a a: gh es 3 i sara, yr es : 8 RRR rnempsn Sud = i | oe ee armen iy EXAMINE Y NEWSPAPER oF kK. Ist any te jae . vy afternoon, from the office o Tre ft : Wine Company, in the le — = \ Sires RATES SU RSCRIPTION N ADVANCE) For s ‘ < ce me? which are ordere« ks the charg ~~ . Rate ca co ' ta 1 rate ay m jacx ‘ ‘ are t& ru ‘ three MP : MY Om mn wala 2 nivertisers we ¢ paper to ; = eses = The Weekly Examiner | Is m t every Friday morning from the pais ti i s made up of matter ; i ap mn the Daily editions, ana lea . * Ww ALY e\sepape! teresting arm! \ T . ion r Tue Weetry Exam. INE at x any part offCanada or tix United States, is one dollar per year. i ad rtising rates on the same seale as giver bov c Tae Dai_y EXaMINER. E. Island Railway sfter FRIDAY, 5th December, 1893, P, sR vw tdaily (Sur i ' . 7 R wt Read up ‘ \ P.M q Ras Ros 2 . North W ~ i . hiur 14 . bra 107 Emerald is 1 ‘ 2% ‘ Ket g 22 ; . ~ « Ly lia A.M 4 | “urn rs \ _ ; M 0 lwo 2 2 Wwe J 2 P H a : ary “ ‘ 4 " ‘ ' ' oe P. M A. M “3 L ‘ irl tow Ar iva 2 hMeovaity J 10 1 \ si it Stewa wv 8 ‘ | M Stewa Ar 9G ardi< ‘ we “ Ly 7 P. A.M ; ~~ 4r . 44 M;« a 17 - 5 I 7 + 4 ™~ I 63 rr. M A. M. mL Emerald J Ar Ca Tra » Mgr. Can. Govt. Railways. UNSWORTH, S perinten lent. { ar ett town BD . it, Ise aN os DOCTOR DORSEY, — Physician and Surgeon. y Medical Department of the reity the City of New | : York, late Me ver of the Resident Stiff or Belle- Hospit amd th New York Lying-in Hospital, New York City ’ Ques n OPPOSITE POST OFFICE North Side Square <i tence—Near Corner of King and Queen Sirwt.. Chaslotieto-rn. DAVIES OINTMENT Has no Equal for the Cure of Old Sores, Burne, Bealing Sores, Salt Rheum, Bezem2, Itch and all Sores where there is any Jnflammation. TRY A BOX, PRICE 25 CTS , f | sell for Fk next four weeks We Will #¢: DAVIES’ DRUG STORE, ’ rge Pharmacy Lod "2 WS. « = | The Greatest Rheumatic @ndNeuraigia Cure Of the Age Be HED Rove | w’PAIN CURE MANUFACTURED ONLY BY THE HAWKER MEDICINE COV UD; ‘ST JOHN.N. Bs afl | TERMS « THE DAILY EXAMINER. | S?rate Four Dollars a Year. NO; td, ROom “tu. is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”— Euripides. Diniprigeieitincetnt eerste eae * Single Copies Two Cents NEW SERIES. ramen _—— : ua CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, TJ SDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1893. WHAT MUST GO :---Bad aliguimeut, kevs, double seales, etc., are no longer to be tolerated or pardoned. =The Yost Typ pe ees x fx Sere Ft) v mia ie u Se ‘oy nent e utegible work, foul abolished them. and no other can retain them and live. THE NEW YOST combines the life-long experience of the invented the “ temington ” latest and best improvements have been perfect typewriter. The New Yost in 1873, the * Caligeraph”’ put is clern cut and beautiful. aper is an ideal success, the best ever applied to a typewriter. I . pertect. Send for Illustrated Catalogue Provinces, 134 Prince William St., Ladies, Misses and Boys, | 5 wonqgarpe ¢( inkSsSo. prints direct from steel ty The alighment is absolutely 5t. John. or to DR. B. STEWART, Charlottetown. BEAUTIFUL SKATING BOOTS sossemcemnenme ) Piypocnnsneceee OUR OWN MABE. JUST RECEIVED FOR A Noe Lot of Imported Ladies’ Slippers Boots & Shoe: THE XMAS TRADE. Se GORE BROS _ NAW BRICK BUILDING Charlottetown, Decc mber 15, 1893—1n w f Charlotietown, Xmas Supplies. Go to Go to Go to Go to Beer Beer Beer Beer & & & & AS PRESENTS. USEFUL AM ' \ Re oom an a f. < =" ~ 2 = . at a = > ~ ~ a ae ~ le -o s ww = Xs a2 2 & SF. — I — = 4 ~~ «a> = ™ “ = ea | —- Gm + ~~ aoitae«z ‘\ Me. — we -_— a “oe 7 aa =F So" £ -@ ad ~ oF y aa a “ —-—e & At mand . a) a = wa ~~ wa wa | soe Ge = ene ae a ow v. b mw Cel _ - “oe i a ee ¢ vT— — = ww aie -— an ~ i. ~~ w~ = -—- - J == -— met — ie 2 ee Se am -« a | ~ - — ., ~~ — So OMS °°! =a =e 4 a +) han = — fm — ww SS SS = _ = wes | — a = — az © es Ff x a -o@t 2 P — on _— oa tS i nd ““-£ ~~ = lf: hl FOF) tg = oe — r a = Ee aL. e ¢ 7 m @i es s. — fm ~~ a“ ~ r. whet as-+> » © oe —™ fH & ets = =~ 2am g a 32% $8 a =F w= & o. Re a#7ue — - e2 °a& swe Zw weet w wv December ] i. 1893—m w f ‘for for for for Goff'’s ‘for » | for , > OU 8. Goff | for ‘for ‘for for i for for Goff’s ‘for for for for Goff’s: Large, Juicy Raisins. nice, clean Currants. fresh Candied Peels. extra strong Flavorings. pure, unadulterated Spices. fine Pastry Flour. cheap Cooking Figs. English Mince Meat. pure Honey in the Comb. cheap, pure Candy. ; Fruits of all kinds. Confectionery, } & 1 Ib. bxs. Christie’s Fresh Biscuits. English Pickles and Sauces. shelled Walnuts and Almonds, all kinds of Xmas Groceries. Charlottetown, December 8, 1893—m w f added during 1892, making the New Yost an ideal. to IRA CORNWALL, General Agent for the Maritime THE NEW YOst ~ the only Perfect Writing Mach- | ine. The Ribbon. the Shift Key and other antiquat- ed devices discarded. NEW MACHINE, NEW MANAGEMENT NEW PRINCIPLES, "EW PATENTS, iW MEN, vEW LIFE, ‘EW BRAINS, ‘EW METHODS, NEW CAPITAL, The LATEST and BES’ ink ribbons, bothersome shift The NEW YOST has inventor, G. W. N. Yost, wh« and the * Yost”’ in 1889: the pe; its work is never blurred perfect and permanent. Thx Che line spacing absolutely Removei ! Have Kemoved their Stock of ——TO THEIR— | ACROSS THE STREET. look at our Stock in the the LARGEST and CHEAP Please to New Store ST in the City ' Both the method and results when | and refreshing to the taste J. B. Macdonald & C0, Charlottetown, Oct. 19, 1893-— eol Good Profit & Value TO THE GROCER OR HOUSEKERPER WHO HANDLES WOUDILL’s GERMAN | BAKING POWDER QUALITY ABSOLUTELY PURE, | PRICY 5, nov28 10 AND 20 CEX\T:. Harper's Weekly. ILLUSTRATED. Harper's Weekly is, beyond all question, the leading Journal in America, in its splen dii iliustrations, in its corps of distinguished con- tributors, and in its vast army of readers. In special lines it draws on the highest order of | talent, the men best fitted by position and training to treat the leading lopies of the day. In fiction, the most popular story-writers contribute to its columns. Superb drawings by the foremost artists illustrate its special } articles, its stories, and every notable event of public interest; it contains portraits of the distinguished men and women who are mak- ing the history of the time, while special at- tention is given to the «rmy and Navy, Ama- teur Sport, and Music and the Drama, by dis tinguished experts. In a word, Har er’s Weekly combines the news features of the | daily paper and the artistic and literary quali | ties of the magazine with the solid eritical character of the review. HARPER'S PERIODICALS Per Year: HARPER'S MAGAZINE $4 00 HARPER’S WEEKLY.. sided ade .. 400 DE ee MEIRIEEDy o0 5s dos... occa inne ee HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE 2 00 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada and Mexico The volumes of the Weekly begin with first | number forJanuary of each year. When no time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the Number current at the time of re- ceipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper's Weekly for three years back, in neat cioth binding, will be sent by mail post paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not ex- ceed one dollar per volume), for $700 per volume. Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by maii, post-pa a, on receipt of $1 00 each. Remittances should be made by Post Office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss, Newspapers 4re not to copy this advertise- | ment without the express order of Harper & | Brothers. dress: HARPER & THERS, deel4 yao New York. SUBSTITUTE FOR SiLn. webs and of Wood. A prominept-revenus officer of Moznt- | pellier, France, named Bon, conceived the idea of using cobweb asa substitute for | silk. The notion was nota new one. In 1665, when, one day, near Merseburg, Ger- many, the fields, meadows and trees were covered by masses of peculiar, blue cob- webs, the women of that town, both mar- ried and unmarried, wanted to preserve souvenira of the strange phenomenon. They therefore by spinning made orna mental strings and similar trinkets of the cobwebs. Lon bad gloves and stockings manu fac- | tured of common eobwebs, &nd sent these articles, together with a treatise on the raising of spiders, to the Academy of Sciences at Paris in 1709. A commission was appointed for examining these propo- sitions, nbatuvalist Reaumur belonged, the inventor of a thermometer still bearing Lis name. Ft Sian _ia x . 