omens é » i si : b a : oe, 7 Y \ Vey?) Ny ‘| \\i } 4 : . i ‘ ‘ 7 t, Ria re oan tana patty NEWSPAPRR ow P. B Ista’ ; . Fy ) afternoon. from offiee of gened @VOry ee rcatvea ComPaNy, ip the « BX vorer PC alist . ,oador Honse © : | “8 RATES OF SUBSCRIPTIO: {IN Av anc® $4.00 Ove YRAn 1. Six MonTs* THREE MoenTHs 10 One Morte "as to any par! Canada or the i nited States . , The Weekly ixaminer s eeued every Frid av : y from the publishers’ oites ft is made up of matter which has appeared Sent post ywrning the Daily editions, and TERMS : Four Dollars a Year VOL 34. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, MONDAY, Single Copies Two Cents MAY 158, 1895. NO. 265 ai a0 a | IF you—_ Want a wife, Want a cook, Want a partner; Want a Want a servant girl; Want to Want to sell a house, Want %to rent a house, Went to exchange anything, Wat to sell plants or grain Want to sell groceries or druga, Want to sell or trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or cattle ADVERTISE IN sitnation; cell a farm; is a drst-class weekly newspaper—interesting } —ENDAR FOR MAY, 95 . CALENDAR F¢ ‘se. Ganada Atlantic and Plant Zs o% aie | A COOKING SCHOOL PIE, POST-DINNER ORATORY OF INTEREST TO WOMEN. : ' . SNH . | : ING 4 . cxeeeinnmeneinemety SSS . Give me a spoon of oleo, ma shill , yam Quer < = . ee STE {MSHIP i r\ EK. (i, . { And the caine, alkatl : Oat ne Mrs. T. Jones of Colorado, died of ex- Fall M ; OOM p, u ’ For tne last 50 vears Cough SE ~ wi [nr going to make a pie, mamma, BOTTLED ELOQUENCE UNCORKED | citement while preparing to cast her ‘ides : ast OV year 1S ‘ y moyoite tognake a pte first vote. pede i sik ro hase © 9 iy pe i i Laat & \ i n Medicines have been coming y) For J hu wall be hungry and tired, ma, AT BIG MEETINGS. Mme. Carnot, wife of the late presi- New M 0 Se. FO i BOSTO N in ana aying ont, but during a RASS } And his tissues will decon prone : —— oS dent, is recuznized on the continent ar First ' I 5 all thie tine er & Sy) vAnd th ; aes ac ad cettul ) _— : A Tiresome Experience for the Average | (he best dressed woman in France. " ae a ° } yA d i troonh anu ce Ose. a Y ns he san ——CALLING AT— | — °F ae : , e . fhe third biennial meeting of thi r= i SHARP Ss i \ N : Now give me.a chun’ of caseine, ma Citizen—Brilliant Post-Prandial Speak- World’s Woman’s Christian Temper- feck, | =" sa gt 79) ‘ . oo shorien the thermic fat; : 4 als We } gn . ' : ‘ ee +a% 5 ED ‘ a < oy O shoriep the thermie Tat; ers Are Always in Demand—The Danger | ance Union will be in London, begin irises | sets | water/ Hawkesbury and Halifax.) Bil SAN GF HOREHOGUND e. SO OD And band me the uxyzen bottle, mm m1 ming on the Seth Senn i i ig i ADP OVE And jook at the thermostat; of the Wall-Flowers Being Bored, a Ss Vv: a — enn a Tein — —_e y : . p tas te PN aS And if the electric oven’s coid Mrs. S. Van Rensselaer Cruger is the ikon mor Never left the Front Rank for Curing ey LB * ae ¥ | Just turn it on half ha'f an ohm We have come upon an age of dinners | Mme. de Stale of New York. She is ‘ 4 8. S. OLIVETTE : a oP » Ee! For I want to have supper ready and oratory, and the inclination to mix | more than’ Mme. de Stael was—she has g . i : ; will leave Navigation} CROUP, COUGHS AND COLBS. ZA iF GEA OD a As soon as John comes home. the two is leading to interesting conse- | feauty as well as brains, and is a y . i : i ; o ‘o's. Wharf, Char zs f.. 4 ae ite Q& Videiilaleals sik ineiiead Gack acd quences, Itisa matter of easy calculation | society woman as well as a writer of . : ft 2 lottetown, FRIDAY,; All Druggists and most Groserymen sell Uy ws SSS ‘And rotate the mixing machine 'o show that from the first of November to | books. K NO y } EDGE 4 \ 46 { i o% May 17, at 12 noon, it, pay” 25 ceats a bottle. | %, di Bat give me the sterilized water first the first of June the public dinners given The two richest unmarried girls in 4 5 | S : 45 | 8 i Ss ‘: aid: every Rriday oe ay wae » an iy chin in = country ae than a hun- the whoie universe to-day are Alta and Brings eomfort and improvemen.s ond | - ' | . 9 27] r > 2 } WY and the phosphate too for new 1 thin dred a night, and, as there are at least | Edith Roeckfeller, daughters of John. D 3 cov } iereafter unt far- ; The new Fete : re ; : ane > ean ‘ - | tends ts personal enjoyment when ei: . . 10 6 : ; ‘ e Re Will ARMSTRONG & CO « SS a Ee: aw A _ ot D aitt nels ae a ix specches at each, the total is usually | Rockfeller, head of the Standard Oil | |. rhtl sell The aia whe live bet- fi, We Ay 40 12] 10 45], vee Salad : ee a ee 4 igs oo ” — 7 Sade bs - need ae re impressive. At many of these dinners, | concern. The much-talked-about for- | “3°07 ® a Deltas if ith Y ; . } leave Pyke , 4 : - Same days, : . : y , er , > a , r ! De aie ite . 