3 ie RP od ire nig My been, ALRN pAR FOR JANUARY, 18t5 First Quar 4th aay, .Sm, & m. Fall Moon, jay 7.5m a. m. Last Quar + { m. p>. ™. New Ma P : , su Sur High of Week Day « | rise sets water i h om morn 1 Tues i 49 { iS] 2 { $ | Wednesda 19 | 2 43 3 Thur ay 20 3 26 4) Friday 2\ | 4 27 § | Seturuay 49 | 2 5 41 $18 - | 668 Yi Moucay iS ao | S @ £} Tuesday 1S | 2b 2. 3 9} Wed | 43] 27] 959 so; T ‘7; 29] 10 48 r i7] 30] 36 M1] Fs tS toe 2} Sat 1% | ok atrnis i3 : Sur 33 0 59 14} M WV 15 | 34 1 40 15 { Tue $5 | 35 23 1é \W 4-4 37 - 7) 17} Thursday | 44] 39) 41 18: F i3 40 5 31 ii! Sa fay $2 Li 6 47 20 | Su Vv $2 $2 | 7 64 21'M av | 1 i a3) a 48 ’ | 22 | Tues | ioe 2S 23 We Ay i 15 10 15 24 | } a8{ 47] 10 47 oF | i | 7 is Ll 25 #1 S i 50) 1] 55 97 | Sunday | 5t| morn se,.M y | > | 0 26 29 ] | 4 0 54 20 | Wednesday | 1 656 1 26 3i | Thursday 17 30;467i 3 2 , rm I OM Tnx Leapina DarLy NEWSPAPER or P. E. ISLAND, sg insued every , from the office of the EXAMINER PusLisutne Company, in the London House Bui s, Queen Street. afternoon RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCE) One VRAR , ‘ wn $1.00 Six Monts sasinetesse ae THREE MGNTHS......--- 00 ees cece eeeeeeeenet 1.05 Care MONT... .c00-. cc cccccseseccecvescess - 036 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the Urited Siates ADVERTISING RATES For smal! advertisements which are crdered for only one or two weeks the charge is cents per inch for the first insertion, and 0 vents for each continuation. Rate cards are furnished on application at the office. Special eontract prices ata red rced rate are quoted for inehes in size or larger, which are te run for three months or saivertisements four longer. No special notices inserted unless paid for atthe rate of 10 eents per line, and under no ¢ircumstances will such paid notices appear in the local column. Syecial discounts made on all advertise- meats coaneeted witk Church Fairs, Bazaars, Pienies, etc. No notices will be inserted with he same Uniess the regular rate of 10 cents per ine is paid. That Tux EXAMINneR is considered by our Merchants and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements public, is *bundantly proved by the fact that im order o accommodate Our wuuavertisers we have ‘«on compelled to enlarge the paper to ita present size. Tue Datiy Examenee ts for sale by the fol- lowing agents :— R. H. Mason, Post O fice, Charlotte town. J. Mstatyce. Mal peque Read, - C. Paw, Low er Spriag Park Road, - W.M. ©> fin, Grafton Street, 9 & Geey.eor Waterant Prince St. ~ BD. Casporll, Priace Street, “ Bazaar Store, Quees Street “ Geo. Carter & Co.. Queen Street, S Gray, News Stall, P. E. lL. Railway and On the trains RJ Wool, upper Euston St. R K Brace, Cor, Euston and Hillsboro St. C © Henry, Gt. George St. Evens & Son, Cor. of Prince and Richmond Sticets. M. & T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- merside. D. Sutherland, Souris. Hen. D. Gordon, Georgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge. tJ [ee The Weekly Examiner ® issued every Friday morning from the Publishers’ office. [t is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and fuil of the latest news. The subseription for Tuk WEEKLY EXAM: INER, post paid to any part of Canada or the United States, ‘s one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same seale as given bove for Taz Darty ExaMINER. McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FOR 1895 ¥el IV. Begins Becember, 1894 A splendidiy illustrated life of NAPOLEON, PORTRAITS of will SEVENXTY-FIVE of Napoleon, showing him from youth te death; also portraits of his family and conten poraries, pictures of tamon- th which be feature and baiilefiehis ; in all nearly 260 PICTURES. Begins in Novemter and runs throuzy The Eight Napoleon Numbers, $1.00. TRU eight nambers. “DETECTIVE | STORIES br authority from the Pinkerton Detective Agency. Lincoln and Pinkerton (Nov. 1894); the Melly Mag-t:res; Allan Pinkerton’s. Life; Storiex of Captare of Train Robbers, For- gers, tank ro each complete n one issue, 12 ina |. SHURT STORIES BY W. D. Howells, Radyard Kipling Conan Dove, Clark Ruseell, Robert Barr, Octave Thanet, Bret Harte, Capt. King, Joel Chandler Harris and many others. NOTED CONTRIBUTECRS. tobert Louis Stevenson, F. Marion Crawford, Archdeacon Farrar, Sir Robert