Powe ss. —_ — = “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Earipides. caLENDAR FOR FESRUARY, 1805 cee 9nd " s 3.6m, 1 m. First Quar +" Ben : Full Moon, 9th day, oe vast Quar 10th ve ; oil New Vioen, 24th * Day of Wees se water | || ¢ &O » Flin 189) 243 a 3 Satuinisy : 4 "I : St ' > 3 = a oan TERMS : Four Dollars a Year Mi * ' yr 4 To. 5 | i 4¢ 5} Lues | @Rel | We } “ r - r i inv i 3 : rf - 8) F | it ast V <a ee CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E 9 Se ' . - ae i ° 3 . he A : + e e fai Sy : 6 4 i ; ) siahthitibintmiteeeee 11) M ee r >) Tins a} tue i yr Pr . Trtwr wAT NTT 13 | Weduesda i} 152/1N THE NEXT CENTURY | a Sel oe | : | tales 9 2 48 the twentieth century will want to 15 | Friday 20 LaP1 , 2 know the present truth and not to hear 16 | Sa 22 | t 52| & LONDON CLERGYMAN TELLS OF the lies men used to tell 2.000 years ago. | £7 | Sund an} 6 it THE NEAR-AT-HAND UTOPIA. In Great Britain Dr. Parker prophe- is. v { 7; 6 es sles great political changes at the close it . apes o 1>| *® Optimistic View into the Future—A = oe pereetaeth conturg. ane eoctest 20} : 27 913 : astical commissioners will all be paid off 21/1 Century of Sileat but Historie Revolu- | and their millions will have gone to the 22 j F: . if tions and Developments--Every Talut of reduction of the national debt. Lease 23 | | | Professionaliom to Re Swept Away. holds will have become freeholds. The 24 3 { Lt 26] land will no longer be the monopoly of 25 Monday 52 os} il cS Dr. Joseph Parker. of the London | men who never paid for it. The house a | Log oo | mo Temple, recently stated his views re- of commons will consist of five-and- 9 . es a - = irding the possibilities of the Twenti twenty inembers and the house of lords 2 il —— : co ov{ VY 00! oth Century, siys The New York Sun. of six referees. Vestry locusts and ——————$—— | In | Mis ODN uit will bea century « VEER 17 Vy } 1} j leut but profound and _ historic rev \\ 4 4 h lous and developments, Presc r there wil », and possibly gre: re i 4 L a 4 44hibi i a 4 l ill be, ar ip = ily great pt tT) of si olu ners ach ers. but, taken broadly, there will be no Tue Leapixne LY NEWSPAPER uimtin the Twentieth Century. He ow P. E. IsLanp, ‘stinguishes broadly between preachers issued every afternoon, from the office of ®t teachers. The latter, he says, we the Examines Punwisimne Company, in the | Shall always need. Of well equipped soaudon House Building, Queen Street. teachers we can hardly have too many. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. | The coming century will be impatient Ow apeances | with incou:petent teachers, but the very en ee: a gin degree of its impatience on the one hand a... Seeees trrsereseesveeeeee SM) Will be the degree of its appreciation on One MonrH eas westeeeenee sees. 025 the other. Asto churches, a wonderful Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the (lunye will take place. Little Bethels United Staies and Zions, ‘born to blush unseen,” will be swe t Grateiui—Comiorting. tests of faith thodoxy, vedantries, whims and t PPS'S COGHA logical crazes will all disappear and men i will gatherin adoring love around ~ a8 Christ of God. The church of the ff the face of the eurth. Small ith. sectarian standards of or- ieo- the tri- BR SAK FAST—SUPPER. Nuiphant Savior will in very deed be established, for she shall have granite “By a thorcagh knowledge of the nat- for her foundations and salvation for ural jaws which govern the operations of her walls. Men will set their faces as digestiot and nutrition, and by « care fel tint agaiast the crime of violating, even eppeceson ae wae - peers , c nh Var tte:npt. the solemn and rhyth- selected Cocoa, Mr. by pS has provided fcr tii r of God inet) twenticth our breakfast and supper a deiicately flaver il saciid oath et bevwerave which may save us manv heavy Ee a ca