en earn Sma THE DATEY | leams rive Donnars A YEAR. NE W SERIES. “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise : tame may speak CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E, ISLAND. MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1888. *, re re a : POS aie iki eS = a SR EN! Ree @e — ee I See gg eee ee es free.”—Evniripgs. EXAMINER. SN SINGLE Copizs Two Cents VOL. 22.—NO. 114. & he Dariv Examiner 18 issued eve ry ev ening by The Examiner Publishing Go. From their offie Great (ieorge > Y’rinece *, corner of Water and reets, Charlottetown, Kdward Island, —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION — } | ; ' ee CRs Linn duckie cis Man o's. cbSt g2.50 | to read every item. NS i 1,25 | GP SIGNED 500 see c ciiibieddenedé ects Advertising at moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- ! ridiculously low erly. hauyeariy, oF yearly advertisements, UES TERS and SACQUE CLOTUS, you can have your choice at large discounts, and in TWEEDS our values are of the very best. | Our DRESS GOODS trade has been very large this season, owing to the excellent ‘value we have been giving; but our new redu¢ed prices we expect to cause a genuine rush, our Stock i§ Fresh, and we are offering the most Fashionable Discounts, and you only need see them to on application. A: ANT SS Ce SS es ee ~ ALMANAC FOR APRIL, 1988, MOON'S CHANGES. Last Quarter 3rd day, 8h., 28.8m., a.m., 8.W. 30| Monday ' L. ARTHUR & CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, RECEIVERS OF Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS Pouliry, Potatoes, Fruit & Vegetables. New Moon I!th day, 5h, 52.2m., a. m., E. First Quarter 19th day, 7h., 39.7., a. m., N., (below horizon. ) . Full Moon 26th day, 2h., 9.6m., a. m., S.W. D as * iSuan Sun /Moon’ High! Day’s mret OF Vas rig@s'sets | rises okies lew’h mh mmorniaftr’nh m 1 Sunday 446 23 0 30) 1 59,123 2 Monday 42) Ge 1 80) 2 55 3 Tuesday 40;. 46' 2 2114 7) 46 4 Wednesday 38; 2713 3] 5 30; 49) 5 Phursday 341 29 3 371 6 S52) 52 3! Friday 35t 30) 4:30) 7 54)--55 7'Saturday 33| 22; 4 87| 8 32) 59 8| Sunday 31} 33'5 1) 9 22/132 9 Monday | 29) 34! 5 25) 9 58 5 10 Tuesday | 27! 35) 548/10 32 8 11| Wednesday 25] 37| 61211 1°22 12 Thursday | 23) 38) 6 38/11 33) 15 13 Friday | 22) 40) 7 Ti/morn; 18 14! Saturday 20; 41; 741; 0 4 2) 15| Sunday | 18} 42} $ 20) 0 37| 24) 16) Monday | 26) 43/9 6/1 13} 27 17} Tuesday 15} 45) 959! 1 53) 30 18) Wednesday | i3} 46/11 -9} 2 40) 33 19 Thursday 11! 47 aftr'n| 3 40) 36 20 Friday | 9 48) 5) 4.54) 39 21/Saturday | 8! 50! 1161617) 42] 22 Sunday | 6) 52) 2 28) 7 32) 46) 23) Monday | 4) 53) 3 50) 8 28) 49 24) Tuesday 2} 54) 455/919) 5&2 25| Wednesday 0} 55, 6 23/10 3) 5a 26| Thursday 4 58| 56] 7 43/10 45] 58 27| Friday | 57/6 58, 9 1/1) 27/141 @|Satarday $$ | 56/7 0/10 I4/aft 10} 4 29' Sunday | 54) 1/1 19} 0 56) 6 | cy 3 oti l a 9 142, 144 Commercial Street, BOSTON, MASS. May 18, 1887. MEDICAL. Dr. Jenkins & Br, 8. 2. Jenkins, OFFICE : GREAT GEORGE STREET, | Opposite St. Dunstan’s Cathedral. feb24—2m wky tf ee wky pat her a §b-1)-8-'2'--N SPRING AK < t tGENMENT. THE PALACES STEAMERS OF THE INT ia TiQMAL SS. o9. Leave St. Jon for Boston, via Eastport and Port land, every Taeslay and Thursday at 5.00 a m Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, $6,50, 2nd class ; 3.50, i=l classe For tickets and other information apply to G. A.SHARP, *F. W. HALES, e. RL Rv, P. E. L Steam Nay, Co, or to your nearest Ticket Agent, Feb. 24, (888 —304 wkr AMES A. MORRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS '—~AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX. Cousignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Rererkences : Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax ; George Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown, WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS, 71 East Cazar AND 9 & 14 Mincine Lang, LONDON, ENGLAND. Represented in Canada by Morrison & UsGRaVe, Halifax. &, 24, 1887 ~ Trimmings at: Large ANOTHER LIST. —ttet tiger) { UR LAST SPECIAL OFFERS brought hundreds of extra customers to our Store, and in order’to still keep up the ‘Supply of Bargains, we have prepared a new list, and ask you 50} AS only a few DOLMANS, REDINGOTES and SACQUES remain, we will, in order to make a clean sweep, offer them at prices —so now is your chance. find just-wxhat will suit you. We@re “to the front “with a Choice Stock of HAMBURG EMBRO!DERIES and INSERTIONS, CASH’S FRILLINGS KDGINGS of all kinds, and & Stock of WHITE COTTONS — “ the best value,we have ever offered. ft Pays to buy your Dry Goods and Millinery at BEER BROS. Charlottetowh, Feb. 10, 1888.