m 80: "HE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN. JANUARY 7, 1898 a ADA OE al Ls lara he Mbt Ras Sa ae P E Island Railway On and after MONDAY, 27th Dec., 1897, teains of this Railway will run daily, (Sun- days excepted,) as under. | ; (rains Out- Trains In con Read| STATIONS. ward. Read down, | up. Toms|A. M. oA ™ 3 10) 6 20, «Charlottetown ... 9 9) 10 00 2 30) 6 3G... Royalty Junction.’ 5 16 9 {() €77 7 12). North Wiltshire. 1 10 8 55 4.81 7 24|..Hunter River... | } 99) 5 4] & 7 51 . Bradalbane...... j Ow § O07 5 13) 7 58} Baperald..« c<ece 12 53 7 53 % 27\ & OO).. Freetown .....-- 12 42) 7 39 fe) 7 § 25|..Kensington..... 9 94) 4 18 GM) 8 SHAT) (Lv. 12 go 6 45 » MiP. MM, r oy olide 5 A, M. P 12 EpILe. } Ar. 10 an 14 #1 |. . Miscouche alae 10 10) i { 37|.. Wellington Le cia > 47 ; 2 19)... Port Hill ....... 9 09) i3 34. O’Leary....---++| 8 Qo | 3 5a]..Sloomfield ...... 7 34 ¢ 34|.-Alberton......-. 6 5) 5 So. . Tignish Cs os oo ee 6 00 eR \. M.| aa! 4 |A. M. 2 wi |. Charlottetown ... 10 30 2 ;..Royalty Junction 110 10 + Bi pe eee 1 9 37 5d. ur ) Ce fly 9 05 > 10 iv j Mt Stewart lar 8 50 a? |- - Sanaa ce ieee 73% 5 45 |..Georgetown ... 710 v. MI A. M, ye Ble A. M. 4 05)..Mt. Stewart ...., 8 55 Ge MOEN: sodee ce ses 817 5 12). St. Peters shoes 7 48 5 57|.. Bear River ......| 7 08 Soe ee ced 60530: 6 20 weet P. M. we % e. MM - we: % 8 ore i 7 SO 6 05)|..Cape Traverse ..; 7 0) Pp. M |A. M. Trainsare ran by Eastern Standard ‘Time @ A SHARP, D.POTTINGEk. 8u ntendeut, Gen Mgr Govt. R Gnarlotietows. Goncton, NB. Railway Office, Deo. 27 1887 Oysters Oysters Oyster JOY! JOY! JOY!" Victoria Cafe. Great George Street. Oysters served in every style Lunches and dinners with despatch. As usual, I am prepared to deliver Oysters in any quantity to customers <o any part of tne city. Telephone Connection. JOHN P. AOY Vicroria CAFE Gt. George St..... FOR SALE. RARE CHANCE The property occupied by J.J, Gay and son @tuate in the village of Pownai,7 miles from _barlottetown, is offered for sale. The pre- ste have carried op a large market gar- en nursery, and seed business for thirty years, and the purchaser wil) no doubt retain * large share of the tocaltrade. The prem- ses comprise a large dwelling house, s‘ore, warehouse, barn, shed, orchard, and about 16 acres of the moat ferti:e land on the Isiand This land hasbeen manured year after year. for so long that as an vid man said the other day.; “It isall abed of manure and could be hauled for topdressirg.” ‘This would be an ideal spotfor a country merch- ant. orit would be admirabie fora summer resort, The situation is one of the most beautiful on the Islacd. Good betting. fishing. boating, sbooting and within easy distance; churches, post office school telephone and shops all at tie door. For terms and farther particul.re, apply to Von Clure Gay, J J Gay & ton or to, JOHN T MELLISH So! citor Char lottetov-n d&w act7 a ee JUBILEE pew and superior white soap - 8 mar- vel of beauty, pority and efficacy, the gueen of fine Laundry, Toilet and Bath. Should you buy ic once you will always use aod forever thank Jas D. Lapthorne & Co., Makers Makers of the Famous Royal ®ak Soap. Wants, Lost, Found && WANIED,—A tew boarders, ina private family. Apply #t ths office jan3- 3i FOR. SALE.—A double seat family sleigh, latgh-turned runners and dasher. JOHN H (A ATES, St Peter’s Road, _ TO LET.—Honse on jower Spring !’a k jad(with or without barn) containh g b.gntiarge and weli finished ;ooms, Frost ‘oof ceilar. Possession ist of bec. A + SIG vhorne Kevere Hotel, pDOV. tf WANTED—To borrow, $240 at5 per cent. <Ou, BS acres on Lot 22, worth $6000 cash. Writ | dect31) pde i A A, Box 356, Charlottetown. ply | DISEASES OTHERWISE INCURABLE MEDICAL “There is SHMEZ . — no skin disease which NY-AS-SAN will not cure Wanted--The address of every sufferer in America. NYASSAN MEDICINE TRURO N.S. Mention this paper when you write. 135 & w CO.., THE EPPSS COCOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homeopathic Chemists, London, England. If you are ill you need a doctor in whom you have confidence. If you need a remedy you want one that has been tested for years; not an obscure, un- tried thing that is urged upon you, or on which you save a few cents—that is no consid- eration as against health. For wasting in children or adults, Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo- phosphites has been the recognized remedy for twen- ty-five years. 50¢. