Cfenms :—Five DoLLaks 4 YEAR, eee ee ee ee NEW SERIES. The Darin Examiner > Is issved i very Evening hy ’ ’ ; Pahtichine fhe Examiner Publishing Co., FROM THEIR “ LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, OFFICE, Charlottetown, FP. E. Isiand. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION gE 32 50 Three Months..... 1 25 One Month..... cal . 0 &O za Advertising at most moderate rates, Contracts may be made for terly, half-yearly or yearly adveriise application. nah ane “a ALMANAS FUR APRIL, 1889 MOON S CHANGES, First Quarter, 8th day, 9b., 35.5m., a.m., N.1 below horizon Full Moon, 15th day, 6h., 6.lim., p. m., | (below horizon). Third Quarter, 22nd day, 9h., 43.3m, a.m, 5 ‘\ New Moon, 20th day, 16h., 53.5m., p. 1 N (below horizon ° D _iSan Sua ;} : High! Day's 4] DAY OF WEEK) , len’h h mih ric ttr'a! h i Monday 5 446 2 6 Bini 3 12 39 2 Tuesday 42' 25) 6 54)mort 43 @\Wednesday {; 40) 26171910 6 46 4 Thursday 38; 27| 7 48} 0 338 19 5 Friday — 37; 29) 8 21) 1 14 52 > Saturd y 35 S0i.9 5&1 1 &S FO 7iSunday 92' 32| 9 46) 238) 59 8' Monday 31 23:10 38) 3 341/13 2 9 Tuesda: 29' 34/11 35) 4 44 5 10 VW ecine sday 27 a it39| G6 35 s 11) Thursday os; 37i i 4 7 16 12 12) Friday — 231 38' 256814) 15 13) Saturday } 22) 404 7/9 1) 18 14) Suaday | 41; 5 22! 9 43 2) 15| Monday 18} 42) 6 32|10 22; 24 16) Tuesday 16} 43) 7 55\10 59 27 17| W ednesday 15} 45 9 2i/1t 40 0 (8iTbursday © 13; 46 10 20/aft 28 19 Friday Li} 47,11 41) 0 55 6 20 Saturday 9 48'morn| | 58 9 21 Suaday $i 350] 0 431 2 56 42 22) Momday | 6 52) 1 36, 411 46 23) Tuesday | 4! 53| 2141537) 49 24\Wednesday | 2] 54) 2 53| 656 52 25) Thursday | OF 6&5 323) 759| 55 26) Friday 14 58} 56) 3 49) 8 46 58 27 | Saturday | 57! 58) 4 11] 9 25/) l 28/Sunday | 567 0! 434/10 1 4 29' Monday 54 1 4 57/10 34! 6 20 ‘Tuesday 4 5217 5 21j11 7jl4 9 SPECULATION. iC > GEO. A. ROMER, Banker and Broker, 40 & 42 BROADWAY AND 5i NEW ST., New York City. Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Provisions and Petro- leum Bought, Sold and Carried on Margin. P. S.—Send for explanatory pamphlet. sept20—dy & wky ly Glasgow Lead and Color Works, Mo¢rwrtTReaL. roe “ELEPHANT ” 2kanp —OF— PURE WHITE LEAD i, now manufactared uader the control of the original proprietors. ‘i ” Ready Mixed Paints, made ELEPHANT up ip all the —— = Every packet is warranted to please. iver7 sheds msatened. Order early, as the Spring de- mand wili be great. Only one quality ma le, the best. " ELEPHANT ” lasting finish. " ELEPHANT ” and ceilings. " ELEPHANT ” " ELEPHANT ” Patent Zinc Paint, snow- white, gives @ beautiful and Paints for W ater-color sedes kalsomine walls Colored Paints, in iron cans and kegs. Japan Colors, in all the newest and richest colors. 46 ’’ Warnishes and Japans, su- FLEPH perior to imported. Stains and Lacquers for, : ELEPHANT ’ i nish and aeamty: ELEPHANT ” starantee of really’ good paint. The newest, most central and best equipped Paint Factory in Canada. FERGUSSON, ALEXANDER & CO. feb2—3m eod qumene orl icimnmennaianaee JaMes A. MORRISON. MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS -AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. RevreReNnces; ‘Thomas ¥yshe, Esq., Cashier GEORGE MUSGRAVE Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax ; George Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown, ' co’ & TANS WARREN & JONES, TELA MERCHANTS, 1 East Cuear anv 9 & 14 Mincine Lane, Lonpox, ENoGianp. Represented in Canada by Morrison & Muserave, Halifax. Oct. 24, 18 J=- super- .Y¥ ; Ci: E | Rea kag | At fee ooo Feu | et ivi GY be LATTES? STYLES IN | Hiard and Soft Feits, English and American Makes, | AT WERE LOW . FPRICES. JOHN MeLEon & CO. ap4—tf 2 i . ss . > City Surveyors Office. oe NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN J th By-Laws of the City, severally relating hu iIks and to the erection of li hereafter be rigidly enforced in lB aliien i Wiad Buildings, wi the following parti ns unlawfully drivirg over or the Sidewalks. Tuch > > Ol t property erecting Build- ings facing upon the street, without having boundaries from me, ite, countersigned by the : erection. JOSEPH TAYLOR, .” City Surveyor. » 0; lk. ; | 12) ; av Z4i . 