seaescsc, M % > : 4 4 * THE The fact that “ SUNLIGHT ” has the largest sale of any Soap in the world; that it has been awarded ii Gold Medals for purity and ex- cellence; that it has been in use in Windsor Castle for over three years ; and that its manufacturers have been specially appointed Soap Makers to the Queen are sufficient guarantees that you can’t make a mistake by using “ SUNLIGHT SOAP.” DON’ Let another Wash-day go by without trying it. ° eeeee 4 = Refuse Cheap imitations y he tr ‘ events for , ita ix g t iP. E. Isla Nova Sk Uia® ar ee i¥iothers suffering with weakness and emaciation, who give little nourishment to babies,should : ‘Scott’s Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil and hypophosphites. It wil givethem strength and make their babies fat. Physicians, the world over, endorse it. Don't be deceived by Substitutes! + & Bowne Rallewitle 41) Droeriets. Me. £81 TO LET. rhe Brick Store on Queen Street, late'y spied by E. H. Norton & Co. Apply i office Of Trustees Connolly Estat WQneen Street ec tf—jan25 rm ERVOUS MIEN! NERVOU EN! EXMAUSTED VITALITY. — " Pree ure i £ st Manhood - Sof as a c nsul ats a ond afvtes PROVIDENT MPDICAL INSTI- hire ‘ ne Prosy is Saeco eo Though you Cough Don’t Despair! ¢ Many apparently hopeless cases $ have been cured by a course of AMPBELL’S WINE OF BEECH TREE CREOSOTE TRY IT! ; AT ALL DRUGGISTS. , K. CAMPBELL & CO., Montreal. e TO LET. A Cottage on Sidmy Street, . Contain pb five rooms and good cellar. Possess hon given on De ember L-t W. W. WELLNER 15 arson RELLS Make New, Rich B The le wee No cthn Ske! i ponit ure or ret ee!) mane t ' The | 1 B:0ntd wet Pes te the cost of a I f ville Fits) oute 1 a t nkfs > re 1 ining mt thoes tk ‘ ' bene using then Ulu at { ! vent wa r : “ é oR & JOHNSON & © Wink url. Jame tolutely cures the moet cases IREATMENTS have failed/even to relieve. wold gate ot G per package, oF ok foe Fe ot et NT seceipt of price by audressing THE JAMES MEDIUINI 2. Toroate, Unk. «= Write fur pampldes. Bold to Charlottetown by G. E. Hughes druggist TO LET. The Premises lately oceupied by Mr. George wr situate on Biduey Street, containing cht bedrooms, kitehen, dining room, shop nt room; good yard and stabling, ete. on immediately. Apply to fAMES F,. CURTIS. Yr? anced fre deel8 Grateful — Comlorting. Epps’s C pps s ocoa. BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By athorough knowledge «f the nat- ural laws which and nutriti« govera the operations of » and by a careful application of the properties of well-seleet- ea Cacoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our ’ a delicately flavored beverage whico may save us many heavy Jigestior ‘ é ui re: Kfact an | pp. doctors’ bills. It ia by the judicious use of | & constitution until strong such articles of diet that may be gradually tuilt up DAILY EXAMINER ° ° ore COMMON SALT, ite Valae as eo Fortil cor and Mow i Can Nest be Used, Salt is chemically composed of the metal sodium and the gas chlorine Chioride of sodium, when pure, con tains 60.68 per cent. of chlorine cand 39.52 cf sodium. Salt is found ia near ly all soils, in the ashes of all plants, and is necessary for animal life. It is very mucl the same as muriate of pot ash in its agricnitural character and uses, and can be substituted for it It hes been used in all ages snd countries asa manure, and acts not only asa but chemically as a feeder cf plants ve this latier regard ap nt. and in ¢ most efficient. It must be ‘ i and not applied directly ’ t The use of salt is par t remnnerative npon pearly mea tlows ltas eoss, in combination with i sere phospuate of lime, on wea 10s iB ia ey due tO a pecuilar Change Lae <i ‘ lints growing upon t 1. THe COND vely valucless herbs aii grasses (the :0 called sour grasses ? und are replaced by mor \ thie and more nutritiveones. 