eT. Ma AAS SE TE IY OT MRM ARE PRT AI i 8 RRP SO coe _M’MILLAN & HORNS Queen Street. THE DAILY EXAMINER, MONDAY, DECEMBER ee mee tee ae ee ener 23, 1895. -_—— CHRISTMAS THE BRIDE AND GROOM. Hiow a Wedding in High Life Was Ma D gis ‘ _ Chronicied, — . en there was a wedding on the avenue the 4 vy crowd wa ver night. It was not a grand wedding . - , som it Was avery simple one, con- - g that the groom was a very suc- 4 a | : ' ng business man and the bride : ‘ . w was naire s daughter, **There we } att ents, the society editor i ne ould almost see the repor- A ? x0 up as this damaging state- , Wek ke he decorations were y specially elabora’e; the bride’s cos- Sor ce a ‘mh 4 call forth few adjectives; and ‘ vernor and & senator or two A vt Hi ‘ the invited guests, there 0 i little erial for the news- The , ‘ s ; ‘+, a rer in the modest wedding, or in ( 7 ‘going away’’ of the bridal (; ‘ me \ s of persons who ordinarily oO . Wa - are not 1g for the society column Di a ‘ a ight t headline and read every word rief Account with eager eyes, and nYahumble hom a ‘*God bless Pain ss — sa " was spoken by lips little used to RCC ys forms of convratulation, . - v and his In a city hospital two young girls lay 1 a ° si si-egp tate ed on cots, Sulling into each . = ‘ s faces, and fox retting for a mo- w — | ;' ta the rs of pain through whizh g ~ pass A 4 1 gy one uy ‘So she i married,’’ said one. “I 2 | onde { she'il stili come here on San- | i 92 SKY; aft ’ 7 Weeks mever seem v pa Walling) s , l can hear ber sing and 8 ¢ kind look in her beautiful cyes.’’ Wh t Faith’s confi ct: | I shall always love her,’’ the ether now }said. ‘“Phis worki would be heaven, ] y wing . \ nis,| OVen With all the pain, if there were more i ine sa eww } se it.” ) lod y s Heaven above \ crowd of newsbors and. bootblacks Ani tloats from Earth below,| & ithered on the corner, dtfsctissed the - pnappdungt ut aweet stranger,| *ciety event with as muen relish as if oe 2 eo hey had been members of the mMiost fash- . ti ‘ es many ’ aie i shle club in the city. Lay HuAcdred Fears A_Y, tia: ‘tle’s the real kind, he is,’ said one the # a DR) We-ans is in luck, for he ain’t a-goin' All sin and wrong forgiven, | to forget us—not he.’ hLarth seems se kin to Heaven, It was the bridegroom of whom he Anl sweet iwo w i3 toe ising Upon a) en oke, and they were all members of his { : as day Sunda chool class. lib o-+e-< oe I hous3 on the avenue, after the CHRISTMAS SHIIs. guests hadi departed, father, mother and — = sister met together in «a tender embrace. A-ia Nichols Man, in Harper's Lt s onl orthy of our darling,’’ B * s 2 \ - » ’ | } } Meanw na lonely hearthstone a B wW air and K i ug — ee For mary sails sne for a favoring breeze } a ; = U a i ais a vy as is W r 1 ’ : ‘ 2 % ved.’”’ 7 r gra y It wa ng high li fter all For Christmas p - — —-~— : HMyin Ovr Ally.” < - > waves ‘ 3 ~ . . ve ee The famous *‘S, i r Alley’’ tsa \ ‘ song, t story of Which has been pre- 0 ou . y . e dark seas! § f rus by the =r er himseli, the se hoted Henry Carey. il was much of a : - ate Bohemi and got many subjects for Re ' si ! : = ie song pees Ww strolling about ay o edt t 5 One holiday ke chancel to nN wi ow oo a shoemaker’s apprentice who was giving himseif and his sweetheart i uting H t x erto the puppe Go, friend breezé But whee billows fiercely rock and rave, l.a'l them to ease Let joy abule At Christmas-tide ! ———————— CHRISTIANS IN TURKEY. it is a Mest Une smiertable tor Them to Live in. Why Plare A little historical resume is perhaps neeful in helping one to arriv- at a due appreciation of the present difhk e2 writes tad Gorre-ponue News from b-yrout. j : } —_— hating the Curiatians, have always nt of the ] milon The Druses, while fret- ted under and rezented the Turkish rule The knowledge thatthe Porte. was in a sik @ condition prompted them to rise @xce more, and fora time, at apy rate, ther have succeeded in driving the Otto pap authorities out of the Hauran. A war of extermination is now being w aged agaiast them. They will fight bravely, tenaciously, but they will be evercome by mere numbers. It is difficult:te get any authentic information about what