cena Fe pitt sainaceugdet|$ A ws " oa i a = & ne SR ap ) 1 ny : AIL) EXAM | A JAMA Tax Leapine Datly NEWSPAPER th or P. E. IsLanpb, iagued every afternoon, from the office of be EXAMINER PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the soadon House Building, Queen Street RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCE) ONE WEAR... ...- sce cece ecee cee neeereretenes $1.00 Six MonTns. psec seneedsncectendpecdlsden 2.00 Turek MONTHS - 1.00 GR MONTH, . ..5.000ceweccnsccesees > 0.35 Unit States The Weekly Examiner Sent paid to any part of Canada or the ee is issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. is a first-class weekly newspaper ud full ofthe latest news. {t is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily «iitions, and interesting eT THE DAILY EXAMINER. TERMS : Four Dollars a Year | VOL 35. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. Single Oopies Two Oents NO 89 momey. You can dothis by trading with us. We have a complete stock of Boots and Shoes that cannot be surpassed in KUALITY or price. It will be to YOUR alvantaze to see our stock before buying elsewhere. A large assortment to choose from at prices that will please you. It will mean MONEY in your pocket if you buy your Boots and Shoes from us. Ladies’ ( loth Gaiters juet received and selling low. B..K: JOST, 36 Queen Street, Two Doors Below Prowse Bros, r. JUST WHAT YoU WANT. The Jatest productions in Quality, Style and Comfortable FOOTWEAR. Our New Stock cash. HO nr tg sO W. & W. Popular Shoe Store. W. & W. is up to date and well selected in the best market for spot cash. Your purse will open quickly when you gaze upon the bargains we offer in our new lines of Fall and Winter Stock of Boots, Shoes, Rubbers and Overshoes, now selling at the lowest bottom prices for Come and see make the prices right. the goods; we will Remember the place. = WEEKS & WARREN, Next to Lewis’ Photo Rooms, Market Square. nh | ttetown, Septem ber }3, ‘E935 35 & wky ©aiLENO AR ¥OR OCTOBER, 189 Full Moon, 3rd day, 6+ ¥+’m p. m, Last Quar llth day, 10a 21 ¢m. a m, New Moon, ISth day o7 5m. a. m.| First Quar, 25:1 lay 15m. am. ' ! j | Day of Week ae | 3 : | gon | iio | fhm] m morn 1] [ esda | 6 4 5 S| 9 39 2} Wednesday | G6] 35] 10 12] 3 irsday 7 | sk} 610 40 4/ Friday Si Fei tt it! S ray | % 27 ll 44 6:5 ay lt} 25; aft 18] 7 | Monday ia: 63 0 57} si; T slay 13] 1 46] 91 Wednesday 1) 2 35] © | Thursday isi 34 l Fy day i 5 | i i Sa ardsy | ] t 6 36 -} Sup lay z 2 7 47] 4 | Monday 2 | 8 40 | Tuesday 23! owl 9 26] 16 | We tnesday zt 7 | = 8 iT | Thuneday 26 Sj 10 47} 18; Friday 27 at 28.381 lt | Saturday 28 1} morn | 2uis fay ! 30 Of a 9] 21 | Monday $53] 0453] 22 | Tuesday 33 An 1 44] 23 | Wednesday 341 54] 2 32] 24 Thursday 36 53 | 3 29 25 | Friday 37 aii 64387 26 Saturday 38 50 5 48 27 | Sunday 40 438 6 52 23 | Monday 41 i 4 29 | Tuesday 43 45 & 24 20 | Wednesday as... Ss 3 31 | Thursday 6 46 | 9 38 DR. H. D. JOHNSON EYE AND EAR, ‘NOSE AND THROAT Office -- Rent Strect Aug 16, ’94—ly Tie Prince Edward Island COMMERCIAL COLLEGE THE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Commercial College and Shorthand Insti- fute is now open. Young menand women desirous of acquiring a Business Education ehould embrace this opportunity. Subjects taught iuclude Book-keeping, Arithmetic, Commercial Law, Business and Legal Forms, Business Correspondence, Peumanship, Shorthand and Typewriting. Stud~nts admitted at anv time. We guarantee attention to business. §.F.HODGSON, W.H.CROSSKILL Principal. Teacher of Phonography NELLIE M. HODGSON, Asst Box 242, Charlottetown. Commercial Teacher. sept30 JUST SO. For fineness of finish, artis- tic posing and moderate prices our Photos are unsurpassed anywhere. Children’s Pic- tures a specialty. All kinds of Copymg and Enlarging done from old pictures, C. LEWIS, Entrance on Grafton Street, Opposite P. O PI eeptlt , ys’ For Sale or To Rent The well-known Busness