= ¥ Rath ie “ - nner: — ALENDAR FOR JANUARY, 85 First Quar 4 iy m, & m . f y 4 ’ Full } ' ) ‘ » | la: S New '. Pp. ? oe i | Sur. | High way " } Bete | water ; j j —— ” ve ee m f norm 1/T ay 749; 4 18} 2 4 ; 1 ” : 2] We im ' a . & 3 : ] a1aY j i) ai j b ~ r i% , j 27 $j Friday 4 3/8 iv i 49} 2 f 5 41 | ~ ‘ | > & | 6 oS ee. is | 25 es 3g g | 8 3. 3t 2 4 i 34 ” « } 9; 4 7 |} Sy | 9 sei T 1 #471 wi we iF O} IL 36 91 < V i 4 | SL | atr’n 8 zis i ti 3 | @ 89 14! 5 V | oo | BAY 1 40 . s »* « ) 16 | ; Sie ee a Ay | a4 oi | 3 Ie y i? | ay SP 6S 5G) ls he. 10} 6 3h) Jt? Sa : ee it | 6 47 964s far i cf | {2 7 54] a1) y ; oa. eee 68a 22 | ol 4] spl : j iy | 464 1015 24 uy i 38 i 17 10 7 25 iv i is | il ray) °% ~ iY sG i 59 | ll &5 27; 5 y i 5 | SLi mern j 9g! Monday | 33] 53 , 0 26 : 3 | 54} 0 Sd ; Vy ednesday v2 55 | 1 20 vedep, «= 17301457] 2 3 ed every afterneon, from the office of gs isso the Exayrner Pustisiine CoMrany, in the Loudon House Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SIASCHRIPTION. (IN AL VANCRK? ad VRAM. occ cccccccevcecccecesseoucess vee S400 Six MONTHS... 6666 ce rece cere ween nereeeonne Bul THREE MONTHS... «0.66. 0e cere cece en ee ee ewes 1.00 ONR MONTH... ..0 cen cece ere c eee eneneeeeeet 0.35 Sent }<si paid to avy part of Canada or the Untied states ADVERTISING RATES For small advertisements which are ordered for oniy one or two weeks the charge is cents per inch for the first insertion, and @ cents for each continuation. Rate cards are furnished on application at the office. Special eoutract prices at a redaced rate are quoted for advertisemeats feur inches in size or larger. which are to ran for three months o1 louse r. No special notices inserted unless paid for atthe rate of 10 eeuts per line, and ander ne } circumsiances will such paid notices appear jn the local column. Svocial discounts made on all advertise- ments connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Picnics, ete. No notices will be inserted with he same unless the regular rate of 10 cents per : ug EXAM'NeER is considered by our Merchants and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valaable advertising medium throcgh whieh to make their announcements public, is »buudanily proved by the fact that sn order o accommodate Our uavertisers we pave compelicd to enlarge the paper to ita pr-sent size. Taz D ExsMtnen is for sale by the fol- lowing <enis :~- 2 B if. alssoa, Post O See, Caarlotte town 3.M(a.res dal peyqae Ruad, . C. Pst .» ver Spring Park Road, - ww. 4M. Osh, tou Street, s. 2 : W it-eanl Princes St. ” Db 13) de. Prine: Strest, “ Bacver s Qi1224 Street . ueen Street. ” Geo Carve & Co., Qe S. Gray, News Siali, P. E. L. Railway) and r t i" nston St. I 722 C ston and Hillsboro St. Ci Henry, Gt. George St. Evias & 400, Cor. of Prince and Richmond St. ects. M. & T. J. Walsh, Eelectic Bookstore, Sum- merside dD, Sa land, Souris. Hon. !). Gordon, tieor:-ctowa. D. A. Egun, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton MeNeil Stanley Bridge. COSHtF ese , 4 . The Weekly Examiner ‘ Friday morning from the publishers It is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and je a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and full of the latest news. The subdscripiion for THe WEEKLY Exam. INER, post paid to any part of Canada or the A. J. #® issued every oftlice. United States, is one dollar per year. Ailvertising rates on the same ecale as given beve for Tite DaiLy EXAMINER. McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FOR 1895 Vol EV Begins Becember, 1894 A splendidly illustrated life of NAPOLEON, will be the eres Pes re f hich i€ vrenat feature Of Wiilch GEVENTY-FIVE PORTRAITS of Napoleon, showing him from youth t death ; coutemporaries, i in all nearly 260 PLUTURES. also portraits of hia famely a pictures ot mis and ait ber vad Bevins in November and runs th: ht nambers, The tzif Kivht i ght Napoleon Nuinbers, $1.00. TRUE ae DETECTIVE STORIES of by thority from the archives the Pinkerion Retective Agency. ] oln and Pinkerton (Nov. 1894); the di Masures; Allan Pinkerton’s Life; Stores Of