—eod & w In FANCY Remember, A FULL CARRIAGE COODS: Charlottetown, March 5, 1888, i= 5 Ch’town, Feb.{18, 1888. Ss — a — oe Assets in Canada, losses to the insured. Policies issue etc., at reduced rates. LEONARD MORRIS, Agent, Summerside. f February 11, 1888—3m 2aw pa Fiannel Shirts mone (8 Assets Ist January, 1887. pp Hd This Company offers every ad security, liberal contracts, low rates, AND COMPLETE STOCK OF OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. 0: GENERAL HARDWARE and MILL SUPPLIES. 70. NORTON & FENNELL, City Hardware Store. ———— et ee ee se ee Se Se Oreo OOO ek _seeesses a se OVERCOATS, -_— Heavy All-Wool Pants, a Specialty. — Ol KNIT SHIRTS, ALL STYLES. uinders, &e. :O 3 ALL AT AWAY DOWN PRICES. GEO. E. FULL, SIGN OF THE LION, QUEEN STREEI1. The Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Co, :0 and d for three years on Dwellings, Churches R. R. FITZGERALD, Better Value vantage of the most undoubted WE OFFER a ae BUGGY TOPS Than any other House in Canada. IN STOCK: BODIES) ALL STYLES. es SUITS. $38,046,884.56 . 673,375.05 prompt payment of Ageiit, Charlottetown. Sheriff’s Sale. % EDWARD JARVIS Hibocon, surviving Executor of the last will and testament of DANIEL Ilop@son, Plaintiff, , and Defendant. itof Statute Execution to me tof Her Majesty’s Supreme LAWRENCE WHEL BY virtue of a W directed, issued Court of Judicature,jat the suit of the said Kd- ward Jarvis Hodgson, surviving Executor of the stament of Daniel Hodgson, wrence Whelan, I have taken Property ot the above-named Defendant, Law helan, the following property, namely; that tract, piece and par- cel of land, situate, Iying and being on Lot 34, in Queen's County, in Peince Edward Island, bound- ed and described @s follows, that is to say: Commencing at th orth-west angle of Plot No. 237, on the west sid@of a road leading to Stan- hope ; thence west.@@venty-three chains, or until it meets the east outidary of a tract of land now or lately in possession of John Auld; thence north twenty chair chains, or until it) following the cours to the place of co hundred and forty-si or less, being thus ture of Lease made’ 1849, between Sir G ane part, and Neil } ALSO— ALU thiat St land, situate, lying bounded and uescrilx thence east seventy-three eets the said ; thence ereof south twenty chains ncement, containing one acres of land, a little more ibed in a certain Inden- he 10th day of November, m G, Montgomery, of the Ginnis, of the other part, tract, piece and parcel of i being on Lot 34 aforesaid, L ed as follows, that is to say, having a front-of temchains on the west side of the Friston, Road, &nd running back west by parallel lines, boum@ed onthe south by Hugh Connors’ farm, on $he north partly by John Auid’s farm and y by vacant land, and on the west partly by in Landerkin’s farm and John Auid’s ferm, niaining seventy-four (74) acres, a little Move op less, being thus described ip an Indenture of ase, daied the 4th day of December, A. 14M, and made between Sir Graham G, Montgomjery, of the one part, and John Ware, of the @bher part, the two tracts of land containing twa@jhundred and twenty acres, a little more or less, © . ALSO— AL) that otk . ér tract, piece and parcel of land, si\uate, lying @ d being on Lot 44 aforesaid, bounded and descried as follows, that is to say, by aline commencigg onthe west side cf the Covehead Road, at afpoint ten chains south from the north boundary @f a tract of one hundred and twenty-one and threé-quarter acres of land, con- veyed by the Comniissioner of Public Lands to William Brown; it rnps thence wes, fifty-eight chains and sixty links. or toa tract of seven and three-quarter acres assigned by said Lawrence helan to W wn aforesaid; thence south three chains and twelve links ; thence east to the road ; thence h along the road to the place of comme ent, containing eighteen acres and cne dana, a little more or less. ALSO—AlIl that tract, piece and parcel of land, situate, lying being on Lot 34 aforesaid, bounded and as follows, that is to say, by a line con on the eastside of the Covehead Road, in southern bound of land conveyed ae Commissioner of Public Lands to William ;. it runs thence east fifty- four chains ; uth ten chains to land now or formerly in on of Michael Landrigan ; thonce west to the road: thence north along the same to the place of commencement, containing iifty-four acres of land, a little more or less. ALSO—Ali that other tract, piece and parcel