ana hes oe i aa is SAG PUEDE ntti Hedlibn we. nase ; ; a ‘ ——— THE DAILY EXAMINER " THE DAILY EXAMINER. JANUARY 15, 18% THE STANLEY. lene is, naturally, considerable anxiety But the utmost streng:h and sea- espect to the Stanley fidence is felt in the vorthiness of the ship and the ability of Although from any pomt of mmandet she has not observation ar a telegraph or telephone station, it is ped and believed that she is safe in the and has not yet been able to make her | way out of This view is strengthened by the report that large fields of ice are! ' Pictou away to the east- | —_—___—_ ——__ e+ 6+ & —_—_—_——_— EXPORTS OF FARM MACHINERY. most evident to the country that the | if bas been mad prejudiced Grit in the National Policy has not ruined the foreign | ule of Canada. The growth of the for eign trade of Canada is, id Ooh only less irked than that /of ité& inter-provincial Last year it was the atest upon record Among the i domestic tradk pro- ts of our factories which were exported re 3,622 agricultural inachines and im Remarking for Australia } x his fact, the Toronto World says: * The establishment of the Pacific steam- ship lines is a direct outcome of the Na- y we would have 1 t industry to speak of; we would have had no industries at all; and con- sequently, we would require no steamship to handk thém. The National Policy is enabling Canada to compete for trade in the markets of the wide world Only this week the Massey Eompany re-| etived a cable erder from Australia for 00 cultivators And they are sending achines by the thousands to thé Argen- | Repul i and other countries. In | this particular industry we have now eached 8 mv manutacture manufacturers that a m pet with ny pa f the w i Our own farm ers get their machines as cheaply as the farmers of the United States or of any other country can bay theirs The fact that our manufacturers have the Canadian arket as a certainty to work upon acts as a lever which enables them to branch it into foreign fields What sense, then, is there in breaking up the home market, us the grits propose? The Canadian rw n nothing by it, while the business of our manufacturers will be de- moralized and workmen will be thrown out employment The good sense of the people ef the Dominion will never consent to such a policy as the grits announce in their platform.’ —_——_ -—__0-+-e-e——_ F ARMING IN ONTARIO. Sratistics, published under the auspices the Government of Ontario, do not bear it the contention of Sir Richard Cart- tht and other pessimists that agricul- The tetal property of Ontario farmers in 1892 ture in Ontario is in a very bad way is, according to the statistician, vaiued at $979,977,244 compared with $971,886,068 1891, and with $963,925,031 as the age value for the ten years 1882-92 The report set 3 forth that the notable gain here shown is due to an increase of about $4,500,000 in the value of farm buildings, | of about half a million about $9,000,000 in live value of the lands is illeged to ned about $6,000,000, ll round of $2,000,000 t immecrease a reased value of buildings and implements: ised value of bu ig I showing extended farming operations; and | _ . > F ' : | feed, and the manure will be worth two or t may be that an error in this regard has been made by the official, who, it is safe to conclu le, Sir Richard. Howevs creditable and reassuring. It does not, a that the National the vitals of the is a follower of r this may be, the gain shown is all events, indicate Policy ia ‘“‘ sapping muntry.” Tha progress of the farmers of Ontario respect to dairying is varticalarly noticeable ries Ope rated in There were 856 cheese fac- 1892. This is an in ease of 18 over 1991, and does not in-} —— | $50 per acre. le private dairies. The cheese out- | ta! vs an increas¢ f 11,919 906 Ibs prices weet 20 cents per 100 Ibe. better; | uth receipts for ¢ heese exceed those f 1891 by $1,303,455. The making of ‘ ime butter and the starting of new } crea ries show good advances Of 27 butter factories reporting, the output of 67,809 Ibe., $8,344 Ibs. in There is nsiderable iucrease in winter creameries. butter was compare! with 189] shown a Ae t ve stock, there is a very fair dis- The horses are reported to be ’ worth £55,812,920; the cattle, $45,545, | 475; the shee Pp, $8 569,557 ; and hogs, 5.479.083. The total volue of the live stock was $117,501,495, $10,721,076 in 1891 zrumbling in Ontario ag well as comfy ared with There has been | here; bnt the figares ¢upplied by the-grit revernment ef that Provinee'do not “Show that it has had a justification in fact = - — THE PRICE OF WHEAT. The