5 a so a a ne Oe rae wn ee ee ating oe a 7 a ah ae” st ENG, me Talla RAR AR: Se iailmant mi aiNlipii SAI B M ae m Sa es a ee ee cae so 2s reece me ie ee ee aot we pat 6 8 Mt pe a: ae eae Marl, Me nT : CALENDAR, MAY, IS97 MOON’S CHANGES. New Moon, Ist. 4h. 33.8m., p.m, > First Quarter, th. 5h. 24.3m, p. m. ‘ >. Full Moon, 16th, 9h. 42m., a, m, ~~ Last Quarter, 28rd, oh. 22im., a. m. New Moon, 3lst, Sh. 13.1m., a. m. i+ ‘ Bi Sun Sun | High Dav of Week. ioe 5 aah | Woke hom. h. m. }] morn I | Saturday | 1 51 74 | iO 4 2} Sunday 19 5' 1058 }| Monday 48 6! 11 18 4 | Tuesday 16 7 1 19 5 ; Wednesday 45 Ss l a4 6 | Thursday 13 10 » 26 7 | Friday ~ 12 41} 311 8 Saturday 10) 12 3 50 9} Sunday 30 13 13 10 | Monday 38 5 5 20 sl Tuesdav 37 16 6 2 22! Wednesday 35 7 7 24 13 | ‘Thursday 34 sj 819 14) Friday | 33 Wo} 908 1d | Satur lay 32 20 0 42 16 | Sunday 31 i 30 18 17 | Monday 2 23} 10 57 IS | Tuesday 28 24! 11 35 19 | Wednesdey 27 25 1 56 20 | Thursday > Ys 2 2 50 21 | Friday — 24 277; 339 22 Saturday 25 2 4 26 23 | Sunday 23 30 5 ll 24 | Monday 2 21] 600 25 | Tuesday 21 32 6 48 2 | Wednesday 20 33 7 41 27 | Thursday ww 34] 8 32 28 | Friday 19 35 9 06 2 | Saturday 18 36 9 28 30'| Sunday is {| _ 37 9 41 31 | Monday 417) 738} 1019 P. E Island Railway the traime ef this Railway will ran daily Jupaays excepted) as follows.— feains Out- lTrains In- ward. Read} STATIONS, |ward. Read down. up. . M.JA. M, iP. MA M 3 10, 7 00} Charlottetown ...| 3 10/10 10 30) 7 19|.. Royalty Junction.) 2 50) 9 50 4 17| 8 08|..North Wiltshire. | 2 04) 9 05 4 31| 8 17|.. Hunter River... | 1 49) 8 51 5 05| 8 52!..Bradaibane......| 1 15) 817 5 13) 9 0O|..Emerald.. ..... | 1 07} 8 08 5 27| 9 15!.. Freetown ....... 12 53) 7 54 ‘5 47| 9 36).. Kensington .... [12 33) 7 35 6 2010 10)Ar. } Ly./12 00) 7 Of M. S’Side A. M 12 50,Ly J ax.|10 80 1 11]..Miscouche ...... 10 10 1 37|., Wellington...... | 9 47 2 19}... Port Hill ..... ..| 9 09 Re ' 8 00 3 58!}.. Bloomfield ...... 7 ot 4 34|..Alberton........ | 6 55 5 30|..Tignish .... .... | 6 OF PrP. mM. jA. M, ~ oe A. M. 2 20|..Charlottetown ... 10 30 2 50|..Royalzy Junction/l0 10 3 23) . Bedford ..... oe : = 3 55)Ar. “ema FS 4 10 ip? Mistew't } xy, 8 55 SS Ol. CORE. 2 cc cc cece | 81% & 12)..St. Peters ......| 7 8 & 57|..Bear River ......| 7 08 ir ces o 20503 ica parental ~oeeranammmemes,” WTS 4 10|..Mt. Stewart ....| 8 50 5 22)..Cardigan........ | 7 35 5 45|..Georgetown ....| 7 10 Pp. M. lA. M. P.M. [Az M. )5 15|..Emerald ...... 7 5O 6 05|..Cape Traverse ..| 7 00 P.M A. M. Trainsare run by Eastern Standard Time. A MoDONALD, D.POTTINGER, ous Gen Me vovt. Rp. Raiway Office, Jant , 1897. Wants, Lost, Found &e dwelling house containing seven rooms, on Hillsborough St, adj vinine the residence ot Lemuel Poole, Esq Aiso — as ~ = TO LEIt—The stable therewith For etc, apply to George Al TO LET—House on Cumberland St | Welsh a WANTED—A @irl fer general hous3work- Apply to Mrs Thos Campbell, Richmend St WANTED—A crmpetent girl for general housework Apply to Mrs Goff, Fitzros St tf "FOR SALE —A desiraqle Building Tot on eorner of Sydney and Hillsborough Streets. Apply to W. W. Wellner. 96 TO LET—A house, situated on Orlebar St. entaiping 8 Roems, besides large pantry. eossession given 19th May Mrs Blatche, Cor Preat George and Fitzroy Streets 61083—lwk SALESMEN WANTED. tn ‘every district to handle reliable goods, new s®ason, sam ce free, salary from the start. For particulars write Luke Bros, Co Montreal. 95 TO V.et.