7 ost 1 “ ? 9\7 AY 91 13 It 26 | t +" oe esbury a . Pp = 7. o Proprietors, St. John, N B. urified Blood 0 help his brain a bit.—Chicago News. | .ays Frank Leslie’s Weekly, the same | tunes of the Gould and Vanderbilt girls tex than ot vers a enjoy -ife more, wi 16 } Frida 231 lien gi. .™ fax On Saturdays at 10 p.m., aI nov23—d stories are told; a speaker who originates | pale into insignificance when the Rocke- | ‘¢58 expenditure, by more promptly 11 | Saturday | 29. 2 0 49 | a Boston Moadage at 7» m- o Saved an operation in the following rr Sauer — 4 happy illustration or a successful bon / feller wealth is mentioned. ulapting the world’s best products to 2 | Sunday oe l 33 | PROM BOSTON— Tuesday, May 14, at case. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures when | These Concern the Tenaci f mot is recchoed wherever his performance The veil now worn by ladies of Egypt | the needs ef physical being, will attest I M ay i ‘ i 18 9 19 } 12 noon, and every Tuesday thereafter “_e nee eitinimrcenentesante Mpenicenannntnt —~ | all others fail It e ales oa : bl 1 prety ose se Tenacity of Life Seem | i: Known. ‘I wish I had said that,’’ said | are as thin as these of Paris, London the value to nealth of the pure liquid 25 a, i . oY until further notice, calling at Halifax and . B tan. mia gov sa 100d, _ im Animals and Reptites, Oscar Wilde to Whistler, after one of | or New York. It is etiquette and reli- laxative principles embraced in the 1s | Wed tin ¥ | ; o . ‘| Haw kesbury, and arriving at Charlotte- ! ‘ “A year ago my father, William Thomp- A French professor has been making Whistler's best epigrams. ‘Oh, but you | gion that a Mohammedan lady shell be . _ d _ Pe Fi 16 ' ees oo | oe 4 | town on Thursday evening f son, was taken suddenly 1l with inflam- ee ee a rye ay a oar Will say it,’? responded the merciless | veiled ; the Koran commands it, but | "Cy, ©yTup OF Sigs. 1? aor oh ee a For rates of passage, freight, ete., apply g | mation of the bladder. He suffered a great —. 7 ste i mp ants ee nn » James, It is largely that way with after- | says nothing about the thickness of the | _ Its excellence is due to its presenting os ; a : | ae i 6 Ll | to loeal agents, or the general agents as : deal and was very low for sometime. At sam 2 pate ~ ce = a. aaa dinner oratory, and we mnay well inquire | yeil, so the ladies regulate that point | in the form imost acceptab’e and pleas- 1 mer lo SS r 8 | below. : ; } hj last the doctor said he would not get weld | a niial xt tot ati gl ble waa where the fashion is going to end unless | to suit themselves. Most Moslem wo- | ant to the taste, the refreshingand truly ‘i Mi. ied | Sack ed Siperior workm wasHip, Te | aniess an operation was performed. At a td k, oe thes eat eo ‘al had it is more judiciously directed. men, however, attach such importance } beneficial properties of a perfect lax. 2U | Monday 26 | 26 } 8 43] arr . . ho oO know that anything unusual hac There isan awful suspicion that the | ¢ rering > ‘ , ote ; ‘ a 3 i i cee ee a a ie ‘ : ; a om , i . Cee spi » covering the face that when taken } «tice. effectua'ly cleansin stem 21 | Tueaday 24] 27) 9 24} HALIFAX SERVICE. fined finish and moderate this time we read about Hood’s Sarsapa- | been going on. Next to the rabbit in | people who buy ten dollar and twenty | py surprise without a veil a woman will 5 ee ae g the sy ’ 221 eda: a} 201 10 § | _ : SE : acute! rilla and decided to try it. Before he used | being able to bear great cold come in | dollar tickets, and who simply eat and oft ‘ aia nia’ sane enk welt ter aicpeliing colds, heacaches and fevere o ee _ i — i . on S. S. “Halifax” or * QOlivette _will s . k hese half a bottle his copes had come back | order the sheep, the goat and the pig all | drink and listen may get tired of being | f, 1 eh ‘ " yo rm 1 wer limbs and permanentiy curing constipation, air - ; <°}7 29] 10 46} leave Plant Wharf, Halifax, every WED-| prices combine to make these } to him, whereas before he could eat but doinésticauimala: The cat was complete- | joe Senet. ane Yee “ ace with it, leaving the lower limbs { 7 n) ee apy: ie bd) | *¥ - “er Oe li 39 NESDAY. 