Capture of Train Robbers, For- vers, bank robbers, ete. each complete nh t jesne, 12 ina |. SEGERT STORIES BY W. D. Howells, Radyard Kipling Conan Doyle, Clark Russell, Kubert Barr, Octave Thanet, Bret arte, Capt. King, J vel Chandler Harris aud many others. f° NOTED CONTRIBUTORS. Robert Louis Stevenson, Archdeacon Farrar, Prof. Drummond, Thomas Hardy. F. Marion Crawford, r Robe ri tal! Ar hibald Forbes, Clubbed with Tue Dairy Examiner at $4.60 | ir er year. S$. S. McCLURE, Lrp.,, 29 Lafayette Place, novl4 New York. Chureh Schaal for Girls Bigebill, Windsor, hi. 8. Lent Term of this Institution be- gs on January 19, 1895. He ‘or Calendar and forms of admission DR, HIND, Windeor. Windsor, Dee. 20, °94—1m ecd NOTICE. tt —_ OTTAWA LSE " s oe PE. Island Raliway ae ‘ vba de J ee } | On and acter TIFURSDAY, 2°th December ISM, the trains of this Ratiway will ran daily Munddays exce; ted) as folluws.— rrains Outward Trains Taward. Read down, Nead up M Leave Arrive PWV = Oo a Charlo mw . 0 ;u e* Rovalty Juncton ; +O ‘in North Wiltshire ‘ x1 Hanter Biver...... ni ae S48 ‘ é Dractaibane 13 4 SAT sabe ~ eameraid ..... 2 ASM | # ta ee .....Frectown 2201] 3 2 eee . KRen-inglou Leo so (Ar (lvy Lido °* ) f Summerside AM} 25) ¢Lv) (Ar) i@3o | SEL sexes ... Miseouche 1 bo} 13 Wellington... incon OT 2 dunt Port Bill 909 | +4 (Leary eee Sas Lioomficld . wan aa ate Lr ia > -Tignish 60) PM AM PM AM ODD... cesveese- Crariotietown ae 1O 2D. ces koyalty Junction 10 10 e cuake Bedford . 937 ©» Ar (Lvy 9b ) ¢ Mount Stewart ? : 110¢ LyS ¢Ar} 850 iae wenewe sbaeeddas 2 Paiveeve a vM 40> .Mount Stewart sit Vere | OB: cease saves see St Peter's ror Bear (ive i) Souris vi a | A™M POD ods co tnd cscs entre can snces ft ant in sae Spe “EsaN < 7 *M 3 .M Trains are run by Eastern Standard Time D> POTTINGHE, Gon Mgr Can Govt ht vs i« ‘ A. MCDONALD. Supe riutendent, Chavioiiktews deel Don't Be Blindly Led CLOTHING AND CLOTd WHEN YOU CAN GET THE Home-made Goods, Which cannot be approached for Durability or Cheapness, —AT THE— McKAY WOOLEN C0. Charlottetuwn, Nov. 26, 1894 Lippincott’s ' Magazine, 1is8ss. Che special feature of LIPPINCOTT’S— A COMPLETE NOVEL in each issue, in addition to the usnal ’ . ee Short Stories, Novelettes, Pocims, ete., Kssays, All combined, make it one of the most de- sivable magazines now published, We avoil the objection held by so many readers to a continued story. During the coming year novels may be expected from Capt. King, Amelie Rives, Gertrude Atherton, Mrs. Stickney, Mrs. Alexander, Miss Train, (Author of “ The Autobiography of a Professional Beauty”), and other well-known writers. Price, $3.00 per year. Single copy, 25¢ Send five 2-cent stamps for specimen copy LIPPINCOTT’S HAGAZINE PHILADELPHIA, PA. 7 ’ aec 50 YEARS For the last 50 years Cough Medicines have been coming in and dying out, but during all this time SHARP’S BALSAM OF HORENHOUND Never left the Front Rank for Curing CHUUP. COUGHS AXD COLDS. All Drugyists and most Grocerymen sell it. Bay” 25 cents a bottle. ARMSTRONG & CO., Proprietors, St. John, N_B. nov23—d Mechanical Drawing, &¢ The undersigned is prepared to give evening lessons in Mechanical and Indus- trial Drawing; to make Plans and Specifi- cations for Patents, Copying, Blue-print ing and Draughting in general. L. W. MACDONALD, Land Surveyor and Draughtsman. Nov 21— Dominion Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appointed sole selling Agents in the Province of Prince Edward Island for the above Com- LAND SURVEYING, &e. The subscriber is now prepared to make Surveys of Land, run Boundary and Division Lines, furnish Plans, ete.; also, Mechanic al apd Architectural Drawings, Plans, Spect fi- vations and Estimates. “ J. P. NICTIOLSON, Surveyor, Pownai Street, Charlottetown, Aug. 25, Isi—dy & wy sany, are now prepared to issue orders for Round, Slack and Run of Mines, and will keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coal on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. i PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents. SS T FEEL LIKE A NEW PERSON. Prominent ‘Paine's Celery Compound a Book to Business Men Mr. Frost writes as follows :— “T have been subject to severe bilious attacks and headaches for the past fifteen years. During that time I have been doc- toring, ani have also tried patent med.