tg , - = > CALENDAR FOR MA _ RCH, 1894, 'Hood’s eat S Cul | N I i . otter _— QD 4 $ de a ~ « rr > af : sf NW JENMOCPS FAC? i ~*~ Scrofula in tho Neck-—Bunches Al Ss High Cone Now. water ’ ser n — ‘ 6 2] + 7 34 ” . .s “* ; ‘ x 6 TR —" +1 , ir : ; ; —Euripides, Single Co lwo Cents ss = TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free. I } 4 it 9 22 , i 9 33 es ms a a ; i i 10 27 : wo} lL Oo ‘ 7 2 wT” YEW SERIES TTETOWN, P.E. ISLAND, MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1894 VOL 33.—NO. 21 _— a= :| ui NEW SERIES CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1894. -* ’ morn i S54) @ Sig ——— " oe 24) 56) 0 | ae ee ee THE LAT ATEOUL KEN (NEDY ide 1! 5 ‘—" 4s + purest pride that man can hay : éé ; i h . . . . sciousness of duty done. Good night <0 | Y oe Ei wi } But to his last home he was called one *y 5} 3 ; | THE STORY OF HIS DEATH BYANILE God knows it was afterd ity ha i beer ‘ ! ’ - VOYAGEUR. May. it be with those that heard him tl i > 57 ab i night that Whittier’s beautiful lines may ‘ 7 2% | apply as they did to him: e g 3} | A Fine Funeral Accorded by a Great Na- a : ‘ a | And when the angel of shadow rests his feet ) 20 tion to a Brave and Gallant Soldier—A wave and shore, : > s And our eyes grow dim with watching and our e.1.8 1 & ¢ 1 Mt a Hero That Was Not One only on Show hearts faint at the oar, : : shaw ~y aap es ‘ } 10 37 Happy ic who heareth the signal of his re Gentiemen:—I feel I< ugh i ave O U See n ZA i j prunaeaenp, In tl go of tt H y Cit } of in favor of Ti ’s Sars po illa i , $ i i vells oO e ) vy the chimes of ll 45 . : ernal peace . I have been troubled \ rofula fh my neck 2; ll & i Jack rambled on, relating the incidents wena, acini : . > aft 18 : renege . ; : Chas, Lewis Shaw, in Saturday Night. and throat. Sev ral ki f medicines which ' of his life in London, and in my wake ve al aa Ren 0 53 | | ntate ¥ eee bal : ; Yai I tried did not do me any good, and n Icom A was half lulled to sleep, I remem The Young Soldiers of France. mencedl to take Hood's Sarsapa ai 3 J er in a disconnected sort of way his sav TI » Frenchman. if he cl » the , ; z ; “t . pe . . e young neiiman, if he choose th large bun my nD K ys le i 2 2 IY, ny, ‘The finest funeral ever man hal a army career, at t 4 sail . “7 a : : 2] - , he deserved it, God bless his son] I ous ot’ att dial ‘ 49 Sars? f° en | KNOW! EDG? | ments of s-Idiers the Queen and the Prin we int 1 p t = od Psi & 5 ire - 4 | ' ae , z at Ne os ito the Polvteehr } ou \ s — 7 5 4 ahs tii Kid | of Wales sent their noblemep, and thousands | pranehes is seientif aan tary t RU t! e : vt - ve . . . » a: ; , . Ae . — a es ey not bear ! testtouch. Wher it 2 ‘ } Brings comfort and improvement and | crowded the sireets; old England doesn’t Like all of the departments of Fra 8 on b ote ft I ul ; i cae | . forcet . i. i “tsk - 1 tlie o 3 icine, Tue ‘ — ends to personal enjoyment when forget aman that served her Canada ; educational system, it is pen to gone i before I had finished the > - . ad ive » ( have eeen o »f : bone, au 101 had flushed ‘ ue rightly used. Tho many, wh> live bet- would have been proud to have seen on- of s free for these without meat It is acon Ameo al : mT y Tr Sindee : ¢ her soldiers receive such honors trom their | gtroy ueht on the eattieerinn Se a a ee . PPes ig er than others and enjoy life more, with : _” ; aT engineering side, a ATW rville, Maine i i Queen and from the old country. I re of its pupils become the enyinees t n 4 | , ° . : : het 5 : N fy id le to take " » ! ess expendi iture, by more prompt y inember his voice dropped here. “Twelve massive chains of fortifica . \ s yen Gee ike Hood's Sarsaps j MEL | vdapting the world’s best products to | uf his own boys carried him and | France Ripe inna aang rma rilla dow induced to buy any « | the needs of physical being, will atteet | I was one of them,” [ was | Germany to pr vont & repet Hood’s Pills cure constipati \ ‘ Pare Leapine DatLy NEWSPAPER the value to nealth of the pure liquid slightly aroused by the earnestn-ss | catastrophe of 1870. The artillery brane] ing the peristaltic