ead, 8004 : \ P. &. Island Railway. Christmas and New Year's Sy aE —_ —— ee } j ; | | j i DONT WAIT until you are on the last F sheet before ordering Holidays. fi l @ your DAY BOOKS or son fret 4 | LEDGERS. Ordernow m all ye . —- — = ; =z : What about Dillilileads ? f Ja aary, 1896. Tickets TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Enuripides. Single Copies Two Cents We work cheap. Save not go« urney after Ist Jan s Be ea - : aa mc seca Toe money by trading with A. McDONALD, _D. POTTINGER, Bs eae eee ee ace Rie e oe cr ee eee ee us. slay Ofte Charkteorn, | WOK 85. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. FE. ISLAND, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1895. NO 147 J. D. TAYLOR, Lith December 1896 | anne QUEEN STRiET. ~EAAMIM rus Leaprve Darm.y NeEwspaPerR or P. E. Istanp, ssued every afternoon, from the office of ae EXAMINER Pt suHING COMPANY, in the snd. > House Building, Queen Street RalSsS OF SUBSCRIPTION s-N ADVANCE) We iavcvccwinwh hes sdukesecase* . - 84.00 Six Monrsus seeenne - BW Tuer MeNTHS...... - 1.00 One Montu - 0.35 | Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the 1ited States U2 uy x ° The Weekly Examiner + issued every Friday morning from office. [t is raade up of matier which has appeared in the Daily editio ic a Grst-class weekly newspaper i pubdlishers’ 15, and interesting wd fall ofthe latest new<, CALENDAR FOR DECEMBER, Full Moon. 2nd. day, 2h 259m a m. Lsvat Quar%th day, 29 56 6m. a. m, New i Lis: a F ret Quar, 24th day, lh. 8.9m. a. m. , p.m. h M Ist day, 4h. 18.2m Dav of Week. wm | me High . so rises | sets water | batt h m a bo morn I | Sunday 7291)4 19] 10 31 2; ™ nday a los 2.44 3 | Tuesday ; 9} 11 &7 4; Wednesday 32 | 9} aft 41 6 | Thursday 33 | 9 1 26 6 | Friday ST - oF 24 7 | Saturday SS ar 24 &} Sunday 36 | 8 ,g 9] Monday 37 | 8} 510 (8! Tuesday 33 8 6 33 o We ines lay 39 | 3 7 42 12} Thursday 40) § 8 37 13 } Friday 1 | 81 335 <4! Saturday 42 8 10 16 § | Sunday 43 | 9} Il 0 16 | Monday 43 | 9° 11 @ 17] Tuesday 44} 9 | morn 18 ; Weduesday 45 9 019 I< | Thursday 45 10} 0 57 20 | Friday $6 PO) 5-338 21 | Saturday 47 ll 2 10 22 | Sunday 47 1i{ 2 48 23 | Monday 47 12} 3 42 24) Tuesday 43 Zi 6433 25 | Wednesday 48 13; &33 26 | Thursday 48 141 6 40 27° Frilay a: 35 7 45 23 ; Saturday 48; 5l 8 39 29 ) Sunday . 2 16 9 32] 20 | Mon lay 49 17 10 18) 31 fuesday 749},4 18] 10 48 PE Island Railway On and after THURSDAY, 5th December, | 1895, the trains of this Railway will run daily (sund .ys excey ted) as follows .— Trains Outward. Trains Inward. Read down. Read up. PM AM PM AM B°O 2 cscs Chariottetown..... 310 1010 322 719....Royalty Junction 250 9 59 47 803.....North Wiltshire.... 2:4 9 05 441 $§17......Hanter River..... 149 8 51 $0 852....... Bradalbane....... 115 817 ee Es dscns Emerald ........107 8@ §27 915 Freetown coed OB 7h 647 936........Kensington ......12 33 733 €2) Wid Ar { Lvi2 7 00 { Sammerside PM 125) Ly (Arloco AM BUS ccccces BEOUIUMO. .0c0cec8e 0 t 37 ee eee 9 47 EDs ccukous oo 909 ere O’Leary.......-. 30 i eg 434 --.+-- Alverton core Oe a'a. os. ce dices 6@ PM AM a Mm AM BOD. cnoes Charlottetown. ....10 30 25)....Royalty Junction. ...i0 10 eee ices Soe 355 Ar (Ly 905 { me Stewart 419 Ly Ar 850 Se <acciaee OE. cciee TH 5 45 Georgetown 70 PM AM 4%.....- ount Stewart..... 83% 4 aie a i wsecsoees OEE OO. occccue OEE eh ccceseee OO § &7 Bear River....... 7 (2 6 ... Souris _ om PM AM PM AM 6 Ub ja ooo Gh, « <ss coe senene 7 On 05 Cape Traverse 70 PM AM Trains are run by Eastern Stendard Time A. McDONALD, Dh. POTTINGER, Superintendent, Gen Mer Govt. Rys, Charlottetown. Moncton, N B. Railway Office, Dec 1, 1895. DR. H. D. JOHNSON EYE AND EAR, NOSE AND THROAT Office -- Kent Street Aug 16, ’24—ly $10 per Set Partial Set TEETH $2 and upwards. Gold and Porcelain Crowning. Rest material, best workmansn. best satisfaction. DR. J. P. MURRAY, Qneen Street, Charlottetow “MONTAGUE Carriage Factory We are showing this season a finer line of Sleighs than shown by us heretofore. The assortment consists of Single and Double Box Sleighs, Round Back, Square, etc. Prompt attention to Repairs. Painting @ *pecialty. Terms reasonable. JOHN McLEAN & SON. Seeh—dy & ORY SPECIAL PRIGES ON ALL G00 DS During the Holiday Seas on G.H. TAYLOR, JEWELER. ANNUAL