8 : , 1 SATURDAY, 10 little. When he had taken three bottles : “ . vored. Itis one of the disadvantages of | bare to the knees. if has given satisfaction to millions and 25 | Sa lay a ho morn | ee —" “ee ng a a fo ‘B st »} Phot t] st satisfactory ( of the medicine he was as well as ever.” ly outcinsned. ‘ _{ the growth of total abstinence that it One of the things that the fashionable | met with the approval of the medical atl Seater 20) 33 \ @ ih | bsp ntil further notice, for bo: rs 10008 1@ most satish Y | Pranois J. Tuompson, Peninsula Lake, ‘One would think that the wild creatures | makes the after-dinner audience more | woman picks up abroad now to hang | profession, because it acts on the Kid- a7 | Meade, | of ot di ect. Returning, will leave north side . Ontario. Remember | Would be the hardiest and as a nutter of | critical. When under the full inspiration | in her Grawing-reem is @ set of priest's aia, ‘icon eal Meeks winds c 23! 7 . 2 ~ | t *|of Lewis’ Wharf, Boston, Tuesdays and in Charlottetown *o-day. , 7 fact some of them do show almost miracu- {of unnumbered bottles the banqueter | vestments. These are used for window ming thaws md.tb ka cantentae timaiietes a sGay iv a> vo y. - ‘ i ne _ — vate citi rv i vantinii : : es ° : en 2 et ee ie ! : on : =" Saturdars, 12 noon, until farther notice. | Hood Ss Sarsaparilla lous te nacity of life as all old trapper cares very little about the quality of the | and door draperies, one hanging as a every objectionable ro an 30 r} aa - , 18 37 5 a Fasseng: rs arriving in Halifax TUES- | can testify, A Canadian trapper found speeches. All that he hopes to do is to lambrequin over a wide window, wit’ = Yt Fie is f. i by all t 31} Friday | 7 7 36 ‘ 7 hari G EO CO O K | De TE aS me et hig Seay Bad) kee p his eyes open, his body steady, and | perhaps the narow casements in the — — we , 2 oe nd a ben, 417{7 38| 4 54) the steamer without extra charg?. . I ;. } is the oO nly disappeared. A month | afterwards the occasionally to pound the table by way of | same room conventionally decorated. gee | a aan but a . } people of Green Lake ninety miles dis- showing those around him that he is the | These pieces of rich erebroidery can be scured by tne Vaiuorma 2g Syrup PE. Island Railway On and after THURSDAY, 27th December, 1894. the tralus of this Railway will ran daily (Sundays execery ted) as follows .— Trains Outward, Trains Inward. Read down. Read up. AM PM AM PM 7 @ 3 30...... Charlottetown. .... 1¢ 10 2% 71 3 49....Royalty Junction. ...9 50 211 8 433.....North Wiltshire.....9 05 12 Sit 441..:....Hunter River......85] 1% 8 48 > 18 -. Bradalbane 817 Re $57 527 . Emerald i2 $i% > wi Freetown ‘ i2 oD s8.... -Kensington .... 12 @ 6 r Lv ] PM PM Summerside 1» 4 11 pone OUD, occconssn0cens iz 6 Se aca Kcascevns 219 ..Port Hill 334 O’ Leary 3 BS +o OE. 6 cincs dee 4% - AIDCTIOR. 2.00 ee 5 30 sp icsdbcctduseckes PM PM 23 vkiowd A ee Om...... Royalty Junction.... 4 i eee ee &¢ Ar) Ly) } Mount Stewart ) f 4197 Lv dar$ 850 O2.... on Se, ccc scnecstcens BOM 5 43 Georgetown. ..... «ve Ve ae AM PM AM 405 Mount Stewart 38 55 443 nneth. wahane sccevdeeee 317 § 12 a Ucvesccusssecaver Ge 5 47 a AONE TOR 5 och cise kcuncet G4#).... 0¢: 0s OOOO. nace denéeveda ae PM AM PM AM + pu. éicnases cacenne 7 2 un) Cape Traverse 635 PM AM Trains are run by Eastern Standard Time D. POTTINGER, Gen Mgr Can Govt Railways Moncton, N B. A. MCDONALD, Superintendent, Charlottetown. derzs TIME TABLE FOR STEAMER SOUTH PORT, a 4 a S it wi piy < be East West and West Rivers until far ther W eave Pr Street wharf on every Monday for East River at o'clock p- m., ret ¢ Tuesday for Charlottetown; leav- « Wheel at 7 98 « -alling ing Hay ' Wharf at 7.20 a. m., calling at [faggarty’s and Hickey’s wharves; leav- ing Charlottetown for East River at 3 P and maxing returpo trip. W ave Prince Street wharf for East Riv Saturday at 5 a. m. leaving Hayden’s Wharf for Char- lottetown at 7.30 a. m., calling at Hag- garty’s and Hickey’s wharves making re tur at 3 p. m. from Prince St. er will run to Mount Stewart € y alternate week as the tides may suit. ST RIVER. W ive Ch’t wn for West River Bridge, Thursday, at 4 p m, calling at Westville when required. Friday morn- ing leaving West Liver Bridge for Ch’town at alling at Westville, making re- turn trip from Chtown to West River Bridge at 4 o’clock, p.m. ROCKY POINT FERRY. Leave Charlottetown for Rocky Point daily, (Sunday excepted)—6.30, 8 and 10 @m; 12: ;2,4 and 6 pm. Lea wocky Point for Charlottetown— 7,9 aod 11 am; 12, 3 5 and 6.30 p m. "GINT SUNDAY TIME TABLY. Leave Ch’town at and 9.30am; 12 noon: 1, 2 an : ' Leave Rocky and | a& m; 12.398, 1 T TAL F Oy FERRY H is fii Wii pl; m the Sou uport fe rry t eas follows: —Sun- days exoepted, eaving Charlottetown daily at 6.30 a m, and uvery half hour up to 9 pm. Leaving South port at 6.45 a m, making half hoarls trips up to 9.15 p m. Sun jay tripe On Tues- day and Friday of each week steamer will ommodate the travelling ; fame as last year run on time to ac public. - “HIGKRY & NICHOLSON, Tobacco Manufacturers, NO. 1 QUEEN STREET. iry their New Brands of BRIGHT CHEWING and BRIGHT SMOKING —ALSO—— Their Old Reliable Brands of BLACK CHEWING and BRIGHT SMOKING TWIST. Prices Lower Than Imported Tobaccos, 120% . 