7 hese ' ts jertil zation can only be obtain t the cssary quantity of powdered uspli te of lime is also applie?. A ial ayplication per acre tay be re eorded to consist of 500 pounds of salt 0) pounds powdered phcsphate of wining 50 per cest. cf phos be cid fae proper time to apply 1. is iu tue fall. ‘bhe salt shouid in all liwnixed with the phosphat« Salt is beneticia “es De ve being applied wien addei tv the manure heap, ‘pine down the heat and prevent tog ins fermentation Salt is some times used to check vegetation. It is amploved not infrequently to hinder the rops, or rather to pre yom becoming too rank m rich soils or on soils too highly charged with nitrogenous manure, t has been noticed that dressings of salt and even of chloride (inuriate) of potash tendto make potatoes waxy rather tian mealy. Asa general rule, the percent age of starch in potatoes is diminished when the land has been fertilized with either muriate of soda or muriate of potash, and the yield of tnbers is apt to be diminished by their. presence in the soi! Chloride of potassium closely resem bles co nmon salt (chloride of sodium ia appearance, solubility in water, taste and action oa the soil. When fine it ontains 52.4 per cent. of potassinm and 47.6 ,.°r cent. of chlorine, more alkalins hase and less chlorine than salt. In re ference to chlorine as a fertilizer, very little hus been said. Its presence in a fertilizer has the effect of retarding the starch formaticn, an i:nportant fact to know, since the wealiness of the potato is due to its richness in starch. Sugar production is also decreased by chlorine Alxaline carbonates are far preferabk t» any form containing chlorine for us in mized manures for potatoes, saga; beets, fruits or any crops where the fur mation of starch or sugar is speciily im + € wrait growt.i Of Brain ¢ nll vent the stalks fy | enough to resist every tend er y to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies around us ready to attack wherever there isa weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves wel! forti fied by pure blood and a properly nourish ed frame.”—~Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in packets, by Grocers, labelled | tine, JAMES EPPS & CO., Homewpathic Chemists, London, En ei. STAMPS WANTED. OLD Canadian, United States’ and other tiamps, as used 25 to 40 years ago. For mane pay $1 to $5 each. are floating | portant Sulphate of potash is far preferable ; toany form containing chlorine for ns in mixed manures for potatoes, sngaz beets, fruits or any crop where the for mation of starch is specially important sad that the results sometimes froin th use of any potash salt, when used alone, are often due, not to any cirect feeding power but to their indirect: © ion in dis solving the plant food ingredients al ready in the soil, feeding the crop at the expense of the soil and net from their own resources, and that «eo nmon a lt or plaster would frequently do just as well lt appears that the form in which alkalies are applied to the soil greatly affects their in Chlorides and sul | phates are im a very inferior form to pr carbonate; their action on the soil and plants are entirely different. Carben ates are plant nourishers, sulphates and muniiates are plant poisons Jr. Samuel L. Vana, in the Muck Manual says: ‘‘It isa well established fact that plants growing on soil contain ing a due mixture of earthy ingredi ents, always select a due proportion of each, according to their functions; yet, if to such soil an excess of either of the alkalies or the alkaline earths is iven, an excess of potash, soda, ime or magnesia may be taker up by the plant, to the exclusion of the usual proportions of another- Hence it may be established as the sev- enth principle in agricultural chemistry | that one base may be substituted for an ; other in an equivalent proportion. This | is a very important law in the agricul tural relations of the organic parts oi the soil. Whatever may be the offices performed by these, in the living strne tare, none is of higher value than this. that they may be thus substituted the one for the other. It is a fact of the highest practical valne. Its value will be perceived when it is considered that if soil containing vriginally all the ele ments essential to # crop becomes ex hausted of one, another may be substitut ed, which, combined with the organic acid of the plant, enables thisto perform and perfect all its functions.”