is hap- pening in the interior. The Arable press dare publish nothing, and 1f ts unwise to discuss the situation with tbe Syrians. All that is general ke«-wledge is that there} ix revolution in the Hauran, and that soldiers are being sent to quell it. I have} had an opportunity of gaining the opinions of men with a long experience of Syria and. Turkish government, and although it would be foolish to“ say any- thing likely to create a panic, the fact is tw ‘ gnorei that Huropeans throeghout Syria and Palestine are fully ‘ to he convipeed the drafting of so many troops into the country fas a purpose besides the eviduing of the Druses, Ever since the trouble about Armenia commenced, Turkish soldiers have been sent into Syrian towns, as the crisis became 2 ute, more and more were sent. Then eame the order for the calling out of the reserves and the pres--gargiog of the peo ple from the h and the pla =” 2 furtnight ago all the commotion v cor ling to the Turks, to prevent European Armenians, Jerusalem wou'd have been strange. Now it is to put dawn the Drusee. In the minds of aides was, ac- &*+istance being sent to the aitthongh to do+o by way of Boglish people out here there are tw 0 €X- piana' ous for the presence of all the e t70%p- First, that internati mal revoiu- tions are expecte] away in the interior, jn-t a+ they have broken out in Asia Minor. Secndly, and th’s is more Jikely, ywingof the dissensions in prov: av declare a the Sultan, kn his empire, sects against sects, and inces agains (he anthorities, m ° . ng hat Mohs aj- holy war, which means tha ohamme ans will sink their mutual differences and \ fight ‘of the prophet under the green ff I to sweep all Christian<« from their land, In, now a/ ali the M »slem moe yues there ix prayer that the Christians te cursed. — A Alen Amma antegnan It Saved Our Chill. “Viv litle daughter, three and a half years old, suffered three years with Eez+ma. Her tittle body was covered with the itching rash, and doctors did no Four boxes of Chase’s Uintment jave entirely cured and saved our child. Her skin i+ clear and not a sign of rash is to be seen.” Andrew Aiton, Hartland, N. B. Mr. Aiton is one of thousands LbLene- fited by this vufailivg cure for’ pies and tkin diseoses goo! Xuas Present-—Bieycles, cyclometers, lanip-, belle, toe clips, pumps, carriers at Ww . BE. Dawson’s. shows and lying irs, thence to a piehouse, where he treated her toa feast ef buns, cheese, cakes, gammon of bacon, beef and bottled beer. Then came more shows, a ride oa the river and a dance to wind up the afternoon. Carey had nothing better to do than to follow this interesting pair about, and, emused with the naive courtship, spent the after- noon observing them. Returning to his 1 s, the idea occurred to him that the ‘prentice’s love-makiug ought to song. ‘That night he fell to work and before he went to bed he had composed the greater part of the song new bearing the name. It was at first received with ridicule, and Carey, being a modest young fellow, was well-nigh erushed by the laughter of his aequaint- make a gout ances at his unique production, but in spite of their sarcasm the song becamo popular ine London, and in a few weeks was heard on every corner and every alley. Nor cid it make its way only the rude, for it caught the fancy Among f the polite and was even heard ‘‘at eour?,’’ a fact that gave an iinmense im- niso « petus to its popularity. It’s naturalness Was its main recommendation, for as a poem it has little grace, bat as a picture of innocence and love in low life it is in- imitable. The melody to which it was originally sung was composed by Carey, and remained popular for nearly thirty years, when some one set ibe words to an old English tune, “The Country Lass,’’ and this is the only melody now known, that by Carey being completely forgotten, called Had to Wait His Turn. In the days of Gen. Sam. Houston, duei- ing was much more comimon than now. After removing to ‘Texas Gen. Houston happened to give offense to a po itical op- ponent, who felt his honor disfigured to such ar extent that he sent a challenge to Houston. ‘The bearer of the challenge received courtly civilty. He handed the written challenge to Gen Honston, who read it and taking up his pen wrote sorme- thing across the back of the folded paper and placed it in a pigeon hole of his desk. He then wnt on to entertain the bearer of the challenge with the pleasant conver- sation for which he was noted. After a time the man began to grow impatient, and remindiig the General of the chal- lenge, asked him if he was going to reply. ‘*Oh yes,’’ said Houston, ‘‘I am going to reply.’’ ‘*We'l, ara you going to accept the chal- lenge of my friend?’ **Certainly I will accept it.’’ ‘Will you fix the date for to-morrow?’ **No, not to-_acrrow.”’ ‘*Next day”’ ‘*No, not the next day either.’’ **Well, will you fix the date?’’ ‘‘No, Lam not able to fix a date. You saw ine number your friend’s note; it is No. 49. There are forty-eight other blank- ed scoundreis ahead of your friend and I must take them inturn. As soonas I have killed them o*f | will return to your friend; but he will have to wait until hig turn comes.”’ The bearer of the challenge bowed bhim- but of course his friend’s turn never came and it is not probable that he was anxious for it to come,—Knoxville Journal, self out; Towels at $20 a piece are among the lus- uries shown beneath glass cases in some lof the linen stores. ‘They do not seem ‘even distantly related to the heap of huckaback and damask which the fingers of the multitude handle on the bargain counter. They areas fine as silk,the bird's ‘eye weave of the background close and soft. ‘They are big affairs. “They haye drawn work as delicate as lace, and em: broidery almost as fine as that on christen- ‘ing robes for their adornment. Sometimes 'the embroidery is of pale pink and blue, but usually it isin liven tints. But it |} would require a multi-millionaire to use jthem without feeling that she was com- jinitting a desecration as well as an extray- agance, | DIVORCES IN THE EAST. | BDurinese Separations Decided by the Aid | of Candle or Rush Lights, | In Burmah when a couple desire a di- ;Voree the first step is a general summon- jing of the family relations of both sides, }Wwho commence proceedings by a discus- } Sion with a view to an amiable settlement. | This, however, seldom takes place. Then the patriarchs of the village are called in, Fond they proceed as follows: They take | two candles, wax, if possible, buit general- jdy rushlights, and apportion one to the jhusband and the other to the wife. ‘The Seeded are then placed upon the table, if | | | there is one, and on the floor if there is not, and lighted. Great care is taken that neither isin any draught likely to interfere with or expedite its combustion, Then the husband, wife and relatives sit round to wait and watch, If the hus- band’s candle burns out first. he and all his relatives walk out of the door and leave the wife in posssession of the house and all the chatcels. If the wife’s candle } goes out first,she and her relatives depart. the victor pays a small fee to the candle- | providing patriarchs, and the divorce is complete In Madagascar a husband can penne his wife for the most trivial offence by giving her a piece of money be- fore witnesses and saying: ‘I thank you, madam.’’ In Japan the couple simply proceed to the nearest temple, each wear- ing a blue scarf across the left shoulder and Knotted under the right arm. They bow thrice before the altar, unfasten their scarfs, and leave the temple by opposite doors, thus having loosed the marriage tie. In Cochin-China the breaking of a pair of chopsticks in the presence of the couple is a legal form of divorce.—N. ¥. Sun, She Was Se mental, **You keep rings here, don’t you ?’’ he asked in a Woxiward avenue jewelry store. *“Certainly,’’ ronlied the clerk. thing for yourse’{?’’ “No; i'm thinxin’ of gettin’ suthin’ fur my girl. Got snything fur about two dollars?’ **Some- “Yes, L can give you a plain ring at that price. Here is something very neat. *’ ‘*I guess that would fit her all right. Kin I have sunthin’ engraved on to it?’ *“Ot course—what is it? ‘Wall, lL wantyou to puton it: ‘From Thomas J. to Helen H., who 13 not only the best lookin’, but the smartest girl in the State of Michigan. My love will | never, never grow cold, and should death overtake me, my last thought Would be | of you. Be good and you’ll be happy, | and please aceept this as a token of. love.’ That's what 1 want you to put un.’’ “Good gracious, but you can’t get all that on a ring!’’ exclaimed the clerk. ‘““Must have it on or I don’t ' | ring!’ wasthe firm reply. “Bat the usual way 1s simply to en- grave: ‘T. to H." with the date after it.’’ “The usual way may be all right with girls, but it won’t work with mine. What she wants is sentiment—heaps of sentiment. So you can’t get it-on?’’ *“*Couldn’t possibly doit, You'd want a surface as large as your hand to get that on.’”’ “Say! soThic exclaimed the young man, after a moment of reflection—*‘I have it! ‘TH bay her a silver belt-buckle instead of a ring, and 1’ have ‘em put onallI sai and adi to it: You are never absent from my thoughts, and a vision of your dear face rises up befory me a thousand times a day. Be true—be true! Virtue is its own reward, and your mother kin live with us after we are married. No more at Free Press. &. Mound Builders’ Corn, A curious experiment was made this summer by Charles Graham, «a nursery- man of this country, and the result lies upon the desk before your correspondent as he writes. Last year,,Mr A. A, Grabam, of Mount Vernon, Ind.,° made a visit to the vicinity of Alton, lll, and called upon a friend,;who had just opened # mound builders’ burial mound. Upon the mound grow several large trees, among them an oak four feet in diameter, and thus the age of the*thound was establish- ed as considerable. In it were found the crumbling remains of bones, and, among other utensils, a large pot, containing a maize very much like our present com- mon red corn, Of this Mr. Graham secured several grains, and on returning home planted it. It grew, and the re- sult was that he produced a strain of corn which«is most likely the ancestor of the corn we pow cultivate. In spite of having been in the grav» for certainty less than four hundred years, it grew very rapidly and prodnced a large, well-shaped ear upon a fairly tall stuik. The ear is well set, the srrains being somewhat smaller than any of the not want a | r present—good-by !’’—Detroit | present varieties, exeept pop-corn. In | shape the grain resembles dried sweet | corn, being rough and wrinkled. In ° taste it is sweet and agreeable—Indian- apolis News, Cheques for Seven Cents, Of the many schemes employed by ad- vertisers to attract and retain the attention of the public, the one employed by a hab- erdasher, is certainly as novelas any con- ceived, says a Chicago paper. He got an " elaborate envelope with a crest upon it and inclosed a short and well-worded note ask- ing the attention of the reader for two minutes to his notice of his goods, and ene closed also a cheque regularly signed, for seven cents, as the value of the time re- quested. ; The advertisement was sent to Board of Trade men, bankers and the better class of | business men throughout the city. | ‘he haberdasher hardly thought that any one would take the trouble to cash the cheques, but some bright and kind-hearted wit conceived the idea of collectirg these cheques and using them for a worthy ob- ject. Accordingly the cheques were gradu- ally gathered in, all properly endorsed,and sent to the children’s fresh air fund, and | aggtegated quite a comfortable sum. While the advertiser was rather surpris- ed at the novel use to which his advertis- ing cheques were put, he is quite pleased to contribute thus Indirectly, as it were, to such a worthy cause.—Chisago Times Herald. Effect of Fright on Lobsters, Lobsters arenot warlike creatures, They do not mind boiling, but have an extraor- dinary terror of the smell of powder and the sound of big guns. Such, at least, was the statement ‘miade last night at the weekly meeting of, the Piscatorial Secicty in the Holborn Restaurant. 1t was affirm- | ed by one of the speakers that during big- gun practice by coast artillery lobsters in the neighborhood become so terrified that their claws drop off from sheer fright. Other kinds of fish, more alert in their. nrove- ments, also become alarmed at the sound of big guns and leave the locality of | the range in millions to take refuge in the deep sea.