+ cowne em "> ey TH DR. H. D.. JOHNSON. a Rye, Kar, Nose and Throat. Operative & Prosthetic Dentistry. DR. J. P. MURRAY, ~~ R ch Blood! fala Noy eG bsUtle i; box Fond oe ~ ‘es r. | . a 4k A eoos CSTVISTBIAVWSYF C . bas I~ ¢ Dodd’s re} awe AAA Kidney Pills wannne AAAAAAAAM re Backache, Dropsy, Lumtago, Bright’s Dis- ween 8 LO TH «f CURE TO STAY CUFED, ; , Rheumatism and all S cr forms of Kidney ¢ @ !roubles, we are backed @ «3 ' * - > . | rvir + > y the testimony of all ¢ e » have used them. 2 3 3 a rhe, AS Ko, Jj nto 43422327280 OV “2: + “om ——_> oo ee omuision SPSS ae 4 CESARE : the Cream of Cod-tiver Oil, ts “TTT Us Cures 2, Coughs, , ¥ ( \ Lungs, and ~ ~ p . ’ ; f be ‘ dan 'h Cohob4eiac! pon | 88 S8cer" By OUsSLIEleS take a dose 0 MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER. ‘You'll Feel Better” When your appetite is poor, if you f vbout twenty minutes before you. $ meals it builds up the system--gives strength to the invalid--relteves § ihe dyspeptic and is nourishing and invigorating. Buy a dozen and try it. © BDLTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LID. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. * 99236-9908 O0090O88 Yy 5 ° NERVE BEANS are 4 new dis covery that cure the worst cases « Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor ar« ; Festores the NERVE BEANS by over-wort, or the errors 0. ex cemmes of youth. This Remedy al> solutely cures the most obstinate cases when all othe TREATMENTS hare failed evento relieve. wold by drug gate at gl per package, or six for F or sent by mail ot ceceipt of price hy acdressing TH JAMES MEDICINE U.. Teruave, Ont 4 Write for peamphis. Sold 2 ttet i ; ‘ CAVEATS, [RADE MARKs COPYRIGHTS. CAN 1 OBTAIN A PATENT? Fore smapt anewer and an bonest opinion, write to LUNN & CO)., who haver experiesre in the patent b tiome strictiy confidentia nd neariy fifty vears’ usiness. Communica 4 Handboek of in- formation concerning Patents and how to ob- | tein them sent free. Also a catalogue oi mechan | ical anc scientific books sent free. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice inthe Scientific American. and thus are brought widely before the public with- out cost to the inventor. hia eplendid paper, jasued weekly, elegant! y ijiustrated. has oy far the :arest cireulation of any ecientific work in the word, 42a year. Bamp'e copies sent free. Buliding Edition, monthty, #2.Ma year. Single copies, 25 cents. Every number contains beau- titul plates, in colors, and photographs of ne~ housea, with plans, enabling builders to show the jatest designs and secure contracts. Address MUNN & CO., New Yous, 361 Btoa«pway. oe Cratetul— Comlorting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST—SUPPER. > = E DAILY ene 2 ee SILENT MACHINERY. for Cogs of Gearings. One of the little great inventions of the times is that of ~~ compressed rawhide, for the cogs of gearings. Thas material is used that each set of iron or steel cogs on one wheel shall ‘‘smash” into a wheel furnished with cogs of raw hide. In this manner iron or steel will in no case come in contact with the same or any other metal, but will come in contact at every point of con tact with rawhide. This obviates the roar of machinery that has from time immemorial made life unpleasant, especially to nervous people, in manu- facturing towne kinds and in all forms, has been employ ed heretofore, but without satisfactory results, since a certain sonorousness still exists. Wire cables running round both the driving wheel and the receiving wheel and supported between these on intermediate pulleys have been intro iuced quite extensively and the roar of the gearings largely obviated, but the lows of power by slipping on the wheels at the two extremes seems to have pre vented the general introduction of this ‘ : , ’ weve method of propulsion The cor uance of the rigid and ositive character of cog gearings seems | t t lesired by all, if only destructive friction and incessant noise can be ban ished The introduction of rawhide may work out results more than ever before satisfactory The banishment of noise is assured, and the banishment of tion may reasonably be ex So small will probably be the | wear of any substance tmpinging ou the rawhide, that wooden wheels with cogs of the same for one side of a set severe fri pe ted | may largely be reintroduced With this expedient in use, the enormons weight of iron wheels. can te