doctors’ bills. Ih is by the judicious use. ot : : gee zach articles of diet that a constituiion | * or ie as -_ may be gradual built up until sicng een : : 8 enough td resist evecy tendency to diseare ‘ " 2 OF Hundreds of subtle n ‘ float ng DECAIR 1 will around us ready to attack : r there I 1 HIS < ing isa weak point. We may escape many 3 them grecu and bloom ng by constant tacal shaft by kee ping ourssives wel! for watering. Now men take long jo fied with pure bloed and a properly novrirb- ; to the cemeteries of the open Christ od frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. venturies, exhuming p cent he ., Made simply with boiling water or m:!k ' makings their ghastly jaws repeat ir id oaly in packets, by Grocers, labelled g.ocid com :places, then arzt be thus, tively sla their faces aud putting JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homecepathic | t).cia back inte iheir antiquat hi ls. Chemists, London England. ‘ A hideona ¢ if? simral But | pulses. | faith county council vampires will have died of starvation and have been buried ‘“‘unwept, unhonored and unsung.” The tax gatherer will no longer be a shadow on the doorstep, but the welcome pres- ence of au honest messenger sent by honest neighbors. It will be a centary of tea and water drinking. The public- house, having been built by the devil, Dr. Parker believes it will go to the devil. The twenticth century will also see the pasiing away of this chief tra- gedy of perdition. Science will be no longer hostile to religion, nor religion hostile to science. For he says there never should have been any contro- versy between them. Religion may have to change her forms = and her way of putting things, but not her reverence for God or her glad obedience to His will. So long as the sky is above the earth man will need re- lizgious expressions of word and service | for his highest nature and noblest im- Little dogma must give way to immeasurable truth; stunted creed must make room for majestic and increasing ; and shrunken self must yield to divine claims of man. In the coming century, Dr. Parker says, in literature authors will be paid and publishers well rewarded. The position of woman in the twen- tieth century will be in happy contrast to that which she now occupies. They will know mathematics and natural philosophy enough to build a second Brooklyn bridge, and yet will laugh, and dance, and joke, and even take a hand in the kitchen. Dr. Joseph Parker coneratulates the babies of the year 1895 who will live far into the new cen- tury, and finds in the circumstance of his present life a regret that he will not see much of the twentieth century. THE SECRET OF LONG LIFE. i With Every Grand Old Man the Prescrip- se tlon Seems to Differ. M. Barthelemy Saint Hilaire, the fa- mous French scholar and politician, wh) recently entered on his ninetieth year full of physical and intellectual vigor, has been telling the inevitable in- terviewer how it is his days have been so long inthe land. It is, we are told, the effect of the strict adherence to the old precept, ‘early to bed and early to rise,” with steady work during waking hours. Every grand old man seems to have a secret of hisown. Mr. Gladstone, we believe, attributes his longevity” to his habit of taking a daily walk in all weath- ers, and to his giving thirty-two bites to every morsel of food. Oliver Weudell Holines pinned his faith on equability of temperature. The late Major Knox Holmes swore by the tricycle, which, in the end, was the cause of his death. Dr. P. H. Van der Weyde, an American oe- togenarian, net long ago offered himself “as an example of the benign influence of the study and practice of music.” Some aged persons give the credit of their lony lives to abstinence from to- bacco, alcohol, meat, or what not; others to their indulgence in all those