Stand, the “ Central Hotel,” formerly the “ Railway muse,” situsted on Richmond Street. «sis Hotel contains 2] rooms, with large Suop and good stabling for 25 horses. Is centrally situated, and within two minutes walk of Market House and Post Office Apply to THUMAS CAMPBELL, Richmond Street. ap23—dy 246 & wkv MONTAGUE Carriage Factory. We are showing this season a finer line of Carriages than shown by us heretofore. The assortment consists of Top and Open Buggies, Jump Seats and Read Carts. For style, comfort, durability and excel ence of workmanship our stock cannot be surpassed. Also at hand, at lowest prices, CARTS, TRUCK WAGONS, and all Carriage Findings, such as Pocket Boots, Whip Sockets, Washers, ete., usually found in @ first-class Carriage Shop. Prompt attention to Repairs. Painting S speciality. Terme reasonable. JOHN McLEAN & SON. jalyl3—ly & wky PHOTOGRAPHY Superior workmanship, re fined finish and moderate prices combine to make these Photos the most satisfactory in Charlottetown ‘o-day. GEO.H. COOK __ Corner Queen & Gratton Sts, —IF You- — Want a wife, Waut s7cook, Want « partner, Want » Situation, Want @ servant girl, Want to sell &@ farm Want to sell ; Want to rent . Want to exchange 4 house, &® house, anything, — t© sell plants or grein ant to sell groceries “no a or druga, Or trade anythin a to find customers for cape ant to sell or buy horses, pigs or cattl- ADVERTISE IN & * d i Furniture | Furniture ! Furniture | All the latest things in Cobbler Seat Rockers, Seat Rockers, Cabinets, Bedroom and Parlor Suits, and a fuli The prices low to clear out, to make room for new goods. Rattan Rockers, Plush line of General Furniture. r. chexp. S.—See our Ladies’ Pr SA Rho we RASLO RLS eka shy OAS SE Be Desks, Call now. Secretaries, very JOHN NEWSON. Newson Block, Victoria Row. Charlottetown, October 9, 1895. Ch’town, Aug. 23, 1895—135 & wy FiRE. Haszard's Sea Shooting Powder, ee I, F, Acadia Smokeless 1-22 Papers Shells, Nos. 8, 10, 12, Wire Cartridges, ce Loaded Cartridges,10 and 12, Shot, all Sizes, Wads and Caps, 1 Double Barrel No. 8 Gun (Muzzle), Guns, Muzzle and Breech Loadeizs, 10 & 12 SIMON W. CRABBE, Stoves and Hordware, Waltker’s Corner out the water. explained. The RIGBY It makes the material appearance or feeling, tion of the skin, you dry. Made in all woolen tons, Serges, Miy cures, ete. octS—3) (63 5) WATERPROOF YET POROUS. Admits the air and keeps This may seem an impossibility but process fabric a non-absorbent and a xepellent to water. so that it will shed water like a duck’s back, otherwise it is not changed in It pernxits and a te same time keeps . . . ® it can be renders the materials, Ladies’ and Germt'emen’s Garments, Tweeds, Mel- the free respira- suitable for A GREAT MANY )EOPLE imagine they camuet get a stylish, up- to-date, made-to-order Suit of Clothes under $20.00 or $25.00. have never seen These people the Suits we make for $12.00, $14.00, $16.00 anil $18.00. Fit, workmanship and material guaran- teed, thoroughly made and. Also, Rubber Coats, Fur Coats, Capes, made-up All our stock up to date, and every- t,"immed. Fur Ulsters. thing in the store genuine value. JOHN MACLEOD & €O.. Charlottetow o, Octo) er 9, 1895 135 w cak ee ee Purified Blood Saved an operation in the following case. Jlood’s Sarsaparilla cures when all others fail. Jt makes pure blood. “A year ago my father, William Thomp- son, was taken suddenly 111 with inflam- mation of the bladder. He suffered a great deal and was very low forsometime. At last the doctor said he would not get well unless an operation was performed. At this time we read about Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla and decided to try it. Before he used half a bottle his appetite had come back to him, whereas before he could eat but little. When he had taken three bottles of the medicine he was as well as ever.” Francis J. THOMPSON, Peninsula Lake, Ontario. Remember Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the