avoided, and the question of dura f shaft bearings find an easy golutior since the weight of the entire system of iron wheels on a shaft, r horizontal or vertical, now makes the st of bearings to endure under s 1 a weight of great importance leret e. the greatest drawback to t 14] use of rawhide gearings has expense, but with the super : of animal hides now seeking i and the consequent low price ; . ght uger to be an impedi t What mechanical genius wit! x come forward and do his brethren in the craft 2 great service by the intro mm of compressed rawhide, pinions, vs. and possible voxes for shaft bear sane time benefit far:n- er and meat packer by creating & mar ket for thousands of animal hides, w lying as a practical drug on the | vY TW obnF marcets 1 at the The Earth's Motion. Dr. L. Swift, in Popular Astronomy, gives the following method of making the earth's revolution manifest to the eye Place on the floor of a room free from tremors and air currents a good sized | bowl nearly filled with water, and sprinkle over the surface of the water . an even coat of lycopodium powder. and | across this make a narrow black line of | pulverized charcoal. Place the bowl so i «> at rack in the floor, or, if the room be arpeted, lay a stick upon the floor ex- actly parallel with the mark. After a few hours it will be found that the hne | is no longer parallel with the ststiouary ' object, but has moved from east to west, proving that, during this interval, the earth has moved from east to west. The reasun appears to me to be that the solid floor has with the earth and bowl moved from west tq east. and so has the water also, but at a slower rate, as there is a slight inertia, of which the yielding liquid does not instantly par- take, to be overcome. It will be seen that the line or charcoal mark always moved from east to west Cast Stee! in Bells. As cast steel has of late years come so much to the front, metallurgists may be interested in some remarks of Herr Cranse. Ghoirmasterin the church of st. Nicholas and St. Mary, Berlin, con- ning beils made of this metal. ‘*Al- thongh,.” he says, “‘the proportions of | -] metal (7% parts of copper to 22 parts | of tin) are well established the difficulty | of procuring a pure, sweet tone lies in | the fact that unsophisticated metals, | and especially tin, are almost impossible | to procure The use of tempered cast stec] canses much lees care and anx | iety He admits, however, that bronze may be cast soasto give a perfectly sweet. clear tone, whilst cast steel does not ordinarily reach the saune degree of perfection: but, again, a cast steel bell costs about one-half as much as one of bronze, while it can be furnished of any desired size, tone, and softness of effect.” —Iron and Industries. @e Creeping Ralls. Every railroader of a scientific or in- vestigative turn can tell you queer stories of how the rails ‘‘creep,” but the greatest scientists of the werld do not attempt to explainthe phenomenon. It has been known for years that rails ‘‘do creep,” as brother Jasper would say, but it has only lately been learned that on lines running north and south the west rail ‘‘creeps’ faster than the east. Fire-Proof ins ulation. following recipe for painting “electrical” wires, making a ftire-proof+insulation. follows: Forty magnesia, 28 tallow, 15 lverized asbestos, 30 liquid glue, 15 vlycerine and } chromate Of soda or potassium; to this may be added an ad- ditional } of lampblack {f it is desired to make it black Vlectric Forging. | Electric forging is economical, not only because the current is applied just as long as needed, but also because its energy is expended wholly on the piece of metal, or concentrated on the part of the bar which may at any moment be in process of operation. Fine Work of s Steam Mammer. A new steam hammer, said to be the largest in the world, recently put ap in the Krupp Gun Factory at Essen is so delicately adjusted that it could be made to beat out a hair-spriag s Fire Proof Wallis. There is a fireproop covering for walls, composed of asbestos sheets, soft- ened by steaming, embossed by rellers and dried or painted or otherwise deco- rated ee Por «ver «ity Years. Ay Orp Axp Wert Trrep Reuepy.— : Mre W insloe’s Soothing Svrup has Leed used! for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their childrea while teeth- It soothes the ens the gums, allays the pain, the colic, and is the best remedy for | Diarrncea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. nig, with re rfec t enccess, ; cures in Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind.