lohn Maced nald subscriptions to THE EXAMINER = = . i aialin = — ee a ee —— an _ ee ae en ee " r Ses Lae TEE oy THE WEEKLY EXAMINER and f : : THE WEEKLY EMPIRE. both tits or neat, clean, tasteful Printing, rd WEEKLY BMPIRE. th tge and prompt attention to orders, THE EMPIRE XN Monae il Alben of Sir EX AMI] TER Job Printing Depart- th oom tn Nend your NEW SERIES Hloase 4 Vverywhere. 3 1-2 Ounce Packets, - - § cents, 5 ie ‘4 oo 10 si i0 ee sé a 90 “a * WOODILL’S a GERWAN ‘ean DES ia wel suited for Fimsiy Use “Grorck Lawson, Pa D., LL. D., Fathuw of the Institute of Chemistry of Great Britain and Ireland.” nov27 J MES A. MOR“1°08, 4H <LIFAS. WARQE ., OAKRBREAD & C0, TEA MERCHANTS, London, «- England, ——AND ALSO—~—~ First-Class West India Firms, etc. SPECIALTIES: Several “Reading Room, * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evairipes. — = Lob oud $0 9_e ee ——-ON BALANJE OF— (x) — Remuants at Cost ! Fur taps at Cost! aa JOHN WL:09 & CO., MERCHANT TAILORS, Rogers’ Building, Queen Street. Charlotrhtown, January 12, 1892 —eod & wky Tea, Sugar and Molasses. Carefu! attention given to consignments of Prince Edward Island Produce. REFERENCK—Bank of Nova Scotia GFFICE -Pickford & Black’s Wharf. Halifax, August 13. 1891— Jy & wy Cotton Remnants x)-———-—— MeDONALD & MARTIN, One Bale cf Flascy Cotton Remaants, BARRISTERS, Solicitors, Notaries Pablic, &c, } Morris’a Building, Charlottetown, { Gaffuey’s Building, Summerside, MONEY TO LOAN. 4.C, McDONAL . B. A., M. P. P. K. J. MARTIN, B. A. | OFFICES: harlotietown, Dec 2, 189i—eod&w Iin CAUTION. EACH PLUG OF THE { IS MARKED h. & BH. IN BRONZE LETTERS. Myrtle rt NOWE OTHER GENUINE. jan2—dy & wky SoOoTHinG; CLEANSING, HEALING. fnstant Relief, Peruiansnt Cure, Failuce Imposs: bk, Many se-called diseases are simply symptane of Catarrh, gach as ham lache, losiays nse Of smeH, foul breeth, hawking and spitting, genes! feeling of debility, etc. If you are troubled with any oi ©: -°¢ or Kindred synigtetns you lave Caterrh, and sheuls icxe no time procering a boltie of Nasat, Baa. Be warned in %me, neglected cold in bead yesults in Caterrh, followed by consumption and death. Sold by al) drugvists, or sent, post paid, on recript of price Poems ond Gi byadd ULFORD & CO. Bro. uvilie. GRATEFUL—COMFORTING BREAKFAST. _" By & thorough knowledge of sau oacu jews which govern the operations of div and nutrition, and sy » oareiu! applicatior © properties of weli-selected econ. ¥) hes provided our breakfas' tables wit: « ately flavored beverax: which mev se Many heavy doctors’ billk« It ix by the judica Gse of such articles of diet that a consti. ai may de ;radually outt up watil strong enon x’ Pesist every tendency to diseane, Hundred Sublie maladies are flosiing around as rer Sttack wherever thore is « weaa poi ”* may escave many a fatal shaft by Koepine ov selves weil fortified with oure bi0ood ania p perly nourished frame.”—Civil Jervice Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or ‘ui. Bold ony in packets, by Grovera labelles -- JAMES EPPS & OO, Homaopatht: hers. London. tmpland. ee ie ABOUT 2,000 YARDS SELLING CHEAP. ————1)—— —— HARRIS & STEW ART, a? "| DIO BIOUS Ohsrlottetown, January 8, 1892 -dy & wky —————= = Se = ee Ntamper's Corner, — —-——(x) -—--—. ( N ACCOUNT of proposed Bu'lding Operations [ am goin - to leave and CLOSE UP MY BUSINE3S$ at >T\M PER’S COLN¢R N w is the tim: to gt BARGAINS in BOOTS AND SHOES, AS I MUST SELL Til STOCK, AND WILL GIVE Special Inducements for Cash x) MEN'S FELT OVERSHE3 VERY CHEAP. ee ee -~(0)———-—-— RR. K. JOST. Charlottetown, January 6, 1892—dy & why tf CARRIAGE BUILDERS. ST scadglbien ois We are closing out this Depart- ment of our business. Wou are boun! to get Bargains. Call or write for prices. Stock is large and close it out this year. NORTON & FENNELL. Oot dws yx ay & way Oharlottetown, January #3, 1802—2aw & why JANUARY, 1892. Big ReductiOns WINTER GOODS! 