1 rg. | He showed that Bon’s plan was impracti- Liver and aa “a ae 7 | cable because not enough flies could be pro em effectua y, Gispeis colds, hea , | cured for feeding the spiders kept for ches and fevers and cures habitual | breeding. ‘This seems to be credible, if one onstipation, Syrup of Figs is the | considers that nearly 700,000 spiders would nly remedy of its kind ever pro yield only one pound of silk, Bon’sidea was han wail all 7 _ | repeatedly revived, and particularly Amer- a pleasing to the taste ee ican spiders, yielding a more compact eptable ti the stomach, prompt in thread. were recommended, but cloths ts action and truly beneficial in ite | made of cobweb silk always remain curi tects, prepare dounly from the most | osities, Thus the French naturalist d’Or ealthy und agreeable substances, its nanyeacellentqualitiescommendit | o al} and have made it the most uur remedy known. RSS ONE ENJOYS is taken; it is pleasant | and acts | rently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Syrup of Figs raw material, Keaumur, however, went further than Bon. “Why shall we borrow from ani- Br.up.ol Figs ip toe sale in Tho | So" ee ee ae e . Die to Cha ge Lae ) ze Pats Si . tf.es by all leading druggists. | “ ne ae ; 1 > ; < y ‘ 7 } . . * . . ‘Ny reliable : ruggist W ho may not | uble, too, to make silk of similar things.” iave it on hand will procure it | Yct Reaumur failed when he attempted to numptly for any one who wishes | prepare silk of gums and_rosius. : " + Siw Cae | time mankind has advanced, chemis- asi ‘ — yn] by the ita. i ime man kine ! . : 0 try it. Manufactured on 7 9 } try has been greatly improved, and at Paris CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO., | 2 sx msswtarureni of ot In this respect even two methods have SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. } become known of late—that cf Chardon- HUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK,N.¥ {| “¢t aud ryote ~ oe which both, r r . . } «al reality, are sed upon the same con- W. R. Watson, Druggist, Charlotteown. | (i "She. It one oom Geile Gk can. Sc er 2 j buric ad, not particularly coucentrated nud iv * litaited quantity, upon cotton, con risting f cellulose (woody substance), one reccive. a kind of weak gun cottcna that, ; laced into a mixture of ether and alcohol, becomes 4 mucous mass kuown as collo- dionu. Exposed to the air this mass be comes solid again by volatilization of the ether and the alcohol. The two French chemists named prepare of wood a mass similar to collodion that, placed in water, becomes solid nearly instantaneously. From this mass under water threads are spun | tbat are called artificial silk. It is a well known fact that artificial products are always inferior to natural products. This is also the case with the artificial silk just described. It is glossy, Lf ’ | kD in Aap PO PS OOOO OY OW OV OS OS OO Ow" Ss © “Vou’ll Feel Better ” body does, after taking ag ttles of é , MALTO PEPTONIZEDS PORTER. It builds up the run-down sys-¢ tem,—is strengthening and appe- ¢ tizing. itis readily borne by weak stomachs, regulates the bowels, > and is invaluable to those afflicted with Indigestion and Flatulency. ‘ THE MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LTD. p TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. Highly Recommended byPhysicians. « MEN ac. AGES be cured. We trect a'l sexual disor- Tour out | natural or venuine silk, particularly by its combustibility. flame than silk proper, wool, or even cotton. Ladies therefore wearing such stuff will do contact with fire. Nevertheless the beginning tas been made of producing artificial silk at the la boratory. Perhaps the time will come when man wiil excel the silkworm in the produc tion of silk, For the present, however, the silky orm still excels man in this respect. ~—Philadelphia Press. Names In New York's Directory. The new