20 BE LET FOR THE SUMMER. | i \ ILFORD COTTAGE, situate on the North - River Read, about one mile from the city, having a front »on the North River. There is a Garden and Orchard attached to the Cottage. Pasturege and stabling for a horse and cow can be furnished, if required he whol n, consisting of about 23 acres of landina high state of ition, would be | wit} entry leased with the cottage, if required } Appiy tol Haszard, Queen Street, or to the undersign DANIEL DAVIES. | April 26--eod j Diindas Esp i lanade, " i] ea tie 33 j ae fy oo b--4 AS IFAW AN | eS iVEI Vy £200 aN Ko op oh | | W HO PAYS 25 CENTS fo: age of Baking Powder in t instead of buying a 10 oz. | a6 oz. pack- {as now sold | ie market), WOODILL’S | German Baking ee WILL LOSE | 2 7-9 Cents. | [s it not worth saving | Take care of your wrappers for the prizes | to be given after 3lst July. ~dly eod STEAMER “COILA” From Summerside and Charlotte. | town to Boston. Iron Steamer, due here 4 from England about the 25th inst., will Freight reasonable rates at Sum- merside and Charlottetown for Boston, pro- vided a suflicient quantity offers. Parties h aving Potatoes, Kegs or other freight to ship, will correspond at once with D. FARQUHARSON & SON. Ch’town, April 10, 1889—dy wy RANKIN HOUSE, SiMON RGOLGER, Proprietor, Corner Water and Pownal Streets, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. .F S*HIS fast-sailing | i receive _ old and well-known Hotel has been thor oughly renovated and furnished with all modern conveniences, and new ranks with the | first-class Hotels of the Maritime Previnces. | The situation is the most delightiul in the city, | embracing a magnificent view of the Hiils-; borough River. | The Table will be second io none. Free Bus will meet ail Trains and Boats, Charges moderate ap9—dy 3m eod wky 6i eow } j A&A CONFAB, j j 66 4 OOD MORNING, Farmer John. How! A sis the travelling to-day ?” ‘Very bad ; nearly ruining my horse's feet. | ‘They are always very sore after going home | from town.” ‘*What do you think is the matter with | them ?” | ‘}] think they call it greased heel, or seratches, and some say it can’t be cured.” ‘*Ob, that’s nothing. You get the MAGIC HEALER SALVE, and you can soon cure! them. Did you not see the testimonials from | Davies, Finlayson, Duff and Hooper in the papers a few weeks ago?’ ‘‘Why, no; I don’t get any papers now, so I didn’t see them.” | ** My dear fellow, you go to any of the drug stores and ask for the Magic Healer Salve, and I'll guarantee that if you wash your horse’s feet at night, and rub the Salve well into the sores, they will be thoroughly cured in a week.” “Well, on your recommendation I'll give | it a trial; and if it does what you say, money will be no object. Good day, and thank you. for the information.” | apl7—dy 2aw & wky Ee ' ae ee FEE Subscriber will sell ; | fronting on Heuston Street, near Crabbe’s | corner, co‘nprising a two-story House, containing eight Rooms, and a Stable. Size of Lot, 160x45 feet. For par- HON. W.2W. LORD ticulars apply to aplo—dy eod tf “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise Ask For Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and be sure you get it, when you want the best blood-purifier. 2 With its forty years op of unexampled suce 1 cess ia the eure of Llood Diseases, you can make no mis take in preferring Ayer’s Sarsaparilla to any other. Tha fore-runner of mod- ern blood medicines, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is still the most pop- ular, being in great- er demand than all others combined. “ Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is selling faster than ever before. I never-hesitate to recommend it.’”’—George W. Whitman, Druggist, Albany, Ind. “YT am safe in saying that my sales of Avyer’s Sarsaparilla far excel those of any other, and it gives thorough satisfac- tion.’