- cines, but nothing seemed to give me re- lief. La-t winter, after suffering with neuralgia for about two months, I started to take Paine’s Celery Compound, and before the first bottle was finshed my neuralzia was completely enred. I have now bottles, and I am very pleased to inform you that my old com- plaint has entirely disappeared, aud I feel like a new person. 2 doster:, } aud Legislators, julzes, lawrers, bankers, ail prafteat and wise people now use Paine’s Celery Com- pound when sickly, weak, run-lown, ner- vous, sleepless, bilious or dy-peptic. The virtues of thi diseace are known everywhere, and many of our ablest merchants is great healer of hvsici are prezcr.l.ag lailv. because puys:cians are prescriiv.ug it Gary, because they know it to be a medic power, ine of wondrou3 Mr. John C. Frost, of the well-known firm of Francis, Frost & Co., Toronto, wa- speedily cured of bilionsness, headache and severe neuralgia. B , 5 | di; Z aes. Nominion Goal Co's. Mines in 6. B We have a large quantity of ROUND, RUN OF MINE and SLACK COAL, which we are selling at very lowest yrices. We have aold thousands of tons of the above COM- PANY’S MINES COAL during the past season, which has given entire satisfaction. We sell our customers just the kind of Coal they require, which includes “Sydney” and the other Mines belonging to the DOMINION COAL CO., Ltd., in Cape Breton. taken six ae mre Since we accepted the Agency for the above Company the public have got their Coal mnch cheaper than hereto- ore, and we wish to inform them that we do not handle Jozzias,” Kelly Cove or New Campbellton Mines Coal. The Coal we sell is GENUINE. We have also a quan- tity of superior ANTHRACITE COAL. PEAKE BROS. & CO. 1895 —tf Charlottetown, January 5. Goa. Winter has set Supply of Coal in, NOW IS THE TRE! as Town and Country alike are taking advantage of our reduced prices. Charlottetown, December 12, 1824. VARRIAGE STOCK RECEIVING TO-DAY—Spokes, Rims, Hubs, Shafts, Backs. A splendid lot of Woodwork and in, and if you have not your Winter Sleigh Runners, Dashers, American Hickory. Special low prices in wholesale lots, R. B. RORTON & CO., ' Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—tf Caarlottetown, Dee. 21, 1891—ta fri CITY MARDWARE STORE. PREVENT PNEUMONIA. HOME REMEDIES TO USE IN THE ABSENCE OF THE DOCTOR, a i The Causes of the Disease—The Temperate | Climates the Real Stalking Ground og the Disease—The Part Absolute Quiet Plays tn Securing Recovery. Conditions of weather and climate are probably the most important of all known agepcies in the causation of pneumonia. Thé influence of the cold and dampness fa incf Asing the liabilities to acute inflam- mat. y diseases of the chest are well know... The disease is also more commen in temperate climates than in regions charaeterized by great heat or extreme cold, Pneumonia is a trouble which falls so quickly upon one’s system that it is hard to discover the precise moment of attack. “Wear a chamois skin jacket lined with flannel next the skin all winter, if one has any predisposition or inherited tendency toward this weakness,’’ advised one phy- sician: “I find this an excellent preven- tive.” “It is also a good idea,” he continued, “to keep the blood well nourished. Strong food is a formidable foe to pneumonia, for it puts the tissues in such condition from its effect that they throw off the cold.” Pneumonia goes iarder with men than women, all doctors agree, the reason being that the lat er are more constantly ex- posed. As soon as the rigor comes on, which is as signifleant of approaching danger as the shrill rattle of a snuke, go to bed. Do not temporize with the disease. Discre- tion is the best part of valor, and a quick surrender mukes the enemy less implaca- ble. Take an effective laxative, 20 grains of quinine, a hot lemonade, and get a good sweat, Stay in bed for 36 