Sha dake eS | 1 : ‘\ Vi 4 4iki \I RE Tuk Leavrxve Datry Newsps or P. Ey zt ISLAND, every aflernoon, from SHING © ‘ &. “UCeR Sire SUBSCRIPTION. eoued Tuk KXAMINS aoa 1H RA. ES OF ..N ADVANCE) ge YEAR cues S410 = MoNTHS : ooh 200 Tarek MeNTHs 1.00 Ove Mont! 0.35 t paid to any part of Canada or the TERMS : Four Dollars a Year pt pos United States the office of IMPANY, in the at neat > Serate read. Room The Weekly Examiner ————— fe issued every Friday piishers’ office. It @hich has appeared i gfrst-class weekly morning from hewspaper . °w oS CALENDAR FOR MAY, 18€6, 111 19 Last Quar th day, ilh 12.8m. a. ™, the is made up of matter nu the Daily editions, ard VOL 35. interesting 4 QUESTION OF The question that is of greater importane day is the question of DOLLARS, which leads direetly to t) your Sp ing Suis? beautiful lines Wish one made to order ? matier is setiled as to where they now; and to those who have not question as to where New Moon, 1” lay, - 4.0m. p. m. Firat Quar, 2 jay, 2h. 8.6m. a. m Fail Moon, 2 lay, Sh.44.1 m., Pp. m., Day of Week | i 7 | Sigh | : | t water mjfhm]_ aft } | Friday Soret 2 ae 3} Sat av > 213] 3 Sunday | 4s ‘ a 4} Monday 16 | 7 | 4 10 § | Tuesda aS So} § 18 6 Wednesday | $3 6 23 7) Thursday | (2 a oon 8 Fri av : 2 | 3 ( GjSaurisy | 39) 13] 9 5 1)} Sunday | 38] 15) 921 "1 Mor Ay | oo 10 | J2} Tuesday } 35} 17] 10 13 | Wednesday | 18 ll 10 @) Thursday 9 il § 4 Friday | é 20 mort 16 | Saturday am) 622i 66 3 17} Sunday ad | 23 | 42 18; Mouday ; wey Mt Se {} Tuesday aa CS 2 52 so} We BY 26 26 | + 53 2 tT! sday | 24 . oe 8 22| Frida } 23} 29! 622 23 | Sa: 1Ay } 23 | ou 7. oe a4) Su av | 22 | 31 | 82 9 %5 | Mo: 2i | te is 28 | Tuesiay Z mi 16 06 91° Wedones coe 34] 10 53 8; T ’ a5} IL 32 99) Frid 13 Su} aft 21 $0 | Se 4 18) «637 ;. & $1 | Su d-y 141717 38 ] i say PE, Island Railway On and us ) December, fis Railway wiil ran daily 885, the trains Sundays excest as cS. Trains Outward, Trains Inward, Read down. Read up, PM M a aw 3a 4 ql 50 413 677 547 6D We AM ] 1 2 3 3 436. ....... a hie idnia 6545 EP secceese eee 600 PM ‘ AM #N _—_— 2 30......Charlottetown. ....39 30 } 230....Royalty Junction. ...10 10 + OR Skt ccvties 9 37 $55 Ar) (Ly 96 Mi Stewart ¢ #10 Lv} Ar 8530 523... Cardigan....... 7 35 545 .. Georgetown > rM Al + .--Mount Stewart - 85% i4 acascdied 817 51? oo BS POOR Ss . ccccccs 748 6 57 Bear River 73 $3 ... Souris 6 20 PM AM PM AM BB secvccces. -ccccMeMBOPOld. . 20.00. socose 7 50 05 «oeeCRpe Traverse............ 70 M AM Treimsare run by Eastern Standard Time McDONALD, D. POTTINGER, Superintendent, Gen Mer Govt. Rys, harlottetown. Moncton, N B. Baiway Office, Dec 1, House and Corner Lot ECR , SALE. i, facing P. W. Coll eg Plea antly Silual Grounds, between the residences of Mra F. W. Moore and L. L, Beer, Esq. Kent Garden runs back on Cumb,erland | S avie an i Coach Honee. House heate i wit} hot water, } registered grates. Terms easy and made | known on application to E. W. TAYLOR, Jeweler, or | also has | DAVIES & BASZARD, ap2 Barristers. pean to sell by J Auction, Qa Thursday, 14th day of May next, Mr. E. W Taylor At 12 i cK, On the premises, his conveniently situated HOUSE AND LOT on the corner of Kent and Cc im be t'~ land Streets, with Garden, Stable, etc. The house is heated with hot water, also Bas register gr.tes. Terms easy and made known at sale See Handbills with Plan. A. McNEILL, Auctioneer. a” REPAIRS To Watches, To Clocks, To Jewelry. To Barometers, ont of order r anything you have Satisfaction giver; charges moderate. @ fay ' UONT FORGET that une place to have WATCH RE- PAIRED PROMPTLY should be your and as it done is at W. N. TANTON’, Late of the em ploy of W. W. Weilner Great George Street, NEAR QUEEN SQUARE. ANEAS A, MACDONALD Barrister-at-Law OFFICE, GREAT GEORGE STREET C IARLOTTETOWN. Money to Loan. Fire and Life Insurances taken. _Ageat for Credit Foncier Franco-Cana d ien, Laucashire Fire Insurance Co., Great estern Life Assurance Co. dec6 -26 &wy “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides, HE DAILY EXAMINER. Single Oopies Two Oents CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. ISLAND, TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1896. of MReadymades we keep 2 Our Hats and Caps are also t the question ot dollars. Will it be a ready-made or a made-to-order 2? ) ice than any of the political questions We wish to say a few words on another Have you made up your ming V of the mnatter about Have you seen the Have you seen our stock of Cloths. if you ments. To those who have seen our gocsds—of course wit) them the are going to get their Suit—we would say come along seen, we would say come and see. you are going for a Suit is settled. _ DONT FORGET that we also keep tie newest, u mm the city. like to have y Quantity Phat dons, the But come now. -to-date Gents’ Furnishing Store he most fashionable in the city. ou inspect every one of our great depart and Quality there is not their equal in the city. , _ We would We are satisfied that for McKay Woolen Company. OUR BOYS AND GIRLS. nn a, ee ee Paine’s Celery Compound Gives Them Strong Nerves, Pure Biood and Healthy Bodies, —_— —-—— IT PLANTS THE FEET OF TAB YOUNG ON THE SURE ROCK OF -___- ---- - Tt is now an established fact that the majority of boys and girls who are ailing aud sickly, suffer from a weakened condi- tion of the nervous system. It should be remembered that a boy’s er gir’s mervovs system iz exceedingly delicate, sensitive and very easily deranged. When the young people are nervous, irri- table, du not sleep well, have headache, variable appetite, sallowness of skin, and eruptions on face, be assured the blood 1s disordered and the nervous force weak. When your children show signs of any of the above-mentioned troubles, give them Paine’s Celery Compound, as there is no other medicine +o well adapted for their peculiar ailments. It will eoon banish every symptom of disease, natural appetite, sweet sleep, and clear, healthy give | complexions. Domina have sent in our rom every part of fathers and mothers ‘on, thank- to prevent sickness tilating, do everything in the handle the best Sanitary Earthenware and appliances known to We are also prepared to do evervthing in the line of STEAM, HOT WATER aod HOT AIR HRATING. ovre Ives upon the perfection of our work im all its branchre. JOBBING done at short notice. us before placing your order. the trade. McINNIS & THORNE. Charlottetown, Feb. 28, 1896—d&w a Re EP What Charlottetown Wants is to get proper Plumbing, Drainage, Ven~- and Heated Honses to live in. COLOR OF WOMEN’S EYES. The Mere Question of Pigment Has Settled Many a Man’‘s Fate. “Did you ever notice that men al- ways instinctively put confidence in a girl with blue eyes, and have their suspicions of the girl with brilliant black ones, and will you kindly tell me why?” writes Lilian Bell in the Ladies’ Home Journal. “Is it that the Ilmpid blue eye,transparent and gentle; suggests all the soft, womanly virtues, and because he thinks he can see through it, clear down into that blue eyed girl’s soul, that she is the kind of girl he fancies she is? I think it is, but some of the greatest little frauds I know are the purry, kitteny girls with big innocent blue eyes. Blazing black eyes, and the rich warm colors which dark-skinned women have to wear, suggest energy and brilliance and no end of intellect. Men look in- to such eyes and seem not to be able tosee below the surface. They have not the pleasure of a long, deep gaze into immeasurable depths. And so they think her designing and clever, and perhaps (God save the mark!) even intellectual, when perhaps she has a wealth of love and devotion and heroism stored up behind the impulsive disposition and those dazzling black eyes, which would do and dare more in a minute for some man she had set that great heart of hers upon, than your cool-blooded tranquil blonde | would do in forty years. A mere question of pigment in the eye has set- tled many a man’s fate