FOR JANUARY, CALENDAR 1894, e Nx ¢ day, 10h 64.9m »p m h fe Quar l4th day, 3b $6.7 m,p.m, § W Moon, 2ist day, 10h 58.9 a.m., N E . ay, Oh 383m. p.m,N W v W “a | Su | H irs ; me water { i nm h m | after’p ~- _ ’ 749) 418 6 34 . ' F slay | & ow) Ute Vedneada 49 20 8 28 TERMS : Four Dollars a Year , 49} zit 9 ist iv 22 9 Se ee mec nae : | Soa 63 i 10 35 4s rr en eT ’ ae ‘ 1] 2) 12 38] acne —_— =o SER 4 e ’ vr x 7 {© nea * TTETOWN, P. E. ISL | | 14s) NEW SERIES. ieag © ARLOTTE N, P. E. ISLAND, 4 is 29 morn | - “2 & | ' et! iO ay ti | 29 | 02 Oi ¥ ‘ 0 0 Se } ; i > l ] 4a} | Satu ta ws | at) 2 | SS x2 ounpSsSA | ; 6 4) 10 OG MOmt pase ror . oy | ge] 9] 61] 7 ee | av 2 i0 7 3s } : : ] Wee 66: Hig : ei { , 2} 41) 8 43 : ie ih Op es aA}! & of Oe ; oh tthe Sone : Oey ea|| |i HE AIL | < ; : . | Ped Chg j | oa | 4a ira | aly OB ke S| Minds | | ae } ; 4 oe 4 : ae tae f; Wr. , l 13 ti j I : IS 15 | aft A MINT i ‘a Ao ME @ HEH? i i 7h 68046. 1 : Axa te) WALA ate ° - e Aa, raion ‘ 50 15 oer ~— } ay 5 yh 23 aps, i = iv > a2 ; ~ , , > 5 4 hy } i - « py Lene i 730,457, 7 2] Vi i\ | a V4 ‘Aas | ti 1 pV iP Ze) 4 MF | ~ » *s | | Aili AML A e\ kr i WAAL Y ' Tux Leaprve Dirty NewsParen [ee Sa *. E. ISuanp, i A { ee afternoon, from the office « AN | : PCBLIsMING CoMPANY, in th £ ‘ ) ‘ House Building, Queen Street ] j fi | RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION jt] (IN ADVANCE) eA ; we Veanr ‘ ss. hn | Six M wre 2 > | i Ts c& Mo.rn . i One Mowre a ! Sent post pald to any part of Canada or t! i nited States ADVERTISING RATES ' For « sd vertisernents which are orderr i for yw two weeks the charge is é j cents he first insertion, and ' enta for acn mntinuation Rate cards a ‘urnished oo application at the office. Spec: ; tract prices at @ reduced rate are quot ; for advertisements four inches in sive « ; jarger, which are to ran for three months + & No special notices inserted anless paid & a era of lu cents per line, and under n- stances will such paid notices appes ti xal CcoOLUMmnh. Boecla! discounts made on all advertie m s mnected with Church Fairs, Bazaar Picuics, ote 6 notices will be inserted wir uless the regular rate of lv cents pe s paid at THs Examtner is considered by o its and Manufacturers to be the lead ing newspaper in P. E. Isiand, and cons quentiy the most valuable advertising mediun through whieh to make their announcemen public, is abundantly prowed by the fact tha order accommodate our advertisers w ha been compelled to enlarge the paper t it® present size, THel ¥ Exawrver is for sale by the fo , y genta : liason, Post O * ce, Charlottetow: Malpeque Road, Lower Spring Park Road, flo rafton Street, _ ov. Wat-r and Prince St. appell Prince Street, Ka-aar Store, yueen street, ‘ ter & Co., Queen Street. " s any. News Stall, P. E. 1. Rallwa:. an ou Lhe 21s M.& 1 Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore Sun wmersicde Harry MeFarian-. Souris. Hon. D>. orden, torgeiown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. GM. Clarke, Alberton Chaa A. Gillis, Grwell EES EE , . . The Weekly Examine: » Ie iseued every Friday morning from the publixhers’ office, [t is made up of matte which has appeared In the Dally editions, anc {4 a first-class weekly newspaper—interestin: end full of the latest news. The subscription for Tuk Weexty Exam WER, post paid to any part of@Canada or th United dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as give bove for Tue Daily EXAMINER. Ceve “States, js OF DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician and Surgeon Medical Department of th 1 City of New York, late and the New Yor ving-in Hospital, New York City. oOFFICI North Side Queen Squar OPPOSITE POST OFFICE R-<idence-—Near Corner of King and Quee: “4treeta, Charitottetown. ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT’ AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES. Queen Street, Cher\«tetor siesTroom a CL LG LO Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFA> The Greatest ~ Rheumatic and Neuralgia Curt Of the Age Be HONS Re |W" PAINGURE “| | piGtomtcent ie coemaap 4 | °,/ AAS SE Tee § MANUFACTURED ONLY BY ¢ UE HAWKER MEDICINE COV ID AB SO THE DAILY EXAMINE got a FLOOD! We. Yon have heard of the good man who prayed for RAIN and JD tT the World’s Fair, 1 chat is what happened with THE EXAMINER’S Portfolics of ther words, THE MAGIC CiTyY ! WE KNEW IT WOULD GO, because it is the Best. the Largest, the Greatest, th. trandest, the Most Beautiful, the Most “ onderfal of all! Containing over 300 Sple iid Photographic Views and Historical Descriptions of the World's Fair and the Midway 4aisance. hey all want it and must have it. Nothing like it! Nothing equals it! Don't Fail to Get a Sample Number of “The Magic City.” All who have seen it are astonished at its marvellous beauty. It is away abov aid beyond everything else relating to the World’s Fair. Its GRAND PHOTOGRAPH, iN NATURAL COLORS are a surprise to everybody. ONLY 0-E COUPON &: QUiX=~D. “THE MAGIC CITY” will be published in sixteen consecutive weekly parts © tumbers, each containing sixteen to twenty splendid Photographs of the World’s Fa ind the Midway Plaisance, with accurate Historical Descriptions. 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Single Copies Two Cents oo VOL 33.—-NO. 170. | THE OLD ROMAN SENATE, *| {ts Origin, Growth and Process of Gravita- i tion to the Eternal City. | We read in many of our histories of Rome that Romulus founded the senate iid gave to it its original functions, This would be a good capstone to his glory, but infortunately for him the senate was a vimitive institution, common to all the Latins, and reached back to a period long interior to the separation of the stocks. ' In the comparatively early history of the } Latin race there was a natural division in- o tribes or tribal families—not indepen- nt social units, but integral parts ofa iitical community held together by a iutual observance of law, legal redress, nd united action in offense and defense, \ fixed local center was essential, at which 1e people could assemble to make laws nd to defend themselves against a com- non foe. The situation most favorable jor this “rpose would be some elevated position, aich wes called “capitolium,’’ from caput,’’ the bead; hence cur word cap- ol. From this eminence the cognate tribes could be summoned by signals, usu- vir the lowering of a flag. This custom f keeping a flag waving while no danger is near continued for several centuries t Rome, until it was considered a guar- ntee of peace and barmony, and all felt ‘cure as long as the flag floated from the aniculum hill. Itis interesting to note a this conection that a flag may be cen above our houses of congress as long aus these bodies are in session. At this point, in the earlier days, a | targe encampment weuld be formed, and sthe sessions became more frequent the | imp would take on permanency and fin- ly become a city—-the chief city in the | ‘nton, the capital. As the population reased and industrial avocations grew yeas deemed best to have a fixed time for embling, and so the cighth day was t as the regular time for meeting for in- reourse, sacrifices and the transaction of /usiness. By and by the cantons became inter- | ‘enendent, and questions of common weal ose, resulting in a league or confedera- on of clans. Asthis time the council] 1et first with one canton, then with nother, having in each case asa presiding ilicer the chief of the clan within whose erritory lay the meeting place. This vandering finally led to confusion, and by ommeon consent a ceniral point, Mount \lba, became the sole meeting place, and {| thus Rome was the capital.