hours, and in six cases out of ten the symptoms will pass. In children the rigor is often displaced by a convulsion or violent fit of nausea. In amateur treatinent to prevent what inclines toward pneumonia, care should always be taker about the heart. Failure of curdiac power is the great source of danger, and, therefore, digitalis, which is such a help in uncomplicated caees, to de- press the circulation, has to be sparingly used where any heart weakness is discern- ible. But quinine remains good in all cases and stages. It can be taken in large doses, 20 grains or more, repeated at intervals of “4 hours. A full dose of brandy is an ex- cellent accompanist to this, Cold baths are given at once, abroad, but it is notasafe thing to try without the aid of a physician, and would be classed more aS a cure than a preventative. Sothe old-time remedy of a good bot mustard foot bath with « blanket wrapped about the knees and a few blankets over the body stands stilla favor at the beginning of the invasion. Absolute quiet should be maintained from the start, for the nerves play a great partin the development of pneumonia, The room should be at a temperature of 68 degrees. Milk, soup or lemonade, quite hot, shonid be the only food. If the fever rts, cold sponging is the thing todo, ex- cept in the case of weak children, when tepid baths should be substituted. Tur- pentine inhalations assists expectoration, tone up the system and are pleasant for the patient. Some ofthe physicians now favor a hypodermic injection of berax; claiming that it is an excellent arrester. Ifthere isa pain in the side or lungs, which generally accompanies the rigor, mustard plasters should be used, and wet or dry cupping according to the intensity of the pain. Some physicians are using choloroform soaked in cotton, with a dry layer of the cotton protecting it, to allevi- ate the distress. But, again, this deserves professional treatment. If one has any tendency toward lung or throat trouble it is well to remember that the ankles and arms should be kept well covered. These parts are very sensitive, aud tue woman who wears a short-sleeved, high-necked shirt is more imprudent than if she exposed her throat. For this reason high boots should be unvaryingly worn in cool days outside of the house or inside, if there is no furnace heat.—Jocelyn Davies, in St. Louis Republican. The Bicycle for Women. The mention of the bicycle for women opens a field of mild controversy which is only important because some of the ob jections to its use are taken from the hygen- ic standpoint as well as from the social. Many objectors contend that the wheel is as undesirable for women as the sewing machine, while the majority of parents seriously object to what they feel to be the unpleasant publicity of the exezcise. As a matter of health, which is of the first importance, the writer has made many inquiries among women who use the wheel regarding the effects of the exercise upon them, and has failed to discover a single case of injury or poor health result- ing from its use. On the contrary, the testimony to its exhiliarating and health- ful effect is universal. Several other American physicians, qualifial to speak from experience in thetr- practice- among- women,- have warmly commended its use. From the standpoint of a symmetrical exercise, the position is preferable to that onahorse The movement is unlike that of a sewing machine in several important respects: Instead of being bowed over in a cramped position which restricts the action of the lungs, digestive and pelvic organs alike, the woman rider sits erect, with full opportunity for chest expansion, while the difference between the environ- ment of the sewing woman and the riding woman as regards indoor and out-of-door life is most important.