-—-Western Rural. JANUARY DUTIES. Things Requiring Attention During Cold Weather—Provide Sufficient Shelter. Help the timid animals in the herd. The others help themselves. The good old brood mare needs a ration of bran sud meal to improve her condition. The overworked team can use the best food too, perhaps as well as the always de serving young colts. Full and prope: rations, in fact, are not amiss for any Jomestic animal in January. Watering tegalarly and keeping the water at the proper temperature are matters of the utmost importance. The prompt re moval of all manure from barns and sheds and conveying it directly to th« fields not only lessens the chance of in- jury to the health of animals but dim inishes the work for the ensuing busy eeason as well.— Advocate Kees vu the Farm, Bees should be the adjanct of every farm as much as poultry and a cow, says Prairie Farmer. Honeycan be had aot for the asking but tor the taking, and why should net the family have a supply? Jt can be obtvined with less out lay of time and labor than sorghum molasges, and is far sweeter. ees ona farm aro the mens of making a pro ducer of some member of the family who would otherwicve be only @ con _—_~ sumer. pepeitiorett nnn nag THREE CURED. Yell MeXechule, with his wife and mother- in-law f ured of Cos int on by Dodd's Kidrey Pillsk—These Vills better than Ordinary Catharties, Torowto, Feb, 19.—Nei McKechnie, a | p pular barber of this city, has been a suf- ferer from chronic constipation for years. H» used I o'd’s Kidney Pi'ls and not only vbtained immediate relief. but a permanent GEORGE LOWE 346 Spadina Avenue, Toronto, cure. Hise wite and moth -t-in-law were similarly afflicted, and usd the pills With the same gad reanit Ordinary a hartics give only temporary relief and leave the patient worse than before using them. While Ddd’s Kidney Pills are not eatharties, their pecu'iar ‘ection en the liver and kidneys is euch that the causes of consipation are pern anently removed. These pils:r manufactured by Dr. L. A. Smith & C-., Toronto, and aro sold by all dealers, or will be mailel on receipt of price; fifty cents per hox, or eix boxes for $2.50 —- oo BOegeg- Consumptives, cheer up! You are no going to die, if you will but take Millers’ Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil, “the kind tkat cures” coughs, colds, bronchitis and the lirst stage ofconsumption, every bottle warranted. No oily taste like others, In big bottles, 50c. and $1.00, at druggists. USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, ‘the great bleed and Nerve Remedy. | | | i | | | | ' | HE FOUND THE NICKEL, (From the Chicago Journal.) i was the only passenger on the ear. | Midway of the block another came in. | His hat was crushed and his clothing daubed with mud Fora long time he | | sat in gloomy meditation. Then he hitched | up toward me and said: “fT guess I'm the dodrottest fool runnin’ | loose in this town at the present time.” “So?” I said. “Yes,sir. Iain’t got sense be let go without a guardeen. up ahead there ?” Idid. It away “Waal, sir, run like sixty for more’n a block to ketch that car.” “Couldn’t catch it, eh ?” ©“Yes,I could. That’s the trouble I did keteh it, and’ I gin the conductor a dime on the hind platform, an’ he gin me Then somehow ] up an’ dropped the nickel overboard ! hollered to the conductor to stop the car, but he wouldn’t do it, so I ups an’ jumps off back- | wards. Look a’ my clo’es When I got enough to See that car | was half a dozen blocks a nickel change USE FOR PILES BURNS SORE EYES WOUNDS SORES Headache AND ALL PAIN that it’s very bad you n POND'S warmly with tainly be much rel mentions. It’s a —the doctor will te