—m. w. f. wkly—I y aiculable, “Ry athorough | viedge of the nat - ural laws which g nt perations of \ Montreal Man speaks, ligestion and nuts n, “i t a careful | \ lt. Carmicheal, of Montreal, P &.. ay ation of the properties of wel]-select- | writes to the Hawker Medicine Company : ed Cacoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our |“ Your Hawker’s Balsam of Tolu and Wild breakfast and supper @ delicately flavored | Cherry, quickly relieved me of a severe at- beverage whico may save us many heavy | '@ k of Bronchitis : It is by the ju liciou suse of ._— sities wh articles of diet that & constitution | until strong doctors’ bills. e ! way be gradually built up enough wo realist every tendency to disease Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there i# @ weak point fatal shaft by ke ping ourselves weil fortl fied by pure blood and a properly pouri h ed frame.”—Civil Service Gazette Made simply with bolting water or milk Boid only in packets, by Grocers, labelled tiue, t AMES EPPS & CO., Homee i Chemista, London, — We may escape many @ , In war, itisa name, not an army. In politics, it is a name not a mob. In com- merse it is preeminently a name for pecu- liar distinction. The name of Priestly is aseoc.ated with the manufacture of fine dress fabrics, as Worth is associated with : the eut of a gown Prieatly’s fabrics are | now sold in Canada by first-class dealers. They are made of wool, and wool and silk, - aup are distuinguished by an exquisite fineness of texture and a beautifal drapin , quality. The trade mark is “the varnish | Board ” on which the goods are rolled. . weaeee EXAMINER Wood of all feasible | with the principles of dissolution in our | man of long experience—has made thi | years to life, if Paine’s Celery Com pound the black line shall cotacide with a | whom we come in contact every day. We A German elect ical paper gives the é . em | DOEs Your ; The proportions by weight are about as). . Wire | Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is | } ing ! | i PROM BIRTH 10 DEATH. ES ~ Prinriples of Dissolution in Our Bodies. Something About Compressed Bawbides | ‘Paine’s Celery Compound Banishes the Seeds of Disease, and Gives Long Life and Good Health. 4 GEORGE A. WILTSE. A great writer has said: “We are born | less released by a strong and agency. Mr. George A. Wiltse, of Athens, Ont., whose portrait appears above, was fast be- coming a victim to dyspepsia. Knowing what Paine’s Celery Compound had done for others similarly tortured and afflicted, he used nature’s health-giver, and soon found a complete cvre. Mr. Wiltse writes as follows about his case: “T want to add my testimony in favor of your valuable remedy, Paine’s Celery Compound which I have been taken for ' over a year for dyspepsia and severe pains in the neck and back of the head. Your medicine has producted a complete cure in my case, and I have recommended it to several friends who claim they have re- ceived great benefit. I can testify, there- effective fame, which continue to operate from our | birih to our death.” A more recent authority—a medica) important statement, that “Men ana women can qaickly dissipate and stamp out every trace of the common ailments which attack them, and add many long is used instead of the ordinary drugs now so freely diepensed to satisfy professional custom.” There principles of dissolution—mortal- | ality—death—are seen to thousands with | meet the dyspeptic, rneumatie, nervous, | bi ious, sleepless and run-down on levery hand, In such, the germs of | fore, inall honesty, that your Paine’s | mortality are fast expanding and / Celery Compound is a very valuable | tightening, and will hold them captive un- | Medicine. Ee SSS COLONIAL HOUSE, PHILLIPS SQUARE. (1) —- Mantle Department. ‘NEW SPRING MANTLES! On Thursday morning, the 15th, and following day /we will show our New Spring Mantles. HENRY ‘MORGAN & CO., MONTREAL. | February 22, 1894—tu thu sat . COMFORT! > she does, see that the wash is made Easy and Clean by getting her SUNLIGHT SOAP, which does away with the terrors of wash-day. Do HER OWN WaAsHiINnc? S = i Experience will convince her that it PAYS to use this soap. LOBSTER PACKERS’ SUPPLIES. ne ee 500 bxs Bost Coke Tin, 4,000 Ibs L. & F. Ingot Tin, _ _28 bars Copper, . 