Toronto Globe reports that during | the past season a larger proportion of i éat has been fed to cattle than in the | previous season, the reasom being that a} much greater profit could be got from the} rain in that way than by selling it ctly. One Ontario farmer says he has | »btained a return of 90 cents a bushel for} his wheat by virtually ¢oniverting it into stock In one section of Ontario it appears that whéat has been used | for this purpose than “for human food The gener result. of the enquiries that the onsum ption of the gra for cattle-feeding has greatly | increased, and that. the stecks in the hands of farmers are much ematler thie | year than last. In some paits of Mani | rding to recent reporte, farmers’ said | that before the next crop begins to move necessary to import wheat for} The fal is put down as the main cause of the re- cent advance in the price of wheat in that Province. It is beginning to look as if af fairs would take a similar turn’ here, and, while an undue inflation in prices is not to he desired, it is neither desirable nor fair to the farmers that prices should be kept low by the prevalence of erroneous ideas as to the supply available, especially when | those prices are such as to return little or | no profit to the producer toba, acc deliveries have now ceased, and it is t will be consumption ng off in deliveries The jointe and museles are s¢ lubricated by Hood’s Sarsaparilla that all rheumatism | and stiffness soon disappears. Get..only | Hood’s. ~~ — | USE SKODA’S LISCOVERY, the grea | Bloot and NerveRemedy. phere which - a Without a protective pol- | agricultural imple- } | ! labor and means to increase the | aise their bright banners to | that floats around them endless in implements, and | stock, while the | ‘ | crops of clover and hay. have de- | ; ] : ¢ leaving aj e Store and feed . | their cost for this purpose; and 71 per It is strange that the price of land should | led he il oe ; * | cent. of the fertilizing materials wiil be have so greatly declined in view of the in- | | ed into mapure, or plowed under. |and lime, Sow ten Ibs. } following THE LEGUMES AS FERTILIZERS. Fovr-rirras of the bulk of the atmos- wraps round our globe is nitrogen. But of this vast store, borne to them by every passing breeze, plants, as a They depend for their supply of this essential general rule, make no use whatever element on the very small portion which is found combined with other substances in the soil. Ammonia and the nitrates, formed from the decay of former genera- animals, are the tions of plants and sources from which they derive their supply. Ammonia is nitrogen combined Nitric acid is oxygen. with hydrogen nitrogen wnited with Nitrate of soda, nitrate cf potash, and nitrate of lime are nitric acid combined with soda, potash or lime. Nitrogen in any of these forms is the most costly, as it is the fertilizer that the In the various marketable forms it is worth fron The 12 !bs. ot nitrogen in a ton of farm yard manure most valuable farmer uses 8 to 18 -cents a pound worth four times as much as all th other ingredients of the The oslle' alia : : look out for highly nitrogenous manures, stable blocd and fish manures, guara and nitrates manure put to gether farmer is always on the such as rich manures, night soil, All these are valuable according to the proportion of nitrogen which they contain- We feed rich stuffs in order to increase the value of our manure piles, principally by putting more nitrogen into them. Thus we are forever spending endless time and store of And as is absorbed in available nitrogen on our farms. fast as we accumulate it, it the crops, dissipated in the air, or washed out of the soil by the rains. The amount of available nitrogen which most of us can command in ton. Or &@ season is not more than a i many farms it is much less, If we could only double this amount we would feel ourselves on the high road to independence and wealth The older chemists, including Boussing- ault, supposed that no plants made use of the free nitrogen of the atmosphere. But recent investigations, especially those at the Connecticut Siorrs Station, have shown that the leguminous plants have the power to assimilate the uncombined They do thie by tae“tubercular organs of their roots nitrogen of the atmosphere. Thus crops of peas, beans and clover be come the proper fallow crops, as they accumulate stores of nitrogen from the at™ mosphere to enhance the fertility of the farm exhaustive, because they draw their nitro- gen from the And we well that many successive crops of oats will soil. know leave