— L. H. Bush, Des Moines, Iowa. “ Aver’s Sarsaparilla and Ayer’s Pills are the best selling medicines in my store. I canrecommend them consciene ; tiously.’—C. Bickhaus, Pharinacist, Roseland, Ill. “We have sold Ayer’s Sarsaparilla _ here for over thirty years and always recommend it when asked to name the best blood-purifier.””— W. T. McLean, Druggist, Augusta, Ohio. “IT have sold your medicines for the last seventeen years, and always keep them in stock, as they are staples. ‘There is nothing so good for the youth- ful blood’ as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.’”’— R. L. Parker, Fox Lake, Wis. ‘‘Avyer’s Sarsaparilla gives the best satisfaction of any medicine I have im stock. I recommend it, or, as the Doctors say, ‘I prescribe it over the counter.’ It never fails to meet the eases for which I recommend it, even where the doctors’ prescriptions have been of no avail.’”’— Calhoun, Monmeuth, Kansas. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, . PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. the Public, may speak free.”—Evuxierpgs. \RLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, APRIL 27, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. |) Chariottetown Dramatic Taleut. | Sin,—The writer was one of the many | who last week received a severe surprise in (the entertainment given by the Tennis Clubs. He went because he wished to show his sympathy with the object, expecting to be obliged to sit through the ordinary town-concert programme of old songs, mcn- caesetel readings, vivid and unreal tableaux, closed by a starzthy dialogue delivered in the orthodox amateur sing-song, and with half-locked jaws and painfully rigid muscles, supposed tou throw the audience mito spasms of laughter. He was disap- pointed. The entertainment from the rise + to the fall of the curtain would not have dis- graced the boards of a metropolitan theatre. The Broom Drill, the Statuary and the Farce are the three features which remain in the memory as ‘‘the points.” The former, though the idea is somewhat worn now, and is asscciated in our minds with school girls and Bands of Hope, was never- | the-less thoroughly worthy of praise. The young ladies locked pretiy and moved pre- cisely. One, for the thirtieth part of. a second, lost her head, that is to say, she turned it to the left instead of the right, but she ‘‘ righted”’ it immediately. Other- wise, to an outsider, the drill appeared per- fect. The statuary iooked so real that many, unacquainted with the nature of such tableaux actually thought it was marble. For this cruel deception the writer understands that Mr. Law- ‘rence Watson is responsible. He should ibe taken to task and reminded that to shake people’s confidence in the evidence of their senses is to lay the foundation for juniversal skepticism. But ** The Mouse- trap” isthe portion which requires the fullest and most critical attention. It isa quiet, sparkling little drama, modern and conversational, with, however, a serious defect in its composition, of which we shalt speak presently. Society plays are always harder than broad burlesques. Those who are familiar with the stage know that there is no character so generally undervalued or so really difficult ro perfect as that of the ‘*stage gentleman.” Where there is scope for tumbling around in uncouth situations, or where the play is of the coarser sort in which individual idiosyncracies form the basis of the humer, an amateur can hide SEEDS. Were RUSSIAN and FIFE WHEAT, Black T'wo-Rowed Barley, White, ‘his nervousness or clownishness by throw- ing himself excitedly into his part, and his over-acting is often vigorously applauded. Such pieces, however, woulda stand in the same relation to a little drama like ‘* The Mousetrap ” as pungent molasses taffy to a dainty caramel. Mrs. Blanchard, as Mrs. 1889. curtain should have fallen with the visitors _ rushing out and Willis Campbell taking Mrs. Sumers down off the chair. This