li ge ie ARS mee aaa A ai ea ca ti a LARS ee eee ‘be s eae Se oi is ii CORRS Ws ES na RNR BLS BSE A ta Tage Amt a a ee Se STS ln. _— _ Tie2t Lacing in the Pulpit. ier. Mr. Hawies, in addressing a crowded el eration at St. James’ Marylebone, s)) -ary strongly on the ‘‘ Criminal Ignor- ance ao b Thoughtlessness of Tight Lacing.” Tie paraphrased in T'ruth :-— What is it makes a lady's head Feel heavy as a lump of lead? What makes her nose's tip sored? Tight lacing! What makes her cheek burn like acoal, Her feet as cold as Arctic pole? Whas cramps her boy and her soul? Tight lacing! What makes her temper short and sharp? What causes her to fret and carp, And on the smallest ills to harp? ; Tight lacing! What checks her proper circulation, And dulls her ordinate sensation? ae What blighted babes breeds tor the nation? Tight lacing! What makes her waist a warp-like thing, And gives her tongue a waspish sting? What baulks her when high notes she'd sing? fight lacing ! What is it, with its vice-like squeeze, Destroys it faded victim’s ease, And brings her doctors’ countless fees? Tight lacing! What is it makes her gasp for breath, And —so stern modern science saith— Dooms her too oft to early death? Tight lacing ! What brings a ‘‘ corn upon her heart,” And makes her—spoiled by cruel art — Unfit to play the mother’s part? Tight lacing! What beauty’s lines in her destroys, And fashion’s powerful aid employs, To crush from out her life its joys? Tight lacing. What ages her before her time, And makes her feeble ere her prime? What tempts to a self-suffered crime ? ‘Tight lacing! What, quite igorinng nature’s facts, Her waist so cruelly contracts, That each inch saved fresh pain exacts? Tight lacing ! And what bad fashion of the day Is it that ladies now should say They li spurn without an hour’s delay? Tight lacing! i caidienibalialies Dick Allen's Merry Christmas, It was about ten o’clock on the night of Christmas Eve--2 good many years ago now—that Dick Allen gave his mame at the gate of Old Trinity’ College, Dub- fin, and passed in. As he looked in at the lodge-door, he felt a strong tempta- tion to sit for a while with the two burly good-natured looking night=porters by their roaring fire; for the night was bit- terly cold, and he felt more thoroughly alone than ho ever had before in the two- and twenty years ef his life. However, there were other feelings in Dick’s mind at the time that counterbalanced his sense of loneliness; so he merely replied to the porters’ kindly ‘Good-might, sir” and passed on to his roomsin ‘ Botany Bay.’ QOace within his rooms he lost no timo in striking a light, and then set to work to rekindle his smouldering fire. The prospect that the candle revealed was ‘ar trom cheerful. ‘The room was carpetless, and, except for a table, one armchair, and two or three dilapidated eane-chairs, almost naked of furniture. And yet they had not the look of the apartments of @ hard-reading sizar, who had neither means or desire for any de— coration beyond what was absolutely ne- cessary; the nails were there in the walls, but the pictures were gone; that handsome armchair and massive table had never been put in by themselves. Where was the rest of the turoiture? Everything betokened a recentand rapid fall i the fortunes of the tenant. He, however, had now at last succeeded in rousing to a show of animation the dying embers; and, after warming his hands for « few minutes over the biaze, he got up, aad, produciag a bottle of whiskey from his pantry, mixed a glass of * grog,’ and then, throwing himself into the arm- ohair, tell a thinking. A perfect stranger to Dick and his story would easily have guessed that the thouvhts which were bringing such a weary look of almost hopeless wretched- neas upon that handsome young face were not over-pleasant ones. Sad enough in al: conscience they were, and uot with- out reason. It was now some six months since Vick had fallea out with his father, between whom and himself’ there had al- ways existed the strongest affestioa. Wat was the original cause of che quar- relis immaterial, Some trifle, occurriag at un inopportune moment, had set at Varisace two proud and willful, though loving hearts. Hot and bitter words had been