MEETING. Merchants Bani of P. E. Island. The Annual G -neral Meeting of the Shareholders of the Merchants’ Bank of P. E. Islandvwill be held at its Banking House, Great George Street, on TUES- DAY, the 14th @ay of January next, 1896, at the hour of I1 o'clock, a. m. Proxies must be left with the Cashier @t least one day previous to tne meeting. J. M. DAVISON, dec6--52 & wy Cashier. (|OUR STOCK the | IS TOO VARIE | to enumerate the differ-' ent artictes suitable for Christmas, but it is all] subject to special dis-, until the New | counts Wear. FENNELL& CHANDLER } , Charlottetown, December 20, 1895—dy Bow bisssell’s ~ertection Carvoet sweeper, THE BEST MADE. — ee BIMON W. CRABBE, Stoves and Hardware, Walker’s Corner. Charlottetown, December 20, 1895—135 & wky eS Creme de la Creme sw» La Fayette CIGARS and CIGARETTES Are for sale in every store in the city. Give them a trial and convince yourself that you are smoking the finest. Manufactured by J. M. FORTIER, Montreal. alee liana AS ee, A Small Bov _ JOHN NEWSON’S. E 1 With an Axe sept24—dy & wky tf oS SN might be able to make a hole in one of those Cob- bler Seats. No danger of his spoiling it in any other way, ‘Theyre the most durable, most sty!ish, cheap Rocker made. The cheapest and best at we: y sH.< SH ery 2A 2 BLO OBA © mPFC H. STANWAY & CO. Wholesale Wine & Liquor Merchant, ITALIAN WAREHOUSE, 243 Hollis & 48 Upper Water St.. HALIFAX, N. 5. P. 0. BOX NO. 475. ly (14) oetl5 : = — A.dsverisers ! Lhe home circulation is the most valuable ter advertisers. Tun EXaxiNER reaches the homes| of our citizens every evening. That accoun:s| for our large advertising patronage. THE EXAMINER PUB. COMPANY | hal OR 7. Catarrh in the Head Is a dangerous disease because it is liable to result in loss of hearing or smell, or develop into consumption. tead the following: “My wife has been a sufferer from catarrh for the past four years and the disease had gone so far that her eyesight was affected so that for nesriy a year she was unable to read for more than five minutes at a time. She suffered severe pains im the head and at times was almost distracted. About Christmas, she com- menced taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and since that time has steadily improved. She has taken six bottles of Hood’s Sar- saparilla and is on the road to a complete cure, I cannot speak too highly of Hood’s Barsaparilla, and I cheerfully recommend it.” W. H. Fursixn, Newmarket, Ontario. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. , ° cure habitual constipa- Hood s Pills tion. Prico 25c. per box. FE SSCS AAG BE SURE IT’S YOU GET 600D ONE! tHe.... . A GPLENDID SOOK OF REFERENCE, 480 PAGES Given Free ‘Sunlight’ it FOR 1896 TO USERS OF SOAP HOW Commencing November, 1895, and until all are TO GET given away, purchasers of IT 3 packages or g bars of Sunticnt Soap will receive from their grocers, 1 Sunticut Atmanac FREE, Contains complete Almanac, Home Management, Language of Flowers, Gardening, Fashions and Patterns Dreams and their significance, Recipes, for Seeton & Mitchell, Halifax, Agents Nova Scotia and P. E. Island. ~ GHATEFUL— COMFORTING, EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST — SUPPER. “ By a thorough knowledge cf tne natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavored beverage which may save use many heavy doctors’ bills, It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Ilundreds cf subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly’ nourished frame.”’ Civil Service Casette JAMES CPPS & CO., Ltd, Homeopathic Chemists, London, England, Nowuce to Ship Measiers anv Ship Owners. All vessels are prohibited from lying in the ice outside the ends of wharves, from Steam Navigation Wharf Yast to Pownal Wharf West, or in any other part of the stream or harbor that will obstruct or interfere with the free passage of the S.S. Stanley to her berth at Peake’s No. 2 Wharf. By order of the Marine Department. DAVID SMALL, decl2 Harbor Master. > = => This Is it. This is the new shortening or cooking fat which is so fast taking the place oflard. Itis an entirely new food product composed of clarified cotton seed oil and re- fined beefsuet. You can see that {felene Is clean, delicate, wholesome, appetizing, and economical--as