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto. Fine Display of PIANDS AND ORGANS FLETCHERS Warerooms, House Building, ATENTS , LICE i Write to-day for @ | free copy of our big Book on Patents. We have | extensive experience in the intricate patent ' lawsof 5) foreign countries, Send sketch, model or photo for free advice. MARION & MA. ON, Experts, Temple Building, Montreal. Opera ' Twentv-five cents a bottle. vy A C RU EL OPE RA "7 it Ne | termination 1n @ very Tew ycars. Aiver capturing them the fishers wait for day- light to complete the work. The turtles are turned over again in their natural position and fastened firmly to the ground by means of pegs. Then a bunch of dried leaves or sea grass is spread evenly over tbe back of the turtle and set afire. The heat is not great enough to injure the shell, merely causing it to separate the joints. A large blade, very similar in shape to a chemist’s spatula, is then inserted horizontally between the lamin, which are gently pried from the back. Great care must be tak- en not to injure the shell by too much heat, and yet it is not forced off until it is fully prepared for separation by a sufficient amount of warmth. The operation, as one may readily imagine, is the extreme of cruelty, and many turtles do not survive it. Most of them do live, however, and thrive, and in time grow a new covering, just as a.man will grow a new finger nail in place of one he might lose. The pecul- iarity of the second growth of shell, , though, is that instead of reproducing the origina] number of 13 segments it is restored in one solid piece. To see the operation of taking the shell from the living turtle once is about all a man of northern breeding wants of it, and if the helpless reptiles bad the power of voicing their suffer- ings under it their cries would tell of as heartless a business as man has yet engaged in.—New York Post. THE PROCESS BY WHICH TORTOISE SHELL IS PROCURED. Fires Set on the Living Turtle to Sepa- rate the Bony Layers of the House In Which He Lives —A_ Business That Struck an Observer as Ueartless. There are many articles of daily and hourly use constantly passing before our eyes and through our hands about the production of which we know com- paratively little or nothing. An inter- esting example of this is tortoise shell, from which combs and hairpins are made, besides a multitude of trinkets for the dressing table, the desk and the pocket, Fierce crusades have been instituted in recent years against the slaughter of birds for the procurement of their plumage for hat trimmings, and yet I venture to say that the proc- ess of procuring tortoise shell is a cru- elty to animal life which far exceeds that to which birds are subjected. In the eighties I happened to be down in Bluefields, on that awful Mosquito coast, and at the invitation of one Manuel Latona, who was the owner and captain of a small schooner, went with him to the cay El Roneador for tortoise ehell. This cay gets its name (which in English would be the Snorer) from the exceedingly angry surf, which can be beard for a long distance breaking over the reefs. This is the cay on which a couple of years back the historic old ship Kearsarge was wrecked and bat- tered to pieces. El Roncador is nothing more or less than a typical coral is- land, such as is found throughout the southern seas, three-quarters of a mile long, perhaps, and not more than a quarter of a mile across its widest part. Surrounding the island is a reef, inside of which the water is smooth and rath- er shallow, and at the bottom of this shallow water there grows a peculiar kind of sea grass which is a dainty food for the turtle tribes. There is also found on the top of the water inside the reef a sort of sm blubber fish, calied in Spanish dedal@®, or thimble fish, which is perhaps the greatest delicacy of the entire turtle menu. The turtle whose shell is valued in commerce is a small species known as the hawk bill. There are other varie- ties which come to El Roncador to spawn, but they are not molested. Dur- fhg the night the turtles crawl up on the shore to lay their eggs, each female depositing on an average about 70. To do this they dig holes in the sand about two feet deep and after laying the eggs cover them over so deftly that it is al- most impossible for a novice to find them. These eggs are really delicious when roasted, but the turtle fishers are careful not to destroy those they do not take for food, so as to promote as much as possible the increase of this valuable sea reptile. At night the fishers conceal themselves along the shore as well as possible, and when the turtles come tp out of the water on the beach they rush forth and turn them over on taeir backs with iron hooks, leaving them secure in this position until morning. The tortoise shell of commerce is not, as is generally believed, the horny cover- ing or shell proper of the turtle; it is the scales which cover the shield. These scales are 13 in number, 8 of them be- ing flat and the other 5 somewhat curved. Four of those that are flat are quite large, sometimes being as much as 12 inches long and 7 inches