— London Telegram, HUNGARY'S MILLENNIUM. A Celebration to Last Throughout arn En- tire Year, Hungary is preparing to celebrate its millennium as a State, the celebration to ast from January 1, 1896, to December 31 of the same year. This millennial year will be filled with commemorations of events of interest in the long history of the Magyar realm, which, for many hun dreds of years, was the bulwark of West- ern Europe against the barbarism of the Kast. The year’s celebration will be divid- ed into three parts, each commemorating an epoch in the history of Hungary. The celebration proper will open with a com- bined session of both houses of. parlia- ment in the new hall, now nearly com- pleted, at a cost of 16,000,900 florins, -and this grand occasion will be marked by unusual pomp and eeremonies. Next will come the opening of the Pantheon at the end of Andrassy street, Buda-Pesth, when hundreds of busts and statues ef Hun- gary’s heroes and eminent men and women of the last thousand years will be placed in Hungary’s Valhalla. This will be followed by the inauguration of the new Museum of Art and History, built at a cost of 3,600,000 florins, the laying of the corner stones of two new bridges to span the Danube at Buda-Pesth, and the dedication of three other great public buildings, the Paiace of Justice, the Ex- hibition Hall and the Museum of Artistic Hand Work. Still further to indicate the beginning of a New era in the spring two sections of the older part of the city will be remodel- ed on bygienic principles, and 500 new public schools throughout the country will be opened. The exhibition buildings in themselves will constitute an attraction of no ordinary kind, as in the different buildings to house the historical ¢ollee- tions wil! be illustrated all the different styles of architecture that have character- ized the 1,000 years of Hungary’s exist- ence as a State. In addition,in the ethito- graphic village will be presented all the dwellings, types, characteristics, ete , of Hungary's conglomerate of nationalities, together with schools, police courts, churches, fairs and kirmesses, the whole forming a celebration of unusual interest to the scholar, the historian and ethno- graphist. Such an exhibition will also be of great significance, not only to Hungary, but to Europe. It will indicate, among other things, the growing sense of nation- ality in this great Magyar State, and the entrance upon a new erain which educa- tion and civilization, humanity and pro- gress will represent the goais and a new order of events.—Interior Chicago, A Young Girl’s Library. Thomas Wentworth Higginson in an aritcle in November Ladies’ Home Jour- nal, prints a list of one hundred books, by American authors. which he regards as the best works for young girls of fifteen. He considers the attractive and interesting features of books in making up his list,as he hol¢s that literary instruction should be presented in its most palatable and in- viting form to youth, In naming the best ten hooks for young girls Mr. Higginson says: At the head of all available books for American girls—whether tocreate the love of reading or to gratify it—miust be placed, of course, Miss Alcott’s ‘‘ Little Women.’’ The your, girls themselves will place it. there, if:we do not; and there is really no objection to be made to this prominence, beyond some occasional instances of slang or slovenly expression. With it may be classed, though perhaps written for some- what younger readers, Miss Jane Andrews’ immortal ‘‘The Seven Little Sisters Who Live on the Round Ball that Floats in the Air,’’ a book which has for the firet time brought it home to multitudes of young poople that they are the citizens not mere- ly of a natioa but of a planet. We may then pass to four classic works, by classic American authors, Hawthorne’s ‘ Won- der look,’’? Longfellow's ‘‘ Evangeline,’’ Lowell's “Vision of Sir Launfal’’ and Whittier’s ‘‘Snow-Bound.’’ With a little less sense of perfect security we may add Irving’s ‘‘sSketch Book,’’ Cooper's ‘‘ Last of the Mohicans,’ and. Mrs. Stowe’s *‘Unele “‘om’s Cabin;’’ the last two hav ing this cspecial. value, - that they intro- duce! two new races into literature and won at once an international fame. This makes ‘nine cf the first ten, and Dr. Hale’s ‘Ten Times One is Ten”’ seems al- most providential as to the fitness of its title, and may rightfully find its way in. A Camera’s Lies, Photographers, especially amateur photogravhers, will tell you-that the camera cannot lie. This only proves that photographers, especially amateur photo- graphers, can; for the dry plate can fib as badiy as the canvas on occasion, and is actually more pernicious because of its undeserved reputation of veracity. Who would belicve a ghost story on the unco:- roborated evidence of a painter's picture? Yeta photograph of a house at Halesowen, taken a few day ago, included the likeness of the wealthy lady who vacated it six months back. Asshe vacated it for the churehyard, the plate apprepriately enough exhibited her dressed in a shreud; and so convincing was this counterfeit present- ment that « regular ghost scare broke a:rt, and s veral women averred that they saw the cead ladv at the window. On Satur- day it was discovered that it was all due to somag flaw in the photosgraphia appar- atus, just as in a very ~imilar case at Ips- wich some time ago. There the view re- : presented a back water off the River Gip- 1 | ping, and in the water there was clearly | outlired a drowned female figwre—wuist. bust, features, hair and all. They actually dragged the river to seu what they could find, and found nothing. Curiously ehough, a woman was really drowned at the very spot a few weeks later; so that Ipswich photography seegns to be as previ ous as Halesowen is retrospective.—Pall Mall Gazette. A Talking People. As Judge Luston, of Tennessee, was ence going through Texas he met an old Texan who described at length the people that had settled in his neighborhood, a Jarge number of them having come from Kentucky. ‘‘And there’s them Kain- tuckians,’’ said he. ‘‘They’re the speak- in’est people I ever sec in my life, fer a fact. Why, whenever we hey a shootin’ match, a camp-meetin,’ a weddin’ or a fun’ral, you can jest bet that them Kain- tuckians will be thar,and afore you knows it they’ll he offerin’ resolutions and a- makin’ speeches tell you cain’t rest. ‘To tell the truth, Jedge, they cain’t cnt a4 watermelon withont a speech.''—Cen- tury. nee ; Case of Know Nothing, ; At a certain Cambridge viva voce ex- amination & particular candidate had so far failed to answer any question what- ever.. After wasting a good déal of pa- tience on him the examiner in desperation finally tore from a sheet paper a portion 2 inches square, placed it in front of the luckless youth and cuttingly observed: “Oblige me,sir, by placing upon this paper the whole of what you know on any sub- ject of any kind whatever.’’—Judge, . = | Is not what we say but what Hood's Bar- oo Se C60 © 6 aww Nervous Prostration It is now a well established fact in | | | ‘A C000 TO SELECT YOUR Holiday Gifts BEFORE THE RUSIL. ~—='s« Walches Easily Head the List of ica Desirable Presents. medical science that nervousness is due | LADIES’ GOLD WATCHES are cheaper than ever to impure blood. Therefore the true way to cure nervousness is by purify- ing and enriching the blood. The | great blood purifier {s Hood’s Sarsa | parilla. Itead this letter: “For the last two years I have been s great sufferer with nervous prostration and polation ofthe heart. I was weat in my limbs and had smothered sensa- tions. At last my physician advised me to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla which I did, and I am happy to say that I am now strong and we Iam still using Hood's Sarsaparilia aud would not be without it. I recommend it to all who are suffering with nervous prostration and palpitation ‘of the heart.” Mrs, DALTON, 56 Alice St., Toronto, Ontario, Get Hood’s, because Hood’s Sarsaparilla ‘4s the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye toda taparilla does that tells the story. Hood’s Pills i,2sisupile’ss SS a GHATEFUL— COMFORTING. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST — SUPPER, “ By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine propertics of well selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavored beverage which may save use many heavy doctors’ bills, It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame,”’ Civil Service Gazette JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, How eopsthic Chemists, London, England. + i BE SURE) YOU GET! ONE! tire..... vA FOR 1896 IT’S GOOD A SPLENDID BOOK OF REFERENCE, 480 PAGES Given Free ‘Sunlight? TO USERS OF $0 HOW Commancing Moxewten, 1895, and unti TO GET given away, purchasers of IT 3 packages or 9 bars of Sunricut Soap will receive from their grocers, 1 Sunticut ALMANAC FREE, Contains complete Almanac, Home Management, Language’ of Flowers, Gardening, Fashions and Patterns, Dreamsand their significance, Recipes, Seeton & Mitchell, Halifax, Agente fcr Nova Scoti:. and P. E. Island. A Wide Range. A preparation? which enriches and purifies the blood and assists nature in repairing wasted tissue must have a wide range of usefulness. Such a preparation is Scott's Emulsion of Cod- liver Oil with Hypophos- phites of Lime and Soda, ‘The uses of Scott’s Emul- sion are not confined to wasting diseases, like con- sumption, scrofula or anzmia. They embrace nearly all those minor ail- ments® associated with loss of flesh. Scott & Bowno, Belleville, 50c, and $f, Notice to Ship Masters and Ship Owners. All vessels are prohibited from lying in the ice outside the ends of wharves, from Steom Navigation Wharf Nast to Pownal Wharf West, or in any other part of the stream, or harbor that will obstruct or interfere with the free passage of the S.S. Stanley to her berth at Peake’s No, 2 Wharf. By order of the Marine Department. DAVID SMALL, Jeel2 Harbor Master. BOARDING & TRAINING STABLES Grafton Street, Opposite Court House. i i ——— JOQUN M. NICHOLSON, Prop’r., (Late in the:emplcey of James Houghton.) Having open’ d a publi¢ Stable on Gratton Street, | am prepared t> take Ger tlemen’> Horses and Colts at all seasohs of the year to board, train, break or keepin road condition for imm: diate use. Horse C'ipping also at tended to. Terms reasonable. nov2/—135& w 3m before. Perhaps you can afford one this year. SILVER WATCHES, too, for Boys or Men, are extra good valve. Very pretty Black Steel Chatelaine Watches. The new long Gold and Silver Chains. Splendid wearing Gents’ Alberts, Cuff Links and Buttons. Brooches in Cases. Handsome Crystal Brooches. RINGS ! RINGS !—Beautiful, sparkling. See them. Silver Top Scent Bottles. ‘ Real Cut Glass Goods—very cheap for ieal cut, which we warrant they are. Goid and Silver Headed Canes, Gold Spectacles, beau- tiful Silver Goods. E. W. TAYLOR, Cameron Block. Charlottetown, December 18, 1895 dy Bisssell’s Perfection Carpet sweeper, THE BEST MADE —— ee SIMON W. CRABBE, Stoves and Hardware, Walker’s Corner. Charlottetown, December 20, 1895—135 & wky W. W. WELLNER, Has completed his Usual Large Stock of Watches, Clocks, Jewel-= ry, Silverware, Fancy Goods, &c., SUITABLE FOR XMAS AND NEW YEAR. ————— The Public are Invited to Call and Inspect Above Goods Charlottetown, December 19, 1895—5i Granby Rubbers Are out again this season in new styles and in all the new Shoe shapes, right up to date, but with the same old “ wear like iron” quality that has always charac- terized them, because they are honestly made of pure Rubber. Be sure you get Granbys this year. nov27—135 & wky ft Hockey & Acme ENGLISH CUTLERY. Carvers in Cases and Pairs from 50c. to $10. 50 patierns Pocket Knives from 5c. to $10. Scissors, Razors, Bread Knives. Bread Boards. Tea and Table Knives ip different handles. Hall Lamps, Library Lamps. Silverware of the very best quality (Rogers Bros). Granite Ware, China Steel Ware, ete., ete. DODD & ROGERS Charlottet»wn, December 20, 1895—135 wKates. | TIME Yaviety Gntertainment CHRISTMAS WEEK | | ——IN AID OF THE | P. E. Island Hospital, —IN Tik— ‘OPERA HOUSE. om ON ct Friday, December 27th _— FIRST PART FLOWER DRILL * Cin Grecian Costunacs). Conducted by Principal J. D. Seaman Selections ......... : SECOND PART and Tableaux, under Living Pictures the direction of Mr. W. C. Uarris Sce ne ! Music. Scene 2—“The Death Scene,” Romeo and Julie t. Scene 3—“ Patriotism or the Sacrifice of Fami'y to Country,” after the Painting of Moreau de Scene 4—‘ Prinee Prison Scene from 1 ours. Arthur and Hubert,” Shakespeare’s King JO0ODD Seene from Longfe!