far superior to lard as the electric light is to the tallow dip. It asks oulya fair trial, and a fair trial will convince you of its value. Sold in 3 and 5 pound pails, by all grocers Made only by The N. K. Fairbank Company, rt Wellington and Ann Stay ~ Nis MONTREAL. “Are You Interested ? All Furniture repaired over @ year or Pictares framed to order wili, after the 15th inet., be sold to pay oper Par- ties interested will please take notice and call at once or write for them, as the undersigned will not be accountable fo them after that date. JOHN NEWSON, dec4—tf A BUSY WOMAN IS MRS. BALLINGTON BOOTH OF THE SALVATION ARMY. Sheisa Hard Woman to Interview- -Has Found by Experience That Visitors If Ad- mitted Would Take Up All Her Time. The wife of Commander Ballington Booth, a v&man who enjoys the scmewhat unusual distinction of belng second in command of a large and thoroughly well equipped army, is on her way back from the Pacific coast to the National Salvation heaqduarters in Fourteenth street. She is expected on Thursday next. Things have been running with toler- able regularity at the headquarters during the month that she has been away, but ic is not denied, either by the rank or file, that she has been seriously missed. Everybody knows this sweet faced chief lady of the Salvationists, Her photographs bave had a large sale. It will probably prove of interest to many persons to learn scmething of her daily habits and duties when at her post as Vice-Commander of thie large and remarkable semi-military organization. In the first place like every other im- portant military commander, she can only be reached by the general public through her chief aide or military secretary. It would seem toone who listens to the sym- pathetic addresses Vice-Commander Booth is so fond of delivering, that it would be the easiest thing in the world to get an in- terview with her next day. There’s where the repentant, ungodly person is fooled. Mrs. Booth is as difficult to see as a mem- ber of the President's Cabinet or a metro- politan theater manager. The office she occupies in the new Sal- vation Army Headquarters building, is spacious and handsomely furnished, but it can only be reached through an ante- room in which Staff Captain and Private Secretary Vickery is established. Miss Vickery, who belongs to an aristo- cratic New England family, joined the army as a private several years ago, great- ly awainst the wishes of her family. She is now twenty-five years of age, and isa remarkably comely and attractive young woman. She ran rapidly through the vari- ous grades of private, corporal, lieutenant and captain, and finally became chief aide to Mrs. Bovth. No private secretary, whatever the work of the chief, 1s called upon to exercise greater diplomacy in dealing with crowds of people than is Miss Vickery. She has & sweet voice and gentle manner and is able every day to turn away hundreds of people who clamor for an interview with Mrs Booth, without offending them. The chief piece of furniture in the room occupied by Mrs. Booth is an enormous ouk desk. It stands in the cen‘er of a light, high-ceilinged apartment the floor of whieh is of slate, One or two rugs are scattered about, but not in sufficient num- bors to hide the cold stone floor. A large picture of Commaneer Ballington Booth ornaments one of the walls. It isin this apartment that Mrs. Beoth puts in long business hours six days out of the week, and there are few men or womenin New York who are more busily emplored. Her home is at Montclair, N.J., but she is sel- dom later than 10 A.M. in reaching head- quarters. For an hour or more thereafter she is occupied with an unusually voluminous mail. People write to her on all sorts of sub- jects, from all parts of the country. and she makes a point of opening and dictat- ing replies to all the letters she receives. No writtes communication is too simple or too silly to fail of recognition and an- swer by this remarkable woman. If callers could be as quickly disposed of as their letters, Mrs. Booth would see every one who calls, but she has discover- ed, like many other eminent persons, that to attempt to receive all visitors would loave her no time for other work. The tip may be freely given that anybody who wishes