city directory is even inore in teresting than its predecessors. People in search of light reading rarely turn to th challenges attention. A perusal of the new edition will show fora living. Mark Antony is selling news ; papers in Canal street. Cicero is a Thomp son street tailor. Michael Angelo will be very pleased to shave you if you will step into his shop on Third avenue. William | Shakespeare is a printer. Richard B. Sheri dan is an engineer in the annexed district may cers cf men. of f.ve who cuffer nerv- Exyyusness, micntal worry, | five Macbeths, and six Macduffs. Wash ington Irving bas apparently forsaken the barren field of literature and is gathering coin as a broker. and James G. Llaine a coachman, atiacl s « f “ the blues,” cre but paying the pen- al'y of early excesses. There The eCread alarm of It is a significant fact that there are also uine Angels, and only one of them is a woman. There are cight Homers, three Virgils, nine Miltons and two gentlemen bearing the name of Columbus. A, Dumas is en- gaged in the retail candy trade in Canal street. It is not stated whether this is Dumas pere or fils. Miss Cleopatra C. Ice is a typewriter. Eighteen people bear the name of Moon, but there is only one Sun— Mr. Kwung On Sun. There is an Isaac Sunshine however.—New York Times. re “permatorrheea, mey b> CURED in strict confidence ot Impotency, the exhaus- - t uroderste expense. Send for our five sealed Look, “‘ PERFECT MANWMOOD.” ERIE MSDICAL GO., Buffalo, HY. “Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies —ork— Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & €0.’S "a BreakfastCocua : \ pure and soluble. Pat | Ithas more than three times the strenyih of Cocoa mixe! with Starch, Arrowroot o7 n Sugar, and is far more eco- nomical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED. asian Sold by Grocers everywher». W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass River Trafiic Steadily Decreasing. Some old river men profess to believe that traffic on the Missouri will increase year by year, but it has been a noticeable fact that during the past 10 or 12 years the traffic has steadily decreased year by year, until now it is almost entirely wiped eut. The building of railroads has caused this, the uncertain navigation working to the in- jury of the river traffic as against the rail- roads. For instance, if a regular steam- boat line was in operation between here ' and Sioux City, and the freight rates were | but two-thirds as much ascharged by the railroads from the same place, the steam- boat line would not control one-tenth of thé traffic simply because merchants usn- ally want their goods as soon after they or der them as possible and would not care to trust their gocds to a steamboat which might make the trip in but a few days and again night have trouble with sand bars, etc., and not get through in a week. Steam boats of course are necessary to carry freight from railroad points to Indian agencies and military posts which are far removed from railroad points, but the riv- er traffic from one end of the river to the THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), South Dakota Cor. Minneapolis Journal. MONTREAL. i i. The Vision of Birds. p._ — Birds have very acute vision, perhaps the | most acute of any creature, and the sense CAPITAL STOCK, spit $100,000. is also more widely diffused over the retina eee than is the case with man; consequently a A Society established with a view to disseminate the taste for arts, to encourage and help artists. per which is absolutely bird can see sideways as well as objects in front of it. A bird sees—showing great un- easiness in consequence—a hawk long be- fore it is visitle to man. So, too, fowls and pigeons find minute scraps of food, distin- guishing them from what appear to us ex- actly similar pieces of earth or gravel. Young chickens are also able to find their own food—knowing its position and how distant it is—as soon as they are hatched, whereas a child only very gradually learns either to see or to understand the distance of objects. Several birds—apparently the young of all those that nest on the ground —can see quite well directly they come out of the shell, but the young of birds that nest in trees or on rocks are born blind and have to be fed.