Lo eee, & * ae, DAILY THE aa "3 mere 49 ne he A “SURLICRT” PILESS ~ s ‘ ‘ c 4 \ . ‘ f ‘ a &) 5 A . [s,s 4 a Ww F ' J a (@ 6 - OO i RRAD mae LADUN one ink ae | IDOE tS ia ered 3 7 ; i CLEANSING EXCELLENCE 4 PURITY | SUNLIGHT (ose SOAP © he See EES (MERIT FOUNDED ON MERIT i Mit hell, Halifax, agents for > Eade 3 eetou an Nova Scotia and P. E. island re CONSUMPTION is averted, or if too late to avert it it is offen cured and a/ways relieved by Scott’s Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil. Cures Coughs, Colds and Weak Lungs. Physicians, the world over, endorse it. Don't be deceived by Substitutes; Boots & Downe, Delievilie. AL Draggists. We. & $L D 8. STEWART. General Agent for P. E. Isiand Ovetce—Next Bank of N. S., Ch’town TOLEZT [he brick suse'eh Ginee Street, late!; spied by E. H. Norton & C App at office ot trustees Connolly Estat Queen Stre eod tf—jan25 7.s Though you Cough Don’t Despair ! Many apparently hopeless cases have been cured by a course of AMPBELL’S WINE OF BEECH TREE CREOSOTE TRY IT! AT ALL DRUGGISTS., K. CAMPBELL & CO., Montreal. The Premises lately occupied by Mr. George Thorne, situate on Sidney Streei, containing eight bedrooms, kitchen, dining room, shop and front room; gcod yard and stabling, ete Possession immediately Apply to JAMES F. CURTIS. TOOTHACHE ! HEADACHE ! NEURALGIA! WSTANTLY CUZED BT CNR APPLICATION oF NERYOL,. 25 cents per Bottle, at all Druggists. yon ILLS Make New, Rich Blood! These pills were 2 womdertul dlvecow Bke them ia the wo bt. Will positive © Or releve oil maxser of dixeave. The information around t Bor is worth ten time» the cost of a box of pills out about them, and you will always be thankful (mp 1 4 poem. They expel all impurities from the bioug Pesicare women find great t fers asing them Lustrated pain ph t o i fifor % cta. in st JouNsON & 0O.~.. B ¢ NERVE |_szeve wears rene BEANS [fase Mp cre by over-work, or the errors 0. ez = pet youth. This ae yhutel Gs obstinate cases othe: pape Benn have failed evento Telieve. iA by drug six for gent Peecipt of price by sciveesing THE JAMES ww. Toronte, Ont Write for pampbica. Sold ia Charlottetown by G. E. Hughes druggist | Gratetul - Comforting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of the nat- ural lawe which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful) application of the properties of well-seiect- ed Cacoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavored beverage whico may save us many heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating — ~—— SHOOTING ALLIGATORS it Is Fine Sport but Familiarity with the Reptiles Is Dangerous. Col. Streeter, a Floridian, told the zoo logical reported of tne Washington Star @ good alligator story. One of the Colo nel's hands was missing, and knowing the section from which he hailed, t} reporter natarally expected to get a first class war story But he didn? The hand was not lost in the fratricidal It was the work of an alliga struggle them in the land call ‘RAVAGES OF LA GRIPPE EXAMINER “ - tor, or, as they where the reptile builds its nest and } rears its young, a ‘gaitor “Well, it | happened a long time ago,” said Col. | | Streeter and if I had not told the story so often I think I should have forgotten it When I was a young fa ellow, chuckfal of dazzling dreams and ambitious schemes I used to hunt ‘eaters for a living. The hide f one of these brutes is worth all the way from one to four dollars, according to size ndition andage. 1 hada bi lat-bottomed boat, sort of a compromise between a battean and a sand-scow, and I uzed to cruise at night ona lake not far out of Tampa. One dark night } shoved off. After I had reached the most alligatorial part of the lake I lit e ire on one end of the boat. These crafts are arranged especially for this. so there isn't much danger of the whols thing going up in smoke. Well, when wy rosin knots began to blaze and sputter and sizzle as rosin knots will, it wasnt long before a big ‘gator raised his head yut of the lake to see what the illumina tion meant. To a newcomer there isn 4 any more horrible sight this side of the other world than a great. loug ‘gator lying close to you and grinning at yo with his rip-saw ivories under the wei: glare of pine knots. But I didn’t think of this, for I was an old hand at tt business Jang! and a Sharpe gun re lieved that ‘gator of all earthly care and trouble. I hauled him in and stretched him out in the bottom of my boat. [1 was a good night for the sport, and the gators seemed to be especially inquisi tive as to the meaning of that fitfu! light. That trusty rifle spoke again and again. and one by one I landed the vic tims in the old beat. The lastone came to the top pretty close to daybreak. He was asavage-looking old timer. He wae what with propriety we might call a hard shell ‘gator. He looked at me in an insalting s rt of way, and I resented his impertinence. 