things. One old lady of whom we read not long ago as having reached the age of 120 or thereabouts, maintained that single blessedness is the real elixir vitae, and she ascribed the death of a brother at the tender age of 9) to the fact that he had committed matrimony in early life. M. Ferdinand de Lesseps believed ix horse riding. Mr. James Payn complains that in his Loyhood he “got a little bored with too much horse. ’ The Grand Francais seems to think that one can hardly have “too much horse.” In a letter recently published M. de Lesseps delivered himself on the ‘subdject as follows. ‘I shallalways feel deeply grateful to Larine, my riding- master, who from my earliest years made me share his keen passion for horses, and Iam _ still convinced that daily horse exercise has in a large meas- ure been the means of enabling me to reach my eighty-fourth year in perfect health.” Carlyle was also a great rider jalmont to the end of his long life, and _ he not only rode, Lut, we believe, groout- el his horse himseif. On the whole, it inust be concluded that the real secret of longevity is a sound constitution pru- dently husbanded. The only general rules that can be laid down are those set forth by Adam in “‘As You Like It:’ Though | .ook old, yet Lam strong For in my youth | never did apply Mot and rebellious liquors in my blood, Nor did not with unbashful forehead woo The means of weakness and debility ; Therefore my age ia as a lusty winter, Frosty but kindly. That is the whole secret of long life. Shakespeare knew it as well as any one, yet he died at fifty-two. and lusty ; Things Well Said. Hatred is the madness of the heart. — Byron. Fidelity is seven tenths of business success. — Parton. Haste trips its own heels, and fetters and stops itself.—Seneca. There is an oblique wsy in reproof which takes off the sharpness of it.— Pope. The mind is its own place, and in it- self can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven. — Milton. Two persons can not long be friends if they can not forgive each other’s fail- ings.—Bruyere. His daily prayer, far better understood in acts than words, was simply doing good. —W hittier. t If there be any trner measure of a man than by what he does, it must be by what he gives.—South. The old scriptural sobriety was effect- ual doing; ascetic sobriety is effectual dullness.—H. W. Beecher. If any man seeks for greatness, let him forget greatness and ask for truth, Envy is a passion so full of cowardice and shame, that nobody ever had the cowardice to own it.—Rochester. It is much safer to reconcile an enemy than to conquer him; victory may de- prive him of his poison, but reconcilia- tion of his will.—Feltham. Whatsoever that be within us that | feels, thinks, deserves, and animates, is something celestial, divine, and, con- | sequently, imperishable. —Aristotle, Books Mace From Wood. j The first book made from wood pulp | wus recently sent to the testing institu- tion in Berlin for examination. The book, which was made in 1852, was ! found in good condition, and the test ; Showed that durability of wood-pulp | j paper is greater than generally eup- | poced. | and he will find both.—Horace Mann. | | in the middle class promenade of life. ISLAND, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1895. a ae ~~ "wa -“o“-_- Dykeman St. George, New Brunswick. The Par-Reaching Monuzoose, Some the was introduced iuto the island of Jamaica to lline ago mon Loose destroy the rats, which were doing damsaye to the tuch sugar cane But the Kingston papers say its activity did not stop there. It destroyed snakes. toads, Insectivorous birds and other enemi the insect race, and as a result tie re has been a pre: at increase in the p ticks, grass lick, beetles, flies Small pests. nuiber of and other Horses suffer severely. and sometimes dic, from the attacks of the