renee en) DALY EXAMINER > Tax Leaprve D Sr gt,” sPER or P. E. Re iseued every afternoon, frou the ExaMIneR PUBLISHING ComMPaNny, .. ,wadoen House Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCE) One YRAR $1.C0 Bix MONTHB. «06-0000 eee cer cree teen newennenes aa Trrem MONTHS... ........60+seceeneecerseeet -00 One MoNTH....-. pepesdesenesevees® 035 Sent tL) mitex The Weekly Examiner {« teued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. It is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting nd fall of the latest news. States CALENDAR FOR OCTOBER, 1895 Fall Moon, 3rd day, 6h 349m p. m. 40 ix 41 46 43 4 4t 4d 646 44 27 | Sunday 28 , Monday 29 ! Tuesday 20 | Wednesday 31 | Toursday woman no ~ Last Quar lith day, 10h 21 7m. a. m. New Moon, [Sith day, lh. 575m. a m.} First Quar, 25th day, 6h. 51.5m. am. . Sun Sun | High Day of Week. rises | sets water ~ f acme 9 <enibenin ja my_R Mw morn 1 6 415 35 ¥ 2 6 3 10 12 3 Thurs lay 7 tI 10 40 4 | Friday oS a ] l ll 6 | Saturday 3 27 ll 44 6 Sunday lt 2 jah 18 7 | Monday 12 23 . 57 & | Tuesday 13 21] 1 46 9! We inesday 15 iY | 2 35 (@ | Thursday 16 8; 34 “1 | Friday 17 mt Se 12 Saturday 19 t» 6 36 13 | Suuday 20 | 12} 7 47 “4 | Monday 21] 0; 8 40 5 | Tuesday 23 | Ni: -S fe 16} We Inesday 2t 7) 8 17] Thonsday 26 5] 10 47 18; Friday _ | 27 Si 2i 37 i i Saturday i 23 l meron 20 | Sunday ae 0 0 9 21 | Monday 3144 53 0 53 22 | Tuesday 33 56 l 46 23 | Wednesday 34 54 2 32 24 | Thuraday 36} 531 3 29 25 | Friday 7 Sii 427 26 | Saturday 33 ‘| 5 48 Sas 5 3 2 9 33 DR. H. D. JOHNSO EYE AND EAR, NOSE AND THROAT Office -- Hent Strect Aug 16, ’94—ly The Piince Edward Island COMMERCIAL COLLEGE THE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Conmmercial College and Shorthand Insti- tute is now open. Young men and women desirous of acquiring a Business Education should embrace this opportunity. Subjects tanght include Book-keeping, Commercial Arithmetic, Commercial Law, Business and Legal Forms, Business Correspondence, Penmanship, Shorthand and Tsp writing. Stud-nuts admitted at any time. We guarantee attention to business. §.F. HODGSON, W.H. CROSSKILL Principal. Teacher of Phonography NELLIE M. HODGSON, Asst Box 2 {2, Charlottetown. sept3d JUST SO. For fineness of finish, artis- tic posing and moderate prices our Photos are unsurpassed unywhere. Children’s Pic- tures a specialty. All kinds of Copying and Enlarging done from old pictures. C LEWIS, Entrance on Grafton Street, Opposite P.O aeptlé Teacher. For Sale or To Rent The well-known Busness Stand, the “ Ceutral Hotel,” formerly the “ Railway House,” situated on Richmond Street. ibis Hotel contains 21 rooms, with large Suop and good stabling for 25 horses. Is centrally situated, and within two minutes walk of Market Louse and Post Office Apply to THCMAS CAMPBELL, Richmond Street. ap23 —dy 246 & wkv MIONITACUE Carriage Factory. We are showing this season a finer line of Carriages than shown by us heretofore. The assortment consists of Top aud Open Buggies, Jump Seats end Road Carts. For atyle, comfort, durability and excel ence of workmanship our stock cannct be surpassed. Also at hand, at lowest prices, CARTS, TRUCK WAGONS, and all Carriage Findings, such as Pocket Boots, Whip Sockets, Washers, etc., usually found in a first-class Carriage Shop. Prompt attention to Repairs. Painting a ae Terms reasonable. JOHN McLZAN & SON. julyl3—dy & wky PHOTOGRAPH Y Superior workmanship, re fined finish and moderate prices combine to make these Photos the most satisfactory in Charlottetown ‘to-day. GEO. H. COOK _ Corner Queen & Grafton Sts. —IF YOU— Want a wife, Want a-cook, Want a partner, Want a situation, Want a servant girl, Want to sell a farm, Want to sell a house, Want to rent a_ house, Waat to exchange anything, Wat to eell plants or grein Want to sell groceries or