19° iSsJo—-6m 13h wy Ch’town, Apri! 1, Operative & Prosthetic Dentistry. DR. MURRAY, OFFICF, 145 QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN. apld Tri-weekly servicea by SS. Olivette and Halifax, between Boston and Haitfax, and weekly service by S. S. Florida between Boston and Char'ottetown will b: resumed in June, as last season Through Tickets for sale an] haggage } k 1] stations on the In ercolonial apply rates of passage, freigtit, etc., | ald, formerly known as the “ McDonald YW. L. CHIPMAN, Agent for Canada, Plant Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents, north side, Lewis’ Wharf, 3oston, may? Will commence the season of 1895 by ng from Halifax on the 30th April. sai: For freight, etc., apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent. i. Black Diamond Line. The SS. BONAVIATA, due here from Von- treal Wednesday, May 15th, wil sail for St, John's, Newfoundiand, via Sydney. carrving horses, cattle and sheep on deck and predace, ete, under deck at lowest poxsible rates. For further particula:s asto freight and passage ipp y to PEAKE BROS. & CO., may? Agents. SALT! SALT! To arrive per Steamship3 Sunrise and Tafua, 10,060 bags Liverpool Sait and 800 bags Fishery, which will be sold at lowest prices whilst discharging. Both steamers are due here about Ist Mav. Apply to PEAKE BROS. & CO. Ch’town, April 18, 1895—tf What's the time? If you have a Congh it is time you were taking GRAY’S ,, RED SYRUP ~*~ SPRUCE even GUM THE OLD STANDARD CURB FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS, Gray's Byrup hat been on trial for more thas §© years and the verdict of the people is thas it is the best remedy known. S33. and 68. per bottle. Seld everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Puoraisvens wanwea.. A GOOD WATCH At a Low Price IS WHAT YOU WANT. eSSEE OUAS.oy G. H. TAYLOR, North Side Queen Square. mch30 FOR SALE. House in Georgetown. That Dwelling House in Georgetown the property of Mrs. Capt. John McDon- House,” together with the outbuildings. This House is in first-class repair, con- tains fourteen large rooms, and is well wlapted for a Dwelling or Boarding House. _ Any party or parties desirous of secur- ing @ summer residence will find this a capital opportunity, l'his property will be sold at a bargain For terms and partienlars apply at the office of J. A. Matheson, Solicitor, George town, ar to L. W. MACDONALD, nar Quesn & Grafton Sts. ; cer Que Soe rie Bieed Purifier Promineutly in the public eye today. cure all liver ills, billous- ] mally & Hlood’s Pills it scoasshe ton ay & nov26—135w ly AND ——" REPAIRING ! %¥Ve are prepared to fill all or- ders for Custom Work promptly. Stock, workmanship and _ prices right. Repairing of all kinds done neat and cheap. oD. Ea. BELLE, The ; Cirtown, Avril 19, 1895—dy feliable Boot and Shoe Dealer. i ee DAIRYMEN ! ne a ee a es ee _— 1 am now prepared to furnish the Dairy Associations of P. E. Island with all sizes of Milk Cans of superior material and workmanship. Sample Cans for examination will be sent free of cost on application, and may be seen at the store. Also, Vats and all heating and other appara- tus necessary in such establishments. I am also prepared to furnish handsome Wrought Iron, Scroll and Crescent Cemetery Palings at very reasonable prices, according to quality, To see them is to be con- vinced of their merits. Remember, I guarantee all my work to give entire satisfaction. such as it has been doing for the past thirty years. At the Old Stand QUEEN STREET. AUGUSTUS HERMAXS. Charlottetown, April 11, 1895—dy_ & wy reece ee tc NC NOLO Keep Your Feet Dry. If you catch cold now it will hang on all Summer. | “Wear Granbv Rubbers. They are the best and last longest. Perfect in Style, Fit and Finish. | THEY WEAR LIKE IRON. ee es Seed! Seed! _—man -———— ee WHKEAT—White Rassian, Colorado Bearded, Red and White Fife. CLO VER—Island Red, Early Manimoth, White Dutch, ‘ : TIMOTHY—Peas, Vetches (English), Corn, Mangolds, Turnips, etc. HARROWS—Steel and Wood Frame Spring Tooth, wholesale and retail. ; SEED BOXES (double) for Rakes. This is @ fine attachment, sowing Grain and Hay Seed in two separate boxes; all Steel Feed. Wholesale and Retail. PLOW REPAIRS—Mould Boards, Shares, Solee, Land Sides, Heads, Jaws, Clevises, for all Plows. D. W. FINLAYSON, Ch’towa,May 4, 1895—246 w H. T. LEPAGE’S OLD STAND.” ———————— We do Job Printing of every descripticnoat reasonable prices. Try us and ,be convinced. soem rumen sear one tant from the place where the wrap had been set killed a wolf with that very trap attached to his leg. The animal was re- duced almost to a skeleton. That he should have been able to drag the trap about for a month threugh 100 miles of forest shows how hard it is to kill a wolf and doubtless his relatives the fox and the jackal as well as other wild anmia!s not so Nearly connected could furnish material for equally wonderful tales. Going down lower in the brute creation the power of clinging to life seems to in- crease, Every. one knows how hard it is to killa snake and the old superstition about the pieces living till sunset seeme« to have been quite justified. Other reptiles show even more wonderful powers. It is sometimes very hard to kill a common tortoise. An English writer, Shaw, tells of one that lived six months after its brain was taken out, moving its limbs and walking as before, Another lived twenty-three days after its head was cut off, and the head itself opened and closed its jaws a quarter of an hour after it was separated from the body. Next lower in the scale of creation come the fishes, and no fisherman need be told that they will flop about in the liveliest way hours after they have been pulled out of their natural habitat. Dut the champion of all fish in this respect is the shark. Itis so hard to kill sharks that they Often live when life would seem impossible. A shark was once caught by the sailors on the French ship Rossignol, and was split open and cleaned as one would clean a fish, his heart and all his other internal organs being taken out. The body was then thrown overboard, when, to the astonishment of all, it swam away and was soon out of sight. Of course, it could not have lived long, but it is wonderful that it kept so much life in its body as to be able to swim at all, Starting a Fashion. os There was once a tanner of hides in London who had an idea. And out of the idea he built upa fashion, and from the fashion he drew a fortune. This is how he did it: After the hides in his finishing room had been trimmed for the trade there was always a great pile of strips and scraps left over, some of them quite large enough to be made into a man’s shoe. - Before that time tan- ners had sold these odds and ends for pump-washers, harness rosettes and what not, and the price that they received hardly paid the cost of loading them into freight wagons. But one tanner was not satisfied with that way of doing business. “TD make shoes of these scraps,’’ he said. ‘‘But you can’t,’’ chimed all the wise tanners who knew him. ‘The leather won't take black dressing—it‘s too seamy and porous.’’ “Then l’. make yellow shoes,’’ said he. ¢ The wise tanners all held up their hands and shook their heads sagely. A bright man was going astray. But the tanner reasoned that because men had worn black shoes for no one knew how long was no reason why they wouldn’t wear yellow shoes. ‘““So I'll make yellow shoes,’’ he said again. And that was his idea, Then he went to work on the scraps, and it wasn’t long before his yellow shoes were associating with the monocle and separated from it only by the stature of an aristocrat. That was only a little more than half a dozen years ago, but to- day the russet shoe is known ali over the world. Seraps have long ceased to be used in its manufacture, and whole hides, the best that can be obtained, are none too good, ~ Catholics in the United States, According to the statistics of the Roman Catholic church in the United States, as furnished by the official Catholic Direc- tory, the membership of the church in this country inereased 175,832 in 1894. The figures were furnished by the chan- collors of the various dioceses throughout the land. They show that the Catholic population of the United States is 9 077,856. In the whole country there are seyenteen Arch- bishops, seventy-five Bishops, 10,053 priests, 6,659 churches with resident pas- tors, 3,650 missions with churches, mak- ing 