: " THE —_ “This is 5 eas L fi ce, satin Pree Hen Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free,’ ‘Ruane, , VOL EARLE FT EN OY LT BY CONVICTS. CHURCH BU Gve of the Sights of Great Britain's Pe- nal Settlement, CHARLOTTEs/WN P. E. | , Reading Room Pee. ba oe Heuse of — ons ISLAND, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, In the stony fastnesses of Portland’s ne rugged isle, or, rather, promcntory~-in whose penal s ttlement the notorious Ja- ez Balfour is at present expiating his sp misdeads---there is a sight which touvists = 7 often over! FH The beautiful garrison Church of St. with mosaics which were inserted by an Peter's is convict work throughout, the exception only of the colored in the rerecos, Italian artist Portland stone, which St. Paul’s cathedral, the law courts, the monument, Westminster bridge and the banqueting room at Whitehall have the same been built. St. Peter’s is situated just outside the prison domains and is for the use of the line regiment stationed at Verne cita- del, the highest point in the island. The interest attaching to such a build- ing is heightened by the circumstances that the verger—an ex-warder of Portland prison—can tell you whose work is repre- sented in particular parts. The border round the porch and the mosaic pavement of the sanctuary are the delicate handi work of Constant Kent, the lady of gentle birth who murdered her stepmother and! was induced to confess her crime by a Brighton clergyman. The stone pulpit, the body of which is in one piece, was erected by the Irish Fenians. The fount at the door and the lecturn in the center were chiseled by young Whitechapel thieves, who proved to be such exception- ally skillful artisans that it was a pity they ever took to thieving. This wild cor- ner of England contains a practically in- exhaustible supply of the famous white stone, and as many of the quarries are owned by the government the Portland convicts are employed to work them. They can be seen at work by the visitor almosi any day. Ten ora dozen of them will be tugging a rope attached toa trolley, on which some huge mass of stone is being | borne along a narrow lineof rails, and the | scene forcibly reminds one of a famous picture in which Egyptian slaves are de- picted quarrying stones for the temples and palaces of that ancient empire.—Lon- don Mail Lachrymose Joy. The two men had passed a couple of hours in the house of commons and one speaker had been talking all the time. “I can’t stand this any longer,’’ said the first one. ‘Let’s come out of it.” “Oh, I enjoy it,’ cheeks. ‘‘I never heard anything that re- minded me so much of my poor, dear wife.’’—London Tit-Bits. Roumanian mothers tie red ribbons around the ankles of tneir children to pre- serve them from harm, while Esthonian yothers attach bits of asafetida to the necks of their offspring. The Congressional library comprises over 740,000 books, 250,00 pamphlets and about 300.000 numbered periodicals. W2I0D'Ss PIOSPIiODINs The Greut Engiish Remedy. eo Sie Packages Guarantecé to ppt > ai promptly and permanently e eure all forms of Nervous ‘ Weakness, Emissions,Sperm atorrhen, Impotency and a’ fects of Abuse or Excesses wy PAE be 3 mial Werry, Ewcessive UWS er of Tobvac.o, Opium or Stim Befors a T+ tant fs, whic’: soon lead to In firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave, Has been preseribed over 35 years in thousands of cases; Is the only Seliab'e and Honest hedicine know. Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if he offers some s3 medicit.e in piace of this, *nclose price r,and we will send by return weil, Price, One will g~wnt, six wils cure. Pamphlets free to any acdreaa, The Wood Company, Wincsor. Ont... Canada, Sold in Charlottetown be Grcrge E Hoghes, Drogyist. 