ticks, which get into their « ars, nostrils and throats. As the mongoose finds the rats, snakes. toads and crabs disappear- ing it attacks sitting fowls and carries off their ezgys, and kills young pigs. kids, lambs, calves, pups, kittens, poultry and game birds, destroys fruits and vexe- tables and is suspected of sucking sugar cane, eats meat and salt provisions and catches fish. A Deadly Burglar Alarm. Among recent patents is for a burglar alarm particularly adapt- ed for use in connection with a safe, which is inclosed in a movable case pro- vided with electrical contacts, the elec- tric circuit including an alarm and a connection with an electrically operated mechanism for opening a fiuid contain- ing case, Whereby the room in which the safe is located will be filled with noxious vapors, in which a person can- not live. Growls of Mrs, Graady, That affectation of art makes neither critic nor counvisseurs. That outward manifestation of grief is no longer the ‘‘correct thing.” That a female arbiter is something new and interesting in fashionable society. one issued | these people>” “Why, that Thiiosephy for the Pill C> il. etar, After the Grip No Strength, No Ambition A + - . “i PCL i 1t> ; AC i€ ) i unpani one ne Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cave Perfect Health. The following letter is from 2 well-known merchart tailor of St. George, N, B.: “C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. : last “Gentlemen—I am giad to say that Hood's Sarsapavilla and Hood’s Pills have done me a great deal of good. I had a severe attack of the grip in the winter, and after getting over the fever I did not seem to gather strength, and had pack?” no ambition. Hood's Sarsaparilla proved to be the colle : just what I needed. The results were very ow long ck it take vou satisfactory, and lrecommend this medicine to . all who are afflicted with rheumatism or other 9 a’ Hood's‘ Cures afflictions caused by poison and poor biood. I always keep Hood's Sarsaparilla in my house to visit all peop! the philosopher inguired, “About a day.” What if all paid up promptly?” would be great.” “Would it? What would vou do for 2 living if all these debtor rai ue Fi day?” ‘pen =p ee ow and use it when I need atonic. We also keep ao fl Hood's Vilis on hand and think highly of them.” + 8e collector looked blank fora moment. | J. W. DYKEMAN, St. George, New Brunswick. ‘Great Jerusalem! ] d be out of un job.” Pere oom ong sont . Hem! t u jo . , {'3 are purely vegetable, and do Well, then, don’t be so anxious to co! Hood s Pit's oe : Ss sa b3 ‘alt druggists, lecte ‘penny due to your people, O ot purge, pain or gripe. Sola py al ate only an breakfast well who did not live well. hearty eater. of a dependent.’’ expericnce, a studious That some women never lose their gloves until time to go to churei:. That no expiring chicken struggles more thau some people to “keep up awppearances.” That prettiest women are said to be That a bald head is the only thing to inake women look more ridiculous taan big sleeves. That the down-town quick lunch is crowding the city with dyspeptics. That hundreds are forever miserable by trying to increase their happiness. That fashionable friendships are never i | | as strong as spirits of ammonia, Piece « f br . Cowley liked fried eels. He said tha when properly cooked they were a dish i set before a king, Michael Angelo, during the greater par! of his life, lived on the plain food of an Italian peasant. vi any other meat, and potatoes better than any other vegetable. the well of tr round some time next week andl may ck something for faded away. lana "ust rou. kk @ Gay is enough. As for me, Cony you, 2nd the philosuplic Dishes For Great Men. Pius IX.. during most of his pontificate. egg and a bit of bread tu, Meyerbeer said that no man could work He was «4 Swift said: “No bread