spoken on both sides, The very closeaess of the bond which had united them before seemed to make the brexch more irremediati:; and Dick Ailen had left his home one bight in the summer Vacution, refusing all offers of assistance from his father, aod determined for the future to bold no communication with him. to wiot money, and consequently thought that aothing wus easier than to get it; so whil: the remainder of his last qu-rter’s allowance lasted, he lived pleasantly eaov zh: at his rooms in college, always on the look out for some means vi making ef points of his discourse are thus He had never knowa what it was/{ money, but not yet considering the search as very pressing or necessary. In fact he was quite satisfied in his owo mind that to a clever fellow—as he undoubted~ ly was—anything like an approach to want was an impossibility. When his money, however, began to disappear, it oecurred it occurred to him that his man- ner of looking for work ad perhaps been scarcely energetic enough, aud so he de- termined to set about making a livelihood witbout further delay. It would be goinz over a thrice-told tale te relate the rebuffs and disappoint- ments that he met at every step ; how he tried i¢ obtain employment ia one way af- ter another, and at last began to think that there was no way whatever open to him. Ie tried journalism; but found the market already overstocked, and num- bers ef men with as much brains as him- self and tea times as much mechanical skill, applying for every vacancy. He had had, it is true, one or two transient cleams of suecess; but they had done him almost more harm than good, as they diverted him from the now all-important search for some occupation comparatively permanent. To be continued. —-——- ——_—__—_-_——- ¢- 8 >> Seasonable Topics. Don’t forget to bundle up the old clothes lying abont the house and send them to to some poor family. Watch your stoves and chimney flues carefully or run a big risk of being burned out of house and home. Ice.—The following is the song of the iceman these days :— Scraping the ice in the frosty morn, Ploughing the ice till the dinner horn, Loading the ice in the misty grey, Sending the ice o’er the hills away, Sawing the ice in the daylight fair, Cutting the ice in the noon-day glare, Drawing the ice in the fading lght, Storing the ice in the solemn night, Packiug tie ice in the sawdust bed, Leaving the ice till the winter's sped, Selling the ice—how wealth increases With that trafficker in cold pieces. | ‘Ts this the editor?’ said the caller, a wild-eyed man, with long hair and a roll of manuscript in his hand. ‘‘It is,” replied the editor. ‘‘I have brought round a little thing that I dashed off in a few spare mo- ments before breakfast to see if you would put it in—that is to say, if you had room.” ‘‘Qertainly, certainly,” blandly replied the editor, ‘‘thero’s at least half a bushel of room; put it right in now,’ and he pushed his trusty waste-basket out from under the table. | : What slipping, wretched slipping, As the people's heels are tripping, Their feet are pointing upward in a trice ; The awful words they're ripping, As they go off wildly ‘‘lipping,” Of a bump they got from contact with the ice. To remove pin worms in the face, place over the black spot the holiow end of a watch key, and press firmly. This forces the foreign substance out, so that it may be brushed off, and is a cure. It must require considerabie nerve to enable an individual to ask for a dead-head notice in a daily newspaper after paying cash for job printing where no paper is printed. And yet there are those who possess the nerve required, and exercise it, too. ~ +> — ~~ The Passenger Whom a New Jer- sey Conductor Did not Put Off the Train. He entered the train in Passaic, N. J., and took possesion of a comfortable corner in the baggagee car. As the conductor walked through the train and shouted ‘* tickets !” there was no response from the corner. “I must have his fare or I'll put him off,” the conductor said. A tall negro who had charge of the ani- mal answered : ‘* What! fare for a dog ?” ' + Yes, the charge is the same for a dog a3 for a man.” ‘¢ Well, he won’t pay,” the negro retort- ed ; ‘‘so put him off.” The animal was