‘ TILE baby growth baby’s mission 18 phe growth. To that little bun- die ot love, halt trick, halt ry added ounce ided hap dream, eve of flesh means a: piness an i comfort! Fat 1s } the signa comitort, good natu beaut v. > . Scott's —— Emulsion, with hy popnosphites, 1s the eas- iest fat-food baby can have, in the easiest form. It sup- plies just what he cannot get in his ordinary food, ] the ? —— and helps him ove! 7 ? sain = “= weak paaces to pel fect growth. a Scorr & Bowns, Belleville, Ont goc. and $1.00 A Happy New Year To All. Now is t buy New Y irs G : M 1 we \ }e ' Fa y i} r A Dressicg Cases W Baskets, ‘ Cases, M S s, Fa c 4 a lors 4 sc? 4 ars Amas a EADAGHE, (REGULATE THE LIVER ONE PILL AFTER EATING INSURES GOOD CIGESTION. (PRIGE 25 CTs. Tae DODDS MER ONT PAE at) 5 BEC -_- 4 eee > EF Wee " T a%— * acn Ir ‘ 2 1° E recezpt of ¢1 r box, o- Six boxes $2.50. Da. L./4.. SMITH & CO.. Toronto. we can seil yon Dodd's Kidney Pills s he fellowing prices, viz. :—&0c. box six boxes for $2.50. Tothe trade—$4.0¢ jozen at $3.75 per per » rdozen, or three dezen. Sent by mail to any address por‘ sid, GEORGE E. HUGHES, Charlottetown. P HOTOGRAPHY Superior workmanship, re fined finish and moderate prices combine to make these Photos ithe most satisfactory in Charlottetown ‘to-day. GEO. H. COOK _ Corner Queen & Grafton Sts. BOARDING & TRAINING STABLES Grafion Street, JOUN M (Late Opposite Court House. NICHOLSON, Prop’r., nu the employ of James Houghton.) Having openrd a public Stable on Gratton Street, I am prepared t> take Gertlemen’s Horses Coits at all seasons of the year to boar: rain, break or keepin road condition for imm: diate use. Horee Clipping also at tendedto. Terms reasonable. nov2Zi~—Lsa&w sin Sample Roos & Grocery Stove Having now completed mv Sample lighted arrange R Sa tiialiaadl *O0Mni*, Hifated by electricity, with all sanit J : 7 ments and a private entrance to same, | have Cr and stocked with the choicest erted my Saloon into a Grocery, Groceries, hoping by paying strict attention to the two above business to receive a liberal patronage for same. P. P. GILLIS. janl5 —6id&w “—s sao ~ Want awife, Want a cook, Want a partner, © Want a situation, Waut a@ servant girl, Want tw sell a farm, Want to sell a house, Want t rent a hous ey Want to exchange anything, Wet w Want io sell groceries or drugs, seil plants or grain Want to sell or trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or catt « ADVERTISE IN THE EXAMINE yj FURNESS LINE, tegular Fortnightly Sail LONDON and HALIFAX cial contract with the went. S.8. HALIFAX CITY, 3,000 Tons. S$. S. ST. JOHN CITY, 3.000 Tons. 8.5. DAMARA, 2,500 Tons. The Furness Steamships are the finest On this route. Al] boats are Clyde built, with taloon and sieeping berths amidshipe where least motion js felt. 8. 8. St. John City and Halifax City are electrically lighted througbout. Superior sccommodation for all kinds of Freight, Dairy Produce, etc. For information regarding sailing dates etc., apply to FURNESS, WITHY & CO, Lap., People’s Bank Building, Halifax, N.S. Or W. W. Clarke, Passenger Agent, ing? between Under spe- Dominion Gcvern > DAILY Ik LEPERS’ GUEST. A Story of the Pyrenees. ] ; Ry MAX PEMBERTON, Dnke of Trovt>e, month at Pau.”’ thought uest or tne whom |] met last thing was said without a nsequences. Yet it proved to be t i Biv. the Duk i at Peau!'' almost screnmned the wier was there when I left,’’ said I, Le is to be at Santander directly.’’ I had raised my veice again so that all Ssaniards in the court could hear Che result was remarkable beyond my expec!ation =" List n te “tt at.’’ eried the chief, “‘the s to be at Santander directly.”’ Sers answered hi with turbue lent s uts You swear that you are not * eried the leader, turaing upon as the possibility occurred to lying to me suc v. L ir it said I » lead us there,”’ cried a 1) throng—and her sug- y y the throng—and h g res miove te moh to raptures | of delight. Forgetting in its excitement the man who las dead at the fireside; deaf to t sroins of the wonnded upon the stairs, the crowd began to pour out of the great gateway, some of the crew calling for my horse, some bidding their friends to fire the building,others again w ringing in delight at the news I had oon I found myself, how I ones more in the saddle with {the army of repuisive gibbering ut my gitths. A hundred rches lit up the dark@ass of the moun- their hands ven them. 5 know not, lepers horse s tain road. ‘The brown cloaks of the men | ot a few of them stamped with the jd k’s foot the sign ot the leper in Biscay) it brig dresses of t giris, the music oT of guitars and the c.iish of tambourines | added to the wonders of the scene. | And the