a farm hopelessly impoverished. | But the highly organized legumes that lure the | gauzy-winged children of the air to their stored sweets have the power of drawing from the sunny billows of the aerial ocean | richness to increase year by year the pro- | ductiveness of the farmer’s land. An acre of peas contains 140 Iba. of nit- rogen, the greater part of which has been taken from the atmosphere. This plowed the richest fertilizing material to the aoil. It will be equal to twenty-three loads of rich stable manure. under will add a large store of Two euch crops plowed under, with the addition of some phosphate, would permanently enrich the land, so that it would produce successive heavy But it is not al- ways necessary to plow the peas under. them. They are worth saved in the manure. Peas sown with oats improve both the straw and grain for three times as much as from oats alone Most ofthis added material, too, is drawn from the atmosphere, not from the soil. Clover should be raised wherever it will grow, and the accumulated nitrogen turn A good growth of clover will afford, roots and all, In the Nor- immense improvements in ninety Ibs. nitrogen per acre. thern States farm lands have been effected by growing clover and liming. Large tracts have been brought froma value of $10 per aere to Where wheat growing has | been followed the produce has been in- creased three-fold. The same thing can | be done here with our generous soil and circamstances We have thousands of acres of poor, dry pasture lands, covered with a wiry growth of natural grasses, which, if sum- | mer-fallowed and limed, would produce a a fair growth of clover or peas that, turned under, would enrich the soil for a greatly This could ve nrade the beginning of a system improved crop the following year of improvement which would bring up lands now not worth $2 a year to their own- ers to a value of $10 or $15 a year. Clover Fallow red clover ia better to begin with than peas. seed per acre—nothing else. When well in bloom plow under. Next year you can af- | ford to sow grain with the clover, and the year have good pasture, Now you are on the high road to success, Pasture, grain, clover or peas turned under, grain and hay to be fed on the That ia the order. Beef, pork, dairy prodace will be your reward, farm. mutton, and a rich and productive farm your hon- But don’t forget that while ordinary crops draw their nitrogen eat pride and joy. from the soil, the leguines receive theirs from the exhanstless supply of the atmos- | phere, and store it up for your use it som are but wise enough to take thé proferréd ott ————— SS He Loved But Lost, A romance inaline, Theerushed hopes of many an arden§ lover are due not to fickle fortunes, but to the fact that he neglected “a simple cold in the head” until! Catarrh fastened its vile grip upon him, causing even love to torn her head in an- guish from him. A change is possible. Hawker’s Catarrh Cure is a certain cure for this offensive and debilitating disease, restoriag the sense of smell and making the breath sweet and pare. Sold every- where, only 25 cents. Manufactured by The Hawker Medicine Company, St. John, N. B A Snre Cough Cure—Hawker’s Tolu and Wild Cherry Balsam. —_<9902 Write tothe Proprietors of Puttuer’s Emulsios for copies of, testimonal to the excellence of Puttner’s Emulsjon from the most skillful physicians and prominent citizens of Nova Scotia. And what shall I say more? for the time would fail me to tell of all the virtues of Puttner’s Emuleion Crops of oats and other cereals are stores of ARTER THE STORM. —_—_—_— The Streets and Roads Block- ed Everywhere, NO ACCOUNT OF THE STANLEY, Difficulty in Burying the Dead.—Move- ments of the Trains. Tuer big storm isover. It raged with great fury from an early hour on Friday afternoon until] about four o’clock yester lay morning. Verv rvany years hav passed since we had uch a storm, and it i- slong time since th: streets were in such a ondition. During the stor 5 O07. the low { mths for a lo me the barometer fell t ‘corded in the winte The velocity oO thirty-five and forty greatest speed be «clock on Satur The wind was at first from thwest. Th: nercury inthe thermometers ranged a tween sixteen and twenty above zero. Mr. Newbery reports that the snowfal was about twenty inches on the level. he drifts throughout the city range fron six to about twelve feet in height. Yesterday very many persons were out shoveling snow, but it was not until to day that the real work began. Councillor Beer, Chairman of the Street Committee, and City Surveyor Da!ziel were out the e