aclion of thea it il ’ | . . . : of Jack’ ¥ . . : “Whe - * . - or P. E. Istanp, | laxative principles embraced in the | , rae ae a \ a w > of the Polytechnique is at Funtainbleau Ni WA | : . it, old man? a kk irpr al a saan ante thames t . ; sued every afternoon, from the office of “Yt | remedy, Syrup of Figs, a ome 6 aera? Be + This echooi, though the most famons, is by | —— . ; , ; li Nag hate a ‘ ti before the sister could prevent it he said, j 1:0 meaua the only one. Schools for vat } UBRLISHING in the 4 uit eelleanece i ¥ 7 ; a . t 1 ) seh is f i e Ex ae ¢ Pesiisuine Company, in the ' 4 if fis si | Its excellence is due to its presenting | «For God's sake, didn’t you know that the | ous branches of military training are scat use 1ilding, Queen Street WY ; “mm cent: a5. , ; . zm ; 1 i $s ot military tralui uw are n House B €. Queen Stree ] OM, nari it | in the form most acceptab’s and pleas colonel was dead? Colonel Kennedy died | tered over all France RATE F SUBSCRIPTION \ fey sug ant to the taste, the refreehing and truly | ten days ago.” I remembered wvothing Yo enter these schools the pupil mast haw ¥. J. 8 vA: Nt ie j beneficial properties of a perfect lax- more for two weeks. It knocked me cout sion eng vements for five years activear Axford NCE 4 P ' ‘ i i " se : sii r - ord ee | ative ; effectually cleansing the system, | | b#d a relapse. They pulled me through | dyty. if he leaves befc rs the five years ar : we YEA $1.00 | a 7 and when consciousness returned, in the ust Reeror Six Monrus 2.00 dispelling colds, headaches and fevers | weary Soden ie eee ee cea ee Meee See "a See eae — ruree Menrtis 1. ; > anent} i ee Ir CORT ALeROeRSe in the common ranks, lere for two years OT. JOUN'S Ox MonTH 0.35 ind pore = = ms constipation. | thought of him we a!l had loved so weil, of he endures a life of constant drill and tive . It has given satisfaction to millions and | j:m with whom we from the far West had heititipatiadiad aeaicer tanta del wien 4 } Episcorat ne 6 ' 4 y ‘ ¢ r ‘ . ‘ : : n sclentifix ay nde: @ Dest driii-masters : Sent post paid any part of Canada or the met with the approval of the medical | listed and-whom we had followed through- | and engineers in the world. He is given ok ff Cuvurcn, United States profession, because it acts on the Kid- out the campaign, the gentle, kind hearted | a thororgh course in applied mathemati — ADVERTISING RATES neys, Liver and Bowels without weak- | ™4®, = manly Christian, the gal- | and military engineering, and this allows no mH ee AD tTISING R. * ; x ; cite alt , ; . . : . ; _—— : ening them and it is perfectly free from lant soldier Le bon colonel” of | triging, When the yo ing Frenchmau has ) Mi : aen 1 y : ‘ . : : ” the . 5 ; e . ; 1eig rf For sma ivertisements which are ordered ; -yery objectionable substat.ce. a a i ae the ad | finished, he has thoroughly mastered - . eof min fo ; ‘ r two weeks the charge is x : & et > .. * % ll = sonal friend of “every Nile vovageur. " | the rudiments of the Frenc! ysten . and I know that his Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug. | °, ae 5 he rudiments of the Frenco 8) m ents per r the first insertior ad & } <-> ye a” 8 those days, w nde al by suffer ail statement is tru cents j ach { he first in ertion, and 2 iF gts in J5c, bottles, but it is manu | . - = y ith = ] ee by wom warfare. — tatemer ‘ — : male qnene ane o agtured by the California Fig Syrup | - ‘f, Memery TeCKnes che Sparing ‘mer After this course another sorting is me s Apt ation at the office. Specia t : : : : : . shared by him when I was weak and hun c ssarv, when choice must be final/y made & Paral, s : hod > oO. only, whose name is printed on every | _,, midst the toil of bigel. uh neil ‘ . -* rm r aes —— : ay is ' ' at @ reciuced rate are quoted ; Se } nae me | “TY Nhast the ton of Ambigol, the words o between cavairy and infantry, and the pa rekage, also the name, Syrup of Figs, cana 7 1) pa : 7 CAN BE CURED. — .