—The southern hair or the late Chief Justice Palmer’s bonse on Queen Street fan be inspected at any time, Apply to Mrs &, Palmer, or at office of H. James Caueee UEEN VICTORIA: HER LIFE AND REIGN; great historic work,se'ls on sight to thousands. Lord Dvefferin in- troduees fit to Canadians in glowing words Zasy to make $20.00a week some make twice hat. Manv make more in spare time than during day at regular «employment. This os Great Sexagenary Celebrations sre ooming it. Bookson time. Prospectus free to canvaesers. Territory eoing fast. Tue BRADLEY GARRETSON Co Ltd Toronto, Can * LIME! LIME! Now landing from schr. Welcome 100 casks No 1 St: John Lime. 10C barrels “ “ Lime. POOLE & LEWIS, 108 —4i Poole’s Wharf. THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 13, 1897, MAKING FALSE EYES, MANUFACTURE OF ARTIFICIAL OPTICS A DELICATE OPERATION. Hundreds Turned Out Weekly—Price Va- ries From $5 to SoC and Occasionally $50—Ready Made Eyes Are Cheap, but These Made to Order Come High, There are many curious industries in this big city, and one that ranks pre- eminent in the peculiar line is a glass eye factory. It may seem strange that there should be a sufficient demand for glass eyes to support such a factory, es- pecially as it employs a number of skilled workmen all the year round. But when one learns some of the secrets of the trade all cause fer wonder van- ishes, The prime reason for its existence is that a glass eye does not last more than a year, and very often not more than six months. Of course this necessitates the purchase of new optics every little while by afflicted people, and the num- ber of people who use these eyes is sur- prisingly large, judged by the yearly production of the factory. Five hundred eyes are turned out weekly, or about 26,000 in the yeer. Not all of these are sold, but this per- centage is very small. The unsold ones are stock eyes—that is, they are used in the sale department of the factory or are sent to dealers throughout the coun- try as samples. The prices of glass eyes vary consid- erably. An ordinary ready made eye costs $5, while a made to order cye, with the pupil and cernea carefully col- ored, costs anywhere from $10 to $30, and occasionally as much as $50, but this latter price is a rare one. Poor peo- ple can only afford the ready made eye, and a large number of these are always kept in stock in different shades of blue, gray and brown. Gray eyes are the most common, then comes blue, and then brown. Black eyes are a myth, and the factory has never had a call to make one. Oph- thalmic hospitals are the largest con- sumers of the false eye. These buy in quantities, and naturally get the prod- uct at reduced rates. They buy the or- dinary, ready made eyes, as they are used, for the most part, on poor people who are financially unable to be fastid- ious in the matter of exact color. The most startling feature of the fac- tory is the cabinet in which the stock eyes are kept. They are placed in large trays, sectioned off into tin squares, each square containing aneye. Blue eyes of many shapes and shades are in one tray, brown eyes of all kinds in an- other and gray eyes of many varieties in a third. When a purchaser comes in, he or she is fitted with an eye from one of these trays, and if the buyer is content with the ready made article a duplicate is furnished from the stock. If the made to order article is wanted, the sample is sent up to the workrooms with instructions covering the minor changes or improvements that can be made. All of the regular customers have sample eyes in the factory. This en- ables them to send from a distance for a duplicate, and a new eye, perfectly fitting and of the correct color, is ship- ped to them. The reason that the eye wears out is that the action of the tear—which is acid—affects the enamel, roughing the edges and surface and causing an irri- tation of the eyelids. There has never been a time in the history of the world that artificial eyes did not exist. The ancient Egyptians, 4,000 and 5,000 years ago, wore false eyes of gold and silver, and later of cop- per and ivory. It is on record that two patriotic Lufetians, when their countfy was in financial distress, generously presented their golden eyes to the pub- lic treasury. During the middle ages porcelain superseded metal in the