a ee ee On. A aot ah inp, habia eR cient ana sacs 0, as Alig eStats sit il MP : DAR, MAY, —— 1Iso7 MOON'S NeW Moon, Ist CHANGES. N . 4h. 33.8m., p. m. First Quarter, 9th, 5h. 24.3m, p. m. Full Moon, 16th, 9h. 42m., a. m. Last Quarter, 25rd, Sh, 22m., a. m. New Moon, 3lst, 8h. 18.1m., a. m. Day of Week ioe Nes, High Sun Wat Sets. h. m. | morn : h, m. 1 | Saturday 46117 4 | iw 48 2 | Sunday 19 5 10 3S > | Monday is G6} 11 ib 4 Tuesday 46 7 LW ® | Wednesday 15 8 1 56 6 | Thursday 13 10 2 31 ‘| Friday 42 1] 3 lov S| Saturday 0) 12 35 ¥ |) Sunday 30 13 t 3t 10} Monday 38 1I5| 52 ol} Tuesday 37 16| 6 28 a2 | Wednesday Bo 17 7 24 13 ' Thursday ot 1s 8 19 14 | Friday 33 19} 908 1 | Saturday 32 20 9 42 16 | Sunday 3 22; 1018 t7 | Monday 2 23) 10 57 IS | Tuesday 25 24] 11 35 19 | Wednesday 27 2 1 56 2 Thursday 26 26 2 50 21 | Friday 24 27 3 39 22. Saturday 23 2) 4 26 23 | Sunday 28 30} 511 24 | Monday 2 31 6 00 25 | Tuesday 21 32 6 48 25) Wednesday 20 33 7 4r 27 | Thursday 2} 34] +832 28 | Friday 19 35 9 06 2) | Saturday 18 36, 9 28 30) Sunday 18 | 37 9 41 3k »=Monday 417 / 738{| 1019 P. E. Island Railway Onand after MONDAY, 4th January,ls¢ tbe trains of this Railway will run sjandays excepted) as follows .— Jyains Out- lTrains In- ward. Read STATIONS. j|ward. Read dowm | up. } . M.JA M. iP. M.jA M 3 10) 7 00) Charlottetown ...| 3 10 10 10 30, 7 19|.. Royalty Junction.| 2 50) 9 50 4 17) 8 03). North Wiltshire. .| 2 04) 9 05 4 31) 8 17|.. Hurter River... | 1 49) 8 51 5 05) 8 52). Bra albans...... | 115) 817 5 13) 9 00 Emeald., ..... 1 07| 8 08 5 27| 9 15).. Freetown ....... 12 53) 7 54 5 47| 9 36). Kensington .... 12 33) 7 33 6 20/10 10) Ar. ) Lv.|12 00} 7 00 Mal S’Side | A. M 2 S0jiLy. | Ar.{10 30 } 1 11)..Miscouche ...... \L0 10 | 1 37)... Weilington...... 19 47 } 2 19). Port Hill ....... | 9 09 | 3 D4). .O’Leary......... 8 00 | 3 58). .Bloomfield ......| 7 34 (| 4 34)... Alberton........ | 6 55 | 5 30). .Tignish .... .... | 6 04 iP. M. A.M, ST ee oe 2 30). .Charlottetown .. ./10 30 2 50|..Royaizy Junction|10 10 3 23| .Bedford :....... | 9 30 | 4 Jolee.yMtStew't FT" 8 55 iE GE os weoeses 1817 5 12|..St. Peters ......| 7 48 § 57|.. Bear River ......| 7 08 i ee ee ee 6 2 : Pp. M ‘A. M. 4 10). ,.Mt. Stewart ..../ 8 50 BD es eS UGIOR. «ccc cee | 7 35 5 45|..Georgetown ....| 7 10 P.M. A. Ma, P. M. A. M. 5 15|..Emerald ...... 7 5 6 05)..Cape Traverse ..| 7 00 P.M A. M. Trainsare run by Eastern Standard Time. A McDONALD, D.POTTINGER, utendent, Gen ae . ricttetown. oncton, Railway Offce, Jan4 , 1897. TO LET. The house on Richmond Sit. west, at resent occupied by Mr. J. M. McLeod. This house is beautifully situated on th- harbor front, with splendid view. Is fite ted with all the modern improvements. Apply to Mr. Thos Campbell. We keepa stock of Tim: othy Seed, Clover Seed, - Vet- ches, Peas. Pearce’s, . Prolific, and Longfellow Corn, Red White Fyfe Wheat, Colorado Bearded and White Russian Wheat, Mangel and Turnip Seed. Our stock is all fresh, and our pricea low. Eggs taken in exchange for Seeds or Groceries. BEER & GOFF LIVERPOOL SALT i 300 28 Brome FOR SALE BY HORACE HASZARD. 96 2w eed fetcteeeteentnnrntme teenie sensmncitee vse tosh tpramencnmmmnyren me BP ES LIS RO TE TS Wa RT. UY | ( ME ‘TO MEN, Proving that 1 Honesty and Trne Phil ant, y Still Wxist, If any man »...0 18 weak, nervous and debilitated, or who is suffering from any of the various troubles resulting from youthful follv, excesses or overwoik, wil! take heart and write to me, [ will send him confidentially and free of charge the plan pursued by which I was completely restored to perfect health and manhood, after years of sutlering from Nervous De- a Loss of Vigor and Organic Weak- Ih ve nothing to sell, and