drugs, Want to sell or trade anything, Waat to find customers for anything, Want to eel] or buy horses, pigs or cattle ADVERTISE IN THE * R00m ost paid to any part of Canada or the) TERMS : Four Dollars a Year VOL 35. W. & W. Popular Shoe Store W. & W. ~L JUST WHAT YOU WANT. The latest productions in Quality, Style and Comfortable FOOTWEAR. Our New Stock is up to date and well selected in the best market for spot cash. Your purse will open quickly when you gaze upon the bargains we offer in our new lines of Fall and Winter Stock of Boots, Shoes, Rubbers and Overshoes, now selling at the lowest bottom prices for 'eash. Come and see the goods; we will make the prices right. Remember the place. WEEKS & WARREN, Next to HOndt gO S bh Isttetown, September 13, ° 89) Lewis’ Photo Rooms, Market Square. 35 & w ky True “overs of delicious TEA are satisfied our lines of Knglish Breakfast Oolong and Ceylon Teas. We to be the best on the market for quality, strength, flavor and price. The public realize a good article when they use it, and to-day our sales on this Tea are larger than ever before. when supplied with Conzou, India, China, believe our 22c. Blend We carry a full line of Canned Goods, Jams and Jellies, Fish, Boned and Skinned Dried Codfish Flour, Meal, etce., which we will sell at the very lowest prices. reliabl: good and Ess taken in ex delivered to all Our ain is to bay the most soll than at the lowes’ prices. change for crs’ or gools. Goods parts of the city. WILLIAM GRANT & CO., Charlottetown, June 19, 1895—135 w QUEEN STREET. $7.00 eth, S250 cath ee ee 5a: Ve" cake STOVE AND RANGKS, $7.00 to $250 each. The largest line sold on the American Continent and the best, Sold only by R. B. NORTON & CO., City Hardware Store. Charlotteown, September 17, 1895—25 % ~ . K 4» % . r ae Fok 3 ae P, : ae ere i ee ne i a) Fink. Haszard’s Sea Shooting Powder,, F, F, Acadia . Smokeless 1-22 Papers . Shells, Nos. 8, 10, 12, Wire Cartridges, Loaded Cartridge:,10 and 12, Shot, all Sizes, Wads and Caps, — 1 Double Barrel No. 8 Gun (Muzzle), Guns, Muzzle and Breech Loaders, 10 & 12 SIMON W. CRABBE, Ch’town, Aug. 23, 1895—135 & wy Stoves and Hordware, Walker’s Corner A GREAT | MANY PEOPLE to-date, made-to-order Suit of Clothes under $20.00 or $25.00. These people have never seen the Suits we make for $12.00, $14.00, $16.00 and $18.00. Fit, workmanship and material guaran- teed, thoroughly made and trimmed. Also, Rubber Coats, Fur Coats, Fur Capes, made-up Ulsters. All our stock up to date, and every- thing in the store genuine value. JOHN MACLEOD & CO., Charlottetown, October 9, 1895 135 7 imagine they cannot get a stylish, up-; Single Oopies Two Oents ee ee oo re me ae + oe In Advanced Years The strength and pure blood neces- sary to resist the effects of cold seasons are given by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. “T have for the last 25 years of my life been complaining of a weakness of the lungs and colds in the head, especially in the winter. Last fall I was again attacked. Reading of Hood's Sarsaparilla I was led totry it. Iam now taking the fifth bot- Ke with good results. I can positively say that I have not spent a winter as free from coughs or pains and difficult breathing spells for the last 25 years as was last win- ter. Ican lie down and sleep all night without any annoyance from cough or a in the lungs or asthmatic difficulty.” 2. M. CHAMBERS, J. P., Cornhill, N. B. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. curs habitual constipa- Hood’s Pills tion, Frice aon. poe box. SUNLIGHT Soap eG: A Household Comfort BOOKS FOR WRAPPERS Seeton & Mitchell, Halifax, Agenta Nova Scotia and P. E. Island. MORTGAGE SALE. To be sold by Public Auction, at the aw Courts Building in Charlottetown, on UESDAY, the fifth day of November, A. D. 1895, at 12 o’clock, noon :— All that tract of land situate on Town- ship number flfty-two, in King’s County, P. E_I., bounded as follows :—Commen- cing on the north siae of the roaa leading from Head of Cardigan to Pisquid, extend- ing thereon or having a front of eleven chains, and extending back north by paral- lel lines for the distance of one hundred chains, being bounded on the west by land now or formerly in possession of Kenneth Beaton and John Scrimgeour, and on the east by land now or formerly in possession of Norman McLean, and containing an area of one hundred and ten acres of land, a little more or less, and is the farm lately in possession of Malcolm McLean. The above sale is being made under and by virtue of a power of sale contained in a certain Indenture of Mortgage of said lands, dated the 16th day of March, A. D. 1889, and made between Frederick W. Craswell, of Head of Cardigan, in King’s County, ani Margaret E. Craswell, his wife, of the one part, aud the undersigned of the other part. For further particulars apply at the ottice of A. A. McLean, Solicitor, Char- lottetown. Dated at Milton, this 4th October, A. D. 1895. | For every 12 Sunlight" wrappers sent to Lever Bros., Ltd., Toronto, a useful paper-bound book, 160 pages, will be sent for DAVID C. HOOPER, JAMES M. HOUPER, oct4— 4i 1 a w. (5) Mortgagees. TO LET. That large Shop, part of the “London House” Building, lately occupied by J f. McKenzie, Tailor, with good room up stairs for work shop or store room. Apply to HON. DANTEL DAVIES, L. H. DAVIES, Q. C., Executors Estate late Geo, Davies, Or to F. W. L. Moore, Solicitor, in tne Building. octl1 Painless Dentistry. CRAPAUD. DrJ E McDonald, Dentist, will bein Cra paud, at Dr Robertson’s, for TWO DAYS only, Friday and Saturday, 1th and 19th inst, where he will demonstrate his now amous method of Painless Extraction of feeth. No bad after effects follow the use of this mgtived, and the doubter is requested to try it an judge for himself. i Observe the dates, Friday and Saturday, October Isth and 19th inst, at Crapau t. My Pr nce County patients will please note my absence from Summerside on the above dates J E McDONALD, DD &. Summerside, Oct 7, 1595, Dominion Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appointe acle selling Agents in the Province 0 Prince Edward none the qnove eae are now prepared to issue orders for Round, Slack and Run of Mines, and will keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coal on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents. Cirrlotte town, May 25, 1894—if FOR SALE. The House and Land on the corner of Pownal and Sidney Streets. - For further particulars apply to the owner, MRS. BOSWALL, Or EUSTACE HAVILAND, ESQ. He Sings of Cheese Principally, Zi Tarns Ovcasionally to Other Themes, The light of James McIntyre of Ir gersoll, Ontario, poet and undertake can no longer be hidden under a bus! el or a cheese box. The course © events is briuging him prominently be fore the mind of every studs: of contemporary literature, and he will no longer down. The revival of th: cheese industry, owing to the recent rains, cannot heip rousing the pocti soul of him who wrote: close Fair Canada is our theme, Land of rich cheese, milk and cream. But besides looking to him for verses #hat contain more butter fat to the line than the works of any other au- thor, living or dead, the wearied Cana- dians are turning to him for an ex- ample of serenity and philosophic calm that is sorely needed at the present time. Canada has been having a hard time of it with her literary men. They have been squabbling in the papers over their rights and wrongs, and a battle of the bards is in progress. All of them want to sit above the Attic salt, but it cannot be decided who sh’ sit at the head of the table. Mr. Wil- liam Wilfred Campbell, like MeGregor, claims