Only True Blood Purifier Promineutly in the publiceyetoday. Manda Dille cure all liver ills, bilious Hood 5 Pills ness, headache, ee lt Pays to use Sunlight Soap 6c. TWIN BAR iy Books for Lever Bros., Ltd., vy rappers Toronto, a paper-bound book, 160 pages, will be sent Seeton & Mitchell, Halifax, Agents for Nova Scotia and P. E. Island. MORTGAGE SALE. To be sold by Public Auction, at the Law Courts Building in Charlottetown, on TUESDAY, the fifth day of November, A. D. 1895, at 12 o’clock, noon :— All that tract of land situate on Town- ship number fifty-two, in King’s County, P. E.I., bounded as follows :—Commen- cing on the north side of the roaa leading from Head of Cardigan to Pisquid, extend- ing thereon or having a front of eleven chains, and extending back north by paral- lel lines for the distence of one hundred chains, being bounded on the west by land now or formerly in possession of Kenneth Beaton and John Scrimgeour, and on the east by land now or formerly in possession of Norman McLean, and containing an area of one hundred and ten acres of land, a little more or less, and is the farm lately in possession of Malcolm McLean. The above sale is being made under and by virtue of a power of sale contained in a certain Indenture of Mortgage of said lands, dated the 16th day of March, A. D. 1889, and made between Frederick W. Craswell, of Head ef Cardigan, in King’s County, an! Margaret E. Craswell, his wife, of the one part, and the undersigned of the other part. For further ~particulars apply at the ottice of A. A. McLean, Solicitor, Char- lottetown. Dated at Milton, this 4th October, A. D. 1895. For every 12 “Sunlight” wrappers sent to DAVID C. HOOPER, JAMES M. HOUPER, oct4— 4i 1 a w. (5) Mortgagees. TO LET. That large Shop, part of the “London House” Building, lately occupied by J T. McKenzie, Tailor, with good room up stairs for work shop or store room. Apply to HON. DANIEL DAVIES, L. H. DAVIES, Q. C., Executors Estate late Geo, Davies, Or to F. W. L. Moore, Solicitor, in the Building. octll Painless Dentistry. CRAPAUD. Pr J E MeDona!d, Dentist, will bein Cra paud, at Dr Robertson’s, jor TWO DAYS! enly, Friday and Saturday, I$th and 19th inst, where he will demonstrate his now amous | method of Painless Extraction of ‘feeth. No bad after effects follow the use of this mathe, and the doubter is requ: sted to try it an judge for himself. Observe the dates, Friday and Saturday, October sth and 19th inst, at Crapau |}. My Pr nee County patients will please note my absence from Summerside on the above dates, J E McDONALD, DDS. Summerside, Oct 7, 1895, Dommion Coal Company, Ltd: The undersigned having been appointe sole selling Agents in the Province 0— Prince Edward Island for the above Com | ny, are now prepared to issue orders for Socok. Slack and Run of Mines, and will keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coal on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents. Carclotte town, May 25, 1894—tf FOR SALE. The House and Land on the corner of Pownal and Sidney Streets. For further ticulars apply to the owner, - MRS. BUSWALL, Or EUSTACE HAVILAND, ESQ. ¥ ‘learned the QUEEN VICTORIA'S EDUCATION. It Begun atan Extremely Early Periid and She Proved an Apt Pupil. In a paper cn “The Childhood of Queen Victc ria” in the current number of the Woman at Home, some inter- esting particulars are given of hcr Mae jesty’s education. It was conducted at first by her mother, with the help of Fraulein Lehzen, who it a later date was formally appointed her gover- ness. und remained with the Queen as confidential s«cretary for a number of years after hcr accession. The Prin- cess learned her lettets ct her moth- er’s Knee, but not very willingly, and we find Grandmemma of Coburg tak- ing sides with the little truant. She writes to her daughter: “Do not tease ycur little puss with learning. She iay S0 young still,” adding that her