wind wa beiw vo miles an henr, ng attained about nin lay night the north, veering to the m ~~ Senna ee eed JANUARY To Begin on Wednesday next, 7th inst, Ice-boats will begin crossing at the capes on Wednesday morning next, the mails leaving this city to connect. with them on Tuesday evening. Weather’ penmitting there will be crossing from both sides on Wednesday, Mr. Jord having arranged for boats to leave Cape Tormentine ag well as Cape Traverse. : Operative & Prosthetic Dentistry. DR. J. P. MURRAY, Stamper Block, Victoria Row. a janlb—d&w lyr St. Peter's | Schoolroom. By speci il request of a number of those who were unalle to obtain admittance to the Entertai held in St. Peter’s Schoolroom la Wednesdav Evening, the management o tie Band of Hope have decided to reper. it On Tuesday Evening, Jan. (6th, With a slight Change of Programme. nent To avoi!l overcrowding, only a limited nu. ber of tickets will be sold. | of same ticket Admission, 15 cents best part of yesterday reconnoitering and ! deciding upon a “plan of campaign.” To-day they have about thirty-five men out shoveling the snew onthe middle of the streets, and have also a number of teams at work. Private citizens are lending a hand with their horses, and the owners of property are hard at work removing the snow from their premises. By to-night it is expected the principal streets will be fairly passable for teams and pedestrians. The services in the various churches yesterday forenoon were very poorly at- tended; but in the evening, after the snow shoveler had been at work, there was large attendance. The funeral of the late Stephen A. Carroll took place ye-terday afternoon. It was to have taken place the previous day, but owing to the storm was yesterday. postponed until The hearse was preceded by a I ’ Doors’ open at 7.30. Entertainment ; | commences at 8 o’clock janl2 | ' | | a | _ BOY YOUR Carpets team and a number of men with shovels to break a track, bui even the hearse could not get any further than the old Roman Catholic cemetery this side with this aid | inti Dassen of the railway crossing. The road from | that out was completely blocked, the snow | being on a level with the fences right | across. When the hearse stopped near the old cemetery the casket containing the body of young Carroll was removed to a wood-sleigh, and another start was made, the driver being obliged to cress fields in many places. In this way they managed to get to within about a quarter of a mile of the cemetery where they were again obliged to stop, the horse being un- able to proceed further. Here the casket was placed upon a toboggan and hauled over the snow banks to the cemetery. The old timers are somewhat divided as tothe number of years since we had a/| storm such as that which has just spent its fury. One gentleman said to Tue Ex- AMINER reporter to-day, “It’s the worst storm we have had in thirty years,” and another remarked that “it was the worst he had ever seen.” Mr. Matthew Murphy, keeper of the Central Fire Station, says that about thirty or thirty-five years ago we had storm about as severe as the one just pass- ed. On that occasion, however, snow fell for about three days. “On the lith or > 18th of March,about twenty-two years ago, | aids Mr. Murphy, “there was another big | torm, and a man named McMillan, who was on his way from Charlottetown to Movnt Stewart with a load <hed on the ice when home.” The kodak fiend was abroad taking photographs of the streets. These views will be exceedingly interesting years hence. : of flour, per- about half-way to-day, The irrepressible joker was also abroad | today. “ Yes,” said he to a friend with whom he was walking alon: the street, there are some very high banks; there’s one on Great George Street that’s higher than the telephone poles.” A few minutes later he came to the rescue of his friend who was doing some tall thinking, and said “it’s the Merchant’s Bank !” no doubt about that,” remarked the joker’s friend as soon as he had caught his breath, “and there are also a good many broken Lanks to-day !” The railway people are doing their best to clear the track of snow and get the | trains running on time again. But their progress is necessarily slow. The train “There’s | and Oilcloths ii PROWSE BROS. & CO's. Charlottetown, Jan. 8, 1894—dy THIS MONTE - . 