9,309 churches in all; 5,1 stations and chapels, nine universities, twenty- eight seminaries for secular students, with 2,129 students, seventy-seven semin- aries of the religious orders, such as Jesu- its, Franciscans, etc,, with 1,474 students; 182 high schools for boys, 609 high schools for girls, 3,731 parochial schools, with 775,070 pupils; 239 orphan asylums, shel- tering 30,567 orphans, and 821 charitablo institutions. The total number of child- ren in Catholic institutions is 918,207, The figures, compared with the figures for the previous year, show the following increases: Priests, 286; churches, 580; universities, 1; secular seminaries, 3; regular seminaries, 16; children attending rochial schools, 10,000; charitable in stitutions, 68; children cared for in char- ftable institutions, 6,685.—Buffalo Kx- press, ——=4— eg ROTECTION from the grip, pneumonia, diphtheria, fever and epidemics is given by Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla. Itmakes PURE BLOOD. In Italy in the last ten years 947 duels have been fought over newspaper articles; 730 <n account of rivalry in love; 377 for polical differences; 289 for insulting words; and the smallest number, 19, for disputes at cards, According to the figures, jour- nalists are most apt to fight, and actors least of those who fought at all, but there soberest man in the company. It is easy for a prosy speaker to work off moss-cov- ered anecdotes upon an intellectual con- dition of this kind. And it is still easier for the victims of the evening to sing ‘For he’s a jolly good fellow,’’ whether they really thinkshe is or not. But now- adays intemperance, even at banquets, is distinctly unfashionable. The many Wines are tasted more than they are drunk. The quality is praised, while the man Who ‘‘goes in’’ for mere quantity is set down as a vulgarian. There are ex- ceptions, of course, and there are many dinners which end in mental fog and physical uncertainty, But the great ma- jority of the banquets are sober affairs, and the post-prandial orator finds be- fore him a hundred or more of clean, keen and intelligent faces that measure him at his own height, and do not magnify his size or his words through an alcoholic at- mosphere. The increase of sobriety, therefore, distinctly threatens to bring after-dinner speaking down to a practical basis on which a bore will be recognized as a bore and a plagiarist as a plagiarist. At best a banquet is a tiresome experi- ence for the average citizen, and if the people who support banquets should make up their minds to revolt, what is to be- come of the numerous gentlemen who are assured in their own minds that they are very happy as after-dinner speakers, but who sometimes fail to prove the facts to those who hear them? A mania of this kind is practically incurable. Heretofore it has existed upon the good-natured tolerance of friendship, and in years to come, as there may be & necessity of finding a way to handle it, there will doubtless arise a post-prandial audience agency, which will supply on short notice to orators of this kind a brilliant and ap- preciative assemblage, who will applaud at the right time and with the fervor of real enthusiasm. There is another thing. The really brilliant post-prandial speakers are be- sieged with applications all through the year. There are so few of the really good ones in proportion to the demand that they cannot begin to accept a third of the invitations that are extended to them. Now, all this means work, and the men who are worth listening to are gen- erally men who work hard in their pro- fession or in their business. More than one of them has sacrificed « part of his life fer after-dinner speeches, which at best could only be fleeting in their inter- est and results. The dinner with us has not yet come to an occasion for the promulgation of fraportant principles of policies. The speeches are most success- ful when most fragmentary; but the strain is there just the same. As the world grows older every leading business man becomes more engrossed in his par- ticular work. We have not yet succeeded in cultivating leisure. But among the men who bear the honors in the different walks are many who begin to see that they must conserve their energies, and that they have yet to learn that sitting six hours at 4 table and eating and drink- ing a lot of things which the human stomach does not especially want is a poor way to take care of health. Perhaps these gentlemen may revolt from ban- quets and leave the field