in life, and es- tablished him with a wife who turned ——— HEALTH, ful and grateful letters testifying in unmistakable language that their children were saved from disease by Paine’s Celery Many cases are on record of from the whom the physicians had given up as in~ curable. Dr. Phelps, upon whom colleges coc- } ferred their highest honors for his deep | and valuable investigations in medicine, knew from ripe experience that his won- derful prescription, Paive’s Celery Com- pound, was just suited for the needs of all! little sufferers. Now isthe time to build up the little ones in health, so that they will be able to bear up against the hot weather when ir Compound. young people snatched grave, comes. To aceomplish this desirable Out tobe very different from the girl and necessary work, Paine’s Celery he fondly thought he was getting. Compound is the only safe, sure aud cer- | ES tain agent. i Saved by a Drink. A child 6 years of age had developed a bad habit of rising in the night to drink from the water bottle, and had been forbidden in vain. On the night of a recent storm his parents being away, his aunt tucked him safely in bed. ‘‘Now, Dickey,” she said, ‘remember I can tell if you go to the water bot- tie:” “Oh, no, auntie,” he smiled slyly, “how can you?” “TIT can tell,” she tion. **Bat how?” said Dick, skeptically. “T can,” she repeated; ‘‘and since We are prepared to PLUMBING line at sbort notice. We We pride Our charges are moderate. S - ae a : : : Best of references. said, with convic- LNOHNES a 1 35 Horse Power PORTABLE ENGINE and BOILER, Locomotive pattern. Hori zontal Engine on top of Boiler. 1 20. Horse Power, same pattern. 1 25 Horse Price ow. Terms easy. NEW DAIRY ENGINES in sto k, new, @n hand. a lower temperature tian any other Ln use. on hand. Steam, Water, Soi! an! Sewer PIPES and FITTINGS in stock. FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY and PORTLAND CEMENT at competition price | Our goods are all of the best, inc'uding our STEEL DISK HARROW, which | we have ready for use. Our SEED BOXE3 will be sold (29 per cent. lower than any in this nvarket) Telephone communication. McKINNON & McLEAN. Charlottetown, April 16, 1896—dy & wy lirect to Farmers. Power STATIONARY ENGINE and BOILER, all iu first-class order Also, DAIRY SUPPLIES of any kind furnished on including the celebrated ALPA DE LAVAL SEPERATOR. PHILHARMONIC BUILDING. : = you won’t promise, you naughty boy, shall empty the bottle.” And she ® [ did so, to the young reprobate’s con- : sternation. In the middle of the night the gable é @® of the house was blown down, and crashed like thunder through the ceii- ing of master Dick’s room. As _ his aunt and the servants rushed in a ter- rible sight met their gaze. The bed was almost hidden by masses of bricks and masonry, two iron feet at the head being driven completely through the floor. With a shriek his aunt fell on her knees. ‘‘O, Dicky! poor Dicky!” shecried. ‘'‘He’s been killed.” The words had hardly left her lips when there came a light, faltering step from the bath room and as they turned there stood Dicky, his teeth chattering with cold, a candle in one hand, and a full water bottle in the other. For a full moment he surveyed the bed with! its ton or two of debris, and then shook his head with sorrowful admission. ‘Yeth, aunty,” he declared: ‘you thed you could tell if I did.”—Boston Globe, BOILERS application It skims closer ant at TESTERS aiwave Abegweit pattern. DAIRY 24 Bottle BABCOCK — a _ —_— ——-= LADIES eee SPECIAL ATTRACTION Strausky's Steel Enameled Goods Two hundred per cent. better value than any other- Enameled Goods ever sold in Charlottetown. FOUR CASES just opened, and will sell like hot cakes. Our assortment is now complete, and ladies calling during ' the first few days will be sure to find what they want. See Daily Guardian for Jist of articles at the “City | Hardware Store.” &. B. NORTON & CO. |. Charlottetown, April 21, 1896—25 & wy sa aah = aE. wre | And it is