therefore want no money, but as I know through my Own experience how to sympathize with such sufferers, lam glad to be able to assist any feliow-beings toacure. I am well aware of the prevalence of quackery, for I myself was deceived and imposed upoa until I nearly fost faith in mank!nd but I rejoice to say that I am now perfecily well and happy once more and am desirons therefore to make this certain means of cure known to all. Ifyou will write to me you can rely upon being cured and the proud satisfaction of having been of great service toone in need will te sufficient reward for my trouble. Absolute secrecy assured. Send Sc silver to cover portage and address Mr. Geo. G. Strong,, North Rock wood, Mich. L35p&éw. ne ew a hee a If we told you that your baby was starving, that it actually didn’t get enough to eat, you might resent it. And yet there are thousands of babies who never get the fat they should in their food or who are not able to digest the fat that they do get. Fat is a necessity to your baby. It is baby life and baby beauty. A few drops of Scott’s Emulsion forall little ones one, two and three years of age is better than cream for them. They thrive and grow on it. SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville, Ong, Wants, Lost, Found &c Pasture to Jlet—Persons wanting Pasture for Cows during the season, near the city, had better apply to the undersigned at once, as he can only take a limited number’— Arthur Peters 114 lmo WANTED atonce, aCook Apply at the Revere Hotel. WANTED. A smart hoy, about 16 years of age. who would be general u-eful about a store. Apply at this office. lwk TO LET—House on Cumberland St H. P Welsh 94 Apply to Mrs Thus Campbell, Richmoud St ~ FOUND. Purse containinz a snmot mon- ey. Apply to H Monaghan, Grafton st li FOR SALE.—A desiraqle Building ot on eorner of Sydney and Hillsborough Streets, Apply to W. W. Wellner. 96 RELIABLE pushing agent wanted, Big commission Home Journal Publishing Co, Globe Building Toronto 108 sat. wed FOR SALE--At a bargain, a second-hand American Piano, patent action. Annvlv at this office. 106 2i TO LET—A house, situated on Orlebar St. entaining 8 Rooms, besides large pantry. cossession given 19th May Mrs Biateh, Cor Great George and Fitzroy Streets G103—lwk TO LET—An office in Bank Building with fire-proof vauld,. adjoining the offices o* Messrs Davies & Haszard. Apply to. M. Davison, Cashier, 106 SALESMEN WANTED, in ‘every district to handle reliable goods, new season, samples free, salary from the start. For particulars write Luke Bros, Co Montreal. 95 TO Ubi.—The southern hal: or the late chief Justice Palmer’s honse on Queen Street Can be Inspected at any tims, Apply to Mrs 2, Paimer, or at office of H. James ">'mer. 88— TO LET—The dwelling honse containing seven rooms,on Hillsborongh St, adjoining the residence of Lemuel Poole, Esq Also stable therewith For particulars as to rent, etc, apply to George Allev 4 FOUR BOARDERS WANTED---Vrs. A. W. Newbury, Grafton Street, ovposite the site of Rattenbury’s new Pork Packing Factory. has accomodations for four men borders. 3i eod pd TO LET—A house containing six rooms sit- uated on King St. back of Merchants Bank, of P. E. I. Possession given lst of Tune apply to Mise. Lowden, Dundas Esplanade. Pienty of good fresh Oysters, by the quart and half shell Please"leave‘ orders in the forenoon All orders promptly attended to taF NOCH CARMODY, Sidney Street, Same tSdol—nd, 103—lwk TO LET—A house on Stewart St. lately oc- eupied by Mr K_ Dobie, containing 7 large rooms, hall and pamtry with oufbulilding at- tached. Poss*ssion given immediately, Apply to Thomas Edward Blackburn lt6}-—2wpd —_e Q*: N VICTORIA: HER LIFE AND GN; great historic