drama of it all culminated i when, suddenly and terribly, great red { flames burst from the building we kad | left. and a newer, fiercer light shone out over the mountaine ‘The assassins ha: f£.red the House of Snows, and made ita i beacon of the hills Che burning of the house. and this was not strange, modified in some measure the ia f the mob. It may be that they had kind'ed a great lamp wiich was as much r to them as a gratification to their terocity; it may be that the stores of their anger were exhanst.d In ether | case there were many who turned their backs upon the company, and slipped | away in the darkness directly we left the : g iteway. That which had been a band of a hundred or more when we set out was a company of fifty when we gained the s it of tl (ass A mile from the burning building thgre was but a scot of men with me, and they had lost their | tongues Indeed, the first coming of the | dawn robbed them of every trace of that ferocity they had d'!splayed during the night; arce Was the sun up when t them cried suddenly that the va ley below and at one among goldiers were in th like deer this they wont off helter-skelter before hounds. Itisto be imagined what my feelings were to be quit thus ina moment of a crew whose company was a harbinger of Turning round in my sarldle, I leoked down the mountain road upon th. house I had left It till burned witha death. lurid red light; but soldiers were woving {n its courtyard, and with them were many villagers come to see the meaning of the beacon. Elsewhere all was still in the heights. Of all the throng that had set out so gayly to the murder of the duke f Trevino but one remained, and she was \ girl; a girl whose age, even allowing for southern maturity, could not have been more than sixteen years. Pretty, piquant, quaintly dressed, with large round eyes and coarse black hair, she now stood tim idly holding to my stirrup strap and seem- ing to wish to speak with me, ‘*Weil, pretty one,’’ said I, ‘“‘why do you wait? Do you not see the soldiers?’’ **Senor,’’ said she, avoiding my ques- tion, but holding tighter to my strap, ‘*will you take me away from here?’’ lake you away, child. Where should I take you?’ ‘*To Santander—to the duke, my mas- —*" er ‘And what would you do at Santan- der? **T would warn him. Oh.I can tell him what he will never hear. Do not be afraid of me. J am not asthe others.’’ By this she meant that the fearful diseise to which so many of her companions were victims had not put its dreadful seal upon her; arms to convince me of the truth. Yet how to answer her I did not know. **See, little one,’’ said I, at last, ‘‘there is hu’ one horse.’’ **T will ride on the saddle before you,’' she protested; and giving meno time to answer her, she sprang up suddenly from the ground and soon was resting in my arms. An argument pressed home like this wasirresistible I gave the hors» his head and we began to descend the pass to Hil- bao. But at the next posting station, where I left her to procure another horse, she rewarded me roughly for my pains, For when I came out of the post house there was not a trace of her to be seen. She had ridden off with my cob; and I did not doubt that her destination was my own, I arrived at Santander or the eve of the tollowing day, thinking it im peratively necessary to mnake known to the Duke of Trevino the whole circum- stances attendiny the sack and destruction of his house. With this intention I de- scended at the principal inn, la Fonda de WE BEGAN TO DESCEND THE PASS. Boggis, and ssked the landlord for news of him I sought. He met me with a look of surprised incredulity. ‘*How,’’ said he, ‘‘have you not heard? The duke was assassinated in the Calle de Bacedo at two o'clock this afternoon. The whole town is full of it. He was struck down by a girl as he was coming from the house.’’ I listened in silent amazement, then I asked. **Have they caught the creature?’ *‘Indeed, no—and yet she was only a child. Oh, trust a cagot for craftiness.’’ —_ nd to what do they attribute the crime?’ “To the fact that he prevented the slut’s marriage to one of his servants because she was the child of a leper. Oh, he nas hunted them merrily, thom poor devils, and now they have repaid him. God rest his soul?’ I muttered an amen—and it seemed to me that the whole story of the night was now made clear. “the duke had sent me to the House of Snows to bring him news of those he had persecuted. 