a very large bloodhound that had belonged to Mr. Heimas Romaine, and had been used for watching orchards and sheep and bringing home cattle from pasture. He had become vicious, and was dangerous to strangers; therofore, Mr. Ro- maine had presented him to an engine com- pany in Paterson, aud he was on his way to his new home, As the conductor advanced, on nearing the next station, to fulfil his threat, the bloodhound simply raised his head from his paws, measured his antagonist, and with a look of scorn resumed his nap. Being a married man, and having a family to support, the conductor said he felt sorry for the animal, and ordered him to be de- livered with care under a D. H. check. eh ERA Henry W. Longfellow, the poet, has five children. Onslow, the eldest, is married and a man of business in Boston ; Ernest is arising young painter studying abroad ; ) Alice, the eldest of the girls, is a pleasing writer, unmarried ; Edith is a.golden-hair- ed young lady of twenty-five, who has mar- ried the third son of Richerd H. Dana, Jr., and Anna is decidedly literary in her incli- nations. - ——--<« > oa Weather Bulletin. Probabilities for the next 2. Maritime Provinces. , hours for the Toronto, Dee. 17, 10 a. m. Moderate to fresh winds ; cloudy to partly cloudy Weather with snow arcas. -_ MINJAWORE ALMANAC. THURSDAY... ... DECEMBER 18th, 1879. Sun Risgs..... 7.45 | High Warer. 1.46 pm) Sun Saems...... .4.10 | FuLL Moon 28, 0, 3.1 m BRITISH AMERICA Assurance Company. FIRE AND RIARINE. Cash Capital & Assets $1,176,49149, INCORPGRATED 1833. liead Office, - Toronto, Ont. a Risks taken on all descriptions‘of Property at lowest rates. PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES. HORACH HASZARD, Agent. Office, South Side Queen Square. July 10, 1879. J. R. FOSTER, 8) Moncton, N. B., REPRERSENTING IN THE MARITIME PROVINCES Ontario, Chicago and Western Millers and Shippers, conan IN-- FLOUR. MEAL, GRAIN, Seeds and Provisions. The following are some of the leading brands of Flour tor sale wholesale, in car-load- lots only, viz:— ‘* Buda,” ‘* Alabaster,” «© White Rose,” Warcun’s Superior, ‘‘ Pastry,’ ‘‘ Beaver Mills,’ ‘‘ Red XXX,” ‘‘ Amber,” &e., &e. The above choice brands of flour, with many others, can be obtained at all the leading Flour Houses in the Maritime Provinces. Samples of all kinds of Seed Grains, and other goods will be sent to any address on applica- tion free of charge. Ask for quotations by telegraph in ‘* Cipher,’’ which will be supplied to all cor- respondents on application. Nov. 25, 1879—ly NOTICE i : \7E have on hand some lots of Fancy Goods, , Silks, Ribbons and small wares, which we are offering to country trad- ers and others in exchange for country Socks, Mitts, Homespun, &c. By calling early an advantageous exchange may be secured. F, LePAGE & CO. Glasgow House, Queen Street, Dec. 6, 1879—2w 2aw 73,620 MORE SINGER SEWING MACHINES SOLD EIN 1878 THAN IN ANY PREVIOUS. YEAR. In 1870 we sold 127,833 Sewing Machines. “1878 °° **: Soeeoe - “s Our sales hare increased enormously every year, through the whole period of ‘hard times.” We now Seli Fhree-Quarters of all the Sewing Machines Solid in the World, Waste no Meney en ‘cheap’ Counterfeits. ea” Send for handsome Illustrated Price List ROBERT YOUNG, South Side Queen Square, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’town, March 18, 1875—-2aw tf ” WONDERFUL improvement in Jacobs’ Lithogram, PATENTED 16th JULY, 1879." One Hundred impressions can now be taken from ** One Original.” Ree a series of experiments conducted L& at great cost and involving much labor, ‘* Jacobs’ Lithogram’ has been so completely perfected that it is not alone more durable, but so altered in consiruction and thickness, that the Patentee of this wonderful labor and time-sav- ing apparatus, is enabled to offer ‘‘a guaran- tee” witheach Lithogram sold, providing the directions furnished are complied with. Postal Card, Note, Letter, Legal and Folie sizes. Prices respectively $2.50, $5.00, $7.00, $9.00, and $12.00. Special sizes made to order. A LIBERAL DISCOUNT TO THE TRADE. Agents wanted throvghout the Dominion. Send for circnlar. _ J. M. JACOBS, Patentee & Mantifacturer. Western House, 557 St. Paul Street, 356 Front St. East, Montreal. Toronto, Ont. Headquarters for the United States ;: 3 Arch St., Boston. Mass. N. B.