1 brought him inte ihe boat. There ig just where I made my mistake. That alligator wasn't all the way dead. He seemed to have lots of energy stored up somewhere, and he turned on me. We had a fight right there in the boat. Before I could pump some pills into him he had me hata wrestling match it was! Young man that’s what's the matter with the end o? that arm.” aiiasilodi echidna Origtu of the Story of Creation. In asummary which in its profoun: thought and fearless integrity does honer not only to himself but to the great jx sition which he holds, the Rev. Dr Driver, royal professor of Hebrew and Canon of Christ Church at Oxford, has recently stated the case fully and fairly Having pointed out the fact that the Hebrews were one people out of many who thought upon the oricin of the un verse, hesavs that they ‘framed the to account for the beyinning of the earth and man.” that ‘‘they either dil this for themselves or borrowed th neighbors; that ‘‘of rent in Assyria and Phoonicia fragment have been preserved, and these ex10it points of resemblance with the biblical narrative sufficient to warrant the in ference that both are derived from the same cycle of tradition After giving some extracts from the Chaldean creation tablets, he says In the light of these facts it is diffi enlt to resist the conclusion that the biblical narrative is drawn fron: the same source as these other re ries @ OL baci? the theories cn cords. The biblical historians. it ix plain, derived their material from th * o best human sources available The materials. which with other nations were combined into the crudest physica! theories or associated with a grotesque polytheism, were vivified and trans | | | i ' formed by the inspired genius of th Hebrew historians, and adapted to be come the vehicle of profound religic truth.” Not less honorable to the sister ur. versity and tu himself is the statement recently made by the Rev. Prof. Ryle Hulsean professor of divinity at Cam bridge. Hesays that to suppose that « Christiaa ‘‘must either renounce his confidence in the achievements of scien tific research or abandon his faith is scripture ia a monstrous perversion of Christian freedom.” He declares: ‘‘The old position is no longer tenable; a new position has to be taken up at ones rayerfully chosen, and hopefully held 6 then goos on to prepare the Hebrew story of creation with the earlier stories developed among kindred peoples, and especially with the Assyro Babylonia: cosmegony, and shows that they are from the same source.—Andrew D White, in the Popular Scieuce Monthly Witeh-Craft, Strange as it may seem to some, the ingredients of the witches’ cauldron iu ‘Macbeth,” at least a part of them were once standard remedies amon: Europeans. In the tenth and eleventi: centuries a sovereign cure for ague wa+ the swallowing of a small toad that had been choked to deeth on St. John's eve and a splendid remedy for rheumatism was to fasten the bands of clothing with pins that had been stuck into the flesh of either a toad or a frog. Physicians frequently recommended the water from: a toad's brain for mental affections, ana that a live toad be rubbed over the dis eased parts as a cure for the quinsy A Sublime Koad Truth. The inhabitants of sparsely populate: regions inust, of necessity, submit to the inconvenience of poor roads; but as th- country becomes more popiilous, and the area of cultivated land is increased and the product of human industrs multiplied, with the augmented wealth that these conditions induces, the roads canand should be improved and per fected. There is no reason why every thickly settled and productive region ix this country showld not be supplied with good roads About National Airs. The national sirs of great countries are short, while those of little countries are long. ‘God Save the Queen” is fourteen bare. the Riussiza hymn is six teen bars, and ‘‘Hail Columbia” has twenty eight bars. Siam’s national hymn has seventy-six bars and that o! Uruguay seventy, Chili's forty six and so on. San Marino has the longest national agg — China's, which is #0 long that e take half a day off so listen Si : ALL ere THREE CURED, Nell MeKechnie, with his wife and mother- in-law ‘ ered of Constipation by Dodd's Kidney Pills«—These Pills better Than Ordinary Catharties, Teronro, Feb. 19.