that the head of the t-ble is where he sits, and the friends of Mr. Bliss Carman argue that he should have the precedence. Prof, Charles G. D. .Roberts, Mr. Archibald Lampman, and Mr. Duncan Campbell Seott all have warm adherents who clamor for their supremacy, and such ugly words as “plagiarist,” ‘“‘imitator,’” and “log roller” are being bandied freely. And what hcs McIntyre to say in the mean- while? Not a word. He minds his own business, and, to quote from his poem, “The Flood of the Creek,” Old friends and new he'll gladly meet On the west side of Thames Street, Where he has a foundation sure And a gocd stock of furniture. Neither floods of water nor of wor?’s can disturb him. He woos his ox-eyed muse in peace, and with a mind not cankered with envy. His position is too thoorugt:ily established to be idly discussed. He is a poet of the people. Notice the modesty of the prologue to his second volume, entitled “The Rise and Progress of the Canadian Cheese Trade.” With his spondaic feet firmly planted in the rich alluvial pasture land of central Ontario, thus MclIn- tyre: It is folly now to aim Or to seek for distant fame, But rest content if we can claim Something of a local name On the pleasant banks of Thame Because in simple strains we sung The glories of this country young. Of cows, and milk, and cream, and cheese, And of fat steers sent o’er the seas, Of horses ploughing land with ease, Of hogs and sheep and hens and geese Themes worthy of our songs and giees. Worthy indeed, and worthily treated, Which of all the quarreling Canadian peets could have written this simple lay? Above all, he is the laureate of the dairy, the cheese poet par excel- lence. Whether he thants a Pindaric cde to one Father Ranney, Who was the first there to squeeze His cows’ milk into good cheese, or from the top of his caselnous Pat- mos beholds with prophetic vision a ten-ton cheese to be, cheese is his great argument. But although this great theme is dwelt upon oftenest and stimulates him to some of his lofties: flights, no pent-up cheese factory con- tracts his powers. He is no “idle sing- er of an empty day.’ Ensilage and bears, wild geese and stone stables, tile drains and the Northwest rebel- lion engage his lyre in turn, while In Ontario the hen Is worthy of the poet's pert. Naturally his sympathy with the cow is very close and is tenderly expressed in the following lines: The cow is a kindly creature, Kind and gentle in each feature, About her is a homely charm, And her the dog should not alarm, But let all guard her safe from harm The gentlest creature on the farm. Still, it is not on account of her esti- mable personal qualities, but as the fountain head and sine qua non of cheese, that the cow appeals most strongly to the poet’s affection. Shake- speare himself had not a wider range or a more versatile fancy than the bard of cheese. Now he moves in stately measure along the banks of the Canadian Thames, pausing at St. Catherines’ famed for mineral wa- ters, And for the beauty of her daughters, and now thrills the reader with a tale of adventure, whose opening lines kindle the imagination, and disélose a vista of wonderful possibilities: I bought of land two miles square, I knew not it contained a bear. In the work of a writer so catholic in taste and so lofty in tneme it is not surprising to find a broad and nobk tolerance towards his brothers of the poetic choir. McIntyre’s gener- ous appreciation of the work of others bespeaks a mind too wise for envy and too great for scorn. With fine emotion he laments in this musical threnody the fate of Shelley: But I have scarcely tine to tell thee Of the strange and gifted Shelley; Kind-hearted man, but ill-fated, So youthful, drowned and cremated, Elsewhere he tribute to Whitman: pays this For erratic style he leads the van, Wildly, wayward