of land. situate, lying and being on Lot 34 aforesaid, being thirty acres of land, more or less, part of a of eighty-five of land dev ‘by John Auld, de » to son, Kdward Auld, bound- ed on the south by now or lately in the cupation of Mic Land'igan’s north division ee, and runni by: eS to the ees now or e posession, oO niamin ughes; bounded ona = west by 8 now or lately in the possession of Richart Toombs, and also by landsin the possession of the said w- rence Whelan, and running east by parallel lines to the lands now or lately in possession of Ed ward Auld, a sufficient distance to include an area of thirty acres, as the same hath been for some time ssessed by the said Lawrence Whelan, in ueen’s County, And Ido hereby give Public Notice that I will, on WEDNESDAY, the twelfth day of Septem- , A. D. 1888, at twelve o'clock, noon, at the Court House in Charlottetown, in the said County, set ap and sell by Public Auction, all the above described properties, or as much thereof as will satisfy the ove masked on said Writ, being the sum of Three Hundred and Thirty Dollars and Eighteen Cents, withinterest on I'wo Hundred and Fifty-nine Dollars and Fifty-five Cents, at seven and one-half per cent, from the eighth day of February, 188%, until paid, besides Sheriff's fees and all incidental expenses. JAMES CURTIS, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Queen’s County, March 27th, A. D., 1888. E, J. HODGSON, Plaintiff in pergon, mch3l—3i law MORTGAGE SALE. To be sold at Public Auction, on FRIDAY, the ‘Twentieth day of April, A. D. 1888, at Twelve o'clock, noon, at the Court House in Charlotte- town, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, bearing date the Fourteenth day of March, A. D, 1884, and made between Alexander Lemon, of Mon- tague Bridge, of the one part, and Archibald Kennedy, Francis Dogherty and Eliza Dewar, of the other part :— A UL that tract, piece or lying and being at Montague, on Township Nunley ‘ifty-two, in King’s County, bounded as follows, that is to say: Commencing on the west side of Main Street, at the north-east angle of land in possession of Archibald MelLaren, and running thence west along Archibald McLaren’s boundary line for a distance of one hundred and ten feet, or until it meets land in possession of John Annear; thence north along said Jobn Annear’s east boundary line fora distance of fifty-five feet, or until it meets land in possession of John Dalziel Bell ; thence east for a distance of one huiidred and ten feet to Main Street ; thence south along said street for a distance of fifty- three iect tothe place of commencement. Also— All that tract. piece or parcei of land situate at Montague Bridge aforesaid, and bounded as fol- lows, that isto say: Commencing at the north- east angle of a plot of land in possession of Char- les D. Poole, and running from thence in a north- wardly direction (along the west side of the street leading from Main Street to the new Gov- ernment Wharf) for a distance of fifty feet ; thenceat right angles westwardly one hundred feet ; thence south parallel with the aforesaid street fifty feet, or until it meets the north boun- dary of land in possession of Charles D. Poole ; thence east along, said boundary tothe place o commencement, containing one-eighth of an acre, a little more or less. Also—All that other tract, piece or parcel of land situate at Mon e, Township Number Fifty-nine, and bounded as follows: Commencing on the south-western side of the rcad leading from the Ferry Road to Mon- tague Bridge, inthe western boundary of fifty acres now or formerly in possession of Augustine ©. McDonald ; thence south three degrees east along said boundary to the rear boundary of farms fronting on that section of the Montague Hiver; thence following said line westwardly ten chains; thence north three degrees west to the Ferry Road; thence east along the same to a continuation of the east boundary of three and three-quarter acres sold to Hugh McPherson, and in the possession of Char- les D, Poole ; tLence northwardly along the same to the Montagne River Road, and thence south- eastwardly along the same to the place of com- mencement, containing eighty acres and one quarter, a little more or less, together with all houses, buildings, Pane, members and appur- tenances thereunto belonging orin anywise ap- pertaining. Dated this Twentieth day of March, A. D. 1888 ARCHIBALD KENNEDY, FRANCIS DOGHERTY, ELIZA DEWAR, Mortgagees. celof Land situate, mch2t law usle (wed) NOTICE, ALL AMOUNTS due the estate of HARRIS & STEWART must be paid at once to the undersigned, at the office of tae London House, or they will be sued for. F. W. MOORE, Assignee | Ch’town, Maroh 29, 1885. THE PIRATE. By Sir Walter Scott. CHAPTER XLI. (Continued ) The wild"g@stasy with which she spoke, so much resem Mertoun answered—** less lofty, and your speeches more plain, I should be better assured of my.son’s,safety.” ** Doubt , vain sceptic!” said Norna— “And yet -know, that not only is our son safe, but vengeance is mine, though I sought it not—-vengeance on the powerful impiement of the darker influences by whom my schemes were so often thwarted, and even the life of my son endangered.