Bal), Prof. Drummond, Archibaid Forbes, Thomas Hardy. Clubbed with Tue $ 4.60 per year S. 8S. McCLURE, Lrp., 30 Lafayette Place, New York. the archives of robbers, etc. Datty EXAMINER at novl4 hone Church School for Girls Edgehill, Windsor, N. 8. The Lent Term of this Institution be- gins on J anuary 19, 1895. For Calendar and forms of admission tpply to DR. HIND, Windsor. Edgel.ill, Windsor, Dec. 20, °94—I1m eod NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, Xe. The subscriber is now prepared to make furveys of Land, ran Boundary and Division Lines, furnish Plans, ete.; also, Mechanik al apd Architectural Drawings, Plans, Speet fi- Cations andi Estimates. J. P. NICHOLSON, Land Surveyor, : ownail Street, Charlottetown, Aug. 25, is4—dy & wy } 184. the Sur A eee te TERMS : Four Dellars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. > oe NEW SERIES PE. Island Railway trains of this Railway will run daily indays exces ted) as follows .— } Trains Outward Trains Inward. | Read down. Read up 1M Leave Arrive P Vv 7u ass . Charlot'ctown os 2? 79 . Royalty Junct on 21 $03 North Wiltshire - 127 Pisin cwieee liunter River 118 S48 Bracaibans 12 42 8 57 Emeraid..... i2 8 9 10 Freetown : 12 20 9 Ken-ington ...... 120 iv J At LV iiia ew) , Summerside ) f AM 25) dLw) (arS w2 iit Miseouche oun cd oe 137 Wellington 947 219 PP Fei e occu dolcchihcs 9 09 R34 PERGET .ncces sane 8 OO 358 .. Bloomfield “a ssiee coe 131 .Alberton vane iad . 6 5 3e Tigeish 60) PM AM AM .. Charlottetown 10 3 Royalty Junction 10 10 MES «0 < Sanecdnes tee 93 335 At Lv 9U5 ) ¢ Mount Stewart ) f 4106/ LyS fArS 850 BBB. wae nan pandas sc0cccccseveces 7 35 545 .... Georgetown i PM AM PM AM 0 OBcbewsos Mount Stewart A 6 HB... ...Morell , oS DEE. bceue s abeeens St Peter's Si nddie Bear River 6 40 . o ENED. wcene a | PM 1) 00s cORNS . cucises 1 . ape Traverse PM Trainsare run by Eastern Standard Time D. POTTINGER, Gen Mgr Can Govt Railways Moncton, N RB. A. MCDONALT.D, Superintendent, Charlottetown. dee26 Don't Be Blindly Led —-INTO BUYING — CLOTHING AND tLOTH WHEN YOU CAN GET THE Home-made Goods, Which cannot be approached for Durability or Cheapness, —AT THE— McKAY WOOLEN C0. Charlottetuwn, Noy. 26, 1894. How It Is Done! How I account for my business Leing successful last year is that I did my best to satisfy my cus tomers, both in PRICES WORKMANSHIP. Believing, as I do, that I ean do work CHEAP- ER and give as SATISFACTORY A JOB as any firm in the eity, naturally I am looking for an im- crease in business, and will try and and give the public good, honest work, lowest prices and entire satisfaction. If I have not done work for you before, give me a trial order for BLANK BOOKS, JOB PRINT- ING, ete. J. D. TAYLOR, QUEEN STREE?. janl5 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 HOREHOUND Never left the Front Rank for Curing CREUP. COUGHS AND COLDS. All Druggists and most Grocerymen sell it. S@F” 25 cents a bottle. ARMSTRONG & CO., Proprietors, St. John, N_B. nov23—d Mechanical Drawing, &c The undersigned is prepared to give evening lessons in Mechanical and Indus- trial Drawing; to make Plane and Specifi- cations for Patents, Copying, Blue~print ing and Draughting in general. L. W. MACDONALD, Land Surveyor and Draughtsman, Nov 2i1— Dominion Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appointed sole selling Agents in the Province of Prince Edward Island for the above Com- ny, are now prepared to issue orders for ety 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. Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—tf “srate Roa “~““RLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, ~~ . . 2 < ae <> - ——FROM- Dominion Coal 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 prices. 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. 