cul son, Prince Albert, was studying a pit- ture book. r When it was made clear to the Prin- cess that until the A BC was learned she ould not read books like her mother, she replied with alacrity, “Me learm too, very quick,” and she did. Her regular .education began in her fifth year. As she grew older the Princess became docile in all things except taking medicine, and she re- formed on this point when she discov- ered that her physiciam only enter- tained her with stories after the medi- cine’ had been taken. She was reared to speak in French and German 4s well as in her native tongue. By the time she reached her 11th year Italian, Latin, Greek and mathematics had been add@d to her studies. Music she stu- die@#@ under Mr. John Bernard Sale, afterward organist at the Chapel Roy- al, and drawing under Mr. Westall, R. &. When the Queen was a young girl, another writer in the same magazine says, one of her chief characteristics was a certain imperiousness of dis- position, but it is a lovable trait in her Majesty's nature that with in- creasing years a mildness of manner and most considerate thoughtfulness for others have superseded the auster- ity of her younger days. She is, in- deed, more inclined to err on the side of indulgence than sternness, “Have it your own way, dear!’ She will sometimes say, jn ‘a grandmotherly discussion with one of the: Batten- berg babies. With her personal at- tendants the Queen is equally gentle. The Queen never by any chance shows haughtiness to a dependent. THE PREPARATION OF MEATS. Methods by Which the French Butehers Excel in Their Calling. Butcher’s meat in France its pre- pared, divided and arranged in the shops in such a manner that it never Suggests slaughter. It is a rare thing for one to see a stain on counter,bench or floor, The mode of killing the eni- mal probably has something to do with this freedom from moisture and -dripping. Maria Parloa, in an article on “The Science of French Cooking,” in The Ladies’ Home Journal for Octo- ber, says the animals are not bled be- fore being killed, as might be inferred from the absence of moisture, but they are killed in such a manner that veins and arteries are emptied quickly and thoroughly. After this the animal is bouffee, that is, filled with wind. The large arteries are pressed open and the points of large bellows are insert- ed into them. While the bellows arm being worked a man beast all parts of the carcass with a flat stick. This is to distribute the air in alt parts of the flesh. All this work {s done very rapidly. The inflating of the animal in this manner gives a fuller and firmer appearance to the meat, and, I fancy, empties the veins and arteries more effectually than they would otherwise be. The French use very little ice, and meats are kept only a few days itthe most. The best of beef in France does not compare with American beef, but the veal is superior to anything we have. It is valued more highly than any other product of the butcher. But no matter what the viand, when it comes to the hands of the cook It is so prepared that she has but little to do except to cook it. “LOVING TOO LATE. A Common Enough Story Portrays a Pa- thetle Morals. Not long ago I met a young lady in poverty whom I had previously known in wealth, and this was, in substance, the story she told me: “Father died suddenly in Washington, and the pro- fession through which he had coin- ed money for us died with him, I am not weeping because we are poor. I am broken hearted because none of us faw that he was dying. Was it not pitiful that he should think it best not to tell any of us that he was sick? And I, his petted daughter, though I knew he was taking opium to soothe his great pain, was so absorbed by my lovers, my games and my dresses th.t I jut hoped it woutd all come right. If I could only remember that even once, I had pitied his suffering or felt anxious about his life, I might bear his loss better!’ The story is common enough, Many a father, year after year, goes in and cut of his home carrying the burden and doing the labor of life, while those whom he tenderly loves hold with but rareless hands all of honor and gold he wins by toil and pain. Then some day his head and hands can work no more, And the hearts that have not great lesson of unsz2lfish love while love was their teacher, must now begin their sad duty when leve hos left them alone forever,—Amelia E. Barr, in October Ladies’ jHonm Journal, Pretty Autumn Coat for a Girl. Navy blue flannel with a small polka dot in white makes a good cloak for a little girl of six to wear in the first ecol days of autumn. Make it with a Gretchen weist and skirt reaching half way between knee and ankle full- ed on it. Trim with shoulder capes of the same material, lined with plain blue, beginning at the waist line in front. The body of the cloak can be lined to make it warmer. A _ sailor hat of navy blue straw or a blue Tam o’Shanter cap with a white tassel can be worn with it.—October Ladies’ Home Journal, Sb oe THE BEST is wha: the People buy the most of. That’s Why Hood’s Sarsaparilla has the largest se OF ALL MEDICINES. White Rose Kerosene, 530 Barrels landing ex schooner Nut- wood to-day from New York. CARVELL BROS, 4 sept 19-—dy | oct?—2i ~ ODDS AND ENDS. The Venezuelan Consul at Cardiff com- plains that Great Britain will not submit 4 her case to arbitration, but goes on en- croaching on Vevezuclan territory. Kidney Ffocts. In Jan. 1892 my ton was taken with Kidney disease. Though attended by theee pliysicians, and change of climate he grew worre and by °93 had fallen from 195 lbs. to 95 Ibs. In 10 days from start- ing to use Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills we were able to move him home. In 4 mouths he gained 50lbs. and was fully re- stored to health by the use of this medicine Jno. S. Hastings, 23 St Paul St., Mon- treal, A medical vuthority on the virtues of bearions kinds of food declares that the herring gives the muscles elasticity, the body strength and the brain vigor, and is not fiesh-forming. This is Concentration. One pill a dose, ene box 25 cents. One pill relieves constipation. One box cures an ordinary case. Une pill taken weekly neutralices formation of guric acid in the blood and prevents Bright’s .Kidney Dis- ease and Diabetes. True only of Dr. Chase’s Kidney Liver Pills. A despatch received at London from Trebizonde says: Serious conflicts occurred here yesterday between Turks and Armen- mans, in which many of the latter were killed. It Does The Business. If you want to know what Miller’s Emulsion of Norwegian Cod Liver Oil will do, for a consumptive patient ask one who has tried it. Ask anyone who has used it in lung troubles of any kind. What they say about Miller’s Emulsion shal] be its recommendation. It is the finest pre- paration of its kind in the world and is worth its weight in gold toa consumptive sufferer, whom it will raise from a bed of sickness to health and strength of body and mind, giving a new lease of life. Thousands testify to the value of Millers Emu'sion. Miller’s Emulsion is the great nerve strengthener and blood maker, and cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Scorfula, and all Lung affections. In Big Bottles, 50c. and $1, at all Drug Stores. The reigning sovereign of Persia is al- ways called by his subjects the Red King, from the color of his turban. A red tur- ban is, in Persia, the distuingshing mark of royalty. That Pale race, For Nervous Prostration and Anzmia there is no medicine that will so promptly and infallibly restore vigor and strength as Scott’s Emulsion. The report of an earthquake in New- foundland on the 7th is corroborated. A heayy rain caused a landslide, block- ing the railroad and destroying a few bridges. This fact probably gave rise to the report. Hands and Ankles Raw, For years Ihave been a great sufferer from itchy