the aim of a good wife to keep it clean and at- tractive. Nothing wil] help her more than the use of Sunlight Soap Like a ray of sunlight it brightens and cheers, en- j courages and comforts. It makes homes bright and hearts light ...... BooKS FOR WRAPPERS , For every 12 “Sunlight’’ wrappers sent to i} | Lever Bros., Ld., Toronto, a useful paper-bound book will be sent, or a cloth-bound for 50 wrappers } —— HOMB W1Is 1| VERY || DBAR Seeton aud Muchell, Halifax, Agents or Noya Scotia, and P, E.I. “ASH CARREL JIMMY.” he First Convert of the Salvation Army fn America, Our first convert in America is ctill ving aud serving the army ia Boston i tory of his reform is 2 remark: ‘be hi - le one. The conversion of the first of amighty iultitude was brought abeut by Com- nissioner Railton, then iu command of he American forces of the army, and superintendent Thomas Byrnes of the New York police. Mr. Byrnes was an iugpectcr of police at the time, early in 1880 It is safe to say that in Salvation Army circles there are very few who do not know Jimmy, by reputation at least. Jimmy was a thief and @runkard when converted in New Yerk in March, 1880. His name is James Kemp. Three times Jimmy narrowly escaped losing his life. On one occasion he was nearly frozen to death outside Billy Mc- Glory’s notorious dive. On another oc- casion he was so brutally beaten in « Water street dive that he was supposed to be dead. The morgue wagon was called by the police, and the bruised and battered body, apparently dead, was car- ried tothe morgue. When it, or rather he, arrived there some of the cCoctors made the discovery that Jinimy still lived, and so he was taken to the hos- pital, where he remained four months. His last narrow escepe from death was when he drank a quantity of spirits cf wine which he found inacellar. Jiim- my drank so much he went raving mad and tried to hang himself. He was sent to prison for three months for attempt-~ ing suicide. The first Saturday afternoon in March, 1880, Jimmy started out to have some amusement, and hearing that the Salva- tion Army, which had just arrived from England, was going **to show” at Harry Hill's notorious resort he concluded to go there and see what kind of people the soldiers were. When he arrived at Hill's, he found that there was an admission fee, and he, with a drunkard’s economy, determined to spend the price of admis- sion in a «different manner. Toward night he strolled intoa dive in Water street, where his Whyo friends painted ; his back and served his face the saure | way and wound up the performance by | rolling the unfortunate man in the saw- dust of the dive floor. Jimmy, aftersub- mitting to their treatment, thoughtthey would let him stay there all night; but. alas, they kicked him out on the s#reet. Just as Jimmy reached the sidewalk his cap blew off and fell into an ash bar- rel which was standing near the door of the den. Jimmy tried to recover it, but in doing so lost his balance and fell head first into the barrel. He struggled to get out, but all his efforts were in vain. He seemed to be there to stay. A short time after Jimmy’s acrobatic feat a policeman came along, and seeing a@ man’s legs in the barre] set to work to discover who was the owner of them and why he had them in such a position He took out his club and struck the in- verted man on the soles of his feet. These means are sometimes resorted to by policemen to arouse drunken men. From the depths of the barrel came a voice which the policeman at once recog- nized. He rapped for assistance, and when another officer appeared on the scene an effort was made to get Jimmy from his novel but painful position. They pulled at the protruding feet, but Jimmy failed to respond, his clothes hay- ing been caught on the nails which had been driven through the barrel. They pulled until the old rotten shoes gave way and were left in their hands. The policemen then threw the barrel down on its side, and laying hold of the unfor- tunate