19,009 yds. Cloth in Stock ! On> Bile cf Grey Cotton Remnants.) oo2s3i well assorted, and we are bound to Lobster Packers = = ———— Ee | } j t ONE BNJOYS Both the method anévtesults when | Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant | and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- aches and fevers and cures habitual only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ace ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, pees = from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known, Syrup of Figs is for sale in 75c bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Manufactured only by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. ' ZOUVISVILLE,KY. NEW YORE, N. Y. W. R. WATSON, Wholosale Druggist, Charlotteetown, mwf jyl3 APPLES. 250 Barrels Choice Canadian Baldwins. N., B. & M. RATTENBURY. CURRANTS AND RAISINS Currants. adja } «Raisins. N., B. & M. RATTENBURY. d2] 2aw m th ROLLED OATS 200 Barrels, N.,B & M RATTENBURY. d21 2aw mth 25 BARRELS, 50 BOXES} 75 HALF-BOXES} BEANS. | 159 bbis. Beans. N., B. & M. RATTENBURY. d21 2aw mth A Teaspoonful ie ISIN 7) EMULSION ' Contains more curative properties than can be found in four times the same quantity of any other Emulsion | of Cod Liver Oil. It is therefore the ON ALL CLASSES OF BOOTS AND SHOES. | Cheapest and Best. The day has gone by when you can get people to take tue nauseous doses that used to be given. In taking Estey’s Emulsion you don’t taste the Cod Liver Oil in it. Still it is there, half of it being Cod Liver Oil, but the taste of the oil is gone; thatis all, every- thing else remains, don’t forget that. For weak, puny children, it is mvaluable, making them fat and reer aud groans Ww. . Biles 5230, ‘Take mo substitute, It hasn't — Kk. M, Estey Mfg. Co., Moneton, N-B. SE HARTSHORNS €),) SELF-ACTING <)SSHADE ROLLERS ) | Beware of imitations, 1 NOTICE auToaaamn 2 HAR FC LINDA “a et alad SHORN Ine’ ~aog having the HARTSHORN, > BY ALL DEALERS, Factory, Toronto, Ont tem effectually, dispels colds, head- | constipation. Syrup of Figs is the | —————— — Marrying to Reform. THE ATTEMPT NOT ALWAYS A SUCCESS Lrdies who think of marrying ex-convicts to reform them can get points from Mrs. Charies Callen, of Oakland. That estim able lady, when Mrs. Ella Higby, became interested in the Convicts’ Home of that city, and subsequently transferred that in- terest to ex-convict Callen and married him to complete his reformation. The ex periment does not appear to have proved a success, a8 Mrs. Callen is now trying to recover $5,000 that her husband appro- priated as the proceeds from the sale of a part of her property, and she had to seek refuge at a neighbor's to avoid an irate ex convict spouse who was brandishing a re- volver. Marriage as a reformatory institu- tion for convicts and drunkards is decidedly a failure, whatever success it may ba as an institution to be cultivated for his own sake, but this is atruth that ladies of a reformatory frame of mind have to learn by their individual hard experience. t+O+e— Wooing Sleep. A NEW METHOD BY WHICH A WAKEFUL MAN MAY FIND SLEEP, The Delsartian doctrine of rest by volun- tary muscular relaxa‘ion is somewhat con- firmed by the experience of thuse who have acted upon this theory in overcoming in- ‘Somnia. Nothing so qaickly brings sleep a8 the voluntary disposal of the body and | limbs in such @ fashion as to produce mus- cular relaxation. The legs and arms should be so placed as to bring them in contact with the mattress at as many pvints as pos- sible. This affords support and relives the muscles. Ths body should be dispused in like fashion, and if all has been done properly the wover of sleep will presently have the consciousness of resting with his whole weight directly upon the mattress. | When once this feeling comes sleep usually follows. The plan is far better than the |old one of repeating the numerals or going ‘over some meaningless series of words, for it has the double advantage of putting the physical man into an attitude of repose and of distracting the mind from whatever thoughts are at enmity with sleep.