4% Sere rp: a nd Afte worth! in lett« one package, ¢1; six, ¢5. how is were can we get a suitabie Xmas resent tur the ieast mouev. Below will [ foucd a jiet of a few of our cut prices Senrou only, whieh will as tbe time for the Holiuav enable von to decide ai ouve, 8 DOW Ss jurt Eight dav, balr herr, cathedral goog, «trixis g Clocks, for $3.60 tilver Cake baskets, (quadruple plate), 2.15 Yapkin ti nge, 50¢ up + poon Holders and P ickle Dis hes, 1.50 4 Waltbon, Wateh with Chaiu (good timekeepers) 7.50 Ladies’ Genuine Gold Filled Walth am W - h, 15 cd L. dies’ Lrng Chains, warranted ive ver -s, 3.43 Levies’ t olid Gold Gem Rings. (heavy) 2.00 Brooches, Cuff Buttons, Stick Pine, Chains, Cherm, etc, at extraordinary prices, R pairirg promptly attended | 7 by a competent person. Watches and Jewelry. Ic. c.cuRY The church is, of course, of material of suid the second, a | widower, as the tears streamed dowr his | Clocks, at the office ‘ CHEAP Uh SPel CASH TOW BET ensati HAY BALE Wik Cut 103 feet; gauge 14, at the CITY - HARDWARE oo+-QUEEN STREET.,.. Pronounced best quality by all who have used it. R. B. NORTON STORE J. F. Norton Proprietor ——— —— ee ne ie are Fully Equine For the Holiday Season with a complete stock of a tines of Footwear. We have all kinds of Shoes; low Shoes, honest Shoes dancing Shoes ana Temperance Shoes (that don’t get tight). Slippers in great variety, Rubbers, Ovetshoes Gaiters, etc. Bis Values, Low Prices, Honest Goods, Bast Style Will make almost any one tapyy. We are more than happy to think that we have pleased you in the past, and know that we can do so row better than ever. Weeks & VWrarren | ———— Se ] — saa-_soapreasnemenpmaspeeaaaptagr einai OL LLL ~ . _——~ os Home at Night— BY YOUR OWN FIRESID Ladie See \ A peir of our Fel: Slippers will add to your com‘ort. Felt Boots we are clearing at reduced prices this mont. pone Laced Felt Boots at 90c. W. H. Stewart & C0 TO DEBTORS The debtors of “Mckay Wool-t len Company” are hereby noti- fied to make immediate pay- ment of their re-.pective debts of tne Company, in Charlottetovn; at which | place due acquitsances can be given. Debtors failing to act on this notice will be sued, without resoect to persons, after the expiration of one week from Cate Ttalian Ware House Beals’ Cor - Cor. Grafton and Ct. Geo. Sts North side Queen Squarre Opening To-day ‘Jules Robin Modicinal Brandy JOW & DAVIES, Wholesale Wine Merchants. For Sale. The snbecriber offers for sale the fal- lowing properties, formerly owned by the late Richard Pillman, at French River, New London, l. Afaria contain ng 25 acres, all cleared and in a good stave of cultivation, sloping to the south. 7 2. A plot eontaining 2 acres, with good dwelling house covtaining 11 rooms and a pew bara and wagon shed, thereon. There is also ther*on a store, eomplete with shelving, etc., and a granary. 3. Ove acre of land, acrovs ihe road, opposite the store, and building lot at the cra-s roads, near the store. | These properties are well situated in one of the finest localities in Prince Ed- ward Island for busivess or farming purooses dwelling bouse and Jot at Kensington The house contains 11 reoms, and ie iv geod repair Charlottetown, or to the owner, LAVINIA J. PILLMAN. jav 20 s.j.3mo Ayer, Mars (Graduate vf the Emersen College of Oratory, Boston). oratory. Apply to Miss Lefurgey at L. J. Sentner’s, Weymouth Street. janl4—135 l 1 Thesubseriber also cifers for sales For further particalars apply to Messrs. | McLeod, Morron & McQuarrie, Setieiaiok MISS LEFURGEY Will be at home to a limited number of pupils in physical culture and | 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE | Trave Marks DESIGNS CopyRiGHTs &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. rae taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir- enjation of any scientific journal, Terms, $3 a ear; four ane $1. Sold byall newsdealers. UNN & C0, 2610rseten, New York Branch Office. 625 F St.. Washington, D. C, Beautiiul That is what Everyone szys of our Display of SILVERWARE ~*" New stock just received. {The latest noveltie@ in artistic designs. QUALITY A | G. H. TAYLOR Chlottetow.n LEGAL CARD. ‘Mathieson & Bentley Barristers, Solicitors, Ete OFFICES— ; | Cameron Block, Charlottetown Main Street, Georgetown. MONEY TO LOAN J, A. Maruizsos, W._F. Benrrey, Ch’town, Geo’town. jan3—law&wEx&Pat3mos; wJo.