1 knew well tnat roving bands of hunted lepers were still to be found in the mountains and Stephen Rogers, of Providence, R. I , 30 years old, is dead as the result of a water-drinking match. He bet at a hotel on Friday night that he could drisk more than any other present; took fourteen glasses of old rum, and was found dead in his bed on Saturday morning. Charlottetown, P. E. I. dec21 EXAMINER . * ' enves of Biscay, and it was such a band that worked so deadiy a vengeance upon Juan Bazan and his master Kivery year for many years they to'd me afterwards, these nomadic lepers had he'd carnival at Christmas eve somewhere onthe dnuke's estate, always swearins Vengeance and nursing their hate But upon the night when I crossed the mountains they bad conceived the daring notion of supping in the duke's very house. Juan Bazan mu.-t have heard of their intention, and was p eparing to defend himself when I arriv ed. 1 reflected bitterly that if, in his panic, he had not mistaken me for one of thoss whom he feared, I might have saved his life and that of his master. It was clear that they bad caught him as he fled to the village, and had carried him the passive victim of that haunting seem I had witnessed As for the duke, I have never doubted that the hand which struck him down was the band of the child | had carried in my arms through the mountains iiik KN D back to be Prices among the Ancients. In reading the stele found by the Ameri can School of Classical Studies at Athens which is a sacrificial calendar, a kind of current account of yvalues,some important deiuctions can be arriyed at as to the worth cf animals in Greece some 340 vears befcre Christ As to the pig, he was est: mated ratoer by his weight and appesa ance than by his age. <A high price was allowed in accordane with the cond tion | of the animal Sometimes 16 and 17 against 11 and 12 for Barlev drachmas are given, various grades of sheep. mated at 4 aboli the peek, which, accord ingto Mr RK, BO Rich would tind an e;uivalunt in l2¢ We sell barley cheap: is esti te a&yGson, er taan that to day chough we do not eat it, but malt it for beer \ pig for 3 drachmas.or about 50¢ ,is cheap, irrespect ive of size, according to reeent Chicago quotations, That distinguished German, Boechk- Frankel, who has given particular attention to the subject of ancient yaines, states that the ratio of prices of sheep and Oxen Was | hus a sheep in the best periol of Athens was worth from 10 to 20 drachmas, abd an ox from 50 to 100. On alendar sheep are worth 12 drachinas, and sometimes 11. The value of a cow or ox on thestele is less than 100 therefore the Boeckh proportion is not exactly aept up.—N. Y. Times. to o. the sacrilicia Heavy Loss in English Farm Values, Farms in England are much depreciat ed through the low prices of produce, and many holders of estates are disposing of their property, not infrequently at auction SAIS. An estate of 1, acres located near Winchester sold recently ata price equal to $75.73 per acre, 2,009 acres and man- sion located on the River Rule have chang ed hands at $71.15 per acre. A# an in stance of the depreciation it is noted that a southern Lincolnshire auctioneer has just sold under the hammer 180 acres at Weston, Notts, in smail parcels, for 43,- 794, equal to $142 per acre, a property which twenty years ago cost £10,000 Among other properties to be sold at auction this season are the Somerset and 200 Dorset estate, of Viscount Bridport which covers nearly 6,000 acres, and in cludes, besides the mansion, two old manor houses of the sixteenth century Glevering Hal), the beautiful Suffolk seat of Lady Huntingfield ; a 2,000-ecre estate in Dorset; a portion of Lady Shelly's pic turesque estate at Bournemouth. In most instances these properties will be offered in smal lots, enabling tenants to bid. An Extraordinary Map. The University of Tokio is said to pos gess the most remarkable map in the world. It is on the pian of those familiar to students at summer sch.ols, being made of sand and earth, so as to represent accuraicly all the physical features of Japan According to @ recent writer, ‘« The seas are represented with white sand, and the mountains, hills, valleys, cities, etc., with dark colored clay. All the bays and gulifs are seen, and the islands are shown in thefproper proportion of their size and distance from tie mainland. Little channels run among the hills and past the cities, and whenever tl @ge is a shower of rain the water flows along these rivers to the sea precisely 8 it doves in thu larger streams they imitate. The students of the university can thus sec ata glance all the physical features of their own country and learn more of their native land by this method ina day than they could acquire in a week by the ordinary avenues of in formation.”’ Looking to the End. Life appears to me two short to be spent in nursing animosity or registering wiongs. Weare, and must be, one and all, burdened with faults in ths world: but the time will soon come when we shall put them off in putting off corrupt and she held upa pair of exquisitely white ! ible podies; when debasement ana sin wil! | fall from us with this cumbrous frame of flash,and only the spark will remain—the impaloable principle of life and thought, pure as when it left the Creator to inspire the ereature; whence it cameit will re | turo, perhaps to pass through gradations | of glory, from tbe pale human soul te brighten tothe seraph, . . . It is a ‘reed in which I delizht,to which I cling It makes eternity a rest, a mighty home, not a terror and an abyss. LBvsides, wit | this creed,revenge never worries sny heart in calm, i legradation never too dceply disgusts me injustice never crushes me too low. I liv looking to the end.—Charlotts ' Bronte. Money in Dreams, Here is a ‘**- trange, true tale,’’? with th scene iu Georgia, near the flourishing tow) of Covington. A faw years ago a negr woman living near Covington lost he: son, by death. A week or so ago th woman had a ¢ream in which the son ay peared to her and told her sat if eh would go to a certaiz corner of the foune and dig she would find a fat rock, under neath which she weuld find a lot of silve. money. The woman awoke, and was s muuch wrought up over th. vision that she aroused some of the family and went a once to the Qesignated spot and began t. dig Soon the flat rock was reached an removed with trembling hands and hig} expectation. A smali box was revealed this was taken oul and opened, anid to the wonder and astonishment or ail present it contained thirty silver dalars!—Atlanti. Coustitution, **Guests Taving Friends to Dinner Will pleas* give notice at the office a that seats may be providel at the table "’ How many thousand hotels have the above absurdity printed on the card whicl is nailed to the inside of eavh reom, and yet the most innocent guest knows that it doesn't mean what it says. Why not say ‘‘We want pay for what we furnish and we haven’t confidenes enough in the hon esty of our guests to believe that we wil! get it.” His Face was a mass vi Blotches. But now his skin is clear as a year old babe’s. Scott’s Sarsaparilla his Salvation. Nothing blights existence like the knowledge that our appearance is re- pellant to those with whom we come in contact, nor is there any relief like that of feeling that the disfiguring causes have been removed. Says Mr, William Alger : My face on one ‘side was a mass of blotches, some of which were constantly full of matter. I run a bake shop doing my own work, but my face got so bad that customers drifted away. Then I hired a man and went toa doctor. He said my blood was in a horrible condition. 1 sold my business and moved to the city where Scott’s Sarsaparilla was recommended to me. The first bottle did me much good, and after taking five bottles my skin is as clear as possible, and not a sign of my Renee. disfigurement. I say Scott’s Sarsaparilla is the best blood medicine going and am speaking from experience, Pimples, blotches, boils, ulcers and all diseases arising from vital exhaustion and impure blood are radically cured by Scott’s Sarsaparilla, a concentrated com- ound of the finest medicines ever nown, Your owe has it at$1. But get Scott's. The kind that cures. TIS TYR OE, WHO WAS SANCHO PANZA. That this squire was the ac’ ual servant of Rodrigo Pacheco there caa be fittle doubt Here, as in other instances, Cervantes has made slight alterations in rames in order to veil the identity of his characters it will Le remembered that Sancho Panza made many allusions to his aris ocratic “In respect of aspirations,’’ said Don Quixote, ‘1 would aspire to be nothing Letter than of the family of Melchoir Gutierrez,’ When, crossing the plain of Montiel, he explains to this trusty squire the nature of the honors tn store for him, Panza exclaims: “What, tif l wers a those miracles your worship mentions, Joan Gutierrez, my duck, would come to be a queen, and my children in- | fantas ?”’ ‘“*Who doubts it?’ answers ote, “I doubt it,’’ replies Sancho Panza, for I am_ verily persuaded that if God were to reign down kingdoms upon the | earth none of them would sit well upon the head of Mary Gutierrez, for you must Know, sir, that she is not worth two farthings to be queen !"" Here we havea striking instance of Cervantes’ fancy for playing upon names, | by calling the wife ‘‘Joan’’ and ‘*Mary,’’ Further on, Sancho’s wife is made to say: ‘‘ Juana Panza is my name, wife of Sancho, not my maiden name, as for some time in La Mancha the women have taken titles of their husbands. ’’ Again Don (Quixote complains that the author of ‘The History of Don Quix- ote,’’ shows disregard of truth in a terial part of the story. ‘*For he says the wife of my squire, Sancho Panza, is called Mary Gutierrez, whereas ber real name is Theresa Panza,’’ ‘*Pretty work indeed!’’ exclaims San- cho. ‘“‘ sure he knows much of our con- cerna to call my wife, 'vheresa Panza Mary Gutierrez ’’ . Out of all this confusion of names and titles, one point stands clear, namely, that in some way Ga'ierrez is the family naine of Don Quixote's faithful follower. Tae founder of this family was Gutier- rez de Soro Mayor, Master of the Order of Calatrava, and all its branches ure found among the hidalgos.—Temple Bar. lineage. Sancho king, by some of Don Quix ma- The Percentage of Poor Eves, | Only one person in fifteen has both eyes in good condition, and in seven casea out of ten one eye, generally the right, is stronger than the other. It is found that just as people are right or left handed. so they are right or left sighted, and while apparently looking with both eyes, they ofien really use only one Out of twenty persons whose eyes were tested by a Ger- mau doctor, two only were found to be left sighted. ‘The reason of the greater strength gencrally possessed by the right eye is not al:ogether understood but pro bably the natural tendency to the greater use of the right side of the body has some thing to do with it. In using Weapons, for instance, mankind has been taught to as- sume for ages attitudes .n which the right hand and side have most exercise, and this discipline has undoubtedly had irs effect on the eye. Old sea captains 2 ver long use of the telescope, find eye much stronger than the left uffect of the exercise. thvir right -the direct This law is con- firmed by the experience of artists Ifa nerson who has ears of equal hearing power has cause to use one ear more than the other for along period, the ear brought into requsition is found to be strengthen- ed and the ear not used loses its hearing in & corresponding degres, Another Poweriul Euptesive. Announcement is made that Prof. Vice tor Meyer has obtain d an insolated de rivative of nitromethane, the detonating power ef which is alleged to exceed any- thing that has ever been demonstrated in the iine of explosives—a derivative which results from the snbstitution of one atom of sodium fer one of the three atoms of the hydrogen of the methane. In the pre- paration of this substance Prof. Merer dilutes a certain quantity of nitromethane with suiphuriec ether, and then adds, in alcoholic solution, the body resulting from the action of the sodium upon the alveohol. The precipitate formed is washed with ether, and then dried by means of concen- trated sulphuric acid. T&e compound is described as anhydrous, and its explosive force is terrific. The potassic derivative of the nitromethane is also found to have great explosive energy, APlea For Temperance, In the Catholic World, of New York, the following appears in a temperance appeal by Rev. Father McSweeny: A great manufacturing company in Mas- sachusetts recently paid their workmen, on Saturday evening, seven hundred ten- dollar bills, each bill being marked. By the following Tuesday, four hundred and ten of these marked bills were deposited into the bank by the saloon keepers of the town Four thousand aad one hundred dollars had passed from the hands of workmen on Saturday night and Sunday, and left them nothing to show for this great sum of money but head- aches and poverty in their homes. Wel] might these men cry out to the state: ‘*Save us from ourselves!’ and their hapless wives and children: ‘‘Save us from our husbands and fathers on the Lord’s day at least!’’ A Model Industrial Village. George Cadbury, one of the most active members of the celebrated cocoa firm, has just entered upon an novel experiment for the benefit of his work people. He recent- ly purchased nearly 200 acres of land ad- joining the works at Bournville, near Birmingham. The estate is to be divided Into 800 plots fi building purposes semi-detached villas will be erected and a sixth of an acre will be apportioned to “ach residence. A 900 years’ lease of the ground at anominal rental will te given and the £250 necessary for building pur- xoses will be advanced on mortgage by Mr. Cadbury’s solicitor. A park, a public juiding baths and several play grounds will beestablished. The tenants, by week y instaiments, repay the cost of building ind become owners. Giving Credit. The customs surrounding the giving of ‘redit differ widely in different countries. [n Italy credit is given only on undoubted security, in Cuba five months after deliv ry. In the Bermudas settlements are an- 1ual. In Austria it is impossible to