is, | however, the weakness of the play, and net of the players. In regard to the affair tak- en asa whole, it reminds me of an eccen- tric friend who purchased a substantial brick house. Speaking admiringly of it, | he said : ** You might examine it from cellar to roof, and would not find a crevice or flaw into which you could put a pen- knife.” So of the playing on Tuesday | night. One might be able vo give ita few! surface scratches with the critical blade, | but there was not a crack in it. This is a strong statement to make of an amateur | performance. We have, dramatic talent in Charlottetown. Why should it not be developed? Why should we not have a Dramatic Club here? Apart altogether from the question of the morality of the theatre no! one denies the powerful educational influence of the dsama. The lower classes obtain by 1t an insight into the manners and customs of society, which they can get in no other way. Virtue is always praised and vice censured, because however wicked men may be individually, mankind in an audience is always virtuous. The stage is spised. By having a dramatic club which during the season, we would secure a great deal of the educational influence which miss by our imsular position and being out of the track of theatrical companies, and yet we would not have the counterbalancing ances. As a means young peoples’ meeting together for hard study is much more elevating than meet- ing for whist or dancing. Ovp LiBeRALIry. A Crazy Empress. ELIZABETH OF AUSTRIA SUFFERING FROM A TERRIBLE MENTAL MALADY—SOME OF HER STRANGE HALLUCINATIONS. The New York Herald’s European edition publishes the following : Wiesbaden. been rumored that Her Majesty was suffer- the nature of that disease was has hitherto not been specified. it receives the following information from all sources on which the utmost reliance can be placed. It is true, says that journal, that the Empress of Austria is at Wiesbaden, but it is also true that she inhabits a villa quite outside the town, and that the police undoubtedly, ¢ | A TeRRIBLE TRAGEDY. too powerful an influence for good to be de- , would be able to give three or four pieces | we. evils of professional theatrical perform- of social intercourse, | ** Empress Eliza- | beth of Austria, accompanied by Arch- | duchess Marie Valaric, is at present at! Tiffin, O., reports that during a heavy For some time past it has; & DAILY EXAMINER. Sincie Corres Two Cents ‘VOL. 24.—NO. 130. Local and Other Items. — A faded or gray beard may be colored a beautiful and natural brown or black, at will, by using Buckingham’s Dye for the Whiskers, Tuk CuHamPion Srtare.—Statistics show ‘that New Hampshire is the champion divorce State, the rate being one divorce to every nine marrie«°*. A Dupticare.—A -special to the Chicago Daily News from Guthrie, 1. T., ad te Oklahoma country is a duplicate of the Great American Desei . Earty Wueat.—Wm. Gordon, Esq., Brudenell, sowed wheat on the 20th inst., and a good deal has been sown around Cardigan this week. -The house of W. P. Wood, in Macon, Co., N. C., was broken into one night last week, his wife and five children murdered, the house robbed and then burned to the ground. iieaiiadibiisiiaasl PARNELL AND THE Times.—A Dublin des- patch says that the case of Parnell against the Times for libel has been expunged from the list of cases awaiting trial before the exchequer division of Her Majesty’s high court of justice for Ireland. eh For nearly half a century Ayer’ Cherry Pectoral has been the most popular cough remedy in the world. The constantly increas- ing demand for this remedy proves it to be the very best specific for colds, coughs and all diseases of the throat and lungs, abeaiiaaals | ComPLIMENTARY.