& Watch- man 3mos. 1898. sometenomasomamennamengemcensrassnennt (i nen ~. DAILY EXAMINER | a *, tty a Single Copies two cents, —_— -_—— Fe NO 40 CAPTAIN JACK’S RIFLE. ‘ie YTational Museum Has the Weapon With Which Canby Was Killed. One of the most interesting relics which has een presented to the National museum .or a long time is the rifle which Captain Jack, the notorious Modco Indian, used in his fight in the lava beds of southern California, and it is thought to be the identical weapon with which General Canby was murdered while holding a par- ley with the chief under a flag of truce. The riffe was cached in the lava beds during the Modoe war, or just before the capture of Captain Jack. It was brought ut by Modoc Joe in the fall of 1896, and presented to Charles Pitt, the Indian in- terpreter of Warm Springs, Or. By him a , it was given to M. C. Davis, special ex- aminer of the pension bureau, and sent by him here from Warm Springs. The weapon is still in a fair state of preservation, and is of rather unusual form. It has two barrels so arranged that they can revolve, one being under the oth- er when ready to fire, one stock with trig- ger and hammer doing work for the two. The clamp apparatus has been broken, so that the barrels revolve now and could not be fired on this account. The ball used to fit the barrel is of about haif an ounce. The barrels are heavily rifled, and the weapon is evidently capable of doing great execution. The garrels are unusually long, and the whole must weigh 16 or 18 pounds In the stock, now minus paint, as if gripped often by the iron fingers of the coffee colored desperado, is a cavity, over which is a brass lid. In the box thus formed were kept the “patches’’ and grease, the former to make the bullets fit closely in the barrel and the grease to put on them, so they could slide easily down the cavity. The rifle is a little rusty, but not nearly as much so as might be expect- ed from its long exposure. Engraved on one side of the barrel is the nams of the maker, Jehn Shuler of Liverpool, Pa. The weapon is regarded as an object of great curiosity. It has not yet been p!aced on exhibition.—Washing- ton Star. A Royal Martyr to Etiquette, In Spain the etiquette to be observed in the royal palaces wes carried to such length as to make martyrs of their kings. There is a historic instance. Philip III was gravely seated by the fire. The firemaker of the court had kindled so great a quan- tity of wood that the monarch was nearly suffocated with heat, and his grandeur would not suffer him to rise from the chair. The comestics could not presuma to enter the apartment because it was against the etiquette. At length the Mar- guis do Totat appeared, and the king or- dered him to damp the fires, but he ex- } ‘ cused himself, alleging that he was forbid- den by the etiquette to perform such a fune- tion, for which the Duc d’Usseda ought to be called upon, as it was his business. The duke was gone out. ‘Lhe fire burned fiercer, and the king endared it rather than derogate from: his dignity. But his blood was heated to such a degree that he was seriously ill the next day. A violent fever succeeded which carried him off in the twenty-fourth year of his age.---London Star. A Considerate Tramp. Magistrate (to tramp)—You met this lady on the highway and demanded alas of her, and she refused you. **Yes, your honor.”’ “ And then you threatened’ her life.” “Oh, no! IJ didn’t do that.’’ “You seized your bludgeon with both hands and said, ‘Madam, you must die.’ You did that, didn’t you?”’ **Yes, but I didn’t threaten her life. [I said that she must die, and so she must some time or other. We all must die some day. I didn’t say when she mustdie. [ think a great deal about death and all that, and’'’— ‘*Six months’ hard labor.’’—~Nuggets. RVs wovesssseuesss ; Lauached ? on the Sea of Uncertainty. Our aceounts® for 1897 are ont. Yours may noi be among the un- ce*taii: ones. Likely not, We Don’t Want , ToRetn The Dry Dock, You payus. We pay others. you can’t pay all et:once, p some, Ifyou can’t pay any alitellus, Come and see us any wry. Yours with a large . . stock of lum- TeLernoxe 181 JAMES BARRETT, Connolly’s Wharf. ~ee 2 OOS 44% @2 OO Os © O2@ @ 5304 fe ce ® *. @ &4060866 FOR SALE, An excellent farm, situated on the zouth side of Murray River. It contains | 78 acres of land, about 25 of which are cleared, and four acres of the best alder mud. Also nupwarde of $100 worth of fence. poles aud scantling iogs. The whole will be sold for the sum of $250.00, For further informaticn apply to JOSEPF DICKS, febl4w Charloitetowa. _— ea a ” es I INNS 5 Bi i gp + A ete Ah sradieed ce ne ee Fe nae pte a bos "7 are? we