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 Jogzins,” Kelly Cove or New Campbellton Mines Coal. The Coal we sell is GENUINE. We have also a quan- tity of superior ANTHRACITE COAL. Charlottetown, January 5, 1895 —tf sila, icicles alleles iad | A ! i i394. Our business for the year 1894 has been very satisfactory, and we feel deeply indebted to our numerous customers who have made it such. ‘To them we tender our sincere thanks, and trust that our treatment to them has been mutually agreeable, 1895. As for 1895, we will continue to buy our goods for spot cash, and will sell them cheaper than any other house in the trade. Any person doubting these facts can have their doubts removed by calling at the store of WILLIAM GRANT & CO., QUEEN STREET.2 —) Charlottetown, January 8, 1895—eod & wky JUST RECEIVED ! A nice cheap line of Men’s, Women’s and Misses’ Gaiters, Also, Fancy Slippers and Felt-lined Goods, Women’s and Misse Skating Boots, WEEKS & WARREN. Charlottetown, January 9, 1895—m w f & wky For Christmas t Sets of Carvers, Game Carvers, Spoons, Dessert and Table Cutlery, Silver Knives and Forks, Razors, Razor Strops, English Pen and Jack Knives, Scissors in cases and by the pair, Christy’s Cerving Knives, Bread, Cake and Paring Knives, Children’s Sets, Peerless Lamp Stoves, 'Table Mats, Fire Sets, Chopping Bowls and Knives, Fancy Coal Vases, Coal Hods at 25c., Apple Corers and Slicers, Wringers, Sleigh Bells, Granite Ware, and last, but not least, Acme Club Skates. Don’t you think that there is something in the list that would make Xmas very happy to someone _ besides yourself. Just try and we can do the right thing for you DM. RICHARDS & CO. Ch’town, Dec. 19, 1884—in w f The Beys who Please the People. Winter has set in, and if you have not your Winter Supply of Coal in, NOW IS THE TIME! as Town and Country alike are taking advantage of our reduced prices. & CO. CARRIACE STOCK Charlottetown, December 12, 1894. Hubs, Backs. American Hickory, Shafts, Sleigh Runners, Dashers, Special low prices in wholesale lots, R. B. NORTON & CO., Charlottetown, Dec. 21, 1894—tu fri ’ CITY HARIPWARE STORE. i! Coal! Coal! | | | | | | | | ! | to the community in each age. EY a WHAT THE DRAMA COST RUNNING A THEATRE IN THE EARLY YEARS OE THE CENTURY, When Kemble Lived 64,000 a Week Was Required to Run Drury Lane—The Salary Paid to the Stars of Long Ago—A Profit- able Investment. “ If one were asked off handed, to ex- press an opinion in ségard to the rela- tive cost of running a theatre during the carly years of this century and to day it is safe to predict that. unless he had just looked up the matter, even an experienced manager would say at once that the amount of money spent and handied in a first-class playhouse to-day would far exceed that spent a century Just {5 many students of the playhouse find that each age has seen its playhouses mect its special require- ments, and that each generation had had the same enthusiasm, the same faults to find, the same degeneration of the theatre to deplore, soit seems that, after all, the expense of running a thea- tre bears the same relative proportion A very excellent proof of this was found the other day in a book published half a century ago, long since out of print, and never very widely circuiated, on are ago. the ‘Life of the Duchess of St. Albans,” whose first husband was Thomas Coutts, the rich banker. There afulllist of tho expenses of running Drury Lane in 1802, when John Philip Kemble was the manager, is published. Mr. Kemble, as leading actor of the company, drew a salary of $200 a week, with an additional $70 as stage manager. | The latter was paid all the year round, the former during the theatrical season ; it made an average income during his control there of $10,000 a year. Mrs. Siddons received $200 a week during the season, or about $6,000 a vear. Leading men like Banister. *‘Handsome Jack,” alike devoted to Garrick and to Edmund Kean, drew a salary of $85 a week. Thomas King, the original Sir Peter Teazle, drew $80. Alexander Pope, whose first wife was the beautiful Miss Younge, and who is better known asa gourmand than an actor, received $65. Wroughton, who was for years proprietor of Sadler's Wells Theatre, had $75; Charles Kemble, $50; Byrne, the ballet master, $40: John Palmer, the original Joseph Surface, $45; Powell, the prompter, had $20, with many emoluments; the famous Grimaldi had but $20. The Drury Lane company was quite large—it numbered forty five people be sides the extras—so that the selary list footed up to the weekly amount of $2,- 660, fully equal to the largest salary lists of today. The extra people received from $6.25 to $10 a week, which com. pares wel] with the price paid to-day. Indeed, the above figures compare more than favorably with the salaries in Eng- land to-day. English leading men in the provinces receive salaries to-day