do business without giving a year’s credit; in ingland settlement is counted upon every three months; in Spain four-fifths of the yusiness is done on a cash beis; Turkish ind 2ussian cred:t averages twelve nonths;in China credit is unknown, and thirty days is the rule in Canada. “These umbrellas dama,e@i by water will be sold at half price’? was the sign hung out in front of a New Jersey store. We may now expect to read of some ive tealer who will close out a job lot of ice secause it has b.en damaged by frost, Since the invention of that leveller of “clase,” the bicycle sulky, 22 trotters have gone faster miles than the queen of the high wheelers, Maud S., 2.03}. Frederick Becker fell heir to $3,000. His relatives needed it, at least they be- lieved they could use it, so he was de- clared to be dead. When he went to the court to prote-t the judge made him go up the stand and swear to the statement that he was alive. This happened over in New Jersey, where a man’s uusupport— ed word on amatter of that kind is not always accepted. The public accounts of Nova Scotia show a revenue of $835,155, and an ex-— penditure of $331,230. There is a eur- plus of $4,225. It was ga’ned because the Government imposed an inheritance tax, which last year brought in $49,526, and raised the loyalty on coal by 25 per cent. The capital expenditure (out cf borrowed money) during the year amount- ed to $170,551. It is remarked by the Montreal Gazette that the record of Nova Scotia bears out the statemcnt that there has never been n Canada a Liberal gov- ernmect, federal or provincial, that has not increased the expenditure, or added to the taxes, or angmented the debt. The Liberal Government of Nova Scotia has done al! three, =o ET oil THURSDAY, AI _ ates A JANUARY 30, = ° Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has ted to the placing on the market many misleading and unscrupulous imitations of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu- facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are used in their manufactures. Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.’s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. {| WAAR SSN RRR 1 MASSE EAE EEE for infants and Children. OTHERS, Do You Know 2am: rceorc Baterman's Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine? Do You Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons? A SSN SOSA S SS Do You Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics without labeling them poisons ? Do You Know that you should not permit any medicine to be giver your child unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ? Do You Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a lst of its ingredients is published with every bottle ? De You Know that Ca-toria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher. That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than of all cther retuedies for children combined ? Do You Knew that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of other countries, have issued eyclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word “ Castoria” and its formul:, and that to imitate them is a state pi ison offense ? Do You Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection was because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless? Do You Knew that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35 cents, or one cent a dose ? Do You Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may be kot well, and that you may have unbroken rest 1 Well, these things are worth knowing. They are facts. The faocsimile e ¢ Chiidren Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. PT TES RLS is on every wrapper. Boe co ob che de do bdo i eco oboe ese ecb fe ocho ey ‘Fine Feathers Make Fine Birds” Women are not all Beautiful but all womex are attractive who are beautifully dressed. Beauty unadormed may do in poetry, but the nicely fitting gown is the desire of every true woman, Priestley’s dress fabrics have done much to realize a woman’s ideals by ofier- ON WHICH THE GOODS ARE WRAPPED. ~ FREEETETTETER | 4 ing, in their texture, appearance, fit and wear,a character and di-tinction, which no > z other derss goods, however excellent, have quite attained to. Andnow I riestley s % have something new. The “ Eudora’’ is all the rage. It is even better than the iS <i Henriettas so much admired. ‘The “ Eudora” has somethirg which the Henrietta i “A jacks—to wit: greater width, greater weight, and a superior dust shedding quality. 