—The St. John Sun says it is understood that the Archbishop of Canter- _ bury has written to the Rev. John de Soyres, | thanking him for the publication of his work |on Christian Reunion, and quoting the appro- | bation and praise which had reached him from ‘other quarters. | i | For the delicate and aged and al] in whom the vital current is impoverished and slug- gish, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is the very best tonic. It restores the wasted tissues, and im- parts to the system surprising elasticity and vigor. Price $1. Worth $5 a bottle, A SHower or SNatts-—A_ special from thunder-storm one night recently, a shower of snails fell, covering the ground, In ing from an incurable disease, but what | Cleveland the same night, the sidewalks in The Figaro asserts that ered with snails. certain sections of the city were also cov- ——_»> — — | Drowsxeo.—John McLellan, of Springville, ‘near New Glasgow, N. S., went alone to the river on Saturday last to start a jam of logs. His hat and pike pole were afterwards found near the place and his body was picked up VALUABLE his Property | Dwelling | smali | and Norway Oats, Peas, Vetches, Timothy) and Clover Seed, &c., for sale by F, L. MACNOTT, é 139 Water Street. - aplS—dy 4ieod wkyli pd Bi 36 CASES! Opening To-day, ex | O ** Stanley.” , A Very Nice Assort- | meut, Cheap. | (\R. K. JOST, ey, | North Side of Queen | Square. | ! ap2—eod tf wky AUCTION SALE ine WA hvsinaon Valuable Building Lots. AM INSTRUCTED BY BRENTON F.; LONGWORTH, ESQ., to sell by Auction, on the Premises, on THURSDAY, 16th May, at 11 o'clock, a, m. :— The ‘ESKER PROPERTY,” situated be-: tween East Fitzroy and Euston Streets. This, property has been divided into 15 Building} Lots, some of which are very desirable. The close proximity of this property to the new Driving Park makes it still more valu- able. Terms atsale The plan of these lots may be seen at the office of . GEO. M. HARRIS, mch26—tl sle Auctioneer. SALT! SALE! org {, BAGS LIVERPOOL SALT, to, 3,4 OU arrive here in the early part of May. PEAKE BROS. & CO. PROPARIY, BY AUCTION. I am instructed to sell by Auction, apli—tf Samers, a fascinating young widow, was the leading character. Her appearance is ad- mirably suited to the stage. She possesses that fullness of face and figure which, be- hind the footlights, makes thinner persons look insignificant in comparison. Her voice is clear, fulland flexible, and her accent good, though in some words the ‘*a” 'gounds incline a little to Canadian flatness. This is, however, scarcely noticeable. Above all, she possesses the power of delicate em- phasis and minute discrimination in modu- lation. Her intonation and all her gestures are natural and easy, and it is a pleasure to look at herand hear her speak. She identi- ties herself with her character, showing a sympathetic appreciation of the humor of the piece.e ‘The manner in which she pulled at her engagement ring and _ said, ‘* Never mind, [ll get it off with soapsuds,” is a good illustration of this. Mr. #. H, Arnaud as Willis Campbell was the only representative of his sex in the cast, but the sex did not suffer. His make- up had just enough of artificiality to take away from the familiarity of his appear- ance. All his actions were free from con- straint,.and he appeared perfectly at home and self-possessed. He articulated dis- tinutly, with correct discrimination. When he brought out the words ‘*moral,” ‘*moral,” ‘*immoral,” the audience interrupted with laughter. His love-making, and, in fact, all his actions, were polished and in good taste. Both Mr. Arnaud and Mrs. blan- chard have unmistakably the true spirit of acting. Otherwise they would never have been so successful upon such brief experi- ence. But while this is the case, a great deal of the praise which the success demands is to be shared by one who was not before the pub- lic. The stage setting, a modern drawing- room in perfect taste, and the arduous superintendence and coaching both of de- clamation and gesture, are the work of Mr, Percy Pope, who had the management of the affair; and the triumph is due perhaps more to his taste and judgment than even to the native talent of Mrs. Blanchard and Mr. Arnaud. Miss Dodge, as Mrs. Roberts, made an indescribably comic