to the great army of mediocrities, who mean well, but who do not love their fellow-men as much as they should. Perhaps there may be a way out of the difficulty through the phono, graph and the kinetoscope, but that haa yet to be developed. It is certain that the ziving of banquets will go on, and that there will be need for speech-making. We must look at the question fairly, and then do what we can to reform it, The first great step should be for the listeners to put down the stupid orator, and the next great step should be for the bright orator to avoid the stupid listeners. Kill Stamps, His Mark. Mr. Pickwick’s pleasant incident of find. ing the stone at Cobham, with the Bill Stumps inscription, was, I have always suspected, an actual incident that occurred during the year 1836 or 1837, He says, in- decd, that it was submitted to the Royal Antiquarian society—or Society of Anti- quaries. One of the same kind was de- scribed in Secott’s ‘‘Antiquary,’’ where Edie Ochiltree explains the mystery of the letters. It is, however, & ‘‘common form’’ of jest, and we find an instance jn the memoirs of Bachaumont, which Dickens may have seen. There was once dug up in the quarries of Belleville, near Paris, a stone with these letters: ee 1 a a Zz wee Eb 2. E. M. .: EK, 8, A. N, E. 8, It was taken tc the Academicians, who could make nothing of it. Savante were consulted without result. At last the beadle of Montmartre chanced to see it, and at once read it off, ‘‘Ici le chemin des anes’’—that is, the path for the don- keys whv carried away the sacks of plaster from the quarries.—Gentlemen’s Maga- zine. ——___—»_.oa—— An interesting survivor of Waterloo is Victor Baillot, who was born at Percey, in the Department of the Youve, and is now in his 103rd year. He was enrolled in the Grand Army, and went through the Prus- sian campaign under Marshal Davoust, Due d’Auerstadt. At Waterloo Baillot re- ceived a deep sabre cut in the head, was taken a prisoner aud sent to Plymouth. On returning to France, in 1816, he was finally discharged from the army, the doc- tors having declared that he wasec tive. He has-a_ vivid recolk Waterloo, and is remarkably sturd aps Box 694, Charlottetown, i The Examiner }ublishing Company is nota single banker or capitalist ja the ist. sidering his great age. picked up in Spain, France and Italy at very low prices, and are regarded by the discriminating collector as a unique and attractive ornament. In using them as lambrequins or doorway drapings, breadths of soft silk of a con- trasting or harmonizing hue are drawn through the openings made in the robes for head and arms, an arrangement which adds a pleasing grace to the rather stiff lines of the splendid pieces. A London paper teli a story illustrat- ing Queen Victoria’s well-known strict- ness in the matter of precedence. As she was about to take a train with the Empress Frederick at Paddington sta- tion recently, she reached the door of her saloon carriage first ; she drew back at once, however, and motioned the empress to go in before her. The em- press protested, and for a few seconds there was a little argument Petween mother and daughter as to which should have precedence, and the queen laugh- ingly insisting, the empress finally en- tered before her mother. This was a striking example of the Queen’s puncti- liousness in observing the rank of her daughter and guest. Concerning the matter of precedence, it seems a little odd that the Duchess of York, who is the mother of the probable future ruler of England, is yet quite low in the ranks at court. The Queen’s daughters and daughters-in-law all have precedence of her, and, according to Truth, her place at a drawing-room is between the Duchess of Albany and the Duchess of Teck. One wonders, if her son shall reach the throne, whether her rank will be raise‘. Or Not to Dy that is the question : whether it is better to wear that faded, shabby dress and endure the scornful looks of all your well-dressed neighbors, or to purchase a package of Diamond Dyes and restore its freshness in another color — making a new dress for ten cents. Diamond Dyes are made for home use. Absolutely reliable. Any color. Sold everywhere. 