—Neil MeKechnie, a popular barber of this city, has been a suf- ferer from chronic constipation for years. He used Dodd’s Kidney Pills and not only obtained immediate relief, but a permanent cure. His wite and mother-in-law were similarly afflicted, and used these pills with the good result. Ordinary cathartics give only temporary relief and Same } leave the patient worse than before using them. While Ddd’s Kidney Pills are not cathartics, their peculiar action en the around us ready to attack wherever there | Jiyer and kidneys is such that the causes ia a weak point. We may escape Many @ | of constipation are permanently removed. fatal shaft by keeping ourselves weil forti | These pills are manufactured by Dr. L. A ; y » : oply : . . +n . ‘ . fied by pure blood and a properly nourish | Smith & Co., Toronto, and ara sold by al: ed frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk Sold only in packets, by Grocers, labelled thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Homecepathic Chemists. London, Enziand. OLD Canadian, United States’ and other stampe, as used 25 to 40 years ego. For wiany pay $1 to $5 each. GEORSE LOWE 346 Bpadina Avenue, Toronto, f 1 dealers, or will be mailed on receipt of! price; fifty cents per box, or six boxes for $2.50. ati STAMPS WANTED. | | ful cough ?” a ee Do you Cough? Hawker’s Tolu and Wild Cherry Balsam is a sure Cough Cure. “Mother, what shall I do for this dread “Take Puttner’s Emulsion my dear, it always helps our family USE §K0u.4’3 DISCOVERY, the great Blood oot Pare Remedy. - ae _— It is the Prov- | Many fatal casee. } | extremely prevalent in incef, La grippe is very prevalent and in many | cases very serious. It is particularly try- ing upon elderly persons, and the number of fatal casea among old people of late is simply appaling. The sad story that comes from Nova Scotia, of a father and two daughters lying dead of la gripde, all at the same time, is but one of many of the pitiful records of bereavement and sorrow caused by this disease. It is of an epidemic nature and is redily con- tracted by those in a weak or debilitated condition. One of its worst features is that it leaves its victims, those who sur- very many prostrated that they easily falla prey to other formes of diesease. This is even where a} person has had only x slight attack of | grippe. Of course much depends upon the care that is taken. Unnecessary ex- posure and the failure to take proper steps to restore the system to health are | chiefly responsible for the ills that follow. | There are remedies and remedies, but the | experience of hosts of people proves | that nothing can surpass a course of | Hawker’s Nerve and stomach Tonic and | | | | } j vive, in cases 80 true Hawker’s Liver Pilis, either to fortify | the system against Ja grippe, or, if that is neglected, to restore the system to its | former vigor after an attack of this dreae- ed disease. Sufferers from Ja grippe will | notice that the tongue is furred and coat- | ed, indicating debility and ‘a disturbed | state of the stomach and liver. It is es- | sentially necessary therefore before com- } mencing tonic treatment, in order to obtain its full beneficial resulte, to regulate the stomach and ijiver by the use of Hawker’s | Liver Pills, ; liver or stomach which are unequalled as a regulator. Hawker’s } Nerve and Stomach Tonic is a certain cure, when faithfully used, for all dis- | eases arising from nerve exhaustion, | weakness or impaired digestion, or an impoverished or impure condition of the blood, such as Nervousness, Weakness, Nervous Heaaache, Sleeplessness, Neu- ralgia. Loss of Appetite, Dyspepsia, Hyste- | ria, and the prostrating effects of la grippe | or any nerve weakness of heart or brain a- rising from worry, overstrain of mind or | body or excesses of any nature. Hawker’s Nerve and Stomach Tonic and Hawker,s | Liver Pills can be obtained from all drug- | ists and dealers. Tonic 50 cents a bottle | or six bottles for $2.50. Pills 25 cents a} box ; Too Late for the Train. It is impossible to “catch a train” when | youare a minute too late, while on the | other hand “catching a cold” is almost | impossible to avoid. If you have “caught a cold” obtain at once a bottle of Hawker’s | Tolu and Wild Cherry Balsam; it will ! quickly put itto flight. It is a certain cure for Coughs Colds, Croup, Bronchitis, Hoarseness and all throat and lung ; troubles. Safe and pleasant to take, sure | to cure. Sold everywhere, 25 and 50} cents a bottle. Edison never carried a watch. For Over Fifty Years. Aw Ocp Axp Wert Triep Reuepy— Mre. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup beed used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth- | nig, with perfect snccess. It the | child, softens the gums, allaya the pain, | cures the colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is | incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind—m. w. f. wkly—l y it~ soothes © = oO ae < & | 2 | a i =| i ) 2 z e = Dp a ® j B | aq ce © 03 : — ee eee The modiste may have the artistic and | aesthetic sense, but except she have the | right material to work upon, the result | will be, not @ creation, which every lady | lesires in a costume. Priestley’s well known dress fabrics, by their softness, ricnness and wonderful quality of perfect fitting and draping, achieve beautiful results in the hands of the tasteful | lressmaker. Ladies should ask for | Priestley’s famous black dress goods.:-aq, | eee The oil of the Norwegian Cod Liver i nature’s grand restorative, and is only | found in its entirely and purity in Miller's | Emulsion, “the kind that cures” colde, coughs, brenchitis and all affections of the throat and lungs. Every bottle warrented. No oily taste like others. In big bottles, 50c. and $1.00, at druggists. are USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the grea Slood and NerveRemedy. SE CAVEATS, TRADE MARKs COPYRIGHTS. OBTAIN PATENT? Fora patent duns strictly confidential. Patents and bow to ob- l catalogue 0: t i PONDS EXTRACT Sore Throat, WiEEC™ f Rison . sie ah : ~ ce ' Lameness, Influenza, Wounds, Piles, Earache, Chilblains, Sore Eyes, Inflammations, AVOID IMITATIONS. POND’S EXTRACT CO., FAC-S BUFF BOTTLE WITH me 4 Tere oe WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1894. RE LHoarseness, | Frost Bites, Soreness, Catarrh, Burns, Bruises, Sore Feet, Face Ache, we Hemorrhages. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTE. 76 Fifth Avenue, New York. Sie - iMILE OF I. &. uw. Grain Crusher ——-AND TURNIP SLICER. -4{x Having a large stock of t hand, and wishing to close them out this season, for the next two months I will sell them | Russian Wheat, delivered at ¢ he above Farm Implements on for 12 bushels of good White ‘harlottetown. Wheat by train will have Bags returned with Crusher. bo Extra Rings for the a always on hand. ve D. W. -FINLAYSON, Ch’town, Dec. 27, 1893—eod & wy LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. is L lCASAtiLe . . ‘ ‘others. Casi Castoria p: and W cures ions Gi o ° 9 2overisancss, eures Diarrhca tecthing troubics, f 2 harm sizbsiitute hing fyrups, and Castor Oil, o is thirty ycars’ use by oria destroys Worms and allays ‘cyents vomiting Sour Curd, ind Castoria reclicves constipation and flatulency. regniates the stomach wep thy and natural sleep. Case Calic. food, toria is the Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Fricnd. ae" ae Castoria assimilates tho ae fi oe and bowels, giving ¢2: Castcria MN eV . * Castoria is an cxcellicnt medicine for ch’! @ren. Mothers have re tedly toid me of iis good effect upon their childrea.” Da. G. C. Osaoon, Lowell, Xiass. “© sthe bests y for children cf w) i i 0 Lud far i : lleonsi ih iz aii a s m i r Ll « ri ] Qs thereby sendin tem & premature grave D n. 3. I. Ervcu£1.or, Conway, Ar Whe Centaur Company, 77 —s a f mechan. Og] and sctensite books cont tree. | Castoria. * Cactoria is so well adepted to chil tren the I recommend it assuperior toauy prescriptica iT. A. Ancner, M. D., known to me. | 211 So. Orfcrd St., Drooklyn, N. ¥. ' neds | | “Our physicians in ths children’s depart ment have epoken highly of thei experi- ence in their outside practice wita Castoria, 1 althouch we only have among edical supplies what is known es reguiar oducts, vet we are free to confess that the verits of Castoria has won ws to iook wit) a2vor upon it.” Unsrrep Hosriral 2xp DisPrensary, Boston, Masa our aw eee oO. Auten C. Surrn, Pres., Riurray Street, New York City. Parties sending brough Munn receive us are it widely bet blic with. | cost cae inventor is splendid anst. } ued weekly, elegantly