skin tronble and salt rheum. My hands and ankles were literally raw. The first application of Dr. Chase’s Oumt- ment allayed the burning, itching sensa- tiov. One box and a half entirely cured me. It is also instant relief for chilblains Henry A, Parmenter, St. Catharines, Ont. The German Ev.nperor has invited the Prince of Wales to shoot with him a few weeks hence at Springe, in Hanover, where the vast beech forests swarm with wild boar, aud splendid sport is always ob- tained. A Remarkable Cure—J. W. Jennison, Gilford—Spent between $200 and $300 in eonsulting doctors; tried Dixon’s and a'lother treatments, but got no benefit. One box of Chase’s Catarrh Cure did me more good than all other remedies, in fact [consider myself cured, and with a 25- cent box at that. The expenditure of England for drink is estimated at $900,000,000 a year. The oon- sumption is undoubtedly enormous, but not really so enormous as this, for a good deal of the liquor which ap- pears in Official statistics is afterward ex- ported, Ovilla’s Prominent Furniture Dealer Gives Facts, Onitia, Feb, 10th, 1894 Epmanson, Bares & Co. Gentlemen,—About three or four weeks ago I had an attack of Itching Piles. I tried two or three different remedies re commended by druggists as the “best and on'y cure,” ete., but got no relief. About the time I was beginning to despair of find- ing any relief, with some elight misgiv— ings I bought a box of your pile cure, which I am pleased to say gave me almost instant relief and permanent cure. I con- sider your Dr. Chase’s Ointment a God- send, ALF. J. DEAN. Leather tires will in the future be em- ployed on bicyclee made for the French army. a Ges a CUTE Inflammatory Rheumatism is pro duced by an excess of uric aeki in the blood. Paralysis is nearly a dead circular tion produced by impure and impews> ished blood. neuralgia of the thigh is selatic rheumatism; sovrafulitic rheumatism is hereditary; syphtHtic results from syphilis; gout is caused by high living; sluggish circulation affects the heart. “THE KIND THAT CIIRES” Thus the whole line of rheumatic diseases Owe their being to an affected circulation of impure blood. No person can suffer rheumatic pain that has a free and equal Circulation of pure blood; and this ac counts for Scott's Sarsapartlla curing the supposed incurable cases. It eradicates all rheumatic poisons and acids from the blood and equalizes the circulation RHEUMATISM AND GOUT Scott's SKin SOAP PREVENTS GasAsY coemcnes tn iaaeemenen NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, &c. riber is now prepared to make avai ot lami ran Boundary and Division Lines, furnish Pians, ete.; also, Mechanic a d Architectural Drawings, Pians, Speci fi- J. P. NICHOLSON, Laod Pownal Daarlosa wa, (iy 23, i—dy & wy BURIED 340 FEET. A Charred Oak Struck by Well Borers tn C lilfornia. The drill of the Santa Barbara Ice Co., which is boring a well in the lower part of the town, has passed trmovugh a charred log some two feet in diameter at a depth of 340 feet. A cereful examination of specimens ob- tr ined indicates that the long buried tree is an oak similar to the species growing above ground to-day. Much speculation is rife as to how this tree came s» far beneath the sur- face of the soil, but an intelligent scrutiny of the Santa Clara Valley gives a clear geological explanation of certain conditions attending this dis- covery. Each end of the valley at Santa Bar- bara on the one hand, and at Goleta on the other hos at some past time been an inlet of the sea. The lower lands received the wash from a great extent of mountainous country. The detritus from the hills, constant- ly carried down by winter floods and deposited below, at length filled up these inlets and gradually advanced the shore line as ,it is doing to-day wherever the wash from the hills fol- lows its own course, while constantly burying from sight the vegetition of a past day. This charred log once