broad, nearly transparent and beautifully variegated in color with red, yellow, white and dark brown clouds, which give the ef- fects so fully brought out when the shell is properly polished. A turtle of aver- age size will furnish about eiglt pounds of these laminw, or scales, each piece Leing from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in thickness. It is the method by which these scales are loosened which is the repulsive part of ‘the business. The turtles are not killed, as that would lead to their ex Impossibie In His Case. Hungry Higgins—I see the paper says we oughtn’t to never begin a journey before breakfast. Weary Watkins—Does it have any advice for us blokes that has to make a journey to find the breakfast?—Indian- apolis Journal. The nrost scientific forester in Europe says that the oldest trees in northern Europe are the pines of Norway and Sweden, and that these are not known to live more than 570 years. Germany’s oldest oaks lived only a little more than 800 years. —— - Positively cured by ties Little Pills. They cizo relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Mearty Eating. A per- fect remeay for Dizziness, Nausca, Druwsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Smali Pill. Smaiil Bose. _ Small Price. Substitution he fraud of the day. See Ask for Carters, you get Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. Beautiful That isfwhat Everyone says of our Display of SILVERWARE—* New stock just’ received. novelties in artistic designs. QUALITY A | G. H. TAYLOR Charlottetow .n Ax O_p Axo Wet Trizp Remepy.— Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Svrup has teeu used for over fifty vears by millions of mothers for their children while teething with perfect success. It soothes the child softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Is pleasant to the ta-te. Sold by diuggiste in everv part of the world. Tts value is incalenlable, Be sure and ask tor Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. The latest S2eee 66603300 @™ ' For 1897. We thank our friends, customers, and the public generally fora largely in- creased trade. FOR '98 ¢ F , | | : ' WARE - HOUSES We wish you alla bright, } TO LET ¢ happy and prosperous New } {ae (| PEAKE'S WHARF (WO 1) ¢ é ; Wharfage storage and yard- age, at reasonable rates. We are hustling with our accounts at present. They will be ready next week. TeLeruon £181 JAMES BAQRETT, Connolly’s Wharf. ’ | 288tDVVAVZVTASSe | Nov. Arthur 6, Peake. ' ro ; gan wa es sh Ser) Aa OS After a Government Official We are in the Dairy Supply business fostay, nh ; standing the unfair competition of au official whose travelling ” expenses are paid out of the public fends. We pay our own, and will compete with any of the Quebec houses thus repre | sented, for quality of workmanship in cheese vats, cream vats, either single or duplex, portable or stationary, temper” ing or receiving vats, and all other Dairy Supplies in stock or to order at short notice. Be We have on hand Alpha Separators which return” more money to the patrons than any other, . Separator oil that will insure safer running at extreme speed than any other on the market. Butter Boxes for storing and shipping butter in. 4 Dairy plants that will run without an expert engineer” on hand. ; Boilersthat will save fuel over any other thathas been imported so far. Engines that do not require to be driven to #™ extreme speed to obtain enough power, All work warranted @ for one year. % ‘ Sall at our up town store in the Temple, Grafton St, 7 ; 1. A. MACLEANG Successor to McKinnon & McLean. PURE INDIA TEA: Brahmin Brand. j = ae rl gb Is fast becoming popular all over Canada, and the| 3 United States. Orders constantly being received from New? York, Brooklyn, Boston, Winnipeg, ‘Toronto. Montreal, ; Ottawa. St. John, and Halitax, as well as commanding the) largest trade in P. E- Island. | — HORACE HASZARDS Is ay Agent for Canada and United States. Ch’town 29th Dee. 1897 e u of lc - OF Naw YORE RICHARD A. McCURDY, - + = = Presiden : (THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPANY), c™ Has more insurance in foree, a greater annual income and more asset®) anaay ther company in the world. It is the oldest active American Ce Total Assets, . . . $234,744,148.42 q Invested in Canada, - ° . ° 1,257,520 75 4 C Total Surplus, nearly - - - 30,000,000,00 : Insurance in force, . - : - 918,6958,558,00 TWELVE MILLONS§ Income in 1896, $19,702,695.27, being more than the total Revenue of the Dominion of Canada, Issues the most liberal policies and pays larger dividends, on al! policies) han any other company. and is beyond donbt,, the wealthest and greates. company ir. tne worla, } All policies payable in gold, Agents want } in unrepresented districts, JOHN MACEACHERN, Agent for P E. Islan