—Cham bers’ Journal Incorporated by Letters Patent of the Government of Canada, the 27th February, 1x93. GALLERY OF PAINTINGS Nos. 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame St., Montreal. EXHIBITION “AND SALE. ADMISSION FREE, from 10 o’clock, a. m., to 4 p. m. i Testing His Honesty. i ide i 2 cs . | Your druggist is honest if when you ask ae _ aennee ia Sip epanity eo ye him for a bottle of Scott’s ieultion he chase works of masters. Pe : gives you just what you ask for. He All the Paintings are originals, mostly | knows this is the best form in which to from the French School, the leading | take cod liver oil. modern school. ceiiieciersracenmeretre: ; 7 . | Warp offthe cholera by getting your Eminent Artists, such as Francais | system in healthy working condition. Rochégrosse, Aublet, Barau, Pesant, Petit | fawker’s Nerve and Stomach Tonic, with jean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a | 4 cour « also of Hawker’s Pills, will excite ee many others, are members of this | eyery organ of the body to healthy action lety. | and “afford the surest safeguard against Ask for our Catalogues and Circulars. disease. H. A. A. BRAULT, USE SKODA’S DISUU VERY, the grea DIE: Director. | Blood and NerveRemedy. . oct26 "Cee, man, with bis higher intellect, should be | There are not less than 25 i'om Jolinsons, | are nine Knickerbockers in the good book. | ' | A Process by Which It Is Made of Cob- © | the name seems singularly inappropriate, | pered crow that ever cawed, _ z } i VOL 33.—-NO. 144 Why Lucy Is Afcald of the OMce Noy. ‘Dolphus is not married—he says he | thinks the “mahwid state is chock full of trepidatious.” His chosen compasion in lifeds a tame crow named Juicy. ‘This gen- as Lucy is the biackest and mosv {ll tem- Her one accomplishment is that she knows how to mail letters. ’'Dolphus taught her to drop letters down the mail | chute in the office, and be and Lucy are | very proud of this achievement. It nearly brought them to grief one day. The otice | boy in one of the upper offices is deeply en- amored of a pretty typewriter on the floor | | beneath, and occasionally, so rumor says, | indites tender missives to her. | ealled Lucy to bim before the letter was The other day when he was writing be realy to mail. Jucy sat there on his writ- ing table for some time, and the boy seem- to which commission the famous | | chute in the hall. ed in no baste to finish his epistie. ; Finally Lucy could stand it no longer and snatched the open page in her beak end flew through the trans»m to the mail The open letter was too big to goin. Lucy knew her duty. That letter must go down, so she flewto the | elevator shaft and dropped it gently down, then flew away with a triumphaut “caw.” The office boy was in despair. He tore madly down stairs only to find that the en- gireer, who had been oiling the top ma- | chinery of the elevator, had caught tie let- ter anc was revling it aloud toan inter ' , . : | ested audience, among which was the office bigny had a pair of solid trousers for which | ' South American spiders had furnished the | boy’s hated rival, the elevator boy. Lucy fights very shy of the office boy now. Doelphus says Lucy can understand every word he says, soit may be that she understood when the office boy anncunced | that if he caught her he’d wring her neck. In the | —Chicago News-Record, Bjarni, the Discoverer of America. All impartial historians give to the | Norsemen the honor of being the discover | ers of America, However, but few of them ever give the name of the real discoverer. According to the most authen‘‘c records, monks from Ireland diseoversd Iceland about che year 725 A.D. About 125 year 3 | later the Norsemen (knowing nothing of the discovery made by the Irish mnks) | also ran afoul of the little boreal island. , | In the year 874 these enterprising sons of | skirted along it for many miles. i ing ie discoverer of the western couti- being