for a word from this remarkable woman will do well to seek it through the medium of the mails, It is a madest little house that ehe and Commander Booth occupy in Montclair. Newspaper reports have credited Mr. and Mrs. Booth with the ownership of a large estate and the possession of horses and carriages. As a matter of fact, their home is most simple and unpretentious. Their only live stock is chickens, and the chicken- house was built by Commander Booth himself. He is also the only gardener on the estate. An admirer of the Booths in Montclair recently offered to present she Booth chil- dren with » team of goats and a goat car- riage, but Mrs. Booth declined to receive the present, on the ground that it would be sure to be magnified into a coach and blooded pair of horses and might hurt the cause for which she and her husband are working. Mrs. Booth, although she looks like a gir’. is the mother of two children—Wi_°lie, seven years oli, and Theodora, aged three. Notwithstanding her work as second chief executive officer of the Army, and her many and frequent contributions of edi- torials to the War Cry, Mrs. Booth as- sumes the entire charge of these children. Both of them haye been consecrated to the Salvation Army, and their education will be turned solely in the direction of mak- ing them useful members in this unique Satan-fighting force. There is not a detail in the organization and perfection of the constantly-growing army with which Mrs. Booth is not as familiar as her husband, but from the time they leave Monctlair, at 7 A. M., until they start for home at 5 P. M, they do not meet, each being occupied with a different line of work. Mrs. Booth does not even find time to go out for luncheon: it is served to her by the janitor of the building at the big desk at which she works so hard.—N.Y,. World, Received at Court, Jenkins describes his police court ex- perience as follows: ‘‘The next morning the magistrate sent for me. I went to him, and he received me cordially, said he had heard of the wonderful things I had accomplished by knocking down five per- sons and assaulting six others, and was proud of me, for I was a promising young man, Then he offered a toast ‘Guilty or not guilty” I responded in a brief but elo- quent speech, setting forth the importance of the occasion that had brought us to- gether. After the usual ceremonies, I was requested to lend the city $10."" An Old Clock. A wooden-wheel Bartholomew clock, of the kind in common use at the begin- ning of the century, was brought to a jeweler in Hazel Green, Ky., one day last week to be repaired. The old lady who brought it said it had been in her family since i834, and had kept tolerably good time, but one of the wheels had become worn out. The jeweler sawed out a new wheel with a jigsaw, and fixed up the old clock so that it ticked out the time 4s ac- ourately as ever. wot WHAT WE SAY, but what Hood’s Sarsaparilla > that tells the story of its merit and suc- cess. Remember HOOD’S Cures. St. Peter's Bay Starch Co, I am instructed to offer at private sale one sixth interest in the St. Petcr’s Bay Starch Co, Full particulars as t dividends, ete, upon application to HORACE HASZARD. Ch’town, Dec 21—3i eod rs | The Empire Tobacco Co., Montreal. He will take no Risks. Shrewdness of a wellknown City. Merchant. HE KNEW WHAT WAS GOOD FOR HIM, In winter when Canadians spend a] large portion of their time indoors and cannot have the same variety of fresh | food as in summer and fall, indigestion | and dyspepsia afflict a majority. ‘If anybody will tell me that dyspepsia in its | advanced stages is perfectly curable,” | said a Toconto merchant, ‘‘I will take his word. Personally I run no risks. As soon as i feel a sense of weight in the | stomach, after a meal, I know that my blood is sluggish in circulation. In my business | cannot take much exercise, and | fight the first sign of stomach troubles with Scott’s Sarsapanila. Ithas never failed me, and has saved me many a doctor’s bill.” Scott’s Sarsaparilla possesses medicinal properties superior to all other so-called | sarsaparillas made. As a remedy for in- digestion, rheumatism, pimples, scrofula anc all blood diseases, physicians state that its equal was never known. Sold at $1 per bottle, of all