—Peterson's Magazine, The Glant of the Land Crabs. The titan of the land crab family is Sirgus latro, commonly called the ‘purse | rab,’’ a resident of the islands of the In- | ian and South Pacific oceans. Mature | { idults are frightful looking creatures, nll 2 icbes across the back, capable of rearing mck and pinching a man hip bigh when | wting in defense, which they are not slow to do if molested. The pinchers are of } ‘course on the first pair of legs, which are | .arge and powerful; the second and third } ovirs are armed with but single claws, | ; ; while the foarth pair—which are much | smaller than either the second or third | und not cue-tenth as strong as the ‘‘pinch- | rcarriers’’—are provided with a pair of eak little nippers. A fifth pair of legs, ut so small as to simply be useless rudi- ments, are attached to the body near the abdomen, Although not identical with the cocoa- nut crab, described in ‘‘Notes for the Cu- ious’’ on Dee. 24, 1892, its habits are sim- lar to those of that curious species of the crustacea. Like the real cocoanut crab, it climbs the cocoanut tree and cuts off the nuts with its powerful pinchers. When a sufficient number have been secured he slowly and carefully descends to the ground, pulls the husks from the nuts and, after striking them over a stone or root, devours the meat at leisure.—St. Louis Republic. ons Sixty Letters a Day. A correspondent is kind enough to send ns the following letter froyn the late Sir ,ndrew Clark, written to a patient on Feb. 15, 1890. It shows what an over- whelmingly busy man he always was: ‘Dear Mr. ——, I regret exceedingly that you have suffered so much inconvenience at my hands, and have had such trouble to get an answer to your letters. This is how it has happened; and from this you will see how terrible a burden letters be- come to a man occupied as Iam. I receive over 60 letters a day, and even on casy days it is all but impossible to keep head with them. But sometimes it is quite im possible, and letters must give way to see ing patients. Until yesterday I had a country consultation every day. No let ter was answered on those days, and the number rose to over 800, On returning { had these letters on one hand and unseen patients on the other. In such a conflict patients must conquer and letters must succumb. The mere reading of these let ters, sometimes badly written and often crossed, is no small labor, and I am toiling atit now. Here isa prescription for the tonic referred to, with my renewed apolo- gies.’’~-Pall Mall Budget. Egyptian Poses. The first thing that a western observer re- marks in the pose of Egyptian drawings of the human figure is that it is an impos- sible combination according to our ideas. We see the fave in profile, the eye full length, the chest in front view and the legs sidewise. But before we condemn this as contrary to nature it is well, as Profess or W. M. Flinders Petrie suggests, to se« what the attitude of a modern Egyptian is and bow far our notions are correct. To avoid all ideas of posing for the sub ject, he selects the figure of a boy from a large group that was photographed with out any special aim bya Cairo dealer. In the kneeling figure are seen the profile of the face,the eye full, the chest in front view and the legs sidewise. Everything that we have heard condemned as unnatu- ral and impossible in the ancient sculp- ture is seen in the modern native, without any constraint, when simply taking an easy position.