“ r ches in size on 5“ wig eens uragement during the bardships and | i). then go to other special schools whos + w a to 1 for three months o1 | nd be ve" I oan eer aes will no? | ii cnlties of the cataracts above Handah, eaching is technical : There are severa ir. Bors Hin had Rhen- oi scent eny substitute if offered. te kindness to the sick and wounded afte ay ow oot hovls. and since Gert y t 1 ism for 15 years In the antunin ' ax j re an . : : avairy § Ools, AN 81 al att . r hes : “ anil . No specia ces inserted ess paid for W.R. Watson, Dri uggist, Charlotteowa | *'1¥ekan. There was not one of the wil |} renewed attention to heavy cavairy tact ’ . [had a . I - malt at f 16 cents per line ander no 1? ® Jeland. iymwtf and reckless band who returned with him | france has lad great stress o1 this branct . . ¢ an ‘ sw euch paid noticés appear Os; | = ae a : see and spt : of her training, The most dif feats es it i a an lin as a Christian gentleman he curse f horsemanship are tanght here. and §, pacent meaicines &nd Cicctric he Nesounte made-cn all adverties | and oath that were all too frequent on onr | tending of horse . Liuadiasd wrastion anit eries gave me no relief. men is ce eted with Church Fairs, Bazaars, | ips would be hushed when thé word © | . wontad ahd dismounted man ring are | <r di ;c es Pi son atienn wie te tnntebedl eth | passed, *The colonel’s here, boys.”” Yes, om | carried to a climax of precisi This is Sko a’s ures. , : ‘colonel, It seemed a long time ago, but 1] | gpa: ke t tadrons , : th s gula »of 10 cents per | oe eo ee ies. what makes the mounted squadrons of | rT wa four months in t! | remembered the scene at Montreal on the | France the pride of her system, tens t after belne at hewee mi line pea fal | ve of sailing fyr Eg ry pt, when it was ru The vre stout schoul for ‘off ers of infan _ 5 , ‘ on . : i he we cilia ee cai yreat sch for oft f infar ad 28 t ave ta ee a . @ moted that he woud retarn to Winnipeg try is St. Cyr. Here the pupils are hon hott ( D ve ' ‘ fanufacturers to be the lead- J . . ou ape © — ‘ ) 8 ol i isc vy a - ae oe ee ene yet ah ao anrbogalioatets | and Chief Prince and the St. Peter's In- | ored with /rance’s veterans, aud at all re feel lil new ; ing newspaper in P. E Is and, and conse- | (ans, as good boatsmen as ever worked iu views are given the first place in the line ; i ieee setae quently the mos aiuable ising medium - ¥ reerrS ” | eddy, positively refused to sail without the Nika wd cathe ate tae Miltebiek Gt cha i. : ob i = ion, through whieb rake ee moonnentD man whose influence had induced them t French Army, and are cited through sat | MEDICAL ADVICE FRED pubtic, is a ; t the fact that ; | serve and in whom they trusted. Tf he | the world us showing the perfectuu of | SYOMA CISGCVEPY C2, LID, ¥ OLFVILL EN.S. n order : 1odate our advertisers we N | hesitated on account of personal affairs be inarching drill have be« pelled to enlarge the paper to | | fore. that with his high sense of duty de- : a Ea ee eee s pre si cided him; he came. Again on the Nile His Slab of Starched Linen. orsaie bY Ou Crugsieu rade sup THe DatLy EXAMINER is for sale by the fol- lowing agents R ‘H. Mason, Post Osice, Charlottetown J. Meintyre. Malpeque Road, . C. Paul, Low Spring Park Road, W. M. Coffin, Grafton Street, Ss. Grey r. Water and Prince St. D. Chappe Prinee Street, e, Queen Street, Gea. Carter & Co., Queen Str 1. Railway & Gray, News Stall, P. E. and en the 1ins M. & T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- mersicd Harry Mc¥arlane, Souris. Hon. D. Gordon, Georgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton. A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge ee The Weekly Examiner morning from the is made up of matter u the Daily editions, and ae Is issued every Friday pudlishers’ office. It which has appeared i eekly newspaper is a first-class w end full of the latest news. The subscription for THz WEEKLY EXaM. INER, post paid to any part of Canada or the F United States, is one do Advertising rates on the same scale as given hove for Tas DatLy EXAMINER. DOCTOR DORSEY, Surgeon. llar per year. Physician and Graduate of the Medica Departinent of the University of the City of New York, late Member of the Resident Staff of Belle- vue Hospital and the New York Lying-in Hospital, New York City. Side Queen OPPOSITE POST OFFICE North Square Residence—Near Corner of King and Queen Streets, Charlottetown. ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES. Cherlattetown Falesrsom: Queen Street, oe Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCEANTS, MINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J.A.MOR DoF. ay: 4 Rheumatic and Neuralgia _ Of the BLE HOUSEHO! A OAIN sn OTH INTERNAL AND named «3 MANUFACTURED ONLY BY THE HAWKER MEDICINE QOY LID; _ 9T JOHN.N.B. | 01k, Charlottetown, January 30, 1894—tu thu sat | | | [t is not a toy, but a tv pewriter built for.and capable of reat. Work. the large machines sometimes become in expert hands, it is still at least as rapid and has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and mastered We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. | Writes interesting | RISON, HALIFAX | $8.00 Typewriter. This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and punc- tuation marks (7] in all) on full width paper, just ‘like a $100 instrument. It is the first of its kind ever offered at a popular price for which the s2bove ‘claim can be truthfully. made. Zlance. capitals, small letters, Easy marks—71 in all. Writes just like a $100 machine. figures and Comp: Act, No Shift Keys. Ribbon. Prints from | Built solid ant tin ple: can’t get out of the type direct. order Prints on flat surface. Capital and lower case keyboard ailke-' Writing always in sight. 2asily mastered. Corrections and insertions easily made. More “margin play” for the small letters Takes any -vidth of to 8} inches. paper or envelope up to understand—learned in 5 Weighs only _ pounds—most portable. takes While not as rapid as as the pen, almost at a minutes » but little room. which do mest of‘the work. Takes good letter-press copies Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8.00, in registered letter , money order or certified check. We guarantee every machine, and are glad to answer all i inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the “ Yost.” IRA CORNWALL, D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlottetown. General Agent forMaritime Provinces. dee20 INSURANGE---FIRE, MARINE, LIFE. The undersigned represents the following first-class British Companies :— North British and Mercantile Insurance Company. Union Assurance Society (1714). Manchester Fire Assurance Company. MARINE. British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company. Reliance Marine Insurance Company. LIFE. London and Lancashire Life Assurance Company. Fire and Marine Policies al] written here. part of the world, issued on shipments ALSO—The N ova Scotia Marine Insu | Guarantee Company of Canada. sae OF FICE—Stamper’s Block, Villages. Charlottetown. Avencies in al] FRED. W. HYNDMAN. febl3—1 yr law (sat) LOBSTER PACKERS’ SUPPLIES. 500 bss Best Coke Tin, 4,000 Ibs L. & F. Ingot Tin, 25 bars Copper, 200 bundles Galvanized Iron, 200 * Black Sheet Iron, 3000 ibs Cotton Heading Twine, 2,000 Ibs Manilla Marline, 4,000 lbs Pig Lead. WRITE FOR PRICE DODD & ROGERS. Sterling Certificates, payable in any rance Company and the Dominion Burglary } Towns and | evening, at the offiee of For First-class Footwear, Faultiess Fit and Finest Finish, in Foremost Fashions, at Fairest Figures, Find Granby Rubbers and Overshoes, THEY WEAR LIKE IRON ALL DEALERS SELL THEM. jan20—t ts & wy Telephone Company. The Annual General Meeting. of the “Telephone Company of Prince Elward Island,” for the election of Directors and for such other proceedings and business as it is competent for the ~Sharehok lers to deal with and determine, will be held on WEDNESDAY, the 14th day of March, 1894, at the hour of eight o’clock in the the President, King Street. H. J. CUNDALL, mehl President. Inland Steam Navigation Company. The Annual General Meeting of the Shareholders of the In!and Steam Naviga- tion © jompany will be held iw the Room in Quecen’s Building, King Street (now occu- pied by the Harbor Light), on SATUR- DAY, the 17th inst., at 3 o’clock, p. m, L. C. OWEN, Secretary. Ch’town, March 1, !894—eod tl dte “You'll Feel Better” When your agrethe is poor, if you 2 tee a dose of »>MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER. about twenty minutes before you. aneals. It beds up the system--zives *trength to the lavelid--relleves ihe dyspeptic and is nourishing and invigorating. Buy a dozen and try it. THE MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LTD. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. * Unlike the Dutch Process = No Alkalies 4 Other Chemieals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & €0’S reakfastCocoa which is absolutely pure and soluble. Ithas more than three times the strength of Cocoa mixet with Starch, Arrowroot o: Sugar, and is far more eco- nomical, costing less than one cent @ cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhers. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass of the relatives of JAMES WALLACP, & carpenter and seaman, who came to Bos ton about 20 years ago. Address GEO. WALLACE, South Abington Station, Mass. jan33—dy & wy EG MANHOOD! How attained—how re- stored—how preserved, Ordinary works on Phy- siol.gy will not tell you the doctors can’t or won't; but all the same you wish to hnow. Your SEXUAL POWERS are the Key to Life and its reproduction. Our book lays bare the truth. Every man who would regain sexual! vi gor lost through folly, or develop members weak by nature or wasted by disease, should write fir our sealed bock, “ Perfect Man- hood.” No charg:. Address (in confidence), ERE MEDICAL O., Buffalo, HAY. DYEING COMPANY. Gold Medalist Dyers and Cleaners, MONTREAL. WE ARE PREPARED TO DYE all rr i “cL = CO = } TE Termes CFI | House in Europe FRENCH CLEANING a specialty. All information regarding shades, prices, etc., furnished by CHAS. IVES MORRISON, Agent, Queen Street. sept25—eod Christy Knives BREAD—CARVING—PARING, FOR SALE RY CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. aag 16. Information Wanted class of goods and garments equal to any | R. ZB. Worton & Co., when volunteers were called for, there was hardly a man prior to his re enlist ment but would ask ‘Is Colonel Kenneds going?” In the shanties of the Upper Ot tawa, in the pineries of Michigan, along the mountain streams of British Colum tia there are Canadian rivermen to-day who, when thinking of the heat and toil ci the Soudan, will recall the kindiy voice that ort-times cheered them with hope and courage in many hard days’ work, and will remember with gratitude kindnesses received from the man who had died in saving one of their comrades, Yes, died a truer hero than if amidst the shot and steel ot battle he had given up his life. Few know what caused our colonel’s death. On the Serapis one of our men showed un mistakable signs of small-pox. There hundreds of invalid ‘soldiers on and the hospital part of the ship was crowded to overflow- ing. To place a man suffering from such an infectious disease in hospital would resnit in such terrible consequences that it was not to be thought of. The matter was kept quiet, and Colonel Kennedy at his own request, got the Canadian placed in his own abin, snd there, isolated from the rest, personally narsed him, The man recover- ed, Colonel Kennedy contracted the fearful disease and died, That isa all. It takes only a few words to tell it, bnt there has be. n many an epic written about smaller things. That is all that yet causes me to have a belief that hero-worship should not be banished altogether from our hearts. Again and again comes to me the memory of the last long talk we had, when I under- stood him as 1 never did before. The | steamer and barges were tied tu the bank were board, just before sun-cown, a few miles from Assiont, where we were to proceed by rail to Cairo en route homeward. It was our ; last night on the Nile. We noticed that before darkness came on, heliographic communication had been going on with the |} towing steamer on which the officers were. | We were making down our ‘‘doss” for the | night, when Colonel Kennedy came hastily | on board and told us that news had