rub thoroughly the part afflict EXTRACT, flannel, and the rheuma- tism may wholly disappear. ieved. have the POND’S EXTRACT try it for any of the many things its buff wrapper But don’t accept substitutes. POND’S EXTRAC Have the early frosts or too late a lin- gering by the garden gate again aroused RHEUMATISM so slumbering the summer long? FOR COLDS GUTS peacefully Well, if rust change your diet and perhaps take some-distasteful drug BRUISES but first ed with wrap it ll you what— SPRAINS SGRE THROAT Gatarrh AND AFTER SHAVING then It will cer- Now that you wonderful curative. POND’S EXTRACT CO,, 76 Fifth Ave., N. Y. up that car was out 0’ reach, so I had to wait for this one.’ Lost my car, spilt my clo’es and skint my | back jest for the gratifyin’ privilege of picking tip that doddeon nickel an’ givin’ it to this conductor. I used to think that Bill Thompson the dingedist a-goin’, but I gvess I’m close onto him.” “What did Bil! do.” “W’y, don’t you know? —_ Bill’s dog got | his head stuck in a pitcher, an’ Bill cut | of the head to save the pitcher, an’ then | broke the piteher to get the head out.” oo tow to Get a Suulight Pictare, Send 25 * Sunlight ” wrappers (wrappers bearing the words “Why Does a Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man”) to Levev Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto. and vou will receive by posta pretty pic- ture free from advertising, and well worth | framing. This is an easy-way to decorate your home market and it will only cost 1 ¢. postage to | send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends | was foo! Scap The soap ia the best in the ra — | “fecal tie net coe Log ee ode GAIN, Crushe | AND —— TURNIP SLICER. ——( X Having a large stock of the above Farm Implements on hand, and wishing to close them out this season, for the next ‘two months I will sell them for Russian Wheat, delivered | Wheat by train will have Extra Rings for the at U harlottetown. D. W. FINLAYSON, h’town, Dec. at, [893 —eod & wy LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. open. Write your address carefully, siadlemeionelicaeee THE LOVE THAT KILLS, It is not enongh that wives must feel | that they have the love of their husbands, | writes Edward W. Bok inthe Febrnary | Ladies Home Journal. They should know it, and be told of it. Thoughtlessness and a misunderstanding of the nature of women are at the bottom ofall this unexpressed love. There is plenty of love abroad in i this world, and a great part of it lies in the | hearts of our American husbands. But it shouldn't lie dormant. When it does, it is | the love that kills. It ehould reach ex- | pression. It should be given voice, and as | often and as warmly as the heart dictates. | A good wife can stand a tremendous quan- tity of love—all that any man can her. The danger lies rather in not giving enough than in giving too much vive It is not an unmanly thing for a man to love his wife,although one might readily | believe vo from the way men go aout it, Neither is it sickly, mandlin nor sentimental for him to shew it. Who has a prior claim to a husband’s love, and who | a better right to know it ? What is it that met do for their wives that is at all an | equ-valent for what wives do for their husbands ? Provide for them ? That’s a | duty and nothing more. In some things it is well that we should go a little farther than the duty line. The, more husbands | remain lovers the better it will be for our land. It is the expressed love of a husband | that makes s wife radiantly happy, and | nothing else can take its place some a A Musical Voice, The nasal twang produced by Catarrh gives a disagreeble sound to the voice. But Catarrh is also accompanied by even more unpleasant resnits such as offensive breath, headache, nausea, deafness, ete. Sufierers | from Catarrh will find in Hawker’s Catarrh | Cure a perfect and positive cure, restoring | the organs to their natural healthy condi- tion and removing all disagreeble symp- Sold everywhere. Only 25 cents, toms. “Mother, what sha!l I do for this dread falcouzh?” “Take Puttner’s Emulsion, | my dear, it always helps our family. | What is ~ ee SSNS a Oe i NO bes Ae. eats te ste Seal ad > ae aS os Steer ° 3 re 2 Z ‘% eZ FA eI A} iN EAN Castoria is Dy. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infarts and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. for Paregoric, Drops, Scot! Its guarantco is thirty ycars’ use by It is Pleasant, t is a karmless substitute 1ing Syrups, and Castor Oil. Millions of Mothers. Castoriadestroys Worms and allays foverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhea and wees Wind Colic. Castoria relicves tecthing tronbles, cures constipation and fiatulency. Castoriz assimilates the food, regulates the stemach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cass toria is tho Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Fricnd, . Castoria. “ Oastori2 is an excellent medicins for chi!- @ércn. Mothers hcre repeatedly told me of its good effect upon ther children.” Da. G. C. Oscoon, Loweil, Mass. * Sastoria is the best remedy for children of hich Lam acquainted. i bopo the day is ot trorviag thei- loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, secthing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending ta¢€ ma to premature craves.” Dn, J. F. Kixcnevog, Conway, Ar ¥ fur distant Wuen mothers will consilerthercal- iuter Castori2. “ Castoria is so well adapted to cl.ildren they I recommend it as superior to any prescriptica known to me." Hl. A, Ancuen, Mf. D., 111 Se. Oxford St., Lrooklyn, N. Y. s in the childreu's depart mn highly of their experi- storia, “ Our physician ment have spoxc ence in their outside practice with Cc and althouzh wo only have amore our medical sz what is known as revuice products, yct weare free to confess tha: tha merits of Casteria has won us to look with faver upon it.” Unsitsp Eosprran axp Dispensary, Boston, Mass AtLen C. Suits, Pres., The Contaur Company, TI Murray Street, Now York City. Lobster Supplies, 1894. The subscribers offer for sale the following Lobsters ani Fishing Outfits at lowest prices tor cash or approved credit: 7) boxes Leadbrook Tin Plates, best brand; 109 boxes do. do., delivered at Georgetown or Souris; 5,0 lbs Block Tin, 3,00 ibs Pig Lead, 2,0” Ibs Cotton Twine for Trap Heads, 300 coils Manilla Rope, 9, 12, 14, 18; 3 doz Herring Nets, assorted sizes; 5,0/) small Hoops for Heads, ~,000 Trap Bows, 50 kegs Trap Nails, assorted sizes; 2> kegs Box Nails, 2,00 cases 1 tb Tall Lobster Cans, 2,0) cares 1 Ib Flat do, 1.000 cases } Ib Flat do, all guaranteed ; 300 Ibs Copper, 19 Lobster Bath Boilers, Galvanized fron, assoried sizes; 100 Galvanized Bath rrays, 30,00 Paper Linings for 1 lb Tall Cans, 1,009 do. tor 1 lb Flat Cans, 200,000 do. for 4 Ib Flat Cans, at faetory prices if orders given immediately; also, 100,000 lathe. Apply to LONGWORTH & CO., jan$-2m- 2aw Water Street, CAVEATS, TRADE MARKs COPYRIGHTS: CAN I ORTA]N 4 PATENT For a i } Opinion, write to v N&CH.. who bave bad nearly fifty years’ tain sent free, Also a cat: of mec and scientific boo! tf ‘atents taken through Mur’ Co. m4 a) notice in the Scientific American. aud tbus are brought widely before With- cost to the inventor. This id } issued weekly, y illustrated, oy.far the largest cirewla scientifie work in the ' world. $3 ayear, Sam sent free. | Building Edi bly, ‘° i pub etl emtaiae plans, ing the i bs $ and secure oe Ser Address UNN & CO., New Youk, $61 Broapway, i j SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of a Writ of Statute Exeeu- | tion to me directed, issued out of Her | Majesty’s Supreme Court of Judicature, at the suit of Thomas W. May against John Martin, [have taken and seized aa the) property of the said John Martin all his*| rigat, title and interest in and to the fo- | lowing property, namely, all that tract | piece or parcel of Jand situate, lying and being at D> .ndas, in Township Number