pinnacle for the piano stool. -Miss Ball, Mrs. J. A. Longworth, Miss Millicent Palmer and ‘Miss Newbery must be described in a group. What little the piece required them to say they said well. Some looked handsome, some pretty, but all lady-like, well dressed and graceful. The great defect in the play is the fact that it is broken in the middle. One of the first principles known to the playwright is the preservation of climax. Everything depends on it. And this in- volves, (1) an increase of interest in the plot, (2) an increase of spectacular interest throughout. For this reason it is that you almost always see the play working out so as to bring nearly all the characters on the stage towards the close. The ** Mousetrap : Qn Wednesday, 17th April, AT 12 O'CLOCK, NOON: i } situated on Great George Street. The property has a frontage of 33 feet, and} runs back 79 feet, with right of way from | Kent Street. Terms at sale. G. M. HARRIS, mch30—tl sle. Auctioneer, The above sale is hereby postponed until WEDNESDAY, 8th May. apll reached its climax, both in regard to spec- tacle and incident, when all the visitors left with Willis Campbell beating on the floor. Then the feelings of the audience were at "The Premises formerly occupied by the late they highest pitch. They fell as soon as the PROPER? ¥ EB OR SALE. tesam 2 P. Tanton as a Photograph Studio, | two were left alone. The preservation of the spectacular climax was irretrievably ruined, and the only hope was to begin a new idea, and work up a new climax of love interest, culminating in Mrs. Blan- chard’s ** I think I should use violence.” This idea should have been worked in _be- fore, because it is a pretty one, but it should have reached its climax simultan- eously with that of the spectacle, and the two miles below where the accident occurred. He leaves a wife and family. winsihiaibiiine guard the approaches to the house. This is because the Empress is subject to a mental malady, the same as that by which her | It is merely since the death of Rudolph that Elizabeth has been affected. Signs showed themselves 14 years ago. She craves | for continual movement, and has various! hallucinations. During the last century! there have been 27 cases of insanity in the Bavarian royal family. At present the king is a lunatic and several of his relatives have been attacked by the same disease for years. Her Majesty never passed a night at the royal palace in Vienna, and she used to fancy that she was pursued by a spectre of Marie Theresa after the death of Louis Il of Bavaria. Hallucinations to which the |} empress was subjected assumed one special character. She fancied that King Louis appeared before her and that water flowed from his garments in such a volume as (to endanger his life. She used to scream out | for help and then become insensible. Her last year’s stay at Corfu did her much good. | In fact she was called upon to enter a con- vent. This idea gave way to monomania for Herne, and she made the journey to Hamburg for the purpose of seeing a_ por- trait of the poet. When she learned of the death of Rudolph a new hallucination took possession of her, namely, that she was her son’s murderer. Her majesty’s disease as- sumed a violent character when the court moved to Pesth. She would not see phy- sicians and clothed herself in ecclesiastical vestments. She refused to take food and her attendants were obliged to fasten her hands. At preseut the acute stage of the disease has passed, leaving notable svften- ing of the brain, Her case is hopeless. a Piles! Piles! Itching Piles! Symptoms.—Moisture; intense itching and stinging; moist at night; worse by scratching. If allowed to continue tumors form, which often bleed and ulcerate, becoming very sore. Swayne’s OINTMENT stops the itching and bleeding, heals ulcerations, and in most cases remove the tumors. All druggists, or by mail, for 50 cents. Dr. Swayne & Son, Phila- delphia. oetl2 bm dw Summerside Exports. Summerside, April 24—Shipped per steamer St. Lawrence, Cameron, master, for Point du Chene: At Georgetown, this morning, (April 27th), by the Rev. Fred. E. J. Lloyd, Wm. Leith Poole, of Lower Montague, to Catherine Westaway. daughter of Richard Westaway, : hal ; > ye j cousin, King Louis of Bavaria, was visited. Mertuopistic.