Walt Whitman; He done grand work in ctvil war, Where he did dress many a scar, And kindly wet tne hot parched mouth Of Northern soldiers wounded South, It is not much to say that Poet MeIntyre has fairly met the other Canadian singers and beaten them all on their own ground. To take the much-discussed Mr. Carman, his stout- est adherents will hardly maintain that his thought is always clear, al- ways tangible. Too often his poetry swims into a mist of words as vague as one of his own “gray winds.” N« puch reprosch can ever be brought i lai noon wot WHAT WE SAY, but IM what Hood's Sarsaparilla Does, that tells the story of its merit and suc- cess. Remember HOOD’S Cures. White Rose Kerosene, 530 Barrels landing ex schooner Nut- wood to-day from New York. CARVELL BROS, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1895. ODDS AND ENDS. Property to the value of over $4,500,000 is left inthe ruilway carriages of Great Britain every year. Kidney Focts. Tn Jan. 1892 my son was taken with Kidney disease. Though attended by theee physicians, and change of climate he grew worse and by ’93 had fallen from 195 lbs. to 95 Ibs. In 10daysfrom start- ing to use Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills we were able to move him home. In 4 mouths he gained 50lbs. and was fully re- -tored to health by the use of this medicine Jno. 8. Hasting:, 23 St’ Paul St., Mon- treal, v.ry ten days of fog in London, it is calculated, casts 25,000 people on beds of sickness and kills 2,500. This is Concentration. One pill a dose, ene box 25 cents. One pill relieves constipation. One box cures an ordinary case, Une pill taken weekly neutralices formation of uric acid in the blood and prevents Bright’s _Kldney Dis- ease and Diabetes. True only of Dr. Chase’s Kidney Liver Pills. The British Isles comprise no fewe- than 1,000 separate islands and isiets, without counting mere jutting rocks or isolated pinnacles. It Does The Business. If you want to know what Miller’s Emulsion of Norwegian Cod Liver Oil will do, for a consumptive patient ask cne who has tried it. Ask anyone who has used itin lung troubles of any kind. What they say about Miller’s Emulsion shal] be ‘ts recommendation. It is the finest pre- paration of its kind in the world and is worth its weight in gold to a consumptive sufferer, whom it will raise from a bed of sickness to health and strength of body and mind, giving a new lease of life. Chousands testity te the value of Millers Emu'sion. Miller’s Emulsion is the great verve strengihener and blood maker, and cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Scorfula, and all Lung affections. In Big Bottles, 50c. and $1, at all Drug Stores. There are now in England 66,750 pub- licans, 27,254 occasional retailers of spirit, 30,496 retailers of beer and cider to be con- u ned on the premises, 12,376 holders of offlicenses, and 1,015 occasional license holders, ‘That Pale race, For Nervous Prostration and Anemia there is no medicine that will so promptly and infallibly restore vigor and strength as Scott’s Emulsion. The following members of the Imperia! Parliament have Leen raised to the peerage’ Sir Algernon Borthwaite, proprietor of the London Morning Post; Baron Henry de Worms, forn erly Under-Secretary of Stare for the Colonies; and the Hon. Horace Curzon Piunkett. Hands and Ankles Raw. For years [have been a great eufferer from itchy skin tronble and salt rheum. My hands and ankles were literally raw. he first application of Dr. Chase’s Ount meat allayed the burning, itching sensa- tion. One box and a half entirely cured me. It is also instant relief for chilblains Henry A. Parmenter, St. Catharines, Ont. The dea h is reported at Clayton, Ont., of Mr. Isaiah Marshall, aged 104 years. He bad the use of all his faculties almost to the close of his | fe, A