—Dr. Mary T. Bissell in The Popular Science Monthly. When «a Pampkin Grows, A. P. Anderson, a graduate student in the department of botany at the State University, has just completed some novel and very interesting investigations as to the growth of plants. In this series of ex- periments Mr. Anderson has been study- ing the growth of the pumpkin and its vine, making use of his new electrical device for measuring plant growth. This work has been in progress for fully a week, and the interesting fact is reveal- ed that the pumpkin itself does most of its growing after 7 o’clock in the evening and diminishes its activity as the sun rises and begins to act upon its leayes. From 9 o'clock in the morning until 3 o’clock in the afternoon the weight of the fruit di- minishes, owing to the evapoeration of water from the leaves of the plant. The general results show that when the fruit grows most the vine grows least, and vice versa. The course of these experiments has been watched with great interest by the botanical department, as they cover a part of the science as yet very littie known.— Minneapolis Times. fyoon’s Sarsapariiia wins its way into the confidence of the people by the good it is doing. Fair trials guarantee permanent CURES. There may Le rich fools, but poverty is no particular sign of ahility. To correct a suur owmache, or cure a sick headache, Hawker’s liver pills are without an equal aed pieces Flannellette yet in stock, they have got to go, and so they are going fast. The are the Best Value ever seen in MME. EMMA EAMES. The Great Soprano. = hae Very Leautiful are the features of Mdme. Emma Eames, the great singer, whose art has delighted many thousands. Ifer pres- ence is scious, her intellectuality un nestioned and her voice a perfect delight. raise from one so celebrated, then, has a high value, and this is what Mdme. Emma Eames says of “ Vin Mariani,” the famous tonic wine:—“* Vin Mariani” is a most de- lightful and efficacious tonic, of inestimable value.” All public characters, doing 2 great deal of brain work, feel the beneficial effects of this tonic-stimulant, which is a great nourisher of the brain, imparting at the same time tothe body, debilitated or depressed, new vigor, so that it has been well called by Zola, the elixir of life. “ Vin Mariani” is more tonic than iron or quinine, and does not produce constipation. Send your address to Lawrence A. Wilson & Co., Montreal, the Canadian Agents, and you will receive an album, containing the por- traits of a large number of celebrities, who have spoken enthusiastically of this notable stimulant, prepared from pure grapes and coca leaves. OPENING THEIR CELLARS, Montreal Gazette says : A very pleasant little aftair was the in- spection of the Bordeaux Claret Company’s cellars by His Honor Lieutenant-Governor Chapleau. The manager has sent out in- vitations to several prominent citizens, who were in attendance to meet His Honor. Among those present were Hon. Peter Mitchell, Mr. Richard White, Lieut.-Colonel Hughes, Messrs. Henry Dalby, E. N. St Jean, Q.C., J. P. B. Casgrain, J. M. Fortier, Geo. W. Stephens, jr., D. Z. Bessette, A. Terroux,S.S. Silverman, ex-Ald. Dufresne, Ald. Préfontaine, Hon. A. Archambault, M.L.C., etc. After the visit of inspection to the cellars had been paid and the different arrangements for bottling, ete., highly com. mented upon, toasts were In order. | beantiful speech was uttered by the Liea tenant-Governor, who wished the Company success in their great enterprise. Write for price liat to the Bordeaux Claret Company, 30 Hospital Street, Montreal. (C8089 287 SOB0BNG0S0S0SNSOSNSOSOS OS OS OPOSOSOSO PIONS o @ WANTED HELP! esse locality (local MENinevery or traveling) to introduce anew discovery and keep our show ; cards tacked upon trees, fences and —- throughout town and country. Steady employment. Commission or Loony aepanetincytoak ses, and money tedin an r when started. For Soule write World Medical JOHNSON 4NopYNE LINIMERT yrulke Rago ° THE R Tor INTZZNAL as EXTISNAL use Im 1810 Originated by an Oid Family Pnysician. Think Of It. en ae ces 3 Years, and still leads. ration alter Generation have used and blessed tt. Every Traveler stiould have a bottle in his satcnel, Ss From kKheumatism. Every Sufferer Py, sama Nervous aoe catenin te aetee asia, Soreness in Body or Limbs, Sti will find in this oid Anodyne relief and speedy