—-Popular Science Monthly. Corrected the General. The story comes from Washington of a senator’s wife who entertained at dinner General Blank. <Asall the world knows, General Blank prides hims:lf even more upon his knowledge of dining than upon | his skill in warfare, Imagine his emo- tions, therefore,when at a certain point in | the elaborate menu his hostess leaned for | ward and sweetly called out to him, | “General, J know you will forgive me for | telling you, but you’re using the wrong fork!" | A Hint to Housekeepers. It is a bad plan in putting paper on pan- gry shelves to use newspapers with love | stories in them. Send your daughter there for butter, and you will find her half an hour later perched on a flour barrel and almost standing on her head trying to read a story.—Atcbison Globe. i For Over Fifty Years. | Aw Opp Axp Wert Trikp Remepy.— | Mra. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup _ has | beed used for over fifty years by millions ! of mothers for their children while teeth- nig, with perfect snccess. It soothes the } child, softens the gums, ajlays the pain, | eures the colic, and is the best remedy for | Diarrhoea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists ia every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind.—m. w, f. wkly—] y USE SK OTA’S DISCOVERY, the great | blood and Nerve Remedy. feet in length and from 8 to 14 | Its value is | HER MATRIMONIAL CFFOATS, They Were Varied and interesting and Mom Became Boss at Last. A southern Jady of an inquiring turn of mind asked her old colored mammy whether she considered marriage a fai}- ure. ‘“*‘Well, chile,’’ replied Mom Lucy, as- suming a judicial air, ‘‘dat ¢ epen’s on de kine of man you gits. 1 has had ’speri- | ence with fo’ bnsban’s, and I tel’s you, lioney, dey ain’t no countin on de men | folks. In co’tin time dey is sweet and sof’ us de bes’ m’lases, but come time you's ' mawried laike es pot dey’ll corree’ you } wid de flatiron. | “My fust was a peart, laikely younr | buck, mighty souple in de j’ints w’en de was dancin to de quarters, but wuk time be plum crippled up with de rheumati or some cder miz’ry. W’en he tuk sic! sho’ ‘nuff, he daid befe’ hesho’ bisself da be warn’t perks ‘possum. Cato was d nex’ one. e waa de masterfullest, onda ciousest critter, dey warn’t no foolishnes ‘bout him. He cud wuk in de day a: dunce ali de night, an w'en be drored d&« bow ‘cross de fiddle he cud mek de boys ar i gals dance de night fro’, or set ‘em wail en an moanin with de mo’nin tunes. Bu lord! Mistis! he was dat jnilous dat h. ‘spec’ me to be def an dumb an biin to al) de werl but hiséel; dat’sa huccome de dis greemen’s with de Baptis’ preacher. Cat: me got kiil, ’cause de preacher was o. yuickes’ with him razzer. **Den 1 mawrle de preacher, an I nebe- sorry bet onc’t, an dat was fus, las’ an iu de time. To see dat man a-stan’: ip in de chu’ch, a-trompin up an down c | rost’um, bis han’s outstretch’, de tears: droppin fom his eyes; his voice a-waili n de words a-fallin f'om his mouf laik oney f'om de honeycomb, you'd t’ink | | -aidy for bis hebenly crown. But he I: } wway de sweetness with his stu’ clothe: ' uo de pickaninnies’d a beap ruther dat ¢ bil cotch 'em dan dere paw. Bimel e cotch de feber, an I ’clar to goodne: iistis, dat de preacher’s fune’al was «© wyfulles’ occasion sence we'uns’ maw vidge. ‘ “Well, Lucy,’’ said her mistress, ‘‘] would not have thought you wouid marr) { .gain.”’ ‘‘Laws, honey, dere was two reasons ‘ust, I had done got in de habit ob bei. arried, and nex’, seein de waysI ha ‘en bossed by the fust t’ree, it sholy see1: d laike it come time fur me to do son: ossin my own self, so I Jay low t’well some across de quietes’, meekes’ nigga! nde kentry an mawried him, dry so’’~ And a few minutes later Mom Lucy cou) ave been heard assuring her long sufic ng ‘‘fourth’’ that Le was ‘the onariest wuthlessest niggah on de face of de livin worl.’”’