lay at the bottom of the sea. It was found in @ stratum of blue water sand and ,deter- mines the great depth of what was once a fine harbor, extending probably a mile or more back of the present beach. This theory is confirmed by the fact that both at Goleta and Santa Bar- bara the soil is to an extraordinary depth nothing but black loam, occa- sionally streaks of clay and sand hav- ing been encountered, Similar trees, as well as beds of seashells, have been encountered in well boring at great depths in Goleta, Old Indian traditions tell of a monster disturb- ance in the paet. Some great convulsion of nature must have sunk the entire valley, for this tree lies 300 feet below the sea level. The only new fact established by this find is that the aborgines of a very remote date made fires.—San Francis- co Call, The Killing of Jesse James, the Bandit. Missouri, as well as the Pacific States, had to contend with aggra- vated lawlessness. When hardiy a week passed witnout a train being “held up” somewhere in the State, Governor Crittenden was driven to the terrible expedient of using crime itself as a police power .In the spring of 1882, Jesse James, the noted despera- do, was assassinated by former mem- bers of his gang ,who surrendered to the authorities and were lodged in jail—none too soon, as an angry pop- ulace, gathering in thousands, hotly beset the slayers. Slayers and slain had been Confederate guerillas in the war. On the return of peace they be- came train-robbers as easily as priva- teers turn pirates. James, at any rate, had not been inspired by lust of gain, for, in spite of robberies amounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars, he died poor. He had been a church member, concerned for his “wayward brother” Frank’s salvation. After his Geath his sect in Missouri repudiated him, whilk expressing strongest dis- approval of the treachery used in his taking off. For nearly twenty years every effort to capture the fellow had proved futile. The nature cf the coun- try aided him, but not so much as the enthusiastic devotion of his neighbors. This murderous chief, this ruthless man, This head of a rebellious clan, had made himself a hero. The Sedalia Democrat said: “It was his country. The graves of his kindred were there. He refused to be banished from his birthright, and when he was hunted he turned savagely about and hunted his hunters. Would to God he were alive to-day to make a righteous butch- ery of a few more of them.” By thus fighting fire with fire Gov- ernor Crittenden succeeded in dispers- ing three other desperado bands.—E. Benjamin Andrews, in The October Scribner's, Rebert Louls Stevenson an Exile. Three miles behind Apia, on a rising plateau that stands some 700 feet above the ocean level, lie the house and grounds of Vailima. “I have chosen the land to be my land,the people to be my people, to live and die with,” said Mr. Stevenson, in his speech to the Samoan chiefs, and his great lonely house beneath Vaea Mountain, the fruit of so much love, thought, and p4- tient labor, will never lose the world’s interest, nor fail to be a spot of pious pilgrimage so long as his books en- dure and his exile be unforgotten. For Stevenson was an exile; he knew he would never see his native land again when the steamer carried him down the Thames; he knew he had turned his back forever on the old world, which had come to mean no more t¢ him than shattered health, shattered hopes, a life of grey invalidism, tragic to recall. Whatever the future held In store for him, he knew it could be nec worse than what he was leaving, that living death of the sick room, the horror of which he never dared put to paper. I can remember the few min- utes allowed him each day in the open air when the thin sunshine of South England permitted; his despairing face, the bitterness of the soul too big for words, when this little liberty was perforce refused him. I recall him say- ing: “I do not ask for health, but 1! will go anywhere ,live anywhere I can enjoy the ordinary existence of a hu- man being.” I used to remind him of that when at times his Samoan exile lay heavily upon him and his eyes turned longingly to home and to those friends he would never see again.