10 cents a package. §2@7Diree< tion Book and 40 samples of colored cloth, free. WELLs & RICHARDSON CO,, Montreal, P.Q. Grateful—Comlorting. EPPSS COCOA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorcugh knowledge of the nat ural jaws which govern’ the operations of digestion and uutrition, and by a cafeful application ot the fine properties of well- selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flaver ed beverage which may save us many, heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of uch articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up uatil strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is;a weak point. We may escape many tacal shaft by keeping ourseives well fort fied with pure blood and a properly nourish edi frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simpiy with boiling water or milk. aoe ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelled tiua, JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homoeopathic Chemists, London England, GOLD PARIS 1889. “0 SIX REDUCED CENTS TO ALL GROCERS 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 Board, Slack and Run of Mines, and will keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coa) on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents, Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—1f Jo. only, whose name is printed on every sackage, also the name, Syrup of Figa, ud being well informed, you will net cept any substitute if offered. The Professor of Chemistry, Toxi- cology, and [Medical Jurisprudence,o New York City College— R. Ogden Doremus, r.D., LL. D.—highly recommends Adams’ Tutti Frutti for}: indigestion. i See that no imitations are paimed off on you. | i e TT PRI SUMMERSIDE ADS. W. EB. MALLETT, HAIR DRISSER, Shaving, Hair Cutting Shampooing. Having lately renovated and refitted my Shop, I am now prepared to give satisfuc- tion in all kinds of Barber work. ap8—dy 3m McKinnon's English Ointment. Cures Old Sores, Erysipelas, Salt Rheum, Eczema, Piles, Burns, Corns. Cute, Sore Eyes, etc. Made and sold by NEIL McKINNON, Summerside, P. E. I. TOOTHACHE! This is addressed to all those who are suffer- ing from Toothache, or who may uire treatment of any kind at the hand« of a Den- list. I make the very best Teeth, guaranteed, for $ 5a set. If not satisfactory, money re- tunded. Gold and Siiver Fillings a speciaity. The f-llowing letter from Dr. Roberteoa, ot Crapaud, as regards the PAINLESS KX- TRACTION of Teeth, speaks for \iself:— ToJ E MeDonaalad, DD 3,Sinmorsida,P E Dear Doctor,—I am so well pleased with the work yeu have done for me, that I will take it as a special favor if you will give publicity to ‘his letter. I positively assert that after an experience extending over twenty-two years under the hands of many dentists, you are the only one who ever extracted a tooth for me ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. The TEN teeth you removed forme atone sitting did not hart a particle, as Mr James Dawson of Tryon, who was present at the operation beard me testify, The man who invented your method should be knighted, Iam yeurs, gratefully, H. W. KoBertson, M. D.. Crapaud, Jan. 16, 1895. J. F. McDONALD, D. B. 8., api~-ly Summersi apiely WANTED. Customers for 10,000 Bar- rels of Lime. which I will sell this seascn at the follow- ing reduced prices, delivered at Kilns on the Malpeque and St. Peter’s Roads :— Unriddled Lime for Farm purposes, 60c. cash ; 65c. payable Nov. Ist. Riddled Lime for Building, 65c. cash 7dc. payable Nov. lst. Any orders for car lots will be delivered f. o. b. at same rates. JOHN T. PEARDEN, Upper Great George Street. apl3—dy 246 & wy Dairymen, ~ Attention Of the Cheese and Butter Factzries in operation in 1894, we furnished, to the ~atisfaction of all concerned, the necessary apparatus for the following :—Winsloe, Hampton, Tryon, Crapaud, Grand River, Dank River, Mount Stewart, and Vernon River Bridge. In the summer of 1894 we made nine Cheese Vats (each holding from 650 to 706 gallons of milk), and two Butter Vats (each everaging 400 gallons of milk); no complaints were made—satisfaction given. From our large experience in the past we are now better than ever pa to meet the wants of Dairymen. We guaran tee satisfaction, and respectfully solict the patronage of those who are contempi lating the erection of Cheese or Butter Ftories. Our make of Vats is superior to all others, and our fifteen and twenty gallon Cans are the best and cheapest in the pro. vin @, Terms to suit puchasers, M. STEVENSON. febl4d—3m dy & wky Diba = oaks ocuamy gates re ost sae ; SO RS A Bs i Wael saapelacetnennnr ed sai eT Peet saci a , t ’ , as +. rs ae ~ : Bi Ps + oe zy | oa . | - a : | | = - i? > bape ay : , a | a | — r i; '@ . a au | hae | : ei | ite i aa 4 4 ; a Pat a 4 ' He | q , ss } aw 7 4 .. 4 . / it 1 f j / a 3 4 : or ,? A