3 And then it has an exquisite surfece which gives it an almost regal presence. W Tap iB 4 ped on“ The Varnished Board,” and the name, Priestly, stamped on every live yards. i eat a a SPDLPS PP TKD IoD 9 Is eloals ere t MWS Bows SEES PFSSFSHPSPEHE TITS SIV TEST EP PPOTT PO POP! PPPS TPT TK ANWAY & 60. Wholesale Wine & Liquor Merchant, ITALIAN WAREHOUSE, 243 Hollis & 48 Upper Water ©t., HALIFAX, N. 5S. P. O. BOX_NO. 475. ly (14) octlS ———————— A . IN ebssssssssssssosssesssssssusssoeSS oso aNIoeS “ALL THE MAGAZINES IN ONE," = “REVIEWSREVIEWS | Edited by ALBERT SHAW. é LLP PLP PP PLP PAP PPP LPL PIII ) i 9 ‘. 99999999999 999 HE REVIEW OF . REVIEWS, as its | FIVE us name implies, gives in commu “> readable form the best ee that appears in the other $ 1.00. us great magazines all over “S the world, generally on the same date that they are published, With the recent extraordinary = increase of worthy periodicals, these careful = reviews, summaries, and as quotations, giving the ANNUAL : — = gist of periodical litera- tees SSS ES ture, are alone worth the subscription price. SUBSCRIPTION $2.50. STEELER TLR ER EES R ESSER EREE EE EERE RENEE RESTLESS EE ESEEEEESEEE @ Aside from these departments, the editorial “> and contributed features of the REVIEW OF REVIEWS are themselves wey equal in extent to a magazine. The Editor’s ‘‘ Progress of the World’”’ is ee an invaluable chronicle of the happenings of the thirty days just past, “*&® with pictures on every page of the men and “S women who have made the history of the month. | THREE S The Literary World says: “We are deeply Steger ee : ; SAMPLES | ‘® impressed from month to month with the value ‘ of the ‘REVIEW OF REVIEWS,’ which is a sort | 25 cents. | ES of Eiffel Tower for the survey of the whole => field of periodical literature. And yet it has a mind and voice of its us own, and speaks out with decision and sense on all public topics of us the hour. It is a singular combination of the monthly magazine and © the daily newspaper. It is daily in its freshness; , cs it is monthly in its method. It is the world Agents find it us under a field glass,” the Most ee Sold on all News Stands. Single Copy, 25 cents. A) Profitable os an REVIEW REVIEWS Magazine. EP 13 Astor Place, New York. oS 2:55555559999999999999999999999:19999999999999 0 Feed! Feed Now landing fresh from the Mills: Ground Oil Cake Blatchford’ Calf M eal, Bran and Shorts, Selling at lowest prices, AULD BROS Charlottetown, December 20, 1895—1 BVVSVSSVSVSESVeseses Bissell’s Perfection. Carpet Sweeper, ‘RIPANS ONE GIVES RELIEF, 2238 SOS 8602S 8865860666586 888GSSS8R 1896. THE BEST MADE SIMON W. CRABBE, Stoves and Hardware, Walker’s Corner. 35 & wky a eth th tt i i ee ee eS BAVESOSVVVeESe EVENING Now Open from Those who wish should attend this Sessicn jan3—dy & wy tf to learn SESSION OF———- CHARLOTTETOWN BUSINESS COLLEGE And Writing Academy 7.80 to9 30 p.m. the science of Accounts L. B. MILLER. PRINCIPAL. octl—246 HOWARD FLOUR If you have not yet used it ask for it and take no other, ALL RELIABLE GROCERS KEEP IT. he calls fo KILTY for it. ++ mber 11, 1895—135 AN ENGLISH SOLDIER generally has a favorite whiskey which r wherever he goes. For years English Garrisons have called The Military Scotch. Try it yourself and you'll always ask iawrence A, Wilson &Co., Montreal Yea Are for sale in sept2i—dy & wky tf Wood’s Phos A Py Before Taking. restored to manly vigor and health— Reader ter who has given you upas incurable—the remedy is now within your reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness and happiness. Price, one package, $1; six packages, $5; by maii free of postage. One will please, six guaranteed to cure, Pamphiet free to any address. The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont -, Canada. Wood's Phosphodine is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominion. BzDeeeee ‘Creme de la Creme «x» La Fayette CIGARS and CIGARETTES every store in the city. Give them a trial and convince yourself that you are smoking the finest. Manufactured by J. M. FORTIER, Montreal. >see seswe phodine.—z%. Great English Remedy. Is the result of over 25 years treating thousands of cases with all know® drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment—* combination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stages of Sexual Debdility, Abuse or Exzcesses, Nervons Weakness, Emissions, Mental Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Wood's Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed almost hopeless—cases that had been treated by the most talented physi- cians—cases that were on the verge of <lespair and insanity —cases that were tottering over the grave—but with the continued and persevering use of Wood’s Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were a eer i P rf After Tak you need not despair—no mat- =e ee ee e2t &F