Remarkable Cure—J. W. Jennison, Gilford—Spent between $200 and $300 in eonsulting doctors; tried Dixon’s and all other treatments, but got no benefit. One box of Chase’s Catarrh Cure did me more good than all other remedies, in fact [consider myself cured, and with a 25- cent box at that. The Sultan has informed President Faure of his intention to contribute 500,000 fr. to the subscription opened for the erection of mosque in Paris. Orilia’s Prominent Furniture Dealer Gives Facts. Oriiia, Feb. 10th, 1894. Epmanson, Bates & Co. Gentlemen,—About three or four weeks ago I had an attack of Itching Piles. I tried two or three different remedies re commended by druggists as the “best and only cure,” ete., but got no relief. About the time I was beginning to despair of find- ing any relief, with some slight misgiv— ings 1 bought a box of your pile cure, which I am pleased to say gave me almost instant relief and permanent cure. I con- sider your Dr. Chase’s Ointment a God- send, ALF. J. DEAN. > The Dominion Government is being urged to put a tax upon natural gas, which is being piped in Jarge quantities from Canada to cities in the United States. = TERE ANH ~ LIVER gaa CURE BACKACHE Oya Ae ears Sold wholesale and retail by Geo. E. Hughes, Charlottetown. NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, &c. The subscriber is now prepared to make Surveys of Land, run Boundary and Division Lines, furnish Plans, ete.; also, Mechanie a and Architectural Drawings, Plans, Speci f- cations and Estimates. 3J. P. NICHOLSON, Land Surve sept 19 —dy — = th. oct7—-2i NO 92 against the subject of this article. Whatever else he may be, he is never obscure. His characteristics of lucid thought and simple, forceful expres- sion, are well shown in these lines on a thousand-pound hog: Pig had to do some rootine work To make one thousand pounds of pork; Our stomach it doth not incline To eat a hog seven feet nine. On smaller pig we love to dine, And it we do enjoy so fine; For big fat hog we don’t repine, Let others eat enormous swine. Let them, indeed! Eigh praise har been given to the patriotic verse of Prof. Roberts, but when has the *50- called Canadian laureate, in any of his bursts of O-my-country poetry, equal- led this? But we sing more glorious theme, It is our verdant pasture land, Where cows produce a flood of cream Doth make cheese of the finest brand, Young Deminion so gigentie, Where rail cars run at sp¢ed terrific, Thousands of miles from the Atl«ntic, Till in the West you reach Pacific. Mr. W. W. Campbell, who started the late peotical unpleasantness, has been called “Poet of the Lakes,” but her? again a single brief quotation from on- of McIntyre’s lyrics is sufficient to demolish his would-be rival's claim to the title: Here in great lakes we do take pride, And them with Uncle Sam divide. Other Jakes seem inferior In size to Lake Superior, Mr. Lampman has been called the didactic poet of Canada, but only bs those unacquainted with the protean genius of McIntyre. The seers of In- gersoll has written verses of a mosi searching ethical quality, touching with a fearless yet reverent hard the funda- mental truths cf religion. Whether it be the tenets of the Christian faith, ot the inspirations that have found ex- pression in the teachings of Brahma, Buddha, Confucius, Mohammed or the lamented Mme. Blavatsky, has he no‘ laid bare this basic principles in this terse couplet? Fifty bushels to the acre Makes us grateful to our Maker. Has he not here pointed out the spring from which flow the healing wa- ters? In taking reluctant leave of this great and hitherto neglected poet, it is earnestly hoped that he may soon receive the recognition due to his re- markable qualities, and that the culti- vated circles of Boston, ever ready to pay homage to new discovered ge- nius, may soon be