—New York Jeurnal. Lecognived the Keys. { The proprietor of a traveling circus an- nounced that on a certain night a traine: elephant would play the Russian hymn o1 t piano with its trunk. When the ever iw came, the circus was crowded to tl oof with an expectant public. After ti sual performances had been gone throu uur men carried in a cottage piano, whic ey placed in the center cf the aver Vhen the jutelligent animal was brou: ), he walked slowly three times aro 1¢@ ring, and then amid the keenest exciu nent advanced to the piano. With a slight movement of his trunk b ypened the keyboard, but scarce had bh one s0 when a sadden change came ovi iwsappearance. His eye dilated with ra; ud fear, he lifted his trunk ia the aii nd then with a wild ecream of terror b ushed out of the arena. The proprieto if the circus and the elephawt's keeper he! i shortand hurried consultation, and the. hey, too, left the ring. After a few moments the circus proprie or entered again and annennced with rc ret that the performance could not tak lace. The fact was, be said, that the ek hant had recognized in the keyboard o he instrument a portion cf the tusks o is long lost mother, who had fallen a prey o the ivory bunters of Africa.—Londou “illion. The Ticket Told a Tale. Jenkins had left college. He had lived -ather fast, but now he meditated matri- uony, and settling down into the respec abilities. As an old aunt died and lei im a little money, what was {more nat iral than that he should redeem some « be many articles of clothing which bh iad «unfortunately deposited with hi incle in the days of hisnecessity? Ly ra nishap, however, that esteemed «a: bliging relative forgot to remove tl ickets, and this led to an embarrassi: ontretemps. Full of kindness and pride i er dear boy, his mother, on his return t ne patenral mansion, insisted on unpack og his boxes. In doing so, she first dis overed an overcoat with an ominous look ng label upon it. “What a nuisance!’’ said Jenkins, ir answer to her expression of surprise ‘They must have forgotten to take off th. ticket at that ball at Danceaway’s, whe { left my overcoat in the anteroom.”’ Mamma was Satisfied, but when, shorti> afteward, she found a pair of tronse bearing a similar label, imagine the puz zied surprise with which she exclaimed ‘But surely, my darling, you didn’t leav« these in the auteroom too?’’—London Tit Bits. ee A Vaccination Party. The little daughter of a prominent phy sician issued invitations for a novel party } xerhaps the only one of the kind whic: ius ever been given. The mothers of t! children in the families which the doct attends have been made anxious by r ports of the existence of smal)pox, so number of them requested him to vacc | nate their children immediately. Whe | he went home and mentioned it to bis wif« sbe proposed they should have a little par ty and vaccinate their children and the oth ; ersat the sametime. When the invites | tion reached a house where there are thre: little brothers, the eldest, wiser than th: others, promptly said: *‘ Please, mothe: send my regrets right away. I don’t wan. to go. I know what vaccinate means, anc it hurts.’’ Sugar coating the pill with the name ‘‘a party’’ did not fool him,—Lou- isville Courier Journal). The Most Popular Novel. What is the most popular novel among American readers? A poll of all the prin- cipal libraries in the United States, which | appears in The Forum, shows that ‘Da vid Copperfield” leads in popularity every work of fiction, The most popular nine novels in the order of their popularity ar: as follows:‘* David Copperfield,’’ Ivanhoe,’’ ‘The Scarlet Letter,’’ ‘Uncle Tom’s Cab- in,’’ ‘‘Ben-Hur,’’ ‘‘Adam Bede,”’ ‘ Vani- ty Fair,’’ ‘Jane Eyre,’’ ‘The Last Days of Pompeii.”’ This is a complete refuta- tion of the notion sometimes expressed, that Dickens and Scott and Thackaray have lost their hold. Our own greatest novelist, Nathaniel Hawthorne, comes bigh up in the list, and‘‘Uncle Tom’s ee aypears likely tc hold ite own for time, ; REAL MERIT is the character- istic of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It | cures even after other preparations fail. | Get Hood’s and ONLY HOOD’S. | Nursing Mothers and delicate children | should make free use of Puttner’s Emul- | flesh productor. | Crergyman, students and overtaxed busi- | ness men will find a wonderful | ative agent in Puttners Emulsion, which } contains Phosphorous (brain food) in the | moet aseimilable form, eens sion, the best Jung healer, strengthuer, and | recuper> | Completely Before, [ could deo ne work. ee ee ee j ! A Ges We fore Simply Awful Worst Case of Scrofula the Doctors Ever Saw Cured by ROOD'S SARSAPARILLA. “ When I was 4 or 5 years o}d I had a scro?- ulous sore on the middle finger of my left hand, which got so bad that the doctors cut the finger off, snd later took off more than half my hand. Theu the sore broke out on my arm, came out on my neck and face on }oth sides, nearly destroying the sight of one eye, alse on my right arm. Doctors said it was the Worst Case of Scrofula they eversaw. It wassimply awfal! Live years ago I began to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Gradually I found that the sores were begin- ping to heal. I kept on till I had taken ten bottles, tem dollare! Just think of what a return | gol for taat investment! A theue sand per cent? Yes, many thousand. For the past 4 years I have had no sores. Work ali the Time. I know ne@ what to say strong enough to express my grat~ itude to Hood’s Sarsaparilia for my perfeos eure.” GrorGE W. Turner, Farmer, Gal- way, Saratoga county, N. Y Hooo’s P:itg do not weaken, but aid digestion and tene the stomach. Try them. 25 LIFE'S SUNSET ALL AGLOW. Wife and Patrick Darling, aged 78 yrs. hardships our lives had been filled with happi- ness until the fall of 91, when we were attacked with dyspepsia, sleep- lessness and their attendant evils. SKODA’S DISCOVERY CURED ws, and we ate again floating down life’s river will all bright smooth before ” iii s SK09. GS > Vor sae by all druggists. Trade sap fied by W. R. Watson; Charlotretewn > His MARY pousd, stUp oO, STAWVPER BLOCK Instructions given in the various brancn f Drawing and Painting. LINIMENT yrelke 2 WY OTHE R for INTEDNAL as EXTEDMALes 0” Originated by an Oid Family Paysician Ch nk Of It. Bo ecm ae Bier ation after Generation have used and blessed it, ery Traveler should have a bottle in his satChel, Ever ufferer From _ Rhcumatian, het y Su Diphtheria,Goucke Densch Bow aitls, Asthana, Cholera-Morbus, Diarrhoea, Lameness, soreness In Boayor Limba, Seite Joints or Strains, vill Gad in this old Anodyne voles que speedy cure = uid have Johnson =very Mother Anodyne Liniment in the hoase for Croup, Colds, sore Throat, Tonsilitis, Colic, Cuts, Bruises, Cram ad Pains Hable to oceur fami) without tice. Delays may cost a life. alt Summer unplaints like magic. Price, 3 cta Se bor ws, 32. bxpress paid, L 8, Johnson & few Baby Wants It. Martin’s Cardinal Food FOR INFANTS AND INVALIDS. The most palatable food prepared, and is unequalled by any other preparation ofits kind. The best food and the best value, put up in one pound Tins, price 26 cts. per Tin. old Retail by all Druggistsand Gro cers and Wholesale by KERRY WATSON & CO. Propaicrona MONTREAL. a ; c js * } | me. a Sq LIVER OIL RA tlt) ghee | te 8, alatable as cream. © oils taste .ike others. In big bottles 6Oc, and 81.00. OF NORWEGIAN ine When we assert that Dodd’s we fw Kidney Pills wee’. Cure Backache, Dropsy. Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed by the testimony of ail who have used them. TH «¢ CURE TO STAY CURED. By a tragyists or mail on receipt of price, ge cent» . L. A. Smith & Co., Toronto, i omer > oe si oe on JE BLI AAS = apy ety rn. i a 6 4 a