Fifty-five, in Kings County, in Prince | Edward Island, bounded and described as | follows:—On the North by land lately | sold to Jonathan Matheson ; on the East by land now or formerly in possession of Daniel Nicholson ; on the South by land now or formerly in possession of Alexan der McLeod; and on the West by the Cum- berland road, containing one humdred acres of land, a little more or less, And I do hereby give Public Notice that I will on Friday, the Tenth day of August next, A. D. 1894, at the hour of Twelve o’clock noon, at the Court house, in Georgetown, in Kings County, set up and sell! at Publie Auction the said property, or as much thereof as will satisfy the levy marked on the said writ, being Six Hundred and twenty-nine dollars, and interest on Five Hundred and twenty-six dollars, from the Fifteenth day of Juiy, A. D. 1893, till paid at the rate of Seven per cent., per annum, besides sheriff's fees and a)! incidental ex- i } ' | } j } | | | | Room and Bed Dont Talk! but call and inspect our New Parlor, Drawing room Suites, Chairs. Table Bedsteads, and odd pieces of Furniture. ae ay aaa Don't Listen ! but remember that we sell the Cheapest, and are dctermined to give the best bargains every time at JOHN NEWSON’S, tlie Cheapest Furniture Store goods guaranteed. on P. E. Island. Quality of No trouble to show goods JOHN NEWSON. Charlottetown, January 4, 1894. Ald POROUS WATERPROOF GARMENTS, Everybody wears them, ALWAYS ASK FOR penses, DANIEL A. McINNIS, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, King’s County, February 2nd, 1894. A. A. McLean, Plaintiti’s Attorney. dy ex. 3in f Mrs. DeWet—“ There, Reginald, are | those Rigby Waterproofs I have been tel]- | ’ ing you about. Can’t you see how stylish and comforiable they look !—and they are just lovely for winter weather. Yon al- | ways wait till everybody else in the world : adopts a new thing before you will believe | in it. We really must have them at once.” | Mrs, Uptodate—* Dear me, what a sight those DeWets are, out on the streets a day like this without Rigby Garments, It takes some people a lifetime to learn how to be comfortable. Just think how we used to swelter in those horrid Rubber Waterproofs, and such smelling things.” decl9—t ts L 12 bushels of good White Parties sending Bags returned with Crusher. above always on hand. 40 cents a month. month. Tue Exauiner Publishing Co., Charlottetown, P. E number. Bs cicsssvercoencbieastinnsasinnes FITTS SITTIITTITTITTIIII ITT with famous people. of AFRICAN ADVENTURE. the great animal importer and trainer. his present expedition to Africa. . Island. understood that you are to have sent to my Wa Biccctecnee DPR ciinisncicinvemns Professor. Garner is The Daily Examiner The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. THE BET for the Public and for Advertisers. ‘One Year, - - - $4\Three Months, - $I Six Months, ; $2\One Month, - 35c Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : McCLURE’S ‘MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 months at By special arrangement with the publishers, we are enabled to make a most exceptional offer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fills out the following blank form, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 40 cents a CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT TT TTTT-TTITTTE TIT TTIIT 04 TITTTTTIT - You will please send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months from date, for which I agree to pay 40 cents a month, it being address for one extra charge, McCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current CO ee ee ee eee ee eee eeeeeener ‘a NS MS Si MLS SS ln SLi nS Sb Ln Slip Sl Sn Lin b> nS Lb Nn Soli ln Lo Son by Son Sb. Ly LoS ll Li tL Sb lp CALL AT OUR OFFICE and see the entertaining and finely illustrated Me CLURE’S MAGAZINE, which has among its contributors the most famous authors in America and England, including R. L. Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, A. Conan Doyle, Octave Thanet, William Dean Howells, Bret Harte, Clark Russeil, Joel Chandler Har- ris, Thomas Hardy,.J. T. Trowbridge, Jerome K. Jerome, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Theodore Roosevelt, Joaquin Miller, Gilbert Parker, John Burroughs, Hamlin Gar land, Prof. E.S. Holden, Prof. C. A. Young, H. H. Boyesen, Robert Barr, Henry M. Stanley, Archibald Forbes, Andrew Lang, and many others. Each number of McCLURE’S MAGAZINE contains two illustrated interviews Jules Verne, Frances Hodgson. Burnett, Tissandier, the famcus French Balloonist, Archdeacon Farrar, Thomas A. Edison, F. Hopkinson Smith, H. H. Boyesen, Alphonse Daudet, Camille Flammarion, Edward Everett Hale, Professor Graham Bell and many others, have furnished material for especially prepaged inter- views, which wil] appear fully illustrate? in this magazine. HENRY M. STANLEY will contribute, especially for young readers, a story NATURAL HISTORY AND ADVENTURE.—There will be several articles written by Raymond Blathwayt, who as been called by Mr. W. T. Stead the best interviewer in England, from material furnished him by Carl Hagenback, of Hamburg, These articles deal with the Capture of Wild Beasts, the Training of Wild Beasts, the Transportation of Wild Beasts, the Adven- tures and Escapes of Carl Hagenbeck. The series will be illustrated by an English artist of great skill in drawing animals. JOHN BURROUGHS, C. F. HOLDER, DR. C. C. ABBOTT and other writers amous for their work in this field, will contribute to the Magazine. Of interest to both Young and Old will be PROF. R. L. GARNER’S AFRICAN EXPEDITION T0 THE GORILLAS, Arrangeineuts have been made, in connec tion with aleading English review, to publish Professor Garner’s letters descriptive or noted the world over for the curious and interesting investigations he is making im the speech of monkeys. He sailed for Africa last September for the purpose of further pursuing his studies in the native haunts of the gorilla. The illustrations of these articies will be from phote graphs taken by Prof. Garner in Africa. McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most intereating articles under the heads The Edge of the Futare,” “ Newest Knowledge,” Knowledge of Immediate Value,” The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” ete. We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for oniy $4.60 a year, payable in advance or in monthly instalments of 40c¢. as desired. We make this exceptional offer in order that we may secure a large number ot new subscribers, but all who are already subscribers may avail themselves of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magazine. Agldress: The Examiner Publishing Co., CHARLOTTETOWN, FOF ee eOFee eee eeen er enee P. E. ISLAND. j MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1894. lbp lb lp lb I I » year, without hy lp To ly lp Sit Se Sb Si lp Sin So ln b> So In lin op Ceeee ere eeeereeeeere . SILVERWARE Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. stock on hand. suueenseeen —{x) We are giving BIG BARGAINS in the above line of goods, as we havea large Gc. G. JURY, North Side of Queen Squara, - - - - Opposite the Post Office Charlottetown, January 4, 1894—dy & wky Operative & _——< Prosthetic Dentistry. DR. J. P. MURRAY, Stamper Block, Victoria Row janl5—dd&w lyr ENDS You Meet in Our Stock. Quality, Quantity, Price, We keep everything a first- class Clothing Store should xeep. We not only sell at moderate prices, but fill and deliver orders promptly and carefully. Inspection of our Overcoats, Ulsters, Reefers and Suits will convince you we are fully up to the wants of the people of P. E. Island. McKay Woolen Co. Charlottetown, Noy. 17, 1893. Give us a call. ISDA. Spring Trip From Liverpool, THE CLIPPER BARK RALPH B. PEAKE, 700 Tons Register, Classed A 1 Red, at Lloyds, RICHARD RENDLE, COMMANDER, will be on the berth at Live ij on the ist MARCH, and will sail from that port For Charlottetown Direct, ABOUT Is7v OF APRIL NEXT, and wiil carry Freight at through rates to he different Railway points on the Island so Pictu. (&3~ For Freight appiy in London to John Pitcairn & Sons, 7 Union Court, Old Broad Street, E. C.; in Liverpool to Pitcairn Bros., 51 South John Street, or here to the owners, PEAKE BROS. & CO. Charlottetown, Jan. 16, 1894. pat guareod her wat sem jour 8w The World’s Columbian Exposition. 