—We learn from an excha:-ve that the following invitations (Methodist, P. iE. 1.) have been given and accepted, and the ‘conference will probably sanction them: Charlottetown, second, Rev. W. W. Brewer ; Bedeque, Rev. Wm. Harrison; Margate, Rey. E. C. Turner, and Summerside, Rev. C. W. Hamilton. The ministers stationed at the \following places have completed their full term and changes will have to be made at conference—Bedford, Little York, Murray Harbor and Winsloe. seiiaiiaeeil Why is it Gay’s seeds are so reliable? This question has been asked time and time again by good sensible farmers, that should be in the secret as well as themselves. The reason is Gay & Son will not sell a seed they wouid not plant themselves, and, moreover, their extended experience in the cultivation of gar- den and farm products has fitted them to select seeds best suited to our Island climate. See their advertisement in anothe: column of seeds, fruit and ornamental trees, blooming pansies and daisies, plants, ete. ap24 dy2i law wy6i sipiiltaataih LANDSLIDES AND CLoupBURSTS.—-The Com- ericio, of Lima, Peru, dated March 2), says landslides have recently occurred from the perpendicular walls through which the tun- nels on Oroga route are cut in order to enable the Verrugas bridge to be thrown across the chasm from tunnel to tunnel. A cloudburst caused a mass of rocks and earth to crash down and sweep away the bridge, which cost $500,000, being 575 feet long, and 260 feet high,—the highest in the world except one in the United States. ° <— ADVICE To MoTurers.— Mrs. Winslow's soothing Syrup should always be used when children ure cutting teeth, It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain; aud the little cherub awakes as “bright asa button.” It is very pleasant vo taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regulates the bowela, and is the best known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothin Svrrn, and take no other kind. [April 1 'R8 nscale Deata Turoven Fricnt.—Says the Listowel, Ont., Banner: The saddest event in connection with Tuesday morn- ing’s fire was the death, on Wednesday i i epee $ 4¢|morning, of Annie Delph, aged 10 years, ioe Sean salaeon ee a fags 100 |6 monthsand 17 days, through fright. She 98 bee ace b oc tere cs bie vant otes 1148 \was of avery nervous temperament, and DO sincewes aise bane 120 ;when the alarm was rung, Wim. Delph, her 12 tons starch ..... ---++1eseeee eres 720 | father, who lives on Victoria Street, told 22 bris oyeters......0--++eeee seer ees 55/his family not to waken Annie, as she BO beth Park... -.'.-0verse~ssrrerees 120 | might be frightened. ‘* You don't need to 1310 Ibs oe PPeE SESS Sahes ow! Soe eae be wake me, I am awake already,” was heard 180 ES SESE ISIE Os Mes gel mg Uo, on from her room, and she was soon dressed 2807 DRS dade vn eau js eeberesesees and down stairs. She did not appear $3412 alarmed then, but, when the flames broke By same steamer on 25th,— out brightly, she became excited, and fell 130 caeee Geen & 390 into a kind of nervous fit, from which she 511 bags alaeabas. Bic mee etn ae F "" 949 | never recovered consciousness. Her death pepe Gu WRN? 362) <. .. se co- oe 557 |is a direct result of incendiarisin. DOPING, occ ce Seccpccsccssaceece 60 eee eee Sl brisoysters...... .....--eeereees 102|Zezema. Itchy, Sealy, Skin Tor- a tures. $1358! The simple application of Swaynr’s O1nt- eee ll MENT, without any internal medicine, will cure any case of Tetter, Salt Rheum, Ring- worm, Piles, Itch, Sores, Pimples, Eczema, all Sealy, Itchy Skin Eruptions, no matter how obstinate or long standing. It is potent, effective, and costs but a trifle. Eeq., of Albion Bay. octl2 Gm dw aan pa ti ag