cure. Every Mother snotynetiniment in the Anodyne Liniment in the house for Croup, %ore Throat, Tonsilitis, Colic, Cuts, Lruises, Cramps and Pains Nable to occur in notice. oar may cost a fe, Fuafiewea al aneet So ae enka oot Sse Trade monn bySW. K. Watson Char ottetown. wards. Painlese €x TEETH EP a P. MURRAY, flice, 145 Queen St., Charlottetown. P. E. 1, BILLIARDS. I have op®ned a Billiard Room in connec- tion wtth my Restaurant. About 5) barrels of the finest Oysters In the city will b* sold in every form. The finest of imported and domestic Cigars; temperance drinks of all chitis, Asthma, Chelera-Morbus, Diarrhoea, Lameness, ? Joints or na, $10 per set. Partia sets $2.00 and up oct6 kinds; fresh Buttermilk always on hand, also Fluid Beef Tea. P. P. GILLIS. deci3 What’s the time? If you have a Cough it is time you were taking GRAY’S RED SYRUP SPRUCE GUM THE OLD STANDARD CURE FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS, "3S has been on trial for more thas Sosa verdict of the people is that it is the best remedy known. 25¢. and 566. per bottle. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Paopaisvons MOnTR®SAL. Make New, Rich Blood! These pills a 5 ke them in the world. Wil positively cure or relieve di manner of disease, T..6 informe*ion 2 ox is worth ten times the cost of a bor of pille beaut and will always be ful. Ona See "he opal all imputitiee from the blooa Jel women hina great benefit freui using thm free. fcid everywhere, or stampe live boxes nail for $5 cts, im stampe House 8t.. bet Farm For Sale. The subscriber offers for sale his valuable Farm, containing about sixty acres. House is in good repair. There are six outbutldt some are newly built. There are twoorc one containing si trees fferent varie ties of fruit, — a haif miles wi : this city.—Prowse Bros, from the city. easy. Cc. BENOIT sept25—3m dy & wky de ee a > y {T] ~ > = Z tT Le SIMPLY A SUGGESTION. What's the use of sighing? Just as cheap to laugh. What's the use of erying? Just as cheap to chaff. Song will sweeten sorrow, Sun wiil rise to-morrow, And relicf you borrow For a guiding staff. What's the use of fretting, When the clouds hang low? What's the use of getting Left where’er you go? Just step out and hustle *Mid the din and bustle, Brains and brawny muscle Always stand a show. What's the use of moping? Doesn’t pay your rent. What's the use of groping Tn your tenement? Tho’ the skies are grieving And the birds are leaving, Stand up for achieving, Never be content. ~ Pleasant Debt We Owe to Dr. Holmes. Among the titles of Dr. Holmes to grati tude and enduring remembrance, which recall themselves to us so numerously and forcibly at the moment of his death, there is one I hope no one will lose sight of, amd which perhaps ought to be called his infiu- ence as acivilizer. He not only showed us, it seems to me—and I am thinking of some of his more didactic poems, of the opening chapters of “Elsie Venner,” of countless passages in the *‘Autocrat” and the *Pro- fessor’’—what a fine foundation we Ameri- cans have to build upon, but he was the means of inciting directly a multitude of readers to work toward ideals of real and sincere culture (not the sham article) which have never in our literature been put into such sane and comprehensive form. I should like to see a muster, and I am sure it would be a large one, of the men now ‘in middle age whose mental tone has been, consciously or unconscious- ly, considerably influenced by the kindly ceastigation, until they seemed intolerable, of shams and half-baked pretences that otherwise they might have gone on toler- ating: by the flashes of unmalignant wit in which even smal! boorishness and mean- esses were suddenly shown up in so un- mistakable a ight that it seemed impos- sibleever to permit them again; by the numberless cumulative touches by which an ideal of the gentleman was built up, wholesome, sensible, unpriggish, attain- able by every sincere stiam-hating man, yet also full of quiet, high things, charity, consideration for others—“a man of gen- tle will.”’"