200 bundles Galvanized Iron, 200 E Black Sheet Iron, 3000 Ibs Cotton Heading ‘Twine, 2,000 Ibs Manilla Martine, 4,000 lbs Pig Lead. WRITE FOR PRICE ——- ree DODD & ROGERS. lk, Charlottetown, January 30, 1894—tu thu eat RS oa J. &. BRICK WOOD'S GASE A Government Offiicial and his Rheuma- tiam Cured by 12 boxes of Dodd's Kid- ney Pills—Sets all the people asking Questions of the Druggists, March, 12.—The fact that rheumatism is caused by diseased Kidney’s, has been conclusively proved bv the case of Mr. J. H. Brickwood, fishery inspector for this district. He suffered from rheu- matisin for fifteen years and found no cure in the prescriptions of doctors or in patent Finally, he used Dodd’s Kid- Kingston medicines. ney Pills, 12. boxes of which eured him. Harry Wade, the wel! known druggist here. who said Mr. Brickwood the pills, savs he is overrun with inquiries as the genuineness of Mr, Brickwood’s story, of which he is able to satisfy everyone. He also reports large sales of the pills with most satisfactory results in every case, A Al siow to Get a Suulight Pi cture, Send 25 “Sunlight ” Soap 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 easv way to decorate your home. The soap is the best in the market and it will only cost 1 ¢. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends Write your address carefully. me open. I Ponds’s Extract, for and all Pain. No preparation is equal to it. Inthe Extract Nature and Science are combined. Genuine ip bottles with buff wrappers only all Hemorthages Dr. McGilvray, of Sydney, C. B., says : “I unheritatingly offer my testimony in favor of Puttner’s Emulsion. I have used it extensively for a number of years with the most satisfactory results. “In wasting liseases of children it has no eaual. ——_—__—__-__«s e=- — When the system is all run down, and no hope of obtaining nourishment by the ordinary food supply, then take Millers Eniulsion, the great flesh and blood mak- er, “the kind that cures” colds, coughs bronchitis and all diseases of throat and lungs. LKvery bottle warranted. No oily taste like others. In big bottles, 50c. and $1.00 at druggists. es USE SK ODA’S DISCOVERY, the great hlood and Nerve Remedy. Need Wheat For Sale. White Russian and Manitoba Red, grown one year on “The Warren Farm” from seed imported gin 1893. During the last thirteen years Seed Wheat, the growth of this Farm, has given great satisfaction in every section of the Island, being better than imported. JOHN NEWSON. mech6—dy Im Lobster Packers, ATTENTION ! Having been appointed Agent forthe Nor- ton Manufacturing Company, makers of the PATENTED LOCK SEAM LOBSTER CANS, [am prepared to take orders for the delivery of same for next season’s packing. These Cans are made of the best Tin Stock, and warranted superior to anything before offered I have also in stock for sale :— P » RCHMENT LININGS, TIN PLATES, INGOT TIN, LEAD, COPPER, COVTON TWINE, MANILLA MARLINE, ROPES and other supplies. WALTER MATHESON, Lo@ver Queen Street. Ch’tow 1894—2m eod & wky!,m \Do You Recognize It ? This is the heel of the GRANBY RUBBER. Look for this pattern on the heel when yon buy a Rubber or Overshoe. It guar- antees a perfect article. Granby Rubbers Wear Like Iron. Ask your dealer for them. mehl4 ENGLISH & McCOUBREY, Manufacturers’ Agents, COMMISSION MERCUANTS AND AUCTIONEERS. Office and Stores—Mechanics’ Building, WaterStreet, St. John’s, N. F. P.O. Box 142 d&w 3m—mehl2 Mortgage Sale. To be sold by Public Auction, on the pre- mises, Gerald Street, Charlottetown, on FRI- DAY. twenty-seventh day of April next, A D 1894, and atthe hour of twelve o’clock, noon, under and by virtne of a power of sale contained in an indenture of mortgage bear- ing date the first day of July, A D 1875, and made between Henry A Harvie of the Com- mon of Charlottetown, in Queen's County, in the Province of Prince Edward Island, in the Dominion of Canada, Stationer, and Hannah Harvie, his wife, of the one part, and Rowan Robert Fitzgerald of Chariottetown, in the County and Province aforesaid, Barrister-at- law, of the other part: — All that tract, piece or parcel of land, being rtof Common Lot Number Twenty-seven (27) in the Common of Cnarlottetown, bound- ed as follows. that is to say:—By a line com- mencing on the north boundary line of land ‘ately the property of the late Daniel Hodg- son, Esquise, in the south-east anglé of land formerly the