work.sells on sightto thousands. Lord Dufferin in- troduces it to Canadians in glowing words Easy to make $20.00 a week.some make twice hat. Many make morein spare time than during day at regular employment. This ear’a Great Sexagenary Celebrations are eiates it. Booksontime. Prospectus free tocanvassers. Territory going fast. THE BRADLEY GARRETSON Co Ltd Toronto, Can * a Pressman Wanted. At once a good pressman. Steady em- \foyment and good wages. Apply by’ letter or telegram. F. L. HAM, 106—4i pd. St. Stephen, N. B. 4 ROBERT THE, DEVIL. (Continued from Ist page.) aiways Mm the nouse Night, mowers, per- fume and pleasant company. The stepchildren looked curiously at each other as year after year slid away and said to each other that she would never die. Many of them died of dropsy and sther watery disorders, and their chil- iren grew up, but at 90 Mistress Chey- alier was still alive—and at 93, al- though, truth to tell, she had shriveled into a brown mummy and sat all day and ofttimes all night in a great wad- ded chair with a hood ‘over it, stuffed about with cushions and propped with pillows and hot water bottles. Her body had mummified, but ber mind was as clear and as crystal as ice. She would look with her deep black eyes at the faithful mulatto slave wom- an who waited upon her and laugh to herself—a strangely clear laugh to is- sue from such sunken lips. Sometinies her step-grandchildren would go to see her. When they were children, they were afraid, but as the years passed they got quite used to the sight of the great coffin in one end of the room. “It is a very comfortable bed,’’ Mis- tress Chevalier would often say. And several times, when she thought the hour had surely come, she made the slave woman and her daughters put it on its trestles and lift her in, and she would lie, waiting for death, gazing with a corpselike smile at the general’s portrait. At these times the family, in all its branches, rejoiced. There were only a few of the direct line left. Nearly all had married. Some were rich, and some were poor, and all were avaricious. At last, one morning the faithful mu- lattress found the mistress dead in her coffin. . Once again the children of the house assembled in the drawing rooms to hear the reading of a will—the women, as usual, a hypocritical row of veiled pleureuses. All were present except the son of Robert. He had inherited bis father’s hatred, and Mistress Chevalier’s death revived the story of her son’s. So the step- grandson staid away from her burial. His portion of the estate should be the place itself. But the will ran, “To my faithful and devoted attendant Cil- la, or Lucilla, Chevaher I leave the place and certain sums of movey at in- terest, herein more fully described and specified. ”’ This Lucilla Chevalier was none oth- er than the mulatto slave woman whose papers of freedom, together with those of her daughters and sons, had been declared before the will was opened. Therefore was she a legal heir. A gasp of horror ran round the room. The Chevalier place! But that was not all. If the surviv- ing relatives of the testator should at- tempt to set aside the conditions of the will in any way, on any grounds, the entire property, real and personal, should go to the dead woman’s phy- siciaa. Between this man and the Chev- aliers there had always been feud and ill favor. Niobe’s son received a life interest of many thousand dollars, and there were a few legacies here and there among the poorest Guelph-Chevalier tribe. The mistress’ gold and silver plate, dizmonds and other jewels were locked up in a bank in the city, to be disposed of, in accordance with sealed instruc- tions locked up with them, a year after the reading of the