3efore Stock Taking we must work off all our FUR &. ‘GOODS. If you want a Lady’s Astrakan Jacket cheap snowed-up The balance of Fur Muffs and clearing come to us. our Ladies’ Collars at prices ; Ladies’ Felt Hats half price. Yes<=> Remember, our Fur | Coats, Sleigh Robes and Men’s Overcoats and Boys’ Ulsters are the best for the which left here for Summerside got as far | as North Wiltshire by one o’clock. Cape Traverse train reached Emerald all right, and the Tignish train got through to Bloomfield on the way to Summerside Up to the same hour the train from Souris for Charlottetown had only reached St. | Petere, and the train from Georgetown | had only got as far as Cardigan. | There are only a few “crosses” of tele phone wires reported in the city. In the | country the wires are reported “all right.” The telegraph wires are also reported “all | right.” From Georgetown, Souris, Montague, | Summerside and other towns and villages | along the line of railway, the storm is re- ported “the worst for many years.” } Everything is blocked up. Trade was at | a standstill all day on Saturday, and very few people cared to face the fury of the storm To-day the “broken,” and the passable as possible, Upto two o’clock this this being made as | roads are sidewalks | afternoon | there was no news of the Stanley. A ru- | mor that something which was thought to be her was seen from Panmure Island | turns out to be incorrect. The Stanley, it will be remembered, left Georgetown about seven o’vlock on Friday morning. The | snow storm began about half-past eight or | nine. By that time the steamer would be | somewhere off Cape Bear, and she would likely be put about and effort made to get | her tnto the lea of the Jand, where she would ride out the storm. Failing to | make this shelter she would likely be run | into the ice, where she would remain se- | cure until the wind changed and cleared | the ice, when she would make port in safety... The general impression is that: the latter4s the case! ~~ Captain Finlayson | may be relied upon to do all that a man can do to ensure the safety of the Ship and those on tL oard. The passengers on the Stanley include Mr. Geo. E. Full, Miss Ella Blake, Master i. M. Arnaud and Masters Fred and Frank Bayfield, all of this city, and a number of commercial travellers, including T. C. Johnson, representing Greene Sons .& Co., Montreal. A gentlemen who was on boarl the Stanley two winters ago when she was out all night in a gale and snowstorm, says that on that occasion the capta'n put-her out into deep water and kept her “head on” all night and until eleven o’clock in theforenoon of the feliowing day when it cleared up and she made port in safety. He speaks highly of the Stanley an] the skill of her commander, and says : “IT think ske’s all right. If there’s one | man that can get her through all right, | that man is Captain Finlayson.” It is reperted that -Pictou is chocked | with ice. There is also a good deal of ice | reported off Georgetown. | Rev. James Aineas Macdonald, of Hope River; Captain Malcolm Macdonald, M. P., Georgetown; Mr. Walter Simpson, of Bay View, and Mr. H. Beer, of Kensington, are | ; among those detained in the city on ac- count of the storm The | least money. ‘Everybody . J. B. Macdonald & Co. Charlottetown, Jan. 4, 1894—eod Don't swear because you briay woods burnt out. Geta new) USE MASTIFF' PLUG CUT hereafter. 'tisthe £ only [o- bacco that 3 leaves the briar- wood pipe whole» and sweet. J. B. Pace Tobacco Co. Richmond Virginia; and Montreal, Canada. $n eaten ought to see at least one copy of “ DONAHOE’S MAGAZINE,” the great popular Catholic publication that is revolutionizing economic thought and wiping out religions bigotry, $2.00 A YEAR. Representatives wanted avery city, town and village. We want ladies and gentlemen, who can give satisfactory refer- ences, and we will pay well for their ser- vices. Address Subscription Department, 611 Washington Street, Boston. janll Those holding tickets of last Wednesday i evening will be admitted on presentation i _| jockeys and ballet girls will disappear.’ DON’T CARRY a risk yourself. 6. I. Brow CHARLOTTETOWN. Insure it with TELEGRAPHIC. STORM ON MAINLAND Some Fatalities on the Rail. An Engineer and a Fireman Killed, Haxirax, Jan. 15. | Several disasters have been reported as | a result of the storm which raged through- out the Maritime Provinces. A fatal accident occurred on the W. & A. Railway yesterday. The special train running @ snow plough and flanger, which left this place, met with a disaster at Gib- : bons’ Bridge, one mile west of Wilmot eta- ; tion. When within 200 yards of the bridge, the snow plough left the rails and forced’ | its way over the sleepers until reaching the bridge, when the structure collapsed, carrying with it the snow-plough and en- gine. O.B. Pudsey, engineer, and Frank