illustrated. has oy far thé tion of an cor ¥ in the sen BF bdsse, Sulit ian } . } ayear. Single | 5 eee nee am coutoine ese. x ith plans, enabling Idere to show the j and ‘ ddress MUNN & CO., New Yorks, 361 Broapway. The “Magic City.” | | Save your numbers of the “ag | | } City” and have them bound by J. D. TAYLOR, at J. D. McLeod’s old corner. Price for binding, 75 cents and upwards, according to style. The “ Magic City,” when bound, will make a valuable and inte’ esting book. J.D TAYLOR, feb3 Book binder. SHERIFFS SALE. By virtue of a Writ of Statute Execu- tion to me directed, issued out of Her Majesty’s Supreme Court of Judicature, at the suit of Thomas W. May against John Martin, Ihave taken and seized as the property of the said John Martin all his right, title and interest in and “to the fo- lowing property, namely, all that tract piece or parcel of Jand situate, lying and being at D-.ndas, in Township Number Fifty-five, in Kings County, in Prince Edward Island, bounded and described as follows :—On the North by land lately sold to Jonathan Matheson ; on the East by land now or formerly in possession of Daniel Nicholson ; on the South by land now or formerly in possession of Alexan der McLeod; and on the West by the Cum- berland road, containing one humdred acres of land, a little more or Jess. And I do hereby give Public Notice that I will on Friday, the Tenth day of August next, A. D. 1894, at the hour of Twelve o’clock noon, at the Court house, in Georgetown, in Kings County, set up and sell at Public Auction the said property, or as much thereof as will satisfy the levy marked on the said writ, being Six Hundred and twenty-nine dollars, and interest on Five Hundred and twenty-six dollars, from the Fifteenth day of July, A. D. 1893, till paid at the rate of Seven per cent., per annum besides sheriff's fees and all incidental ex- penses. DANIEL A. McINNIS, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, King’s County, February 2nd, 1894. A. A. MeLean, Plaintiff's Attorney. dy ex, 3in f just lovely for winter weather, ways wait till everybody else in the world | we used to swelter in those horrid Rubber é 7 & new thing before you wil! believe | Waterproofs, and euch smelling things,” in it. ad & Co. i= gene notice in the Scientific American. and | ore the but call and inspect our New Parlor, Drawing Bex Bedsteads, and Room and but remember t are dctermined every time at J( Furniture Store goods guarantee JOHN Charlottetown, January 4, 1894. Lonennmeniaied AlGh ALWAYS Mrs. DeWet—“ There, Reginald, are those Rigby Waterproofs I have been tell- ing you about. Can’t you see how stylish and comfortable they look ?—and they are You al- We really mast have them at once.” POROUS WATERPROOF GARMENTS, Everybody wears them, lroom Suites, Chairs, Table odd pieces of Furniture. Listen | hat we sell the Cheapest, and the bargains )HN NEWSON’S, the Cheapest on P. E. 1. No trouble to show goods NE WSON. to give best Island. Quality of ASK FOR Mrs. Uptodate—* Dear me, what a sight those DeWets are, out on the streets a day like this without Rigby Garments. It takes some people a iifetime to learn ; how to be comfortable. Just think how dec tte ———— ee The vaily Examiner The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. One Year, - - - $4/Three Months, - $! Six Months, - $2/One Month, - 35c Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 months at 40 cents a month. By special arrangement with the publishers, we are enabled to make @ mest exceptional offer to seud MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fille out the following blank form, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 40 cents 4 month. CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. UTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGTTTTTTT-TITTI iia indy > Twe Examiver Publishing Co., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. You will please send to my address the DA'LY EXAMINER for 12 I months from date, for which I agree to pay 40 cents a month, it being understood that you are to have sent to my address for one year, without extra charge, MocCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current number, Lp Tn Lo DSi SS lo Sb > So Sb» Ln i Sb Ln Sb Nb Uli inl i a i eal rel TIVIIITTITTTVTTTIITTTTTTT = Uo MS Me SoM MS No Sno LL Sb Sb Sb Sb a Sb bob i bo Sn bp b> So Sb Sb Sb Sob Ln Sb bb ili Sin Sn lS Ib pb re CALL AT OUR OFFICE and see the entertaining and finely illustrated Me CLURE’S MAGAZINE, which has among its contributors the most famous authors in America and England, including R. L. Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, A. Conan Doyle, Octave Thanet, William Dean Howells, Bret Harte, Clark Russell, Joel Chandler Har ris, Thomas Hardy, J. T. Trowbridge, Jerome K. Jerome, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Theodore Roosevelt, Joaquin Miller, Gilbert Parker, John Burroughs, Hamlin Gar land, Prof. E. 8. Holden, Prof. C. A. Young, H. H. Boyesen, Robert Barr, Henry M. Stanley, Archibald Forbes, Andrew Lang, and many others. Each number of MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE contains two illustrated interviews with famous people. Jules Verne, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Tissandier, the famous French Balloonist, Archdeacon Farrar, Thomas A. Edison, F. Hopkinson Smith, H. H. Boyesen, Alphonse Daudet, Camille F!ammarion, Edward Everett Hale, Professor Graham Bell and many others, have furnished material for especially prepared inter- views, which will appear fully illustrate? in this magazine. HENRY M. STANLEY will contribute, especially for young readers, a story of AFRICAN ADVENTURE. NATURAL HISTORY AND ADVENTURE.—There will be several articles written by Raymond Blathwayt, who has been called by Mr. W. T. Stead the best interviewer in England, from material furnished him by Carl Hagenback, of Hamburg, the great animal importer and trainer. These articles deal with the Capture of Wild Beasts, the Training of Wild Beasts, the Transportation of Wild Beasts, the Adven- tures and Escapes of Carl Hagenbeck. The series will be illustrated by an English artist of great skill in drawing animals. JOHN BURROUGHS, C. F. HOLDER, DR. C. C. ABBOTT%and_other writers amous for their work in this field, will contribute to the Magazine. Of interest to both Young and Old will be PROF. R. L. GARNER’S AFRICAN EXPEDITION TO THE GORILLAS. Arrangements have been made, in connec tion with aleading English review, to publish Professor Garner’s letters descr: ptive ot his present expedition to Africa. Professor Garner is noted the world over for the curious and interesting investigations he is making ia the speech of monkeys. He sailed for Africa last September for the purpose of farther pursuing his studies in the native haunte of the gorilla. The illustrations of these articles will be from photo graphs taken by Prof. Garner in Africa. McoCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under the heads The Edge of the Future,” “ Newest Knowledge,” “ Knowledge of Immediate Value,” The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” etc. We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for only $4.60 a year, payable in advance or in monthly instalments of 4c. as desired. We make this exceptional offer in order that we may secure a large number ot | new subscribers, but all who are already subscribers may avai! themselves of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magaziue. Address: The Examiner Publishing Go., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. ———— SILVERWARE Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. We are giving BIG BARGAINS in the above line of goods, as we have a large stock on hand. Cc. G JURY, North Side of Queen Squara, - - - - Opposite the Post Office Charlottetown, January 4, 1894—dy & wky K 3 _WANVERS CATARRH “= CURE safe RE PLE a UENZA HaWkbh MEDICINE COY.,.L’'td.,St. John, NB. People in this 19th century are bound to have the best that can be had for the money. That is why EZEYERYBODY WEARS GRANBY RUBBERS! They give perfect satisfaction in fit, style and finish and it has become a by-word that ““Gransy Ruspers wear like iron.” December 26, 1893—tn thu sat Operative & Prosthetic Dentist DR. J. P. MURRAY, Stamper Block, Vi janl5 —d&w ly: a genre ih cue : dx | re j a ee ae oS i i f y a a - 4 ' “i ‘ (N+ gr 4 4 ae ‘ DA - -_ - ; f Hf kets ~ ¥ i o< U PA |p a Poe { , \ | eee ee. rere eer a J THREE FRIENDS You Meet in Our Stock. Quality, Quantity, Price, We keep everything a first- class Clothing Store shoulé keep. We not only sell at moderate prices, but fill and deliver orders promptly and carefully. Inspection of our Overcoats, Ulsters, Reefers and Suits will ocnvince you we are fully up to the wants of the people of P. E. Island. McKay Woolen Co. Charlottetown, Nov. 17. 