just } been received that war had been declared | against Russia and that a rebellion had | broken out in the Canadian North. West. A cheer greeted the announcement of the war with Russia, for by this time every man of us was a Jingo at heart, and 2 shout of derisive langhter the idea of a rebellion in Canada, The news was exciting and the men gathered around in groups and talked about volunteering for Afghanistan, whether Canadian regiments would go, ete., ete., and very few thought of the re eilion, Creek ora Batoche. Col. Kennedy thought otherwise. Asan old first expedition offi- } eer he knew the North-West, Riel and the character of the Half-breed and Indian. Charlie Manchard, Tommie A—— and I, who all knew him in Winnipeg in civilian | life and were favored thereby with a cer- tain amount of intimacy, sat with him and | talked far into the night. “The 90th will be at the front. my regiment, you know, boys,” I remem- ber his saying. ‘I wish I were with them or knew what was going on.” Our talk then gradually drifted into re collections of Canada, of Winnipeg and of home. The subtle charm of the Egyptian starlight night had its influence, pod the knowledge that this was the last night on the mysterious river that has had for ayes such a strange fascination to traveler and to Arab; the river that was all-in-all during | our life thereon; the river that we and conquered in its angry moods, and on which we had sailed to a hoped-for triumph, | The strange ferling of companionship | which the Nile, Howing through its miles | of rock and sand in its long journey, gives, is indescribable and made us faintly real | ize why theancient Egyptian worshipped itasa god. Its murmuring flow could be | heard around us, and the colonel, reticent | though he usually was, talked to us then as I never heard him before. When we were about to part he spoke of our adopted home on the tanks of the Red River in far- off Manitoba, the home where all he held nearest and dearest was, and about which only a few of us knew how often he thought, He said: “Well, my lads, we will return with the That's Emulsion contains neither Quinine, strychnine, nor other harmful drug. Its ingredients are wholesome ani- mal and vegetable substances, and it may be taken indefinitely without dangerous re- | sults. senile Puttner’s | THE STRONG POINT about the cures by Hood's Sarsaparilla is | that they are permanent. They start from } | the solid foundation —Pure Blood. | USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY the great Blood and Nerve Remedy. nent i tile ti aitmaatnsacninaiiaaatlas ai Ae and none dreamt that there would bea Fish | fuught | A New York clutiman has been express ing his thoughts on the burning of men’s shirts Is there anything absurd? A lot of men in evening ire absolutely ridiculous, if you ou twice about their most conspicuous—theit only conspicuous—article of dress, KE ch nan has his di-tressed bosom — fi.tly shielded by a stiff, ungainly, inartistic anestion more dress iwseless, meaningless slab of starched linen. Fancy the relief to the eyes of all beholders and tu the person of the wearrr if some bold, deterinined man should break away from the pes tiferons conventional style and aypear in evening dress, wearing a very fine unstarch ed linen or soft white silk shirt, with a col lar of the same material, or of fine lace, and even a lace ruffle. 1 am as firmly con vinced as I ever was of anything in my life that if some gentleman, with an absolutel: secnre place in the best society, untinged introduce such a change he would work a complete and speedy revolution in that re spect. and if he had good taste could go on and reform the ugly dress of men in every gar- ment worn for every occasion in suggesting such a thing, even, is some fool of a man will undertake volutioa, not to reform men's fashions, to ms his name in the paper. the re but Wise and ouherens. A face which is always serene possesses a inysterions and powerfal attraction ; hearts come to it as to the themselves again. —Joseph Roux You will find that the mere resolve not to be useless and the honest desire to help other people will, in the quickest l anda most delicate ways, improve yourself,— Ruekin. sad this morning, Mr. Crossgrain? Mr. Cross grain—Yes, ma’am, and it has proved an alibi. —Inter-Ocean. Many a man who wants to set the world on fire will lie in bed while his wife kindles the kitchen conflagration. —~ Yonk ers Statesinan. A maiden desirous of a swaying figure ean easily attain the same by brisk exer cise with a swinging gait.