- “* Hiawatha.” (a) Hiawatha’s Woo ing. (b) Thus it is our daughters leave us. Scene 6-—* Roman Gikdmtars.” Scene —“* Ghost, Storles}~ seene from Shakespeare’. Boyle 1 t Scene 8—‘ Greek’ Teetry,” after the celebrated painting of Cocuians. Scene 9 .“ The Three Witches” in Macbeth. See ne . + 7 Scene 5—Double ’ ; iow s 10—“ Britannia”—Grand En- semble. Intermission...............++.+.+...Candy Sale THIRD PART. Charlottetown Amateur Minstrels, (Ladies and Gentlemen) Prof. Vinnicombe, Musical Conductor Capt. Weeks, Interlocutor. Four End Men—two Bones, two Tambos. CJUONEC i. tid iscdisn this, Ce Ss o Wane Bane)” ...:2..6.. 0 Company * Cricket on the Hearth ” ..... Mr. Ethiop * Whistling Coon”.......... The Little Coon Solo and Quartette—“ Old Home ”......... se siaaend arbi eameiena Jake and others. ** Dar I Long to be Again ”.. Melind@ Kole TN A as cp sdnss sacmednceta es Tam bo RRND TINIE. csc tnanoeti cotrents .Bones Bros xs Sidewalks of Ow, eee i, ....Mr. Christmas and Miss New Year Harmouica and Banjo i iiieccaecnnes Bones “ Mystic Star ” (with mareh and grand electric effect).........+..++-+++.+.COmpany * God Gave this eet nici ii kc The music will be furnished. by Prof. Vinnicombe’s fall Orchestra. Doors open at 7 o’clock. Entertainment commences at 8 sharp. Tickets at popular prices, 25 an] 35 ets. Plan of Hall at Dodd’s and Rankin’s Drug Stores. decl7 Shake! Shake! Shake ! Give us your hand while we wish you a Merry, Merry Christmas. At this season . you. surely. want something in our line. What’s the matier with a pair of Skating Soots (beauties), Hockey Boots, a pair of nice Slip pers ? These are very suitable for Christmas Presents. Our prices are away down on these goods, A. E. McEACHEN, decl9 THE SHOK MAN. Mail Contracts. Over+hoe, or Seen <A NS Sealed Tenders addressed to the Post master—General!, will be received at Ottawa until noon on FRIDAY, 14th February, 1896, for the conveyance of Her Majesty’s Mails on proposed contracte for four years from the Ist April, L896, on the following routes :— New Annan and Railway Station—dai'y (Sanday excepted). 4 New Annan and Wilmot Valley—semi- weekly. 7 Peake’s Station and Railway Siation—daily (Sunday excepted). — ’ Peake’s Station and Ruskin—semi-weekly, Printed notices containing full informa- tion as to conditions of proposed coutracts may be seen, and blank forms of tender mav be obtained, at the Post Offices at which the services commence and termin-~ ate, and at the office of the subscriber, Charlottetown. F. DE ST. C. BRECKEN, Asst. P. O. Inspector, Post Office Inspector’s Office, ( h irlotletow D, P, E. Island, 13th December, 1895. SPEGIAL PRICES ON ALL GOOTS During the Holiday Seas on G.H. TAYLOR, JEWELER. decl9 7 . —~ TO LET. That large Shop, part of. the “London louse” Building, lately . oceupied by J T. McKenzie, Tailor, with good room up stairs for work shop or store room. Apply to 11ON. DANIEL DAVIES, L. H. DAVIES, Q. €., Executors Estate late Geo, Davies, Or to F. W. L. Moore, Solicitor, : in th Building. octil CHRISTMAS CARDS! Our entire Stock of XMAS CARDS, CALEN- DARS, BOOKLETS, etc, at 20 per cent, discount till Saturday Night only. stock. Don’t miss this chance, Wenurest Goods ! Wexrvest Assortment ! Opposite Prowse Bros’., WNeurvest Prices ! ~« * Every one this year’s BY SKATING RINK A DANDY XMAS GIFT! Season Ticket. GENTS’. 2.006 5008000G3.00 LADIES’ sccccccescees 2.00 CHILDREN’S.......-- 1.50 PROMENADE......... 1.00 Citizen's Band Monday and Tkursday Nights, also every alternate Saturday Afternoon. J. B. DAWSON, GEO. J. ROGERS, Managers, ¢ Charlottetc wo, Dec. 19, 1895—Iw } ee E The Greatest Sale of Bankrupt Clothing ever held in Charlotte- town is now on at the Bargain Be a partaker of its Corner. benefits. McKAY WOOLEN COMPANY. — i ' pertain Bs a So Fe 3 ye