mak- ing of artificial eyes, and a century ago the glass eye arrived. Now enamel is considered to be the best material for the work, and it is used to the exclu- sion of all others. The process of making the eyes is easily described, but the work calls for much delicate and painstaking labor on the part of seven or eight skilled work- men. Formerly one man made an arti- ficial eye from the crude to the finished state, but now the work is divided into a number of specialties, each man per- forming only a fraction of the whole task. In its initial stage the eye is a long, slender stick of enamel, made of per- fectly transparent and fusible flint glass. This is placed in a crucible and exposed to great heat. The globe maker places the enamel. over a blowpipe supplied with wind, which is pumped by engine power into a large cylinder and stored under water pressure. Under the care- ful manipulation of the workman the enamel tube is formed into an oblong globe, just the size and shape of the human eye. Next it passes into the coloring room. A piece of colored enamel is placed on the summit of the globe, and this is gently heated in a small flame and con- tinuous!y rotated. Gradually this takes the form of the iris, and then a spot of darker enamel is added to represent the pupil. Then this is covered by a thick layer of crystal to form the cornea. At this stage the eye is detached from the blowpipe and cooled, and then sent to the cutting room, from which it emerges shaped into a small hollow oval with irregular edges, The cutting A ede ull PaLLUSd, wo & MUIL DS Leia Gevintion in size will make a materi ditference in the fitting. The edges m fired and the eye allowed to cool slow ly, this being the annealing or temper ing process, which toughens the enam el and renders it less liable to break. The final werk is the polishing, and then it is ready for the owner. The coloring werk is tke most deli- rate of all, as sometimes eight and nine colers are worked in to give the correct shade.—New York Cer. Washington Posi. POLITICAL QUIPS. The office seeker’s motto: The man who stands back is lost. —St. Louis Star. ‘‘Micawbering’’ is the latest for office secking. It isn’t so bad.—Cincinnati Commercial-Tribune. It is rather appropriate, after all, that the headsman of tais administration should come from bleeding Kansas.— Washington Jimes., There are some congressmen who do not seem so large when they reach Washingtor as they do before they leave home.—Balti- more American. ‘There never was and there never will be enough offices to go around until every citizen has an option on a public place.— Indianapolis Journal. Nobody can accuse President McKinley of standing in with the Washington board- ing house keepers. He advises the pie seek ers to go straight home.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. The real trouble with the United States constitution, as many gentlemen now in Washington will explain, is that it does not provide for a sufiicient number of of- ces to go around.—Chicago Record. APPEARANCES. It is not the clothes that make the man; but, oh, how they help! No man is well dressed when he is over- dressed or underdressed. Because a man is a genius does not ex- cuse a filthy personality. Striking, loud costuines should never be ellowed behind the counter, and only the fool cf a business man will wear them. Few of us are geniuses, and most of us stand on the auction block of business to be sold as we appear to be as well as we are, The man is well.dressed when 90 per cent of those who see him, if asked the question when they turned their back on him, cannot tell how he is dressed, but can say that he was well dressed.