Smith, fireman, were killed. Their bodies were buried in the debris; but were recov- ered after much work. Sr. Joux, Jan. 15. On Saturday night the Canadian Pacific train coming this way frem Montreal, was derailed at Harvey Lake. The snow plough and engine went off, and Fireman Henry, of Woodstock was killed. NOTES FROM THE CAPITAL, Fast Atlantic Steamship Service. A Post Office Clerk in Trouble, Orrawa, Jan. 15. The Government will entertain pro- posals for a fast Atlantic Steamship Service on tne basis of a subsidy of three quarters of a million dollars, But it ie not likely that they will exceed that amount. Edward Morse, a packer in the post office, was sent to gaol by the civil service examiners for eight days for refusing to answer a question. Morse passed a re- cent examination, but wrote at Montreal, and it is charged that he got some one to personate him. When questioned on the subject he would not answer. ——__.——_— CAPITAL AND LABOR AGAIN. A Difficulty in St. John, N. B. Sr. Jony, Jan. 15. There is trouble between Schofield & Co., of the Furness Line and the ship-laborers. The latter demand three dollars per day for loading grain, while Schofield says tnat the Halifax rates are only two dollars. Schofield says that if the Union maintains its cemands the Furness people will be obliged to ship grain from Halifax instead of St. John. A Sieamship Lost. Loypon, Jan. 15. It is reported that the steamer Allonby foundered in the Bay of Biscay, and that twelve persons were drowned. An Infernal Machine Explosion. Loypox, Jan. 15. There is great excitement at Islington over the explosion of an inferal machine placed in the railroad rtat:on. The Mitchell-Corbett Fight. JACKSONVILLE, Jan. 15. There is no change in the situation over the Corbett-Mitchell fight. Both men are in fine shape. ——. Fire at Moncton. Mowcroy, Jan. 15. A fire on Saturday night gutted the resi- dence of J. P. Conway of this town. Dr. Douglass Yery Low. Montreal, Jan. 15, a late hour Jast night. Sudden Death at Amherst. Amuerst, Jan. 15. Mre. George Spears died suddenly ycs terday. Over Forty Years has Pond’s Extract been used by the people and profession as tiie best remedy for Pain, Sores, Catarrh, etc. Note name of sole proprietors on every wrapper. Pond’s Extract Co. New York and London. Ss9ene Your souls area picture gallery, Cover the walls of them with things serene, noble, Leautifal, ard the fonl and fleshly will only seem revoltirg. ‘Hang this upon the wal! of your room,’ -aid a wise picture dealer to an Oxford under-graduate, as he handed to him the engraving of a Madonna of Raphael, ‘and then all the pictures of Try the same experiment with your souls, Let their walls be hung with all things sweet and perfect—the thought of God,the image of Christ, the lives of God’s saints, the aspirations of good and great men, the memories of golden deeds, noble paseages of pathetic thought, scenes of mountain, and sunset and ocean. Oh, do this, and there shall be no room for the carnal ugli- ness, which deprave corrupted souls !— Farrar’s Sermons, -1894-= BUY Carter's Almanac. You'll Need it Hundreds of Times before this Year is out. ———-—~ -—— ONLY 15 CENTS, FOR SALE AT Carter's Bookstore. COSTS The Rev. Dr. Douglass was very low at-> oops TO SELECT FROM ON WEDNESDAY, "Tite JAS. PATON & CO’S. New Stock of Linens, Muslins, Sheetings, Pillow Cottons, Towel- ings, White, Print and Grey Cottons for sale Cheap ON WEDNESDAY AND FOLLOWING TEN DAYS. —(x) Experience and thorough knowledge of the Dry Goods trade has enabled us to anticipate the requirements of the Charlotte- town trade, Great care has. been taken to get this stock of New Goods at a price that will make them sell. f : ea FLANNELETTES—Cheapest and best goods ever offered — here, Give us a call and save money, o.. & REET II III III IIIT III III II ITIT BUSINESS MEN ADVERTISE In xX Best Return . ° Most News For Advertisers For Readers THE DAILY EXAMINER The Leading Newspaper of P. E. Island EVERYBODY LARGEST in circulation ZIITIEIIIIAI SII of). & T, Bell's Fine Boots and Shoes, WE HAVE SOLE GONTROL —-FOR—— These goods are celebrated throughout the Dominion for STYLE, FINISH and WEAR. When ‘First-class Shoe arid''a Good Fit. ask us for BELL’=. you. want & “ ‘short notice. The ‘kid Auned ‘an be. washed when. soiled.>% FP. BE. Island “ | LADIES’ ‘OLORED LIPPERS made to order ats ‘Call and see samples? ! J. M: McLEOD & CO. | % a F. * Charlottetown, January 3, 1894—dy ust DO YOU WANT TO SEE —-THE NICEST LINE OF — LADIES’ EVENING SLIPPERS ? IF YOU DO, CALL AP GOFF BROTHERS. jan2 Charlottetown, January 8, 1894—m w f