is so bitter as that He spoke. from personal Locke said that the proper breakfast for i man was a bit of fish and « d Ktare Ben Jonson asked no better treat pork pie, with an abundance of nary Wine, sxernadotre, Napoleon’s marshal, who erwards became king of Sweden, liked ton bons Ose AN Walter Scott liked venison better than NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, Ke. The subscriber is pow prepared to meke Surveys of Land. run Boundary and Divis'on Lines, furnish Plans, ete.; also, Mechani: al Stub Ends of Thought, Language is the bucket which hangs in ! ( thought, What breaks one heart makes another. Art is the sublimation of the artificial. ° Don’t trust a man who is too ready to and Architectural Drawings, Plans, Spee fi- cations and Estimates, J. P. NICHOLSON, Land Surveyor, Pownai Street, Charlottetown, Aug. 25, ISi4—dy & wy ONE OF THE LARGEST PURCHASES EVER MADE IN CHARLOTTETOWN. The interest of Messrs. Benjamin Heartz, Frank R. Heartz and W.A.Weeks in the above Company has been purchased by W.D. McKay and Geo. A. Dixon (who will continue the business as heretofore). sacrifice. ever touched in this city. Low enough to suit a tired purse. RHADYMADEH CLOTHING DEPARTMENT —tThe public will note that we have been in the Readymade Clothing Business only two years, therefore we have no old shop-worn goods. All goods fresh and clean and latest styles. HAT AND CAP DEPARTMENT —This department we started only eighteen months ago, and you can rely on the latest styles. Hats and Caps at 331-3 per cent. discount. Goods marked in plain figures. © ° » ‘ ; . . i ds test Genuine Discount Sale ever placed on the market of Readymade Clothing, Gents’ Furnishings, Hats and Caps, Fur Goods, tei meee Flannels, Horse Rugs, Tweeds, Bed Comforts, Hosiery, Gents’ Rain Proof Coats, in fact everything in our store for the next 60 days, partially enumerated below :— CHILDREN’S CLOTHING. red out entirely. 4 TO 12 YEARS. 52 Si Price $6.25, sell for $4.00 22 - - 7 5.25, ba 3.30 ba all wool br'n. and gray tweed, $4.50 to 5.50, » 3.50 x heavy ‘ree - . ~ Price $3-50 " 2.50 6< » double breast Tw ie eee ee 36 " blue 1 - - " SG *k 8 =(3.75 ~ » » in grey brown and mixed checks, 7 -< in grey, br'n and different shades, " 250 wu 1.80 47s made from our own make of all wool Tweeds. A _ heavy, rough- and - tumbl: School Boy Suit, nicely made in all styles, shapes lors, the best value in the id to-day, +e to PRR BG BOYS’ 2 PIECE SUITS. vy made from our own make of Tweeds, _ west styles and shapes, heavy W - Price $6.25 sell for $4.25 : all w Lj | mixed grey 1.50 " 3.00 2 bre 5 - - 1.10 " 2.70 26 black wor - is i 8.50 * 5.50 26 ; ‘ . 6.50 T 4.50 900 Bovs Knickers or Short Pants, Price $1.00 to ; $1.25, sell for 60 75 Nap Reefers, age 4 to 12, Price $2.50, ae 1.50 165 Reefers, in different styles and goods,at big discount. 132 Overeoats and U|sters. Will clear this lot at a wonderfully low price. YOUTHS’ SUITS. Breast size, 31 to 35 inches. 18 brown check Tweed, - Price $5.75 sell for $3.50 25 Worsted - - tt 5.25 " 6.25 50 Grey mixed - - " 6.25 " 4.7) 23 Grey and brown aoe : ae 4.00 24 Double breast. fine tweed '" 10.75 '"! 1.4% 52 Black worsted - ‘ a 5.00 " 3.765 79 Homemade tweed Suits. assorted a sizes and styles ‘ , ar 5.50 Everything in our stores slaughtered for the next 60 days for Cash only. From the farmer wool will be taken in exchange as cash for any purchases. | YOUTHS Breast size 3 3 Nap Ulsters - 15 Grey Frieze - 7 wu light Tweed - 2 Frieze Ulsters - ULSTERS. 1 to 35 inches. Price $4.25 sell for $2.85 - '" 6.25 '"! 4.25 - " 9 00 " 6.00 ° " 8.25 " 5 60 36 Ulsters, made from our own make of Frize, Al value, will close out at bottom figures. YOUTHS’ ¢ IVERCOATS. Breast size, 31 to 35 inches. 5 Nap - - ) " - = "! 7 & Tweed - - Blue Melton - Light Grey Melton Ct k Cibd Co YOUTHS’ Price $5.00 sell for $3.25 " 6.25. 