—Composition for refilling. Tablets furnished at one half the original cost. BREMNER BROS,, Agents for P. E, L Eastern House, Ch’town, Oct. 21, 1879. THE DAILY EXAMINER ! ‘“* An abstract and brief time.” —Shakespeare. chronicle of the Citizens Fake Netice. OUR BOLLARS will take ‘‘ Tue EXAMINER ” to your door every day dur- ing the coming year,—if paid before the Ist, of January next, Immediate Payment of all amounts due Tuz Examiner Utiice, is required, Mortgage Sale. TO be Sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, at the Court House in Charlottetown, in Queen's County, in Prince Edward Island, on Wednesday, the Third day of March Next, 1880, at the ‘hour of twelve o'clock, noon, by Virtue ofa Power of Sale m an Indenture of Mortgage dated the eighth day of May, 1873, and made between Alexander Mar- tin, of the one part, and Edward Jarvis Hodgson, of the other part, — LL that tract, piece and parcel of land situate, lying and being on Township number Sixty-two, in Queen’s County, in the said Island, and bounded and described as follows, that is to say : Commencing ata stake fixed at the edge of the Creek making John Nicholson’s southern boundary line and run- ning from thence due east fifteem chains, fifty links; thence south three degrees east thirty four chains; thence west.ten degrees. north sixteen chains and fifty links; thence west tifteen degrees north to the edge of the dry land; thente following the courses of the dry land along the inner edge of the marsh north- erly and easterly tothe place of commence- ment, containing eighty-seven and’ a -half acres of land, a little more or less, together with the appurtenances thereto belonging. For further particulars apply at the office of Messrs. Hodgson & McLeod, Solicitors, Char- lottetown. For further particulars apply at the office of Messrs. Hodgson & Mcleod, Solicitors, Charlottetown. Dated the 3rd day of Deeember, 1879. EDWARD J. HODGSON. Mortgagee. Dec. 3, oaw till sale, wed ERSONS liable to pay Poll Tax for Char- lottetown and Common, and Assessment on Lands in Charlottetown Royalty, are here- by notified to make payment to the under- signed, at the store of D. R. M. Hooper, Euston Street. G. C. HOOPER, oo.» omy Ch’town, Nov. "79. Valuable Property for Sale. 780 BE SOLD, all that part of Town Lot No. 74, in the first hundred of ‘Town Lots in Charlottetown; having a front of 67 feet, Dor- chester Street, and running back 80 feet, to- gether with the buildings thereon erected. For further particulars apply to Messrs. Hopason & McLrop Charlottetown. Sept. 18, 1879. “NOW'S THE DAY” AND “NOW'S THE HOUR.” SUBSCRIBE The Weekly Examiner. ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. “THE EXAMINER” supplies to country districts all the home news—which a foreign paper cannot do. Send One Dollar by registered letter or money order and get the CHEAPEST AND BEST paper published in P. E, Island, N.. B.—-Persons who have relatives or friends in any part of Canada, the United States or Great Britain, may have them -pro- vided with Tuk EXAMINER for a year On,pay- ment of One Dollar—postage paid by this office, This is the very cheapest way to pro- vide a friend abroad with the Island news. LAME AXP SICK HORSES Free of Cost, . s wre Liniment lodine Ammonia. Spavins, Splints and Ringbones cured with- Giles’ out blemish. Send for pamphlet containing full information, to Dr. Wm. Giles, 120 West Broadway, N.Y. Use only for horses the lin- iment in yellow wrappers, Sold by all drug- gists, and in quarts at $2.50 in which theres) great saving. : Trial bottles, 25 cts. Agent at Charlottetown: W. R. Warsow, Druggist. Nov. 28, 1879 —eod wky 4m GRAYS SPECIFIC MEDICINE rRabe mark. he Great TRADE MY “=~ English Rem- me - 5 edy, an unfail- <= @ ing cure for Sem- 1 Sxd inakt~ \Vecakness, Cay Spermatorrahea, £& xi * Impotency, and Sea FE* all diseases that Before Taking follow as a se- After j quence of selt-abuse; as loss of Memory, Uni- versal Lassitude, Pain in the Back, Dimness of Vision, Premature Old Age, and many other Discases that lead to Insanity or Con- sumption. ta Full particulars in our pam pllet, which we desire to send free by mail to everyone. ua. The Specifie Medicine is sold by all druggfsts at $1 per package, or six pack- ages for $5, or will be sent free, by mail, om receipt of the money, by addressing The Gray Medicine Co., ‘oronto, Ont., Canada, N. B.