man’s feet they dragged the bar- rel and its howling occupant toward the police station. A pitiful sight was poor Jimmy when he reached the station. His face, which had been blackened by the toughs in the dive, was all battered and bruised, and the paint on his face, mingled with blood, was strongly suggestive of a scalped Indian. His clothes were all torn and his shoes gone. How complete the ruin! How perfect the wreck! Superintendent Byrnes suggested that the Salvation Army be allowed to try its hand on the man, and the result was his conversion, since which time he has served faithfully in its ranks.—Boston Heraid, His Part, Hobbs—How are you getting on in your literary career? Graph (with pomposity)}—Splendidly. Tam now collaborating with Scribe, the author, Hobbs—Is it possible? What part of the work do you do? Graph (who plays the typewriter for Scribe)—I put his ideas into readable form.—Tit-Bits. - £¢> 2° tami, es celle len siive cla tates . a well from : drank waiter. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov’t Report Roya! Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE LATES® NEWS NOTES i i | | hotel keepers, couriers, shcy-keepers and : : bucksters of various sorts. A dastardly attempt was made a few : : : P Mali chee tt te ieee davs ago to poison a number of people in | Lord Salisbury » itis aynonneel > hever wi Oo . ° . > ar } ‘ - « ly . 2 . > the suburbs of St. Malo, Qve. Some mis- | Wa8 in better health in bis life, and will not retire from the Government.® Princess seatrice, yeungest daughter of Queen Victoria, and widow of Prince Henry of Battenburg, has been appointed governor creant put four pounds ot Paris green inte which a huedred families The presence of the poison was detected before any of the water was | used. | of the Isle of Wight, the office previously ee ; heid bv her husband. This is almost the The new census of Paris gives it @ popn- | first time that such an appointment has lation of 2,511,455, which is an increase | been bestowed upon a lady. of 87,000 over the last enumeration, five | : : ‘ : years ago. This is counted as'ow rate of | A steel cigar-shaped submarine boat. to be propelled on the surfaze by steam and under the water by electric ty from sto:age hat eries, is about to be construct- ed at the Columbus Iron Works, Ba ti It will be forty feet long and will vy acrew of six men, will sink one hundred and fifty feet under the water and stay down for forty hours. Its po verfal ee :trie lights will illuminate the oceen bed three hundred feet around the and three wheels upon its battom will en- able it to crawl along on the land under the sea. growth, but it is not altogether a bad thing. When a great city goes beyond the millones, the misery of its submerged mass increases faster than the number of its in- habitants, and the dangerous, submerged mass is | "Ore. carry A count of delegates in the coming De- mocratic Presidential Convention that four-fifths of the membership is likely to favor the free coinage of silver on a ratio of 16 tol of gold. The intrinsic value of silver is about 30 to 1 of gold. There must be a tremendons respect for law among people in the United States, when sO many imagine thata staiute of Congress can obliterate an economical fact’ by pre- terding to ignore it. snows vessel] ee CD ee oO Lieut. Girouard, of the R val Engineers, who has charge of the railway which is built for the Soudan campaign, is | the son of Judge Gironard, of the Supreme eft | Court, formerly M. P. for Jacques Cartier. taking ; Lieut. Girouard wesea Kin cadet, and has done great credit to Canada by the distinction w | heinge being On Saturday last seven New York for European ports, with them two thousand saloon gers, nine-tenths of whom, it is said, go! abroad for pleasure. It ji: estimated that each of these passengers will spend $1,060, while many of them will «pend five times g-ton College pese*en- in the re It is pleasant to think that in neariy every campaign now