will. When Robert’s son was told these things, he turned white and then green —a livid, unpleasant shade. The Chevalier place, his patrimony, left to slayes! And God knew to whom the gold, the silver and the diamonds were left. The sealed instructions with them would undoubtedly reveal further determination on the part of the dead woman to insult and rob the family. Mistress Chevalier’s coffin had been placed in the family vault, between those of her husband and their little son. By her desire the coffins were on one shelf, touching each other, and cov- ered with a velvet pall, on which she herself had laboriously embroidered the Chevalier coat of arms, with its signifi- cant crest and motto. The vault was in the. churchyard of old King William, Seaforth, facing the salt marsh and flanked by the ricefields. Thither went, in his rage, the son of Robert the Devil. By his direction the mistress’ coffin was dragged out, wrapped in the pall and sunk in the edge of the marsh, with not a stone to do it reverence. By night came Niobe’s son—who, | mindful of his life interest, felt ashamed of his cousin’s poor revenge—dug up the coffin and replaced it, dripping, in , the vault. A slave of ‘his let slip the thing toa fellow belonging to Robert. Again the vault was opened, the cas- | ket was dragged out by slaves, and in the flare of pine knots was delivered to the marsh—this time in a spot where the salt tides rose daily and flooded the place. Then the avenger of disappointment and family dishonor met his cousin in the city street and triumphed over him. ‘‘No easy matter, either,’’ he concluded, “for the old mummy case was dam- nably heavy. Find it again, if you cap.’’ He passed fleeringly. Niobe’s son let the marsh keep its secret and bided his time. When the year had expired, the vari- ous heads of the tribe met, as if by ap- pointment, in tne private office ef the president of the bank. But each one, as he entered, looked haughtily and inquiringly at the oth- ers. At midday the large and ponderous strong box was brought into the office and the key inserted in its intricate lock. The men and women crowded about the table, squeezing and jostling each other, the women shoving aside their crape veils to see better. For 50 years and more no one had laid eyes on the once famous Chevalier diamonds. The box lid was thrown back—all the necks were craned. The men’s fingers itched for the gold and silver, the women’s for the pre- cious stones, The box was empty. Er: pty—save for a folded square of paper, sealed and stamped with an Ara- bic cipher. ‘‘Shall 2 open it?” imquired the prest- dent of the bank, locking from one be- wondered face to another. ‘‘If you please,’” amswered Niobe’s son. ‘Ts there no address?”” **None whatever.’’ Broken open,. the letter ran: , My Dear Ropert—Sixty years ago I wrong- ed your father. Today Lrepair the wrong as far asI am able., I intended Ieaving my plate end jewels in this box for you, but I prefer to give them to you with my own hands. Come ard take them from me:. Your affectionate grandmother, JUANA DE:RmyvasCHEVALIER. A card with a mourning border drop- ped from the letter to the table. Robert picked it up mechanically and read: ‘‘Mistress Geoffrey Robert Chev- alier. At home. The Chevalier vault, King William, Seaforth.’’ “‘God!’’ be ejaculated,. staring at the bit of glazed pasteboard: and then at Wiobe’s son. Then he seized his hat, pushed his wife aside and rushed from the bank. From the city to Seaforth station, St. Peter's parish, from the station to the thurchyard, from the churhyard to the marsh. The tide was up. For hours he sat looking at the slow- ly recceding water. Niobe’s son touched him on the shoul- der, ‘*Fool,’> he asked politely, **where did you bury her?’’ ‘*There,’? said Robert doggedly, pointing ahead of him. The marsh was drying, with sucking sounds, under the sun. A slave near by murmured to himself. They caught one word, them waded to the spot and dug, sank a spade, a log of wood and several other heavier things and watched the quicksand suck them out of sight. Then they scrambled to the marsh bank and went cach his separate way. —Claude M. Girardeau in. Lippincott’s Magazine. Aids digestion wonderfully Adams’ Tatts Frutti. Save coupons inside: ef wrappers for latest Books and Prizes. Some dealers try to palm off imitations on which they make more profit. CAN BE PREPARED WITH Benson’s CANADA .Prepared Corn. MANUFACTURED. FROM CMOICE SELECTED PURE CORN. NO ADULTERATION THE BEST FOR CHILDREN. RECIPE for Infants’ Food. To one desertspoonful of Benson's Canada Prepared Corn, mixed with halt a cup of cold water, add half a pint of g water; stir over the fire for five minutes; sweeten slightly; for older babies mix with milk instead of water. SEE OTHER RECIPES ON PACKAGE. THE EDWARDSBURG STARCH CO. Works: Cardinal, Ont. Offices: Montreal, P.Q. < F) PEAKK’S WHARF. NO DANGER. Wharf storage and yardage. WAREHOUSES TO LET By month or year. Apply to ARTHUR G. PEAKE, Office in scale house on Wharf. No c snuection with any shop around the cor- ner. 135 | @ FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE ——OfF— Liki oe ij Is ON THE WRAPPER ANegefabile Preparation for As - similating the Food and Regula - ling jhe Stomacks and Bowels of PARTON OL |) Promotes Digestion Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. NoT NARCOTIC. eS ee Jrecipe of Old Dr SAMUEL PITCIOR BOTTLE OF Apcrfect Remedy for Consti top Sour Stomach, Diarrhoca. ' Worms ,Convutsions ,Feverish- |} ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. - Tac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. mer eri a Ue 35 DosES = 3501 NTs I Oastoria is put up in one-size bottles-on!y, Tt is not sold in bulk. Don’t allow anyone to sell you anything else on the plea or promise thet it is “just as good” and “will answer every pur. pose.” Br Sco that you get C-A-8-T-6-2-1.4, as is ¢3 unr LarSY Led wer ‘wrapper. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. Sees STEEL DISK HARROWS. | And Seed Sowers, to go on Wheel Rakes, sold direct to far. ers at prices that will surprise the buyer. Fumps! Pumps! | order to suit any depth of well, free cf cost for fitting. are determined to keep some of the money On the Island, T. A. MacLEANn, Successor to MeKinnon & McLean. S or . 8 | If you want full en- joyment in your foot- wear of the latest nobbiest, and best,’ wearing go to GOFF — <= > ag £444424244 340} Landing today 19 TONS ENGLISH BONE DUST, ground fine. AN ALYSIS—Ammonia 4 per cent., Bone Phosphate 55 per cent. Ex- cellent for wheat, seeding down to grass, gardening, Lawns, ete., Selling low. a -£ A.o- - S S <n NOTICE. Farmers and others will please take notice that we are in the seed business, and that we keep the very best quality, fresh, pure and reliable; no old seeds carried over from last year. That we will sell at the very lowest-price possible. We buy for spot cash and will give our customers the benellt f the cash discount. Also note we will not allow anyone ndersell us even if we sell at cost. Before buying call and et our prices. A full supply ot groceries kept constantly on and. WM GRANT & CO QUEEN STREET, Charlottetuwn GASTORIA| a ah Bah 4 see We are making a full line of pumps; and fit them up to § We | BROS. for your boots. | ay — ia, in oO! OF EVERY Po & dele ee a es ££ 6 & ] i be i v | Pe 4 a | oe ce -=4 a | | .. : Rt ‘ x * “ " - ‘ 4 oes P : . ; a ee a 5 ~~ é ee Pe Bn. ee ae At abet