—From “The Point of View” in Scribner's Magazine. Remarkable Literary Workshops. Genius has frequently had remarkable workshops.” Robert Burns once went gal- loping over a remote Scottish moor. His lyorse on this occasion was not much trou bled with the guidance of the rider. Burns was busy, brooding over a glorious theme. His lyrical powers touched one of their highest points. The result of this journey was the impassioned national lyric, *t ots Wha Hae wi’ Wallace Bled.” J. S. Mill framed his “Logic” as he walked from his home to his office and back again. Sir Matthew Hale composed his “Contempia tions” as he rodeon horseback about coun- try on his circuit journeys. While travel- ing in the same fashion on his numerous and prolonged preaching tours John Wes- ley contrived to accomplish a vast quantity of literary work. Brron composed the larger portion of the “Corsair” in a London thoroughfare, as he walked up and down Albemarle street, between Grafton street and Piccadilly; and states himself that he composed “Lara,” not in the study, but at the toilet table. “The Revolt of Islam’ took form in Shelley’s brain as the poet apparently frittered away summer hours lying in a boat on the bosom of the Thames at Marlow .—Chaimmber’'s Journal. German Women as Farmhands The utilization of women in Germany as farmbands, which so many moralists have considered their duty to censure, appar ently meets with approval from Dr. Joseph Krauskopf, the Rabbi, for in a letter from Germany to his congregation he says “Such farm work for women is neither d grading nor taxing. They have pledged to become helpmates to their husbands and they regard it as th: duty to lessen the labors of their fathers, and being pbysi- cally able to do their share they regard it wrong to permit the stronger sex to slave themselves todeath while they are idling athome. Judging from their happy and healthy looks, they seem to be none the worse for taking their places alongside the men folks for the purpose of honestly earning their bread. Had we a little more pratical good sense and less sentimentality among our women at home, many a wo- man’s life might be happier to-day, happier for being more useful, and many a mza’s life would be spared the necessity of slay ing itself to death to indulge a wife’s or a daughter's idleness and luxurigs.’’—Phila- delphia Record. The Manna of Arabir. In some of the Eastern countries, nota- bly Arabia and Persia, a manna answering closely to that mentioned in the Scriptures is still naturally produced in considerable quantity. It comes from the tender branches of the tamarisk, and is shown to the Persians by the name of tamarisk honey. it consists of tear-like drops which exude in consequence of the puncture of aninsect in June and July. In the cool of the morning it is found solidified, and the congealed tears may be shaken from the limbs. That, in fact, is one of the methods of gathering manna. Herodotus alluds to the same nutritious product, so that there is no doubt is has been known in these regions from the earliest ages. Itis easy to see how it might be produced in wonderful quantities with out any special manifestation of the su- pernatural. It is a sweetish substance, pleasant to the taste and highly nutritive. Some students of the Bible have supposed the manna there mentioned to have been afungus growth, but while the explan- ation would be 4 natural one, the modifi- cation which it would require is an un- n-cessary one.—Good Housekeeping, Probing the Mystery of Ether, The bequest of $115,000 which the late Robert Stanton Avery has left in his will to the Smithsonian Institution for “lec- tures and treatises upon and concerning those mechanical laws which govern etheria] mediums” might appear at first blush to be the testamentary whim of a very etherial personage. The value of this scientific legacy, however, may prove incalculable from the standpoint of Am- erica’s position in the world of science. Jhe mystery of ether—that unknown, hypothetical mecium for all the waves of heat, light, sound, magnetism and elec- tricity—lies at the bottom of the secret of nature, and the Avery endowment may yet be the incentive to original research which shall take mankind a step nearer to the sources of world energy ana force transmition.