—Siftings., “He married such a cold girl.” ‘‘Poor thank you. too. —Philadel phia Record. I get out kere, Good Tea For a Pleasant Stimulant. Tea-drinking among men has all at once excited discussion to be known that nearly all men of literary habits who exhaust nerve force take to tea-drinking. Edwin Reoth used to have a pot of tea simmering in his stage dressing room. Preachers, orators and lawyers fiud a cup of strong tea the gentlest and most harmless of brain bracers, and it has no re-action. The reason why young men af- fect to despise tea-drinking is that they as sociate it with declining power and old women. Burt the truth is that tea, pure kind and pro; erly “drawn,” is avout as innocuous and pleasant a stimulant as a young man cau resort to after a lon g worry or a drain of emoiional or intellectual force. If it could be made place of champagne and absinthe, the com- ing race would be better off. Some restau rants have taken to furnishing the extra tea that is served a la Russe—that is, with out milk, but With the addit lemon.—New York World if of a to take the “The New Chinese Minister Yang Yu, the new Minister at | Washington, has quickly made himself felt as a personage of importance at the capital. His legation is the only diplomatic estab | ishment that flies its national times to distinguish it from other domi | ciles, and the minister's equipayes outshine | those of all his diplomatic colleagues in | elegant correctness. The minister is ra- pidly acquiring English, and his wife has her English teacher as well. Mrs. Yang re- turns the calls of diplomatic families, and the quaint little figure in gorgeons attire, flowered head dress, and three-inch shoes brightens many legation drawing-rooms and dinner tables, —Harper’s Bazar. The Modern Invalid. Has tastes medicinally, in keeping with other luxuries. A remedy must be plea- santly acceptable in form, purely whole some in composition, truely beneficial in | effect and entirely free from ey ery objec- | tionable quality. If really ill he consults | physician; if constipated uses the gentle ‘amily laxative, Syrup of Figs Chinese flag at all ——_—_————F 6 oe For Sudden Colds, and Wild Cherry Calsam. It cures USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the grea Blood and NerveRemedy. perenne nenereemnemmnamenenaenen with any reputation for crankiness, should | Such aman wonld be hailed as king, ! The danger | that | sun to warm Mrs. Hashley—Have you tried the coffee | fellow! And he is completely wrapped up | | in her.”—Detroit Tribune Polite Gentleman (in street car)—Take my seat, madam? Lady — Never mind, Bnt it does not appear | ion of a slice of take Hawker’s Tolu | pried by W. R. Watson; Charlottetown ra iy think | “DUNSONS - 4Nopyne LINIMENT | | | yrElke ANY OTHe Yor INTEINAL as EITEMALa | im 1810 Criginated by an Oid Family Pnysician, Think Of It. ¥ ars, fot an a ration after Generation have used and blessed It, Every Traveler shoul er & bottle in his satchel, Rheumatism, Every Sufferer ?™. an Nervous adache, Diphtheria,Coughs,Catarrh, Bron’ enitis, Asthma, Cholera-Morbus, Dig uThova, Lameness, Soreness in Body oer Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, wiil fin i in Uus old Anodyne relief and speedy cure. Should have Johnson's Eve ry Ni other Anody ody dniment tn the j | Cold | Sore Throat, Tonsilitia, Colic, Cuts, Gruiecs’ 0 Srampe | a 1 Pains jt liable to occur ™ any family without notice. Delays may cost a life. Relieves all Summer omplaints like magie. Price, % cts. pald; 6 bot. | tes, D Express paid. L 8. Johnson & D. Beston Moos | | APT! 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