—The demands of our business. ha¥e necessitated our removing to Toronto, to whi place please address all future ¢ommruni- cations. . pc:eial #@ Sold in Charlottetown by‘all /Dragists and by all wholesaleand retail Diuggists in the Unitel States and Canada, January 24,1 9 Prince Edward Island RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 13. Winter Arrangement, TO COME INTO FORCE TULSNAY, December 2nd, 1878, TRAINS GOING WEST. Nos. 1 & 3, No, Srations. Mised a. Georgetown one Dp 8.20 a. m. CIGER 5 cel ee j ; Ar 10,10 * Mt Stew t June... Dp 10.15 “ec ? Royalty Jnnction' ‘* 11.27 * Ar 11.50 a.m, CRantpsbehewre- ‘|Dp 8.004 m|Dp 3.00 pm Royalty Junction; ‘* 8.22 “ | ** 3.93 « North Wiltshire..| ‘* 9.14 ** | ** 4,15 & Hunter River....: ‘‘ 9.30 * | ** 430 Breadalbane..... ** 10.07 ** “ 646“ County Line.....{ ‘£10.17 * | “: 5.18. Kensington...... 10.55 ** | ** 6.56 Summerside... .< Ar ate mae 6.30 pm Wellington... -| = 219° EUs. SAME torescch ae 0’ Leela n «ili ima. Alberton........ eee TAME ios 40 a0 " 60** TRAINS GOING EAST. Nos, 2 and 4, No. 6, StaTione Mixed. Mixed. Tine iDp 6.30am Alberton........ © 7B fxch SF LOOET . J00 coe 6 “* 26.4 OR Ber ones cap lcs eee Wellington ......| ** 10.22 “ i. ao Arll.10 am S’mm’rside...... Dp 2.30pmjDp 7.30am Kensington...... oT eS ee County Line.. ..| ‘* 343 “ | “ 844" Breedalbane..... ~ ia “ 6.4 * Hunter River....| ‘* 4.30 ‘ “in North Wiltshire..} ‘* 4.46 * “ 94g Royalty Junction’ ** 5,37 ‘ ** 10.38 “ Charlottetown.... Ar os ym Ar 11,00 am Royalty ‘Junction| ** 2.53 ** Mt. Stw't June .. Ar pind mn Cardigan........ = 6g" Georgetown .....jAr 6.00 pm _ SOURIS BRANCH. Trains Going West. SraTIoNs, No. 7, Mixed. EOE, cvditen hen shbwaueds Depart 7.15 a. m, = ok. on on shed bn | scorite i EE hk atl os. moe A ST pate: aml epee Fes. f Mt. Stewart Junction.| Arrive 10.10 a. m. Trains Going East. i STATIONS. No, 8, Mixed. Mt. Stewart Junction.) DepartalSp mm. Mtetn’. P2555 Ee, | . 458" we Bt Pete & 6.5534 6 ‘aa Harmony..........%. a oe Seuskiu.:. ivi06c0 wd Arrive 7.10 ‘** ALEX. MACNAB, . Sup’t and Engineer, Railway Office, Chtown, Nov. 28, 1879. —pat pres h ane sp sj kea pie 6i In Stock and Daily Expected, he The EG T INT ‘So. geelos ENVELOPE SBsS. The S The ~ Cheapest # Nicest OF ENVELOPES IN P. E. ISLAND, By Quarter, Half and whole Thousands, G. HERBERT HASZARD, Nov. 13, 1879—1m o ars TT CATARREH, Constitutional Catarrh © Remedy CURES CATABRH. Hear what a Reverend Gentlonan says of the Constitutional Remedy. T. J. B. Harpine, Esq., Brockville, Ont.:— Deak Sin—It is now two years since your ‘Constitutional Catarrb Remedy’ was intre- duced to me. Ihave waited this ong to see if the eure would remain permanent before do- ing this, my duty, to you, as at first the : ects seemed to me to be “‘too good to rue.” I was afflicted in my head for years before I suspected it to be Catarrh. In reading in your Cireular I saw my case described in many par- ticulars, The inward ‘“‘drop” from the head had become very disagreeable, and a choking . sensation often preventing me from lying ; I would feel like smother be com to sit up in the bed. My health and spirits were seriously affected. When your agent came to Walkertownin August, 1876, I secured three bottles. Before I had used a quarter ef the contents of one bottie | found decided re- lief, and when I had used two bottles and a third, I quit taking it, feeling quite clear of that ailment, and have not used any since of late I have taken some for a cold in my head, A sense of duty to sufferers from that loath- some disease, Catarrh, ts me to send you this Certificate, unsolicited, with leave to make what use of it yom may see proper Yours truly, j W. TINDALL, Methodist Minister, Port Elgin, Ont., Aug. 24, 1878. | Ask for Littlefield’s Constitutional Catarrl Remedy and take no other. T. J. B. Harpixe, Dominion Agent, Brock- ville, Ont. For sale by all Druggists at only one Dollar per botile. rs on " . TRYIT, BUY IT. «.« «© -«