property of George Wastie Le- Blois, being also the sonth-east angle of a plot of land the property of Peter Gregor, and run ning tnence easterly along the said boundary Jine of the late Daniel Hodgsan’s land fifty- five (55) feet, or to the western side of a street intended as a continuation of School Street; thence along the said intended street norther- y one hundred and eighty-seven feet six inches; thence westerly parallel with the first named boundary line fifty-five (55) feet, or to the eastern woneees, line of Peter Gregor’s land aforesaid; and thenee along the said boundary line southerly one hundred and eighty-seven (187) feet six (6) inches, or to the place of commencement, being known and murked on the plan and survey of the sub- — of the said land as Plots Number 1, 2 and 3. ALSo—AII that other tract, piece and parcel of land, being part of said Common Lot Num- ber twenty-seven (27), bounded as follows, that is tosay: Commencing on the north side of Gerald Street, at the distance of forty feet easterly trom the eastern side %f a street in- tended as a continuation of School Street aforesaid ; thence easterly along said Gerald Street forty-two feet; thence northerly paral- lel with said intended street eighty-three feet three inches, or to the southern boundary line of land formerly the property of the late James Cahill; thence westerly along the same forty-two feet; thence southerly to the place of commencement, being known and marked yare _e ee as —— No. 5, ‘or jurther particulars a) at the offi the undersigned. wy seat Dated this l4th day of March, A D 1894. TZGERALD, R. R. FT meh Lie-ty 3 195 22 20) Mortgagee. - SATUDRAY, MARCH The wily Exar The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. 17, oc , THE LARGEST in Size and Circalation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. One Year, -- - $4 Three Months, - $ Six Months, - $2/One Month, - 35¢ Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : McCLURE’'S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 months at 40 cents a month. By special arrangement with the publishers, we ar enabled to make a most exceptional offer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who filis out the following blank form, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 40 cents 4 month. CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTITTTITTTTTT-TTTIITII IIe siiaaii | = Tue Exauiner Publishing Co., “. — * = : z Charlottetown, P. E. Island. 2 v. =& = You will please send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 = - . ‘ : A «= wonths from date, for which I agree to pay 40 cents a month, it being = - = —_* F understood that you are to have sent to my address for one year, without or —* o extra charge, MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current — = of = number. “: e Lt ie A ieniniviiatineinttsiiceeys sddbipesevdettian svsvecangane z = Date.....00-.cecccescccceseseocsooees Address. .......sccccsceeeeees ovnubos's sptaeeeenare - - wr = = Mo lb lb Sb Sp SSS SN Nb Sb Sb SS NS Sb SLL Ln > > Si Sb Sb So Ln lL i i i bl lb Sb lp lo lp yo ip '» 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 Russel!, Joel Chandler Har- rs, Thomas Hardy, J. T. Trowbridge, Jerome K. Jerome, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Theodore Sano 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. * Bach number of McCLURE’S MAGAZINE contains two illustrated interviews with famous people. Jules Verne, Frances Hodgson’ Burnett, Tissandier, the famous 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 materia! for especially prepared inter- views, which will appear fully illustrate? in this magazine. HENRY M. STANLEY will contribute, especially for young readers, a story of AFRICAN ADVENTURE. NATURAL HISTORY AND ADVENTURE.—There will be several articies written by Raymond Blathwayt, who has been called by Mr. W. T. Stead the best interviewer in England, from material furnished him by Carl Hagenback, of Hamburg, the great animal importer and trainer. 