under- taken by Great Britain, this country is re- asmuch. Sothat it is safe to say that} presented by some young Canadian worthy the outgoing squadron o* ocean liners for | of the loyal and gallant stuck from which a day is worth $8,000,000 to European ! he springs. Wars, THE CHARLOTTETOWN DRIVING PARK. QUEEN'S BIRTHDAY RACES. The following Qaee:*s Birthday Races will be heli on MONDAY, on the Charlottetown Driving Park Track :— :Sth May, FREE-FOR ALL...... iiniee es Diekeddl Gllsubli cute oebeutdphnlaeceeucediaetinnciia Purse $60 00 Tiga ovr ta ee ea) ee ve 40 60 GENTLEMEN’S DRIVEI’S (horses to be driven by the owners in oe ise oek ic edsonn andinhad ch ocikbebied <basabenes detnbnaneiubieneiapcaneens 7" 30 66 PACING RACE...... Riapacen pode benmiaecwhsehi tun sesghewnh cleicinic rd tee conte ” 30 00 RULES :—Five Lorses to enter and three to start in each race. Horse distan ing the field entitled to first m mey only; be to withdraw and remaining horses to finish the rece. Purses diviaed ; 60 per cent. to first, 30 per cent. to second, 10 per cent. to third. Entrance fee, 5 per cent. of purse, payable with nomination, and winners to pay 5 per cent. additional. All aaces half-mile , best three in five. Ea'‘ri s cose 18ih May. Al} comanunications to Le ad lressed to the Secretary. BENJ ROGERS A. B. WARBURTON, heat > SP eS Baas : Presiden’. Secretary. } a se > > . Charlottetown, May 2, 18$6—246 & wy tl dte ee $08 €0CKSCSOR (leveUeCs : Jel or BOS Oe UE USUBUS @TECOCeON Fe 3 D.02 <° : “mm ¢ § [FPipee sii’ e “ 8 os &Wew ce wwe “<I boar H., “re & . 5 § _ “ 6 Cucora,’? is 120 mame of the ne > & by the Priestley’s) whos. t & world, . It iz li : ea in leed, it has t fe 3 a F in peri c aod 6 & as ‘ ; :* c * ra ss c — = na ¥ . e . 2 << E wr: 8 i¢ The Cavalier Bicycles are taking with the people wherever they are offered for sale. They are made by The National Sewing Machine Co., Belvidere, Illinois, EVERY WHEEL WARRANTED. PENNEL®S & CHANDLER. NO 256 th which he has served | PO LEWIS PHOTOGRAPAS | None Better ! | None Cheaper ! For Fineness of Finish and Artistic ae Pee wea 7 a ee ee ee | Posing, LEWIS’ PHOTOS are uneur- | passed anywhere. Special attention given to CHILDREN’S PICTURES ; also to Copying and Ea- | larging Old Pictures, [ENTRANCE ON GRAFTON ST. | OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. feb20 “CORRECTIVE” .CYCLE EXERCISES. How to Preserve Grace and Sy mmetry in Spite of Riding. Miss Marguerite Lindley, cal culture lecturer, that unl ess women are bievele riding | will not only injure their health, but | spoil any grace of movement or sym- metry ofform of which they may be the physi- says very careful, possessed and that corrective exercises are needed toe the effects of riding. However, Miss Lindiey does thoroughly believe in the wheel when it is ridden properly and when riding is supplemented with the aforesaid These supple- mentary exc not designed to be taken at intervals during a bicycle excursion, They are taken standing in proper position, with chest and abdomen in line, or lying on When standing the arms are raised shoulder high and ex- tended, thereby raising the chest. The trunk is twisted, an exercise which brings into play many of the unused muscles. The most valuable of the exercises for sunteract ; ‘corrective exercises, reises are but at home. the back or chest. corrective Miss Lindley said, is taken lying on the stomach, with the feet fixed firmly and the hands onthe hips. From this position the head_and shoulders are raised by means of the muscles of the back. Another valuable exercise is taken lying on the back and extending the leg up and out from the hip. Both of these move- ments give exercise to the muscles which bicycling neglects. Narrow bicycle saddles, Miss Lind- ley declared to be the cause of half the evils resulting from wheeling. She advocated the use of a saddle adapted to the needs of the person who sat on it made-to-order saddle. And she insisted that the width of the made-to- order saddle should be at least approx- imately as great asthat of a properly made chair.