—Hard- ware. . NATURE’S WORK, The oldest active volcano is Stromboli. History does not go back tothe time when Stromboli was not active. The remarkable echo at Eagle’s Nest, on the banks of Killarney, Ireland, repeats a bugle call 109 times, each clear and distinct. The largest mass of pure rock salt in the world lies under the province of Galicia, Hungary. It is known to be 500 miles long, 20 miles broad and! 260 feet im thick- ness. iy FOR SALE (1) THAT farm of SIXTY ACRES at PISQUID, LOT 37, lately oceupi- ed by Jas, A. Campbell. The greater part cleared and in good condition. Remainder with a fine growth of hard wood, (2) ALSO, a comfortable and well situated dwelling house and premises AT CLYDE RIVER, LOT 31, with a half acre of ground. (3) A fine, dry building lot on Ed- ward St., Charlottetown, (near Graf- ton St. R. R. Crossing), 42 feet front, by 120 feet back. Terms easy. (4) ALSO, all that fine farm of 110 ACRES AT DROMORE, LOT 37, lately owned by John Logan. (5) TILAT convenient cottage with garden, yard and stable on Poplar Terrace, East Kent St., now occupied by A. Bannerman Warburton, M.L.A. Possession Ist October next. F. W. L. MOORE, London. House Corner Solicitor 99—d&w—3wks ee YOU CAN'T HAVE THEM Unless they fit yua. What? Why our spec tacles and eyeglasses. Our object is not merely to make a sale, we consider our customers interests as well and make sure that their eyes are properly fitted. ; Satisfied customers come again. G. F. HUTCHWESON Jeweler and Oj tician. Opposite J. D. MeLeod’s HOW TALC 1S QUARRIED. Where It Comes Prem and the Manner of Sending it to Market. At Luzenac, in the upper valley of the Ariege, talc is quarried on an ex- tensive scale in the granite of St. Par- thelcemy, a mountain 7,700 feet high and zbout 20 miles from the main chain of the Pyrenees. The quarries, which are situated about two miles from the summit and 5,900 fect above the sea, are opened in a bedded deposit, included between micaschist below and lower silurian slatcs above, which has been followed for about 2,000 yards in a north and south direction, with a dip of about 60 degrees to the east, the thick- ness varying from 160 to 1,000 feet, as does also the composition. Masses of limestone and granite, the latter cften of co. siderable size, ure frequently found inc]luced in the silicate of magnesia, which also contains some alumina. The best reck is of a brilliant white color and feels greasy tothe touch when ground to fine powder. The principal quarry, at Tremouin, is worked in the open, across the direction of the bed, forming two or three terraces 50 fect high, the surface covering, 6 to 10 feet thick, having been first stripped. The stuff broken is carried by a level, in the bottom of the quarry, driven in the fcot wall of the vein to the valley of Axiat, whence it is hauled in bullock wagons about 12 miles to the works of Luzenac, where a water power of 90 horsepower is obtained from the Ariege. The me- chanical preparation includes sizing by sieves, driving in a rotating cylinder furnace, breuzking, grinding and sifting. Nearly the whole of the preduct is converted into powder, only a small part being riade into pencils for mark- ing out werk cn metal cr sold in the lump form.—Colliery Guardian. Reversing Nature. The reversibility of the physical proc- esses of nature has latterly been the subject of interesting comment. Lord Kelvin, for example, has been credited with saying that all of them, no matter how complex they might appear to the human senses, consist in reality of the motions of invisible molecules, and if, therefore, by some means, all these molecules could, at the same time, be made to move in exactly the opposite di- rection, and each with the same velocity that it possessed at the moment, all the world would begin and centinue to move backward; waterfalls would flow up the sides of cliffs, rivers would run upward from the sea, rain would rise, full blown flowers would shrink into buds and plants dwindle into seedlings, man him- self would become young again, passing from old agetoinfancy. Just what kind ef pictures such a topsy-turvy world would present may be seen with a kinet- escope running backward. Professor Queroult, according to report, has made observations in this line, and some time ago communicated them to the French Academy of Science.