—Philadelphia Record. Travellers, away from the comforts of home, will find in Hawker’s liver pills a speedy cure for all dtsturbance of the stomach. Greatest value in thecity in undercloth ing. children’s cloth? «and ulsters at Mc- Kay Woolen Co. —__ > 0 <a Why pay regular prices for goods when youcan buy them at 20, 25 and 30 per , cent. discount at Prowse Bros. Boys’ Oil Tan Moccasins (black) re ce.ved to-day at Goff Bros, — Hood’s Cured = After Others Failed Scrofula In the Neck—Buncines Ai Cone Now. Sangerville, Maine. “C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: “Gentlemen :—I feel that I cannct say enougt in favor of Hood’s Sarsapariila. For five years I have been troubled with scrofula in my peer and throat. Several kinds of medicines whic I tried did not do me any good, and when I coni- menced to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla theca were large bunches on my neck so sore that] could Hood’s=" Cures not bear the slightest touch. When I had taken One botti: of this medicine, the soreness had gone, and before I had finished the second the bunches had entirely disappeared.” Bis Nous ATWoop, Sangerville, Maine. N.B.. If you decide to take Hood’s Sai + rilla do not be induced to ouy any other. Hood’s Pilis cure constipation by re ” ing the peristaltic action of the alimentaryc. a j 7 \,. rea s ov ed ee 4 ¢ > \ . ~ a : —— oo fr. a ting ) - Spe Tite THO? RP bai sas e* restored wien FRUT LI tS tsecc. ~ oem ages StHING GAR I is Really Equal to any |ported-— Take my Advice and « Insist on Getting this (10 Cent Smoke for Cent Bo ret OA Pa) ~aacco 9 eu sy NTREA ——— ea CARLES Ef. THORNE, Practical Plumber, Gas Sanitary Evgincer. and Having for a number of years worked in the United States with an experienced Plumber, will now furnish first-class work and jobbing of ali kinds at short notice, TESTIMONIALS—Arthur Jolson, Esq, Druggist, Revere Hotel. ete. All orders left at REVERE HOTEL oct3l—dvy 3m ead AUCTION SALE. The Auction Sale will be resumed this ivening at 74 o'clock at P. Monaghan’s Store, Queen Street. Crockeryware, Glass- ware, Groceries and Faney Goods, will be offered without reserve. C. I MORRISON jan2 eod tf Auctioneer. a ® ere oe st Oo Consumption. = The incessant wasting of a con- sumptive can only be overcome by a powerful concentrated nourish- ment like Scott’s Emulsion. If this wasting is checked and the system is supplied with stf@hgth to combat the disease there is hope of recovery. Scott’s mulsion of Cod-liver Oil, wiih Hypophos- phites, does more to cure Con- sumption than any other known remedy. It is for ali Affections of Throat and Lungs, Courhs, Colds, Bron- chitis and Wastine. Pamphlet free. O Scott & Bowne, Belleville. Ail Druggicts. GUc. & $1. Crateful—Comiorting. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of the nat- ural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the properties of well-relect- ed-Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for ee _ eee a delicately flavored verage which may save us many h foctore’ bills. It is by the jadiclens ne such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until suiong eaough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floati around us ready to attack wherever there isa weak point. We may escape many @ tacal shaft by keeping ourseives well forti- fied by pure blood and a properly nourish- od frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk, Sold ouly in packets, by Grovers, !abelle thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Lid, Homecepathic 2 : hemists, London England. REVERE HOTEL (Formerly Rocklin House.) This pear located Hotel, which is within five minutes’ walk of Railwa Depot, has. been thoroughly clesned, painted and renovated. Is fitted with hot water, and possesses the finest bath roome in any Hotel in the city. Terms moder- ate. Coach meets ail trains. P. 8. BROWN, Proprietor, septl9—dy 6m wy I yr