engaged in “McIn- tye evening,” and sit at the poetic feet of him who has written that Poetry is the pure cream, And essence of the common theme. New York Sun, Woman's Dress ina Mohammedan Harem. An account of a visit I paid to the zenana or harem of a Mohammedan Nawab in a native State may not be without interest. A carriage and mounted escort of soldiers were sent at 8 o'clock on> morning to convey us to the castle. A gate in the immense walls of the compound led us into the ill-kept gar- dens; passing from these into the court yard, and through long colon- nades and untidy passages, we were conducted finally into the zenana. A large and lofty room, with* walls on three sides and a colonnade opening onto a court yard was the apartment in which we were received. Chairs were brought for our accommodation, but, with the exception of the matting on che floor, the place was without furniture. Women, some young and tall, others old and wrinkled, passed and repassed, while we waited for the Begum to ap- pear. They were all dresses in the Same fashion. Trousers of light-col- ered damasks or sain clothed them from the waist. These pantaloons were baggy above, but so close fitting from the knee downward that they have to be sewn up after they are on, They are unsewed and removed once a week for the bath. A short bodice reaching just below the breast is worn, and then round the body and over the shoulder, and head is wound the sari of muslin or silk, which falls in graceful folds from the hips and shoul- ders. The Begum kept us waiting and we were told the reason was that she was putting on all her jewels to do us honor. Presently she came in—a small young woman, with an oval, immobile face, and smooth black hair. She wore tight trousers of a rich green damask 2nd a sari of cloth of gold; on her bare an- kles were anklets of uncut emeralds and diamonds said to be worth 40,000 rupees; On her arms were a large num- ber of jewelled bangles and armlets: on her fingers rings of beautiful rubies and diamonds; round her neck were strings of fine pearls, and, suspended by studs of large diamonds in the outer rims of the ears she wore across the hair, at the back of the head, pearls, emeralds and rubies, prettily set as a kind of collarette. The ears were pierced in several places to al- low rings and jewels to be inserted,and in the nose a small diamond was worn. The little jewelled lady did not speak English, and, after we had admired her jewelry, conversation soon came to an end. Her wee baby was brought in dress- ed in colored silk, with a gold laced rap on its little bald head, The Na- wab joined us, and there was much lively chat over the object of our visit to the State. In Such a zenana the most rigorous seclusion of the wives is enforced—wives, I say, for in this zenana the Begum was the chief, and the only wife, and was married the day after the death of the first Begum. —London Queen, His Choice of Death. Hopeless Lover—That’s your final answer, is it, Marie? Unresponsive Maiden—It is, Harold, I cannot be your wife. “Then there is nothing left for me but death!” (At restaurant half an hour later, to waiter)—Bring me a few oysters to be- gin with.—Tit-Bits. The Taste. “Don’t you think she betrays baa& taste in kissing people that way?” “I don’t know. I have never kissed her.” s At that moment the conversation was interrupted by the piano ceasing to play.