ranging from $17.50 to $32.50, the figures being larger, of course, in London, and in this country the price ranges all the way from $50 to $300, with notable ex- ceptions, usually paid to English actors, like the $750 that was paid Charles Cogh- lan when he came here to star under John Stetson’s management and the $500 that was paid Leonard Boyne last year, when he staged ‘The Prodigal Daughter,” and played the hero. Boyne’s salary in London was $125. Leading womenin England get from $20 to $40 in the provinces, more in London. English comedians get from $12 to $30 a week, soubrettes from $12, - 50 to $30, heavy men about the same figure as soubrettes, but heavy women receive from $20 to $40 a week. Many responsible utility people in Ungland to- day do not get over $6.25 to $10 a week, less than was paid in Kemble’s time. Ihe total expense of running the Drury Lane Theatre in Kembie’s time was $4,294 a week. It is doubtful if any theatre in this country to-day costs more. It is difficult to compare the ex- penses to-day with those of Drury Lane at the time mentioned, as so few play- houses have a stock company, but $2,000 will eover most of the salary lists to- day, simply because salaries, though jarge, are few in number, while the ex- penses of a well-known theatre in town, of a position ranking with Drury Lane, are, outside of the salaries, $2,000 a week. Some years ago, when the Bos- ton Theatre had a stock company, the expenses were $600 a day, or, rather, a performance, or $4,200 a week. It is interesting to note that the val- vation of the Drury Lane property was $600,000, and that it was a profitable property. The rent was figured at only 5 per cent on the investment, instead of 10 per cent, as is done in these days. The season was Only 32 weeks, so that the rental was about $1,000 a week. Of course it is only fair to note that there was but one other licensed theatre, Covent Garden, at the time, and that, of course, rather overbalances things. in making comparisons of this sort. Still, it may surprise many to find that, so far as the expenditure of big money in the theatre is concerned, we are not in ad- yance of our great-grandfathers, espe- cially when it is considered that this does not include any money for scenery or the author’s fees, which latter were pretty considerable at that time, as many original plays were produced. The expense of lighting the theatre— candies were used—of heating it, of ser- vauts and of printing the bills of Drury Lane, was $500. It would have been in- teresting to note the cost of lighting alone, to compare it with the cost of electricity—about $95 a week—but, nn- foriunately, no record of that item alone appears. Remarkable as these figures may seem to many, it must be borne in wind that they are the expenses on a very profitable investment.—Chicago J Herald. RECEIVING TO-DAY—Spokes, Rims, She Kept Them All, Miss Old—Did you keep your presence ef mind at your wedding? Mrs. Newed —I kept all the presents. No WHAT WE SAY, but what Hood's Sarsaparilla Does, that A splendid lot of Woodwork and { tells the story of its merit and success Remember HOOD'’S CURES. There may be rich fools, but poverty is no particular sign of shility. To correct a sour stomache, or cure a sick headache, Hawker’s liver pills are without an equal 100 pieces Flannellette yet in stock, they have got to go, and so they are going fast. The are the Best Value ever geen in this city. —Prowse Bros, ee i 1895. TATA e 7 KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvemeni 2nd sends ta personal enjoyment when ightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy *ife more, with less expenditure, by more promptly dapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, wil! attest the valuo to nealth of the cure iiquid !axative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its exccllence is duo to its prezenting in the form most acceptab’s and pleas- aut to the taste, the refrezhing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lnx- tive 3 effectually cleansing the system, clling colds, keacacheg and fevers rimanentiy ¢n:ing constipation, viven satisfaction to miilions and inet with the approval of the medical rofession, becauso it acts on the Kid- NO} s, Liver and Bowels withort weak- ening them and it 1s perfectly freo irom very objectionabie substai.ce. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drag. sists in J5c. bottles, but it is manu- ‘xetured by the California Fig Syrug to. Ouly, whose name is printed on every agkage, also the name, Syrup of Figs, nd being weil informed, you will not “ara i scent envy substitute if offered. BO0SOOSNEOOOOON MBIOHOSOSOHOHOS NO NSOBOSINIOT 0 SOS D HELP risers § WANTE ii MuzNninevery ¢ locality (local or traveling) to introduce anew discovery and keep our show @ Se cards tacked upon trees, fencesand bridgesthroughout town and country. Steady employment. Commission or salary $65.CO per monthandexper= j ses, and money deposited in any bark when started. For particulars, write orld Medical Electric Co.. @ London, Onj., Can. § BOO OU. — 6 OBOROSOBOBOBOS 0 IOBUSOOBOBTSOBUS GEO LINIMER nek any OTH & . As much Yor INTERNAL as EXTERNAL usa im 13810 * . : Criginated by an Oid Family Physician. 3 In use for more than Th in k Of It. Years, and still leads. — ration after Generation have used and blessed it, Every Travelbe chousa have a bottle in his satchel, Fre tism. Every Sufferer fom, Bhcumatian. Seorvous } poadach e, Diphtheria Coughs,Catarrh, Bron chitis, Asthma, Che ‘era-Morbus, Diarrhas ness, Revgnaes in Body or Limbs, Stiff Joiate ax deaden will find in this old Anodyne relief and speedy eure. Every Mother Should have Johnson's Anodyne Liniment in the house for Croup, Colda, *ore Throat, Tonsilitis Colic, Cuts, Brufses, Cramps upd Pains liable to occur in any family without notiee. Delays may costa Jife. Relieves all Summer Complaints like magic. Pricé, 35 ¢ t-] ; 6 bot. ties, 82. Express paid. LS. Johnson & Co., Boston. Mage Trade supplied by W. R. Watson Char lottetown. $10 ver set. Partia sets $2.00 and up wards. Painless ¢x traction of teeth. DR. J, P. MURRAY, Office, 145 Queen St., Charlottetown, P. KE. 1, BILLIARDS. I have opened a Billiard Room in copnec- tion wtth my Restaurant. about 50 barrels of the finest Oysters In the city will b~ sold in eviry form. The finest of imported and domestic Cigars; temperance drinks of all kinds; fresh Buttermilk always on hand, also Finid Beef Tea. P. P. GILLIS. dcei3 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 ali LUNG AFFECTIONS, Gray’s Syrup has been on trial for more thar 60 years and the verdict of the people is that it is the best remedy known. 26c. and We. per bottle. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Paeraitrese MONTREAL. = ARSON PILLS ake New. Rich Blood! These pills were a wondertai discovery. No cthete ke them in the world. Wil positively cure or reheve Ji manzer of disease. T..c information around ea ‘ox is worth ten times the vost of a box of pills Fi ut abvut them, and you will always be thankful. UNS ILL A DOSE. They expel all impurities from the blood licate women find great benefit frcta Nice Seton See t cts. in “tarps ve mes $1. "SUNSOS « Toure St. hoctoms Mass CO... 23 astm Farm For Sale. The subscriber offers for sale his valaable Farm, containing about one acres. House is in good repair. There are six outbui some are newly built. There are twoore 8 one containing sixty trees of different varie ties of fruit. About one and a half miler from the city. Terms easy. sept2}—3m dy & wky Cc. BENOIT Singie Uvrpies Two Cents VOL 34.—NO. 168 ALLIED TO MANY ROYALTIES. With All Pamities. The Hoehenlohes Intermarried European Reigning Tt x il! be ew chancellor we e surprising indeed if the re not tree from )re- race, for, accordin t York Tribune, there is no family 1 Europe the internat of which is more exten Mat Hohenlohe. Queen Vict p sister married a Prince Hohenl and it was her Britannic majesty wh t , e premature death of the Princess ore, assumed charge of her children, i whom, Princess Adelaide Hohen lohe, married to the late Duke of Aug ustenLurg, is the mother of the present Umpress of Germany. The Hohenlohes are, therefore, treated as cousins by the i reigning family of England, as they ure also by the royal house of Prussia, and there was no more popular member of the British court than the late Prince Victor Hlohen lohe, who for so many years filled the office of constable of Windsor Castle, and who, after distinguishing himself in the British navy, in which he attain- ed the rank of admiral, married into the English aristocracy and spent the major part of his