dealers. Mrry Xmas To All! Just received, the balance of our CALENDARS, XWAS & NEW YEAR CARDS, cheaper than ever Aiso, the latest novelties ia TOYS DOLLS, FANCY GOODS, F OLLS, SLEIGHS, CARRIAGES, Cradles, Boots and Shoes, Boys’ and Girls’ Sleighs, New Games, etc. Twenty per cent. discount on all PLUSH & LEATHER GOODS this week. Cc LEWIS, Grafton Street. FURNESS LINE, Regular Fortnightly Sailings between LONDON and HALIFAX. Under spe- cial contract with the Dominion Govern ment, S. S. HALIFAX CITY, 3,000 Tons. S. 8. ST. JOHN CITY, 3,000 Tons. S. S. DAMARA, 2,500 Tons. The Furness Steamships are the finest on this route. A!l boats are Clyde built, w th saloon and sieeping berths amidships where least motion is felt. S. S. St. John City and Halifax City are electrically lighted throughout. Superior accommodation for all kinds of Freight, Dairy Produce, etc. For information regarding sailing dates, etc., apply to FURNESS, WITHY & CO, Lap., People’s Bank Building, Halifax, N.S. Or W. W. Clarke, Passenger Agent, decl9 We've Got It ! and you want it. It’s not hard to get it. Wesellitcheap. Allkinds of Lumber. Come and See It! It costs you nothing to examine, and very little more to buy it. Will You Take It? We're agreed. You want Lumber and we’ve got it. You have money and we want it. We'll treat you right. You give us a handful of money and we’]] give you a whole load of Lumber. THAT’S PHILOSOPHY ! JAMES BARRETT, Connolly’s Wharf. nov29—dy McKINNON’S ENGLISH = OINTMENT CURES Fever Sores, Tetter, Itch, Salt Rheum, Scald Heads, Itching Piles, Pimples on the Face, Ringworm, Blotches, Erysipelas Inflammation, and all Eruptions of the Skin from any cause whatever. It re moves Dandruff and prevents the hair from failing out. It also cures Scratches and Wounds on the Backs and Shoulders of Horses. It is virtually the Poor Man’s Friend and Medical Companion. Manufactured by Nei! McKinnon, Sum merside, and sold by all Druggists. aug30—wky Painless Dentistry. CRAPAUD. Ir J E McDonald, Dentist, will bein Cra paud, at Dr Robertsen’s, for TWO DAYS only, Friday and Saturday, Isth and 19th inst, wher «. «will demonstrate his now ‘amous meth «. (1Painless Extraction of Teeth. No bada effects follow the use of this method, andt ; doubter is requesied to try it and judge « ‘nimeelf Observe the dates, Friday and Saturday, October Isth and 19th inst, at Crapau 1. My Pr nce County patients will please note oy absence from Summerside on the above ates J E McDONALD, DDS. Sum mers'de, Oct 7, 1895. Are YouSaving Money ? We know itis pretty bard todo so these hard times—but then things will look up later on. In the meantime Watch Your Small Expenses. For instance, when youdrop iu for a cigar don’t pay TEN CENTS for one. Ask for SOMETHING GO00D. Don’t be put off with something else When you light it you will realize the fact that you are emoking A REGULAR TEN CENTER. Manufactured only by Sep20—w OSCULAIO?Y EXERCISES. Every Variety of Osculation May be Wit- essed When a Big Steamer Comes in. Right or wrong, everybody likes to see kissing—that is,every body who isn’t sour- ed on life. The sight isn’t equal to the act, but, evertheless, it is a cheering sight. ‘There are places in this city where every variety of osculatory salutation cap be witnessed several times a week. It is on the pier when some big ocean steamship comes in that this delicious drama is played. This is the time of the year when those who have been doing Kurope hie themselves homeward, and when their brothers and other fellows’ brothers, their husbands, sisters and friends gather on the pier to welcome them, and, finding language inadequate, do just what Adam and Eve would have done under similar circumstances. The end of the pier is packed with as happy an aggregation of mortals as can be found anywhere. Out in midstream is the big, black hulled steamer. Nearly everybody on the pier is gving to kiss somebody on the steamer, and vice versa, and in most instaness the exchange will not be limited. Pleasureable expectan*y makes everybody good natured. The crowd doesn’t mind having its toes trod upon or its elbows jostled. Pushed and pullei by panting little tugs the ocean leviathan, itseif powerless and unwieldy, crawls toward the pier. At length she gets near enough for