—Milwaukee Journal, bicyclists, —aA The Reign of Love. Were England to fall from her high estate, to lose her pre-eminence among the nations of the world, to sink to the rank of a second-rate Power, not only would our own liberty be grievously impaired, but the cause of liberty throughout the world would receive a deadly wound. In approaching the question it is essentially necessary to clear one’s mind of that sickly senti- mentality, that optimistic cant of “humanitarianism,” as it is called, which is so unpleasant a sign of the times. ‘‘War and hate,” have not re- tired from the world to make room for men,and for nations of men. Yes, and for ‘‘fruitful strifes and rivalries of peace.” The struggle for existence is still the law for men, and for the nations of men. Yes, and will con- tinue to be so for generations far be- yond those of which we need take ac- count. Human nature may be trans- formed in an indefinitely remote fu- ture. So may leonine nature. But in this epoch of the world wherein we have to live and act, if the lion lies down at all with the lamb, it is, as Sydney Smith said, with the lamb in his stomach. And if men forsake the use of swords and spears, it assuredly is not to convert them into plowshares and pruning hooks, but to substitute rifled canon for those antique instru- ments of slaughter, now found ineffecr- ively murderous. Surely, never was the aspect of Eu- rope so threatening -as it is at the present hour. Standing armies of a vastness hitherto undreamed of con- front one The frontiers of every country are embattled. Rail- ways are converted into military roads. The physical sciences are ran- engines of The whole Continent is an immense parade ground, destined—who can say how soon?—to become a _ vast battle-field. At such a time, whobut a fool ora scoundrel would promise security to this country, so obnoxious to the jeal- ousy, so attractive to the cupidity of ler neighbors, save on the condition that she can vindicate it by arms?— Fortnightly Review. BEAUTY AND VARIETY. another. sacked for carnage. Satisfac'‘on and Pleasure. Each color of Diamond Dyes will give from three to eight different shades, vary- ing according to the amount of goods dyed with the contents of the package. No ‘uch rich variety of colors and shades can be obtained from any of the imitation and poorly prepared dyes sold by eome dealers. There 18 always a satisfaction and pleas- ure when Diamond Dyes are used. The jesired work is well and truly done, and old things are made as guod as new. Carefully avoid buying the crude imita- tion dyes that are so plentiful in the coun try, an i sold ke of profit. Ask for the Diamond Dyes and have your work well done. Simp.y for the sa —— ~<>> 0 <a Potatoes Beanty of Hebron Early Surprise, Early Rose, for sale at Carter’s seed store. ap27 lw eod 7 . Seed — ne The Charlottetowa Mutu2l Fire Insurence Company has been in successful operation for ten yeare. Pays all losses promptly, and insures at much lower rates than foreig” com panies, Patronize Home Institutions. B. BALDERSTONE, D. FARQUHARSON, Secretary. President. ‘ apli—dy 1m WM. F. COMEAU, ™ —— MANAGER OF THE—— Father Murphy Gold Cure Treatment, now prepared to receive patients, and will treat them for the habits of Alcoho! | ism, Cocaine and Morphine. A sure cure is effected. Communications and consul tations strictly confidential. Head Office, 124 GREAT GEORGE STREET, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Office Hours, 9 to 12 o’clock, a. ™., 3 to 5 and 7 to 8 o’clock, p, m. ap28—dy & wy tf ~ ye ee ote 7* ° ob Pee ee ed et peas lm. % : « iP} St ‘Ae {ah +S ape 1. art | ms re af toi er’ a fi ’: tri 2ep ; se q | bet + “74 eis + re Tig ee rn é tf «2 a an ee > feet 2 he me rt. ome oe Bo A tact sf * oe s. row. » ss - Tse ” . - « + 8 ettige Mie. Sem . a Ms ~~, ’ af : oh er ;. 4 ee a sg pte en on ar at Bhi —_ pot OR 8 py hic, ae a ate ts