life in his adopted country. Prince Hohenlohe is married to Princess Leopoldine, of Baden, while another member of the Hohenlohe family is ma trimonially allied to the reigning house of Wurtemberg. Prince Constantine, as grand master of the household of the Emperor of Austria and controller of his court, may be regarded as standing at the head of the Austro-Hungarian arisiocracy. Prince Kraft Hohenlohe is married to the daughter of the Mar- quise d’'Imecourt, one of the most infiu- ential and grandest members of the aristocracy, and sister of the popular cavalry general, the Marquis de Galli- ffet, while one of the sons of the new chancellor has sought a bride in Greece, in the person of Princess Chariclee Ypsilanti, a name than which there is none more illustrious in the annals of modern Greece. There are Hohenlohes who are mar- ried to Spanish grandees, and there are others who are wedded to patricians of Ro:ne and Naples; while the chancellor and his brother Constantine, at Vienna, are married to Princesses Sayn-Witt geustein, a house which may be con sidered as far more Russian than Ger- man. It was the Russian mother of Princess Hohenlohe, by the way, who was the principal cause of the famous composer, Liszt, becoming a priest. Infatuated with Liszt, she went to the length of securing a divorce from her husband, Prince Nicholas Wittgenstein, in order to marry him. By the time she had secured her freedom, however, the heart of tne fickle coimposer was interested in another direction to such an extent as to render it impossible for him to marry Princess Wittgenstein without provoking not only a scandal but even incurring personal danger at the hands of the relatives of his new inamorata. Sorely per- plexed and disinclined, moreover, to bind himself with the inconveni ent. chains of matrimony, Liszt appealed in his difficulty to his friend and chief patron, Cardinal Hohenlohe. The latter, being desirous of avoiding the terrible mesalliance of a lady of his family with a man of such humble birth as the pianist, induced him to be- come a priest and thus to create an un- surmountable bar to any matrimonial projects on the part of the princess. Althengh bitterly disappointed, she re mained Liszt's friend to the last, and it was at her palace at Rome that he was accustomed to reside when in the eternal city. Her salon there used to be crowded with authors, artists diplo mats and church dignitaries, Cardinal Hohenlohe among the number, and while drinking her caravan tea and puf- fing away at her large Havana cigars, which she was accustomed to smoke, would chatter at ease in Polish, German, Russian, French, English, Italian or Spanish. She survived Liszt for several years, and it was to her that he bequeathed the major part of his possessions. she Able to Transfer Lunacy. A series of very wonderful experi- ments which have just been concluded by Dr. Luys, of Paris, whose observa- tions and discoveries in connection with magnetism zad electricity in relation to hypnotism made a profound impres- sion upon the scientific world some time ago, has led to a remarkable result. The latest discovery, says the London Telegraph, establishes the fact that cerebral activity can be transferred to acrown of magnetized iron, in which the activity can be retained and subse- quently passed, on to a second person. Incredible as this may seem, Dr. Luys has proved its possibility by the experiments just referred to. He placed the crown, which in reality is only a circular band of magnetized iron, on the head of a female patient suffering from melancholia, with a mania for self-destruction, and with such success was the experiment attend- ed that within a fortnight the patient could be allowed to go free without danger, the crown having absorbed all her marked tendencies, About two weeks afterward he put the same crown, which meanwhile had been carefully kept free from contract with anything else, on the head of a male patient suf- fering from hysteria, complicated by frequent recurrent periods of lethargy. The patient was then hypnotized and immediately conducted himself after the manner of the woman who had pre viously worn the crown. Indeed, he practically assumed her personality and uttered exactly the same complaints as she had done. Similar phenomena have, it isreported, been cbserved in the case of every patient experimented upon. Another experimeut showed that the crown retained the impression acquired until it was made red hot. During the Queen's Life, The Queen of England, in her 57 Féars of power, has seen every throne in the world vacated at least once, and some of them several times.