—Cassicr’s Maga- zine. What They Said Wouldn't Read Well. ‘* Jim Scorcher has just returned from a bicycle ride around the world. He is going to write a book about it.’ ‘*What is he going to call it?’’ ‘‘People I have run up against.’’— Odds and Ends. The little town of Nazareth, in Pales- tine, bas no fewer than three hospitals, 7 conveuts and 12 schools under Euro- pean supervision. In the royal family it is always the queen who first kisses the wife after her marriage, not the newly made hus band. Rick RED BLOOD is the foun- dation o7 good health. That is why Hood’s Sarsaparilla, the One True Blood Purifier, gives HEALTH. YoU NEED NOT WORRY YOURS om about Lumber. We can sa and you with anything in that lippty prices and quality suita ne— prices to the hard times,ble— quality—you’ve heard of. lt no use to get (s Thin 2s a cath. (Our. laths are a good thickness.) Running from one place to another when you can get every- thing you want at Barrett’s. We will be glad to sell you any- thing from one board to a house. JAMES BARRETT. CONNOLLY’S WHARF LIVERPOOL SALT 30 O BAGS Liverpool Salt FOR SALE BY HORACE HASZARD. 96 2w eod — | & ON’S ODYNE | ON NIE Cures Every Form of Inflammation, It was originated in 1810, by the !ate Dr. A. Iohnso- . Physician, tocure all ailments that are ike tome an old fashioned, noble hearted Faraity an, abscesses, bites, burns, bruises, b; mae” Pi gym a indammation; such ay chilblaius, conc, cramps, cholera-:morbus, diputheria and all forms. FOND, Catartaig fractures, gout, headache influenza, la grippe, lam - if. orms of sore throat, carante ‘ soreness, nervous headache, pimples, pain a ome back. side, neck, mumps, thy ; visas 7 : tuywhere ; wtheis : ‘ toothache, tonsilitis, wind colic and whooping imaok “ee. vital ond ena Joins, | _ _— - é “<6 < nuscle ne . ’ “Best Liver Pill Made.” — , IT have used your Johnson's ; meut for more than bitty years fn eal Have used it for colds, coughs sau stings, cramps, sore stomach, rhea lameness, colic, toothache, neuralgia, i i and found it always good in eve Positively cure Biliousness and Sick Headache, liver rm ; F i and bowel complaints. They expel all impurities Tuomas CLELAND Sonth Robbixston, Mehie <a * Mailed Pres yk oo from the bloca. Delicate women find relief from | Our Book “T ent: ‘ hee, Maa aa ’ : . I x reat ‘ ise: using them. Vice 25c; five gl. Soid everywhere. ! 4 _ Dengalaten LB doteee ae a . Co., boston, Migs i ENGLISH MIXED PAINT If you don’t use all the paint, you can § close the package and save the remain. § der for further use. | y For sale only by Ae . 2a FENNELL&CHANDLER } ee pe tan mm a a SS : > Dont Ask for Credit] — — AT THE——— pet end —= ae Ss = —— eas pean C= bmn, onan But buy cheap for cash. Doing business all for cash with small expenéd) we can do with a smal! profit; consequently you can buy cheap for cash. J. F. NORTON, PROPRIETOR 7 ie NEW SEED STORE| We have opened up a Seed and Farm Implement on the corner of Queen and Kert Streets, opposite City Hall . ht’rere you can purchase fresb and pure SEED, and tree to name, as this js our opening year, we can be depended on sell at the right prices. IN STOCK AND TO ARRIVE — Harrows, Seed So Ploughs, Road Carts, Carriages,: Daisy Churns, Wringers ané Washers. Bre Double Seed Boxes, (Grain and Seed), at bargain, $14.00 We guarantee repairs for all Ploughs sold by us. 4 FINLAYSON & MCKINNG! TERLIZZICK'S CORNER SS Wall Papers! — Paper's! | ‘ . 3 222225 7 ¥ A fine assortment of American and Canadian Wall Paper® now in stock. For Prices and quality we will not be beatem. Have a look at our stock before purchasing elsewhere. McMILLAN & HORNSB QUEEN STREET , ae arts Milam ed Ss a