the discoverer of th tert t | itis true, but it differs in some degree from | It burns with a brighter | the vikings had planted a colony on the island which soon became a flourishing settlement. In the year 893 Fric the Red | discovered the east coast of Greenland and In 995 one Bjarni, who was making a trip in his | vessel from Norway to Iceland, was driven from his course and finally found bimseif, vessel and crew in a harbor on the coast of what is now Nova Scotia. These facts, being indisputable, should accord to Bjarni the individual honor of | nent. But the Scandinavian Listorians, when pressing their claims of being the true discoverers of America. seldom men- tion Bjarni, seeming to prefer conferring the honor upon one Leif, ason of Eric the Red, otherwise known as Leif Lricson. | This man Leif seems to have deliberately | | left Iceland with the avowed inteution of well particularly to beware of comingin | planting a colony in the new southwest— | this some five years after the fateful voy- vclume, yet there is a great deal in it that | that Julius Cesar is now making cigars | age of Bjarni, who was the r-al pathfinder to the new world. Ericson’s colony was landed at what is now Ithode Island {known in Norse history as *Vinland’’), and was maintained for many years, ac- cording to some writers, until finally wiped | out by the plague.—St. Louis Republie. Women Should Keep an Account. Whether a woman is poor or rich, it be hooves her to acquire methodical business | habits, keeping her little accounts accu- | rately and knowing to a cent just what she does with her money, whether she has 10 cents or 10 to expend on her own little per | soval wants, An allowance is the first step toward this | / end, if at the same time it is impressed | easily the money can be spent, how quick Ilenry Clay is a cook, | upon her that every sum spent should be set down with unfailing regularity. In black and white one notes how much more ly it goes and just what foolish little noth ings have lured it from our pockets, Without setting down each item it is ten chances to one that you will conclude you must have lost some money when you can not see how that $10 bill went when you only bought such a very few things. The neat little figures are a genuine re straint, besides instilling a habit and sys tem that will be of great value if fortune ever siniles, and a great estate comes to your hands, and still greater if economy is & necessity, and the do Jar has to be forced into doing duty for two. Unless the accounts are kept accurately and cash made to balance every evening you had better not attempt any bookkeep ing at all, fot slipshod methods are worse than none and only confuse everything — than help matters.--Baltimore Her & oo Helping Cut the Vicar. * Some years ago, in a very rural district, a farmer had a cow for sale. Now, as there was no weekly paper to advertise in, it was | the custom of the vicar to give such no | tices out to his congregation on Sundays. | So the farmer thought he would go to the | vicar and get him to advertise the cow in | eburch. “Yes,” says the vicar, “but you don't | come to my church,” i And they struck the bargain that the _ vicar should advertise the cow, and the | man in return shou'd gotochurch. Now, | unfortunately, the man was very deaf, and | on the Sunday following when the vi car gave out the banns of marriage be tween Joseph So-and-so and Sarah So-and so—a rather unusual incident, for they se] dom had a wedding—the farmer took it | for granted that the vicar was giving out particulars of his cow and shouted out: “You may as well say, while you are | about it, that she is a most gentle creature, | entirely free from vice and a great eater.” | —London Tit-Bits. i Those Nice Large Buttons. Here is a nice little story conducive to a continued popularity of hooks and eyes. “One secret of the Chicago packers great fortunes is simply,” said a resident of that city recently, “they don’t waste anything. The meat, the entrails—everything is made use of but the squeal. They can’t catch that, “so it is wasted. Funny thing what they do with the biood. It is all caught in a great tank, and after it clots is carted off toa stamping house, where powerful ma- chines are busy stamping it into buttons. Yes, buttons of blood area novelty. It is all done at one stamp of the big dies, and it was found that they wear remarkably | well. They are distinguished by their pe euliar red color.”"