—New York Sun. eae The Jews in New York. HOW THEY HAVE BEEN BEHAVING THEM- SELVES DURING THE YEAR, Judging by police reports there has been less of the deceitfuluess, chicanery, and fraud that are popularly and often un- justly held to be discinctive of the poorer jJews in the acquisition of this amazing wealth and influence than among an equal number of nominal christians of similar class. It is certain that the homely vir- tues of which King Svlomon, Franklyn and Smiles are the apostles have been the prin- cipal creators of Jewish affluence and pow- er The pradence which confines expen- diture within the limits cf income, the dil- igence which rejvices in improving oppor- tunity, the far sightedness which deposits money where it will do the most good, and the promlse which is held to be as binding as the legal contract, are the chief factors of fortune with them as with all men. The best proof of the moral standing of the | Hebrews is to be found in the relatively | low percentage of their numbers in prisons and reformatories. Only two murderers, iit is said, have sprung from their ranks in 250 years. Drunkerness is not a Jewish vice. Neither is anarchism a Jewish in- sanity. Its subjects disavow and even re- —— |} vile Judaism. As Bad as a Sea Fight. _ BRITISH JACK TARS IN THE CLUTCHES OF La GRIPPE—-CONDITION OF THE FLEET. Despatches from Malta say that the British fleet at that placa is in a state of weakness which might be compared with that of a fleet having passed through a severe engagement with anenemy. The flagship Victoris, 15 guns, 10,470 tons, has 60 men in the hospital suffering from influenza ; the Amphion, 10 guns, has 39 men down with the same disease; the In- flexible, 12 guns, bas 40 men under treat- ment; the Trafalgar, 10 guns, the flagship of Rear Admiral Lord Wal- ter T. Kerr, has 39 men in_ the surgeon's hands, and the crack torpedo ram, Polyphemus, hasa third of her crew sck with the grip. Finally the Dreadnaught, 4 guns, is coming back from Salonicy, where half her crew are suffering more or less trom ,the prevailing epidemic. Of ceurse these figures give only a slight idea of the spread of the disease in the British Mediterranean fleet, for the Agamemuosn, the Australia, the Bea- bow, the Colossus. the Edinburgh, the Teme- rarie, and the Undaudten, the battle ships in those waters, have had many influenzs suffer- ers among their crews. The above list does not include the many cruisers and gunboats of the British Mediter- ranean fleet whose crews have not escaped the grip. This causes people to remark that if there isany serious trouble in the Mediter- ranean, the British sailors wil! have to go into action in @ slightly demoralized condition. Mayor Washburne, of Chicago, has three children born on St. Patrick’s Day, July 4, and Christmas Diy. The great event of the season at Rome has been the marriage of Donna Marie Bar- berini, the heiress of the late Prince Bar- berini, to the Macchese Sacchetti, a mem- ber of the Pupe’s noble guard, who has been authorized by His Holiness to assume BOXES TIN PLATES, 600 £tons PIG TIN. Lamb & Piug, 1 “* BAR COPPER, Uj ia. square. E. H. NORTON & CO., dee)!--Saw & wy ti @karlettetows, the name and title of Berberini. The bridegroum’s present to the bride was a magnificent Barberini bee, composed of large diamonds and rubies, the family arms being three golden bees on a field of azure. The brother and sister of the bridegroom Below all other prices. Order at once toarrive, | gave a necklace of 10 rows of pearls, form- ing such “ropes” as would have satisfied even the Theodora of Lothair. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. i ISLAND, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1892. ———————— LS eee ment is peculiar. Don't forget it. Sivate Corpus Two Cerra VOL. 29.—NO. 198 News in Brief. Thieves recently he'd up a small funeral procession in Hillside county, Mich., and robbed the minister and undertaker. the oldest pensioner in the United States. He is 103 years of age and was a sailor in the navy in the war of 1812. A dissolute linguist, a teacher of seven different languages, has been jailed at Laramie, Wyo., for beating his wife, who supported him by taking in washing. Mrs. Catherine Fisher, a widow, eloped recently in Madison, Ohio, on her 64h birthday, with a man four years her senior, whom she met only two days previously. A despatch from Hong Kong says 50 of the passengers of the wrecked steamer Namchow, which foundered off Cupehi po:nts, were saved by fishing boats near by The works of the Waterbury Brass Co., at Waterbury, Conn., were burned on the 13th; loss $260,000, insurance $187,000. Over 250 hands are thrown out of employ- ment A distinet shock of earthquake was felt at Memphis, Tenn., at 2 o'clock on Thurs- day morning. Buildings were shaken and suburban residents awakened from their slumbers. The king and queen of Denmark will cele. brate their golden wedding the 26th of next May. Nearly every European sovereign will be present, and the occasion will be one of : rare brilliancy. A young Norwegian in Minnesota fell heir to a baronetcy and fortune in Norway, and the good news 80 elated him that he proceeded to get drunk and was frozen to death in a barn. While D. W, McLeod, of Amherst, was visiting his home at Glengarry he went out to his brother's lumber camp and there shot two large bears, one weighing 400 !bs., and the other a little over 300 Ibs. The queen of England has written two books which have never been published. They are works of travel, recounting her impres- sions on the Continent. She has refused to have them published till after her death. A colored mad of Madison, Ga., claims to have discovered a process of extracting live worms from decayed teech He exhibiis sume specimens of worms said to be so ex- tracted, about a quarter of an inch in length and of a flattened shape, and dark brown or nearly black in color. A queer libel suit has been instituted against a newspsper in Indiana for aver- ring that the plaintiff's horse was fed on soup, being too vld to eat corn. He claims $2,000 damages, alleging that he has suffered great mental anguish on account of the publication. A dense fog on Thursday enveloped New York on and vicinity, and trafhe of all kinds, both on land and water, was much imped- ed in consejuence. All the ferryboats on the North and East rivers experienced some difficulty in making their landings, and in some instances the boats took near- ly an hour to cross. You may talk as much as you please of the grip and diphtheria. No doubt their ravages are sufficiently alarming. But if you want your hair to stand on end with horror just contemplate the epidemic that has committed to an untimely grave nearly every New York resolution which on Jan. Ist was so hearty and robust. Hardly one of the whole tribe is left. The Boston Herald declares the s-nallest American city is Vergeenes, in Vermont, which, after 103 years of cityhood, has a population of oaly 1,773, and covers a terri- tory of but 1,200 acres. ‘‘There are offices enough for nearly every man in the town to have ope. In this way the political squabbies and seiifish struggles for power commor to most cities are entirely overcome.” A