1. The whole civiiized world has been in- terested in the Great Celebration. The crowned heads cf Europe, the governments of all the famous nations of the globe, the lands of the Orient amd the islands of the sea have all been co-operating to render the Exhibition worthy of the greatest event oj modern times. Its magnitude and marvelous character can only be described by saying that it has com- vised al] the rarest products of land and sea, he most dazzling wonders of nature and the grandest productions of human genius. 2. The Great Fair which celebrates the dis- covery of America by Columbus has never been equalled. It was larger and more mag- nificent than any similar exhibition ever 2eld. Over twenty million dollars was ex- pended in its grand spacious bnildings, and the result was the most attractive Exhibition the world ever saw. 8. This gorgeous display is vividly portrayed in our PICTGRIAL HISTORY OF THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION. ‘This captivating volume is 4 briiliant pano- rama of the Great Fair whicn has awakened such a world wide interest. This wonderfui work is a royal octavo yvol- ume of over 800 large double-column pages, 10} inches long by 7} inches wide, It contains nearly twice the amount of matter in an or- dinary quarto book, and is,therefore equal to ~~ 4 a large volume of 1600 pages. It contains a complete history of the World- renowned Exposition at Chicago; captivatin descriptions of the magnificent Buildings an mivellous Exhibits, suchas Works of Art, Texdle Fabrics, Machinery, Natural Pro- ducts, Latest Inventions, Discoveries, etc, with afull description of Chicago, its wonder- ful Buildings, Parks, ete., by ex-Governor Wim. E. Cameron, of the Worid’s Columbian Exposition History Co., with an introduction by Hon, Thomas W. Palmer, ex-U. 8. Senator and ex-Minister to Spain, including a chapter on the Women’s Department by Frances E, Willard, President of the World’sand Nation- al Woman's Christian Temperance Unions. CON DITIONS—It is printe:! from clear, new type, on fine calencered paper, and is embel- lished with a large number of BEAUTIFUL ENGRAVINGS, which charm eyeryone whe sees them, This grand work surpasses anything tha has yet appeared in this tine, and will be solv by subscription only, Wait for it; take n@ other. MRS. N this city A. STEWART is Sole Agent for thee2? People in this 19th that can be had for the mo They give and it has become a by-wor December 26, 1893—tn thn sat ia SHENG U 'N cen BWK Li ney. perfect satisfaction im fit, d that 3 CATAR RH = oS “is REY EFFECTUALLY CURES CATARET. COLD IN THE HEAD, CATARR HAL HEAD~ Sold everywhere. Price, 25 cents. M’fd. by THE H a WK Et MEDICLY. tury are bound to have the best | That is why EVERYBODY WEARS GRANBY RUBBERS ! style “GRANBY RUBBERS wear like iron.” ICINECOPY., L’té., 8t. John, N-B- Ste. Salt! Salt IN STORE. 4 3,500 Bags Liverpool Salt. and finish 320 * Fishery “ 1,000 bush. Turk’s Island Salt, crushed, 1000 “ “ uncrushed PEAKE BROS. & CO. jan2 S. R. FOSTER & SON, Manufacturers of Wire Nails, Steel and Iron cut Nails and Spikes, ‘lacks, Brads, Shoe Nails, I}imgarian Nails, & Sr Joun, N. B. E'arm For Sale —_—_—_-— TH® subscriber offers for sale his farm on the Mount Edward Road, about one mile and a half from the city, well and favorably known as the “Welsh Farm The farm: consists of sixty acres, and con tains a good Dwelling House aud five Outivuildinags, al! in good condition. There is also a good o— in connection, ypiy to ey. rs, see Water Street July 3, 1993. : : 5 ‘ a OO tg Ml, i A A,