— Lloyd Osborne, in the October Scrib- ner’s, An Irrepressible Conflict. He—Please shut down that window; I have a cold. She—I have a headache. He—How selfish of you to prefer your headache to my cold.—Bosten Transcript. Trapped. Miss Elder—I will bet you anything you like that I will never marry, Mr. Easy—lI'll take you. Miss Elder (rapturously)—Will yow. pealy Then 1 won't bet after all.”- STMR. FASTNET (ill sail from Charlottetown every WED NESDAY Evening, at 8 o’clock, for Hali fax via nenenalhii Returning, will leave Halifax every MONDAY Evening, at 6 o’clock, calling st Cavso, Arichat, Hawkesbury and Souris, ae Freight solicited. W. W. CLARKE, Agent. aug3l no = [ FF EVERYTHING else has * The Ideal Tonic a Efficacious PROVES IN RESTORING HEALTH inninaiiiatiiit iat This is asserted after . ; 3° years’ uniform Mailed Free. ; cepestaen. INTERESTING COLLECTION OP Portraits OF NOTED CELEBRITIES. Beneficial and Agrecabdle, Every Test Proves Reputation. Avoid Substitutions. Ask for‘ Vin Mariani.’ At Druggists and Fancy Grocers. Sole Agents for Conada LAWRENCE A. WILSON & co., MONTREAL, Panes: 41 Bo. HausOMANN, Hew Youx : 52 wW, 15TH Srecer, CLomoun : 23° Oxronn Sr, MONTREAL: 28 HOserta, Og Canada Atlantic and Plant STEAMSHIP LINE. FOR BOSTON, ——CALLING AT—— Hawkesbury and Halifax. AUTUMN SAILING S. 8S. HALIFAX will leave Navigation Co’s. Wharf, Char lottetown, Friday, Oct. llth, at noon, and Tuesday, Oct. 22nd, at 6 p.m., and every Tuesday thereafter until close of navigation. FROM BOSTON—Every Saturday at noon, calling at Halifax and Hawkesbury, arriving at Charlottetown Tuesday morn- ing. HALIFAX SERVICE. 8.8. HALIFAX will leave Plant Wharf, Halifax, THURSDAY, Oct. 17th, at 8 a.m , and every Thursday thereafter. Passengers arriving in Halifax WED- NESDAY evenings can go directly on board steamer without extra charge. For rates of passage, freight, etc., apply to P. E. Island Railway Stations and ai office of Charlotttown Steam Navigation Company. H. L. CHIPMAN, Canadian Agent, oct8 Plant Wharf, Halifax. CAPT, McNEVEN, Will sail from Halifax on October 16, and weekly thereafter, for Charlottetown, call- ing at the following ports:—Spry Bay, Sheet Harbor, White Head, Salmon River, Sonora, Sherbrooke, Isaac’s Harbor, White head, Canso, Guysboro, Boylston, Perts Hawkesbury,Hastings and Port Hood each way,thus giving Island shippers an oppor- tunity to forward their produce direct and prompt every week at a low rate of freight. Steamer FASTNET will continue her regular trips as usual. Freight solicited. W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Charlottetown, Oct. 3, 1895, CHTOWN TO BOSTON ——BY THE—— Fast Steamship Olivette,” BUY YOUR TICKETS ——FROM——33 WwW. WwW. Cl arke, TICKET ACCENT, Corner of Queen and Water Sireeta, Cuarlottetown, May 14, i895. FURNESS LINE. Regular Sailings Between Lon don and Halifax. From London. From Halifax. SS. HALIFAX CITY. Sept. 21 Sept. 14, SS. DAMARA. Oct. 3 SS. MADURA. a ~ 2. S385. 3008 Gary, .~ These Steamers have superior accom- modation for first-class passengers. Well ventilated Saloon and sleeping berths amidships, where least motion is feit. Lighted by electricity. Insurance effected at lowest possible rates, Each boat carries a doctor on board. FURNESS, WITHY & CO., Lop., Commission & Forwarding Agents, Halifax, N.S8., Or W.W.Clarke, Passenger Agent Charlottetown. septl4 R . as oer te maou CURE e FOR SCIATIC PAINS. - « vst, a? FG, 4 VIL, FOR Muscy Aa y Pri Pltiitilhea "= y y AND A LA Fi Lad ACHES ° . TO LET. The Shop now occupied by J. T. Mc Kenzie, Tailor. = Possession immediately, Apply to F. W. L. MOORE, Solicitor, sept27—tf In the Building’