recogni tions to be exchanged. Handkerchie?s are waved frantically. are wafted across the intervening space. Greetings are hurled from shure to ship and from ship to shore. Everybody is in a tight place, but nobody ean keep still. Women on pier and on steamer jump and clap their hands ecstatically. It takes ar. awful long time to get the big steamship snug alongside of the pier. It is deliciously tantalizing to those who are impatiently walting to rush into one another's arms. But it gives the mere spectator, who has no such reason for im- patience, time to observe that there are some stunning girls on board that steam- ship. The glow of health is on their cheeks an: the light of ove in their eyes, and they took their prettiest because in the excite nent they forget themselves en- tirely. The breeze toys with bangs, whisk veils aside and sets their hair adrift. But their eves are on “Tom,” or ‘*Harry,”’ or ‘“‘Charley,’’ on the pier and they are oblivi ous to such trifles. They won’t be so to- morrow; they will be just like other girls then, hut now they are different and that very difference makes them so attractive, and makes you wish that you were ‘‘Tom,’’ or ‘‘Harry,”’ or **Charley *’ The steamship is made fast to the pier at last,the pudgy tugs scurry off in search of others, the gangplank i3 swung out, and the race to get the first kiss begins. A man starts in the lead; he is halfway down when a puff of wind lifts his hat; he pauses to clutch it and loses the race A superb brunette. with hat securel; moored, darts by, and in another moment is embraced by stalwart arms, and tw« spirit have ‘‘rushed together at the touch- ing of the lips.’’ Nor do they mind who sees it, and the spectator looks on without compunctions of conscience. Ina moment the osculatory engagement becomes general. *It is kisses to right of you and kisses to left of ycu. Yon can’t see them all, can't see one-tenth of them, but the regret vanishes when you recoliect that it will be practically repeated two or three times a week for a month to come, so that you can come again and see what you missed the first time because nature limits you to one pair of eyes. All the world loves « lover—or ortght to —and naturally the kisses which lovers exchange interest one most. There is something about them—the look which accompanies them, the blush which ac knowledges them—by which they are rec- ognized and classified. But perish the thought that they are the only kind of kisses worth seeing. There an old man, with the snows ef winter on his head but eternal spring in his heart, kisses a white haired lady. And the way he does it and the way she receives it and returns it tells a story cf mutual devotion and loyalty _that has stood the test of two or mora, and makes you feel like taking off your hat. There are kisses between mothers and their children, and brothers and s'sters, and giris and girls—sweet and v-holesome to look on, and sufficient in themsel ves to make a misanthrope revise his miserable philosophy aad +rcknowledge that there is genuine happinessin this world and rauch to make life worth living. O-culation continues unrestrained for half an hour or more. There is contaion about it. It makes you feel like kis-ing somebody yourself. It almost prompts rou to go up to some girl and say, ‘“‘ Par dun me, but I am a stranger here and there is no one to kiss ne. Don't yon feel sorry, ani won't you try to me?’’ But the rules of polite society forbid it, and, if they didn't, ‘‘'Tom,’’ or ‘‘Charley,’’ or ‘‘Harry’’ would have something to say that wouldu’t be a bit pleasant But if you are of Anglo Saxon blood there is one species of osculation you wit ness which, instead of exciting your envy, merely cvuses your risible muscles to twitch. Tat is when two bearded for eigners exchange ‘“‘plumpers.’’ Of cour-e, there is no accounting for taste, but that is a sort of taste you can’t understand Possibly it can be acquired.