3.50 7 6.00 " 4.60 " 4.49 " 5.75 <c: Ga 2.75 ‘ “« 10.00 “6 6.00 - ” 8.25. .4 5.50 REEFERS. Breast size 31 to 35 inches. 11 is - - - 3 Fine Nap- - - - & “ be i ao 16 oe ae pul ‘ite a a. 8 ‘“ " . S «x ‘é = " MEN’S 4 dotted Frieze, - 3 grey Pilot, - - S Nap - a - 7 " - al - 9 o " - a - Pilot - - eo MEN’S Nap - - . - made from our make Tweeds, - » Price $3.85 sell for $2.75. <n re oe “ 5.50 ‘ 3.79 - 6 5.50 “ 3.79 se 6 50 “s 4.50 - ” 4.50 ¥ 3.00 * 7.00 « 5.00 REEFEKS, - Price $7.25 sell for $4.75 - 4 10.00 i" > 50 - » 10.50 1» 7.00 evce SIZ ss 8.00 " 7.96 " 5.00 erie: 8B s 9.00 6.25 4 4.25 ULSTERS. Made from our own make of Frieze. 17 8 light 4 brown, " - - - ' ' i Wee Suits made to order on the premises. dark grey, - - - $12.00 « $8.00 _ if . ie. 8 §.00 out AZO. a 8.00 IMPORTED FRIE 21 light grey - : - 2 " " - wiced > 6 " " 7” - a 4 " " ™ - . 5 Tweed Ulsters, - Bi i" with hood 2 dark tweeds, - . 5 Cape Ulsters, tweed, MEN'S ¢ Blue Nap, - - tweed, grey specks, - 6 blue cheviot, - - 1l " tt - ~ - ey low price. 6 heavy d’ble br’st dark twe ZE ULSTERS, MEN’S $11.09 Price $15.00 - " 15.50 " 9 50 " 14.50 " 10.00 om 11.00 " §.00 . " 11.25 " 8.00 - on 9.50 " 6.50 " 7.79 " 5.50 - » 10.75 " 7.50 IYERCOATS. - Price $5.00 3. " 5.00 " 3.90 é “ 8.75 " ».00 oa 9.50 " 6.55 Sample Overcoats in assorted shades, at a very ed, Price $9.00 sell for $6.00 | 4 " " tt check, - " 8.00 " 5.00 a a o * Nap box back, “ 12.60. .¢ 7.90 15 “ blue brown Nap, - “ 10.20 - 7.90 fine blue Meltons, - ce 16.25 “ 11.20 6 Melton - ‘ - & iL76. -« 8.00 . , . ‘ ‘6 10.00 <*« 7.00 6 brown Melton - J drab Meltons, - - 6 Tweed Overcoats, - 26 65 MEN'S BLACK 3 Suits, - - “ 12 " = - - 3 Blue Venetian, - 1U " " - - 11 Black Worsted, with bind 12 at “ = ee 10.00 “é 7.00 : 6 12.00 - 8.00 a -. 4.00 Spring overcoats at reduced prices. MEN’ BLACK WORSTED OVERCOATS. in fancy stripes and cork screw Al value and will be cleared out at the lowest possible price. WORSTED SUITS. In different shades and styles all in first-class condition. Price $11.50 sell for $ 7.50 " 15.00 su 11.00 13.50 1 9.00 " 18.00 " 13.00 ing, " 11.50 " 8.20 . oe lM 11 25 i of the above Goods. Therefore money is wanted. and money we must have even at a Having decided to clear all the immense stock in the stores of the Company at reduced prices, reduced to the lowest point goods é All MEN’S TWEED SUITS. 54 Plain Grey Tweed, all wool, Price $ 6.50 sell for $ 4.50 10 English Colored Tweeds, - “ 18.00 7 12.50 9 All Wool Tweed, heavy, - 10 59 . 7.50 7 * “* Assorted Shades.- ~“ 9.29 2: 6.75 32 és «“ ““ ““ 3 7.00 a6 5 00 326“ «6 “<6 ‘ i 10.00 7.90 11 éé 6c e ~ - 10.75 . 7.18 90 « «6 ‘i “ * “6 9 25 6.50 1h « 66 Pe iin » = 6.25 7. 4.50 9 Suits, - ° " - 1.50 S 0.50 eee oP ay 7 - # 16,00 . * 11.50 See ; : ¥ “ 7.00 S 9.00 6 ‘i a a * a 9 25 ‘6 6.25 12 « : ‘. e ie 7.50 “ ).25 oi. ‘ ‘ di “i » 11.75 ‘6 5.90 16.25 - 7.25 909 10 “c a % ‘i << 11 “é ie "i sa ‘“é 20. ‘ “ 7 00 < 5.00 _ - - : os 6.25 “ t 50) 228 Suits Double and Single Breast, made from our own make of T weeds, nice and stylish, 12.00 to 5.50 sell for 9.00 and 6 50, MEN’S RAIN@PROOF COATS. 300 coats to select from; all new and stylish, at similar dis- counts, from $1.50 to $15.00 each. PANTS. MEN’S AND BOYS’ READY-TO-WEAR This department consists of thousands of pairs, in stripes, black and fancy tweeds and worsteds; all new and nobby; will be sold low. Of homemade Tweed Pants we also have a great variety, selling at extraordinary low prices. Gents’, Youths and Boys’ Underwear, « large assortment, in all makes. Men’s and boys’ all-wool top shirts, men’s and boys’ white shirts. Gents’ furnishings in undless variety, Cardi- gan Jackets and all fur goods; Hats and Caps, Gloves, etc., all selling at Tremendous Discounts. Now is the time to make low k apt teeck epieeey, YB oe, ah Te Pee am A I NN Cae om Se 8 SS eran teens we wee