new article of fuel was utilized by the steamer Dunedin on her last trip from Clenfuegos, Cuba, to New York. She ran out of coal and the crew had to tear down the woodwork of the cabin and forecastle to supply the furnaces This also being consumed, and a heavy storm prevailing, the captain ordered the firemen to shovel sugar into the furnaces. Before arriving in port fifty tons of sugar (about $2,500 wortk) were burned. Chicago has started a crusade against the man who persists in carrying his hands in his pockets on the streets, and thereby con- verting his elbows into instruments of positive danger to his fellows. If it will enlarge that platform so as to include the woman who carries her umbrella at an angle of forty-five degrees, and the youth who puffs cigarette smoke in. one’s face, Boston will join the windy city in its cam- paign and make a national affsir of it. A rather peculiar incident recently happen- ed a short distance outside of Riversine, Cal. A telephone wire broke between two offices, about 15 miles apart, and yet an ordinary eonversation could be carried on over the wire after it was broken, though the magnetic bell would not ring. There being no other wire on the sime poles at that part of the line where the break occurred, it is supposed that the current was carried between the ends of the broken wire through the wet ground. A few feet below tae surface there is what is known as hardpan, which probably acted to some ex- tent as an insulator between the upper and lower strata of earth. A Russian newspaper recently undertook to investigate the conditions of the bosia kemanda, or tramp fraternity of Russia, and declares that in Kiel alone they number more than 2,000 persons, living in the alleys, barges and other available hiding places along the Dniper, and that two-thirds of the number are men of culture, g-aduates, many of them, of the universities and theological semiasries. “A more wretched and dissi pated crowd,” remarks the paper, ‘‘it would be hard to imagine. All the more dismal and appalling appears their life for the very reason that men of culture and knowledge are enlisted in the raaks of this wretched fraternity, ee A Pleasing Sense Of health and strength renewed and of ease and comfort fullows the use of Syrup of Figs, as it acts in harmony with oature to effsctually cleanse the system when cus— tive or bilious. For sale in 252 botiles by all leading druggists. jl4 veka The Chicago pension office has on its rolls AT IT AGAIN! Cutting Prices. THE BAZAAR CO. —ARE GIVING—— 23 Per Cent. Off THE BALANCE OF THEIR FANCY GOODS ——FOR — Two Weeks (BEFORE STOCK-TAKING). BOOKS, STATIONERY, BLANK BOOKS, INKS, MUCILAGE, PICTURES (Framed or otherwise), MIRRORS (British Plate), PICTURE FRAMING done to order, BAZAAR CO., Wholesale & R tail Stationers, CHARLOTTETOWN. E@ A notice appears in Mr. Theo L. Chappelle's advertisement which (although uot intentionally sc) is nevertheless mis- leading. His statement that ‘‘the Bazar is closed for the present ” has no reference to the Bazaar Company's Store, as some have been led to believe. You will always find us here, ready to give the Best Bar- gains in the City in Booke, Stationery and Fancy Goods. Wholesale orders attended to promptly. janll COLONIAL HOUSE, Philips Square, MONTREAL. Great Cheap Sa PREVIOUS TO STOCK-TAK!NG. During the Month of January we will offer OUR ENTIRE STOCK AT DiSCOUNTS RANGING FROM 10 to 75 per cent., ——WITH 9 per cent. Extra for Cash. We respectfally invite corres- pondence, and give prompt and carefal attention to mail orders. HENRY MORGAN & 00., COLONIAL HOUSE, Philips Square, Montreal, janl3—tts HORSES WANTED. Wy sate to purchase immedivtely, fifteen good sharp drivers; also, some heavy team horses. Apply to W. 8. McKIK, ©a'town, Jan, 19, 12? <dy lw owiey Li