—New York Herald. Kisses erare veas conso!e Faith, Hope, Charity, **‘Without faith it is impossible to please God.’" Heb. chap, lith, vi. verse. While faith is the fundamental princi- ple of religion, hope is the food of the soul, and charity is the honey which sweeten: the heart, and the three com- bined are the buiwarks of Christianity. As faith is essential to salvation, so also is charity necessary for the accomplish- ment ef God’s will, while. as St. Paul tells usthar, “Through faith we glory in the hope of the giory of the Son of God,’’ Vaith comes to us by know: xl ge, and is strengthened or weakened accord- ing to the guidance of passion. It is a gitt ot God, and as such should be treas- ured with the greatest care. ‘True taith begets tirm hope, and inspires an ardent charity, while all three enriches the soul, making it zealous for the honor and glory of God, and its own sanctification, makes it anibitious by its yearning for supernatural happiness, and inflames it with a Christian ardor. The Christian's duty not only consists in attaining a knowledge of God but loving and serving Him; indeed St. Paul assures us that ‘faith without good works availeth nothing,’’ so that itis just as essential to practise as it is to profess faith, and “esus Christ Himself tells us that the “teat commandment of the law is: **Tso love the Lord thy God with thy whole soul and with thy whole heart and with thy whole mind and with thy whole strength,’’ which we can only do by ; obeying Him in all things and so merit the glory of the blessed, the end for which we wero created.—Francis S. Mitchell. TO LET. That large Shop, part of the “London House” Building, lately occupied by J T. McKenzie, Tailor, with good room up stairs for work shop or store room. Apply to HON. DANIEL DAVIES, L. H. DAVIES, Q. C., Executors Estate late Geo, Davies, Or to F. W. L. Moore, Solicitor, in th Building. octll —~— oo << ee ee Variety Entertainment OHRISTHAS WEEK —IN AID OF THE—- P. E. Island Hospital, —IN THE— OPERA HOUSE, ae () N ne Friday, Peeember 27th - — . FIRST FART. FLOWFR DRILL Cin Grecian Costumes). Conducted by Principal J. i. Seaman Selections .........- vee Orchestra SECOND PART. Living Pictures and Tableaux, under the direction of Mr. W. C. Harris. See ne! M uric. Seene 2—“The Death Scene,” Ronco aad Julict. Scene 3—“ Patriotism or the Sacrifice of Fami'y to Country,” after the Painting of Moreau de Tours. Scene 4—* Prince Arthur and Hul ert,” Prison Scene from Shakespeare’s King John —_ Double low’s “ Hiawatha.” iw ing. Scene 5 Scene from Longfei (a) Hiawatha’s Woo (b) Thus it is our daughters leave us. Scene 6—* Roman Gladiators.” Scene 7—** Ghost Storie-,” scene from Shakespeare’: Boyhood. Scene 8—“‘ Greek Foctry,” after the celebrated painting of Coomans. Scene 9 -“The Three Witches” in Macbeth. Scene 10- semble. -* Britannia ”"— Grand En intermission..................+++..Candy Sale THIRD PART. Charlottetown Amateur Minstrels, (Ladies and Gentlemen) Prof. Vinnicombe, Musical Conductor Banjo Duet.................0.-»--«2, 0Be8 Bios “« Sidewalks of New York ”............ ...Mr. Christmas and Miss New Year Harmonica and Banjo Solo............. Bones * Mystic Star ” (with march and grand elbctpie 48a). ec ietenceed Comyany * God Save the Queen PBrcicccccocconcsesees The music will be furnished by Prof. Vinnicombe’s full Orchestra. r Doors open at 7 o’clock. commences at 8 sharp. Tickets at popular prices, 25 and 35 ete. Plan of Halli at Dodd’s aud Rankin ’s Drug Stores. dect7 Entertainment One day left ! We want to cloar out the balance of our Fancy Goods, Jap China and Xmas Cards. Come early and share in the big bargains to-night and to-morrow. Season's Greeting to all. Haszard & Moore. Charlottetown, Dec. 23, 1895. Dominion Blend Tea. REGISTERED- ‘SELLING AGENTS: Beer & Goff, Charlottetown. Stewart & Gates, Charlottetown. R. T. Holman, Summerside. J.H. Myrick, Tignish. A. McKinnnon, Colman. Albt. Craig, Emerald. Cyrus Morris, Bradal} a: e A.J. McLeod & Co. Staniey Bridge, Feehan & Egan, Mount Stewart. Sterns Bros., Souris. McLean & Cameron, Crapaud. £very householder should give Dowriow Biexd Tra atria). It has great strength, fine flavor and is delicious in the eup. Ch’town, June 20—w | yr, Capt. Weeks, Inierlocutor. Four End Men—two Bones, two Tambos. , 13 acd cjg Oe EE ETE, Orchest a ™ " Woot Oe 5 Company “ Cricket on the Hearth ” .....Mr. Ethiop * Whistling Coon”.........- The Little Coon Solo and Quartette—“ O),] Home ”......... ailiinas ie ccsccersecessseedake and other ¢ “ Dar I Long to be Again ”..Melinda Kol- ‘Shine Oe iki. ula wk eee |