1893. Give us a call Lobster Supplies, 1694 The subscribers offer for sale the following Lobsters ani Fishing Outfits at lowest prices for cash or approved credit: 700 boxes Leadbrook Tin Plates, best brand; 100 boxes do. do., delivered at Georgetown or Souris; 5,00 lbs Block Tin, 3,000 ibs Pig Lead, 2,000 lbs Cotton Twine for Trap Heads, 300 coils Manilla Rope, 9, 12, 15, 18; 3 doz Herring Nets, assorted sizes; 5,000 small mony for Heads, * 000 Trap Bows. 50 kegs Trap Naiis, ussorted sizes; 25 kegs Box Nails, 2,010 cases 1 Ib Tall Lobster Cans, 2,009 cares 1 Ib Flat doa, 1,000 cases } Ib Flat do, all guaranteed ; 300 ibs Copper, 10 Lobster Bath Boilers, c‘alvanized Iron, assor ed sizes; Bath Trays, 300,000 Paper Linings tor | Ib Tall Cans. 300,000 do. for 1 1b Flat Cans, 200 000 do, for $ 1b Flat Cans, at factery prices if orders given immediately; also, 10,000 lath». Apply to LONGWORTH & OO., Water Street, 100 Gaivan'! zed jans-2m- 2aw IS94. Spring Trip From Liverpool, Ly | THE CLIPPER BARK RALPH B. PEAKE, 70 Tons Register, Classed A 1 Red, at Lloyds, RICHARD RENDLE, COMMANDER, will be on the berth at Liverpool on the lst MARCH, and will sail from that port For Charlottetown Direct, ABOUT Ist OF APRIL NEXT, and wiil carry Freight at through rates to he different Railway points on the island 80 Pictou, 7 For Freight apply in London to John Pitcairn & Sons, 7 Union Court, Old Broad Street, E. C.; in Liverpool ic Pitcairn Bros., 51 South John Street, or here to the owners, PEAKE Bees. & CO Chariottetown, Jan. 16, Is4. pat guareod her wat sum jour Sw The World's Columbian Exposition. 1. The whole civisized world has been in- terested in the Great Celebration. The crowned heads of Europe, the governments of all the famous nations of the giobe, the lands of the Orient and the islands of all been co-operating to render the Exhibition worthy of the greatest event of modern times. Its magnitade and marvelous character can only be described by saying that it has com- rised all the rarest products of land and sea, he most dazzling wonders of nature and the grandest prod ctions of buman genius. 2. The Great Fair which c 8 the dis- covery of America by Columbus has never lebrats been equalled. It was larger and more mag- nificent than any similar exhibitior ever held. Over twenty million dollars was ex pended in its grand spacious bnildings, and the result was the most attractive Exhibition the world ever saw. 3. This gorgeous display is vividly portrayed in our PICTGRIAL HISTORY OF THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSIT'O™N. This captivating volume is ” brilliant pant rama Oo! the Great Fair whic: awakened such a world wide interest. This wonderful work is a royal octavo vol- ume of over S800 large doubie-column pages, 10} inches long by 7} inches wide. It contains nearly twice tie amount of matter in an or- dinasy quarto book, and is therefore equal to a large volume of 1600 pages. It contains a complete history of the World- renowned Exposition at Chicago; captivating descriptions of the magnificent Buildings and marvellous Exhibits, suchas Works of Art, Textile Fabrics, “achinery, Netural Pro- ducts, Latest Inventions, Discoveries, etc., with afuil description of Chicago, its wonder- ful Buildings, Parks, ete., by ex-Giovernor Wm. E. Cameron, of the Worid’s Columbian Exposition History Co., with an introduction by Hon. Thomas W. Paimer, ex-U. S. Senator and ex-Minister to Spain, iuciuding a chapter on the Women’s Deparument by Frances E. Willard, President of the World’sand Nation- al Woman’s Christian Temperance U nions CON DITIONS—It is printed from clear, new ee on fine calendered paper, and is embel lished with a large number of BEAUTIFUI ENGRAVINGS, which charm everyone wh sees them. This grand work surpasses anything Me has ye. appeared in this tine, and will be sole has by subscription enly. Wait for it; take ne other. MRS.N A. STEWART is Sole Agent for this city le S. R. FOSTER & SON, Manufacturers of Wire Nails, Steel and Iron cut Nails and Spikes, ‘lacks, Brads, Shoe Nails, liungarian Nails, &e St ‘oun, N. B. —<———. .- Farm For Sale THE subscriber offers fi on the Mount Edward Road, mile and a half from the city, favorably known as the “Welsh Farm.’ The farm consists of « xty acres, and con teins a good Dwelling House aud five Outbuildings, all in good condition. There is also a good orchard in connection. Terms easy. Apply to : C, BENOIT, Water Street r sale his farn® about one well an i July 3, 1893. the sea have#® PRR die sit =_ 7