—-Detroit Tribine, SITMR. FASTNET ‘ill sail from Charlottetown every WED NESDAY neta st 8 o’clock, for Hali fax via Summerside. Returning, will leave Halifax every MONDAY Evening, at 6 o’clock, callin aut Capso, Arichat, Hawkesbury an Souris. Freight solicited. W. W. CLARKE, Powna! Jiaclotss va, Lay. 25, lt —dy & wy aug3l Agent, EGE a Oe ane = | The First Snow niikes people think of their Footwear. Dry, warm feet are essential to good health. We are now prepared to furnish you with all kinds of Footwear at prices that will please you. We keep everything that is to be found in a first-class Shoe Sture, from the Iffants’ Warm Felt Boots to the Men’s Heavy Leg Boote. We are here to secure your trade, and if gocd goods, low prices and honest dealing will secure it we shall have it. We wish you to bear in mind those two facts, viz.: Ist, that our stock 1s second to none in the city either in quality or quantity; 2nd, we will not be undersold by any otner person in the trade. Call and see for yourself. R. K. JOST, 136 Queen Street, Two Doors Below Prowse Bros. NAN FID Oe ——— pm Delicious BEVERAGE MADE IN AMOMENT ASK FOR A SAMPLE Ask for ge gwog Uanada Atlantic and Plant STEAMSHIP LINE. FOR BOSTON, — CALLING AT—— Hawkesbury and Halifax. AUTUMN SAILING S. S. HALIFAX will leave Navigation Co’s. Wharf, Char lottetown, Friday, Oct. llth, at noon, and Tuesday, Oct. 22nd, at 6 p.m., and every Tuesday thereafter until close of navigation. FROM BOSTON—Every Saturday at noon, calling at Halifax and Hawkesbury, arriving at Charlottetown Tuesday mora- ing. Lyman’s Coffee is delicious. a. free sample. HALIFAX SERVICE. 8.S. HALIFAX will leave Plant Wharf, Halifax, THURSDAY, Oct. 17th, at 8 a.m , and every Thursday thereafter. Passengers arriving in Halifax WED NESDAY evenings can go directly on board steamer without extra charge. For rates of passage, freight, etc., apply to P. E. Island Railway Stations and at office of Charlott.town Steam Navigation Com pany. H. L. CHIPMAN, Canadian Agent, oct8 Plant Wharf, Halifax. =, cote fs — = a ee 7 Seto ee ee Hie STEAMER CITY OF GHENT 4) CAPT, McNEVEN, Will sail from Halifax on October 16, and weekly thereafter, for Charlottetown, call- ing at the following ports:—Spry Bay, Sheet Harbor, White Head, Salmon River, Sonora, Sherbrooke, Isaac’s Harbor, White head, Canso, Guysboro, Boylston, Ports Hawkesbury,Hastings and Port Hood each way,thus giving Island shippers an oppor- tunity to forward their produce direct and prompt every week at a low rate of freight. Steamer FASTNET will continue her regular trips as usual. Freight solicited. W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Charlottetown, Oct. 3, 1895. CHTOWN TO BOSTON ——BY THE—— Fast Steamship ‘ Olivette,” BUY YOUR TICKETS —FROM—— $3 WW. W. Clarke. TICKET AGENT, Corner of Queen and Water Streets, Cuarlottetown, May 14, 1895. FURNESS LINE. Regular Sailings Between ‘Lon don and Halifax From London. From Halifax. SS. HALIFAX CITY. Sept. 21 SS. DAMARA. Oct. 3 SS. MADURA. eo « 28. 8S.ST.JOHN CITY. “© 19 These Steamers have superior accom- modation for first-class passengers. Welli ventilated Saloon and sleeping berths amidships, where least motion is felt. Lighted by electricity. Insurance effected at lowest possible rates, Each boat carries a doctor on board. FURNESS, WITHY & CO., Lrp., Commission & Forwarding Agents, Halifax, N.S., Or W.W.Clarke, Passenger Agent Charlottetown. septl4 FOR SALE. House in Georgetown. Sept. 14. That Dwelling House in Georgetown the property of Mrs. Capt. John McDon- ald, formerly known as the “ McDonald House,” together with the outbuildings. This House is in first-class repair, con- tains fourteen large rooms, and is well adapted for a Dwelling or Boarding House Any party or parties desirous of secur ing a summer residence will find this — opportunity. his property will be sold at a bargain For terms and particulars apply at the office of J. A, Matheson, Solicitor, George town, or to L. W. MACDONALD, ap 5Box 694, Charlottetown. TO LET. The Shop now occupied by J. T. Me- Kenzie, Tailor. Possession immediately, Apply to F. W. L. MOORE, Solicitor, | sepidt—t In the Building’ ne $1 MONON TNR OES ae - : See a AAA Ge AR ATR IRE EN eh ST RN AES 5 Rabaa spall Oe hg EA arti! bene SE wei