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 TO THE GORILLAS. Arrangements have been made, in connec tion with aleading English review, to publish Professor Garner’s letters descriptive ot his present expedition to Africa. Professor Garner is noted the world over for the curious and interesting investigations he is making in 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 ef these articles will be from photo graphs taken by Prof. Garner in Africa. MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under the heads The Edge of the Future,” “ Newest Knowizize,” “ Knowledge of Immediate Value,” © ” ‘ hd . - The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” ete. We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for only $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 avai! themselves of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magazine. Address: The Examiner Publishing Go., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. We are giving BIG BARGAINS in the above line of goods, as we have a large stock on hand. a0. TORT, - North Side of Queen Squara, - - - - Opposite the Post Office Charlottetown, January 4, 1894—dy & wky ——_ BWHKER’ " LOS (Zs CATARRE Pees URE gaF eu Rei Plt EFFECTUALLY CURES CATARRH, COLD IN THE HEAD, CATARRHAL HEAD- ACHE D DEAFNESS, INFLUEN , ETC, » Sold everywhere. Price, 25 cents. M'fd. by THE H aWKER MEDICINE CO’Y., L’'td., St. John, N -B I. &. L. Grain Crusher TURNIP SLICER. 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 12 bushels of good White Russian Wheat, delivered at Charlottetown. Parties sendin Wheat by train will have Bags returned with Crusher. Extra Rings for the above always on hand. D. W. FINLAYSON, as 8 . we 7 nf | fe PP J 1 ores 1894. [ -— i j - bys eT ™y 1 i ry, | Meet in Our Stock. We keep everything a first- Clothing Store should We class keep. not only sell at moderate prices, but fill and deliver orders promptly and carefully. Inspection of our Overgoats, Ulsters, Reefers and Suits will ocavince you we ate fully up to the wants of the people of P. E. Island. McKay Woolen Co. Charlottetown, Nov. 17, 1895. Give us a eall S. R. FOSTER & SON, Manufacturers of Wire Nails, Steel and Iron cut Nails and Spikes, ‘lacks, Brads, Shoe Nails, I!imgarian Nails, &e Sr Joun, N. B. «804. Spring Trip From Liverpool. 5 ~ ~*~. THE CLIPPER BARK RALPH B. PEAKE, 700 Tons Register, Classed A 1 Red, at Lloyds, RICHARD RENDLE, COMMANDER will be on the berth at Liverpool on the ist MARCH, and will sail from that port For Charlettetown Direct, ABOUT Ist OF APRIL NEXT, and wiil carry Freight at throngh rates to he different Railway points onthe Island so Picton. 243" For Freight appiy in London to John Pitcairn & Sons, 7 Union Court, Old Broad Strect, KE. C.; in Liverpool to Piteairn Bros., 5l South John Street, or here to the owners, = mp . a PEAKE BROS. & CO. Charlottetown, Jan. 16, 1894. her wat sum jour Sw Nicholson iis canvass for Ward Three at present not in favor pat guar cod Mr. Donald liscover that the cit ens are f Sz Reform, Permanent Streets or walks, or a roadway to Victoria Park, ( i to contest the Ward “ail M ia 8 satisfied, however, that the elec tors appreciat and he is now working day and night pro- ducing a GOOD SMOKING and CHEW- ING ARTICLE BRAND, Look out for his NEW made from straight goods | aiiy selected fiickey & Nicholson. Meagher's Orange Quinine Wine, Prepared strictly according to the British Pharmacopeeia. Quinine in this agresabie ticker in action and more reliable n when taken in Capsales, Powders or Do Half a wineglassfal For sale free to physi- form is « > | ‘ Dh 1 arugeZ eis, clans upon receipt of card MEAGHER BROS. & CO., d&yv Montreal. Lumber! Lumber ! FOR SALE in Peake’s No. 3 Whart. CEDAR FENCE POSTS, t CEDAR SHINGLES Sample bott! Uv (ys \ ’ pply of all kinds of Lum- r Pme, Spruce and Hemlock B Studding Fencing, ) Briel Lime, et | t nl will be sold hea 1 as it must t disposed of POOLE & LEWIS Pp. s oO nt of the severe winter und ‘ ve extended the time for t tion of amounts due us to Ma \ ‘ { ettled on that date March court with PCOLE & LEWIS Ch’town, Feb. 8, 1894 Ch’town, Dec. 27, 1893—eed & wy LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. STAMPS WANTED. OLD Canadian, U stamps, as used 2! , pited States’ and other to 40 years ago. For > each GEORGE LOWE 346 Spadina Avenue, Toronto, -m © ») + iu “ many pay ¢ Sale THE subecriber offers for sale his farm on the Mount mile and a half from the city, well and as. the “Welsh Farm.’ The farm consists of sixty acres, and con tains a good Dwelling House aud five Outbuildings, all in good condition. There is also a good orchard in connection Terms easy. Apply to C, BENOIT, Water Street Farm or Edward Road, about one favorably known July 3, 1893. VEE FRIENDS Quality, Quantity, Price, nd