—New York Sun, Antiquity of Embroidery. Embroidery has a creat antiquity and an authentic record extending back to the | Phrygians, but the Sidonians excelled in | the art, and itis mentioned in 1491 B.C. The first embroidery machine is said to | have been invented by John Duncan of | Glasgow in 1804.—Washington Star. A Railway Manager Says: “In reply to your question do my | children object te taking Scott’s Emul- | sions, I say No! on the contrary, they are | fond of it and it keeps them pictures of | health,” Hexpreps of Jadies in ill health have | been or are being restored to health and } strength by the use of Hawker’s Tonic | it has become the great and popular | family remedy. USE SKOA’S DISCOVERY, the great | Blood and Nerve Remedy. eeenee Physicians Ey ponsr Thein. and we GUARANTEE them to Corr, (or money refumiecd } Mrs. Elmer B. Miliett, %, O, Box £11, Livermore Falls, Maine. SALT RHEUM and all diseases of the BLoop & Skin. Skoda’s Discovery, Skoda’s German Ointment and Skoda’s German Soap, are specially adapted to cure inherit- ed and chronic diseases. Mrs. Millett writes: ‘I have had Salt Rheum ever since I could remember; tried many remedies, but received no benefit until I took Skeda’s Discovery. Skoda’s Cures. My husband says it will cost too much to board me if I take any more of Sko- da’s Discovery. Skoda’s Little Tablets cure sick headaches constipation and dyspepsia. 50 in a box, 35¢ MEDICAL ADVICE FREE. SKODA DISCOVERY GO., LTO., WOLFVILLE, N.S, Trade For sale by all druggists. sup | plied by W. R. Watson; Charlottetown P.E.f Have You. Anything To Print +t Lae. BRING IT TO Us ALD WE WILL PRINT IT Promptly, In Good Style, At Lowest Prices, TRY US. The Examiner Pub, Co London House, Queen Street, CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E., ISLAND Dear Sox,— Yours to hand yesterday, It gives me great pleasure in | sending you acheque for $100. /Thanks to Prowse Bros. & Co. 'They have done the people of this country more good and saved them more money than any firm that ever started | business in Charlottetown. I] am glad yeu are buying your Furnishings and Carpets from men you can depend on. They | won't misrepresent an article to make a sale. You spoke about me recommending any- one who might want a Carpet to trade there. It would be impossible for me to tell any- one who has not already heard ot Messrs. Prowse Bros. & Co. Why, your sisters, your cousins and your aunts all trade there. They say their store is like a fair on market days. Crowds of thankful buyers are found pressing their way up to the counters to have a share in the bargains which they daily offer. Good bye. From your loving FATHER. gHNSON' 4NopyYNe LINIMENT ynerikeE ANY THE, Tor INTERNAL a3 EXTERNAL use by Im i810 Oid F selene Think Of It. Yume Susans ration after Generation have used and blessed Every Traveler should have a bottle in his satchel, F Every Sufferer timc curiam Eltie Action Checiony Mertes bane a Soreness in Body or Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, will find in this old Anodyne relief and speedy cure. ‘8 Should have Johnson Every Mother sscdyne tininentin the Sore Thi Tousilitis, Colic, Cuts, Bruises, and Pains tiable eo Seamer in = famil witheee Summer notice. Delays may cost a life. Relieves all Comngtatate Nike ic. Price, 35 cts. ; tles,®2 Express L8. Johnson & When we assert that Dodd’s Ae few Kidney Pills Seen, Cire Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed by the testimony of all who have used them. TH «ff CURE TO STAY CURED. ists or mail on receipt of price, . L. A. Smith & Co., Torenta, es yn Pre A IS 1 ¥ = nin An aplication it : ve SN _— + ee risechangtancee waiver Sek, oh eee Sost.T Swe I ee é % 22S AEP AAR ALE POTN AMER At POM IH St aS oe a RR Re se a aa ae ZZ