—Chicago Times. 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 the city in undercloth- ing, children’s cloth' «and ulsters at Mc Ksy Woolen Co. ——__— oe - Why pay regular prices for goods when youcan buy them at 20, 25 and 30 per zent. discount at Prowse Bros. A few more good fur caps left, now sell- ing at 33} pe: cent discount—McKay Woolen Co. \ Y Y a WS om << MrGtoMennitt Toronic, Ontario. As Well as Ever After Taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla Serious Disease. m what is known as disease for five years, and for days ata I have been unable to straighten myself p. Iwasin bed for three weeks; during that time I had leeches applied and derived no bene- fit. Seeing Hood’s Sarsaparilla advertised in the papers I decided to try a bottle. I found HOOD’S Sarsapariila URES relief before I had finished taking half of a bot- ue. J uu from taking the first bottie that I decided to oy another, and since taking the second bottle [ feel as well as ever I did in my life.” Gro, MERRETT, Toror.éo0, Ont. Cured of a Bright's $ suffering f: gotso much help Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient, yet easy of action. Sold by all druggists. 25c. — 2M —— ana 9 eeeesencacs en 2 eee iene moe ! ss... § ec Art of sever forgetting is acquired by ‘earning to remember the right thing at the right time. For instance, should you have any ureasiness at the stomach at any time, think of Adams’ TUTTI FRUTTI. It gives imme- diate and permanent relief. See that no imitation is palmed off on you. i ; ‘ BOCK BINDING! : i i . Any persons having volumes of Maga zines, Newspapers, etc., to bind, or any books that require to be rebound, can have the work well done at the lowest possible rates by leaving them with DAVID BETHUNE, jan8—Im d&w Rotehford Square. ~ is Really Equal to any Imported | "Take my Advice and } Insist on detting this « 10 Cen Sooke for | BI Sone | ZR JE pence Nowrncne CHARLES E. THORNE, Practical Plumber, Gas and Sanitary Egineer. Having for a number of years worked in the United States with an experienced Piumber, will now furnish first-class work and jobbing of all kinds at short notice. TESTIMONiALS—Arthur Johnson, Esq., Druggist, Revere Hotel, ete. All orders left at REVERE HOTEL oct3I—dy 3m eed Don’t Forget that when you buy Scott’s Emul- sion you are not getting a secret mixture containing worthless or harmful drugs. Scott’s Emulsion cannot be sec- ret for an analysis reveals all there is init. Consequently the endorse- ment of the medical world means something. Scott’ Emutsion overcomes Wasting, promotes the making of Solid Flesh, and gives Vital Sirength. It has no equal as acure for Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consumption, la, Anaemia, Emaciation, and © asting Diseases of Children. Scott & Bowne, Belleville. All Druggists. 50c. & $1. Grateiul—Comlorting. EPPS'S COGOA BREAKFAST-—SUPPER. “By athorough knowledge of the nat- ural jaws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well- selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps hus provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavor ed beverage which may save us manyjheavy loctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until slong enctgh to resist every tendency to disease, Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there isja weak point. We may escape many a taial shaft by keeping ourseives well! forti fied with pure blocd and a properly nourish- 2d frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk, Sold ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelle thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Lid, Homecepathic Chemists, London England. REVERE HOTEL (Formerly Recklin House.) This centrally located Hotel, which is withia five minutes’ walk of Railwa De has been thoroughly shanna painted and renovated. Is with hot water, and possesses the finest bath rooms in any Hotel in the city. Terms moder- ate. Coach meets ail trains. P. 8. BROWN, Proprietor, septl9—dy 6m wy l yr Hy