—Yes, take it as a guaran. tee of the truth of my speech, that Cleveland ~-the pirate Clevblaid —even now enters Kirkwall as a prisoner, and will soon expiate with his life the having shed blood which is of kin to Norna’s,” “* Who didst thou say was prisoner!” ex- claimed Mertoun, with a voice of thunder— ‘* Who, woman, didst thou say should expiate his crimes with his life?” , **Cleveland —:the irate Cleveland !” answered Norna; ‘and by me, whose coun bp scorned, he has been permitted to meet his ate,” * % “Thou most wretched of women !" said Mertoun, speaking from between his clenched tveth, —‘* thou hast slain my son as well as thy father!” ** My son !—what son ?—what mean you r—4 Mordauat is your son—your only son!” ex- claimed Norna—*‘ is he not ?—tell me quickly —is he not?” ‘** Mordaunt is indeed my son,” said Mer- toun--‘‘ the laws, at least, gave him to me as such—But, O unhappy Ulla! Cleveland is ered son as well as mine—blood of our blood, ne of our bone ; and if you have given him to death, I will end my wretched life along with him !” ‘* Stay--hold—stop, Vaughan !” said Norna; “‘T am not yet overcome—prove but to me the truth of what you say, I would find help, if [ should evoke hell !—But prove your words, else believe them I cannot.” “Thou help? wretched, overweenin womatrr!—in what have thy combinations an thy stratagems—the legerdemain of lunacy— the mere quackery of insanity—in what have these involyed thee?—and yet I will speak to thee as reasonable-——-nay, I will admit thee as powerful.—Hear then, Ulla, the proofs which you demand, and find a remedy, if thou canst: ‘*When I fled from Orkney,” he continued, after a pause-——‘‘it' is now five-and-twent years since—I bore with me the unhappy off- spring to whum you had given light. It was sent to me by one of your kinswomen, with an account of your illness, which was soon follow- ed by a generally received belief of your death. I found refuge in Hispaniola, wherein afair young Spaniard undertook the task of comforter. I married her—she became mother of the youth called Mordaunt Mer- toun.” ** You married her !” said Norna,jin a tone of deep reproach. *“*T did, Ulla,” answered Mertoun ; ‘* but you were avenged. She proved faithless, and her infidelity left me in doubt whether the child she bore had a right to call me dather— But also was avenged.” ** You murdered her!’ said Norna, with a dreadful shriek. ‘*T did that,” said Mertoun, without a more direct reply, ‘‘ which made an instant flight from Hispaniola necessary. Your son I carried with me to Tortuga, where we had a siiall settlement. Mordaunt Vaughan, my son y marriage, about three or four years younger, was residing in Port-Royal, for the advantages fof an English education. I resolved never to see him again, but 1 con- tinued to support him. Our settlement was plundered by the Spaniards, when Clement was but fifteen—Want came to aid despair and a troubled conscience. I became a corsair, and involved Clement in the same desperate trade. His skill and bravery, though then a mere boy, gained him a separate command ; and after a lapse of two or three years, while we were on different cruises, my crew rose on me, and left me for dead on the beach of one of the Bermudas. I recovered, however, and my first inquiries, after a tedious illness, were after Clement. He, I heard, had been also marooned by a rebellious crew, and put ashore on a desert islet, to perish with want—I be- lieved he had so perished.” ** And what assures you that he did not?” said Ulla; ‘‘ or how comes this Cleveland to be identified with Vaughan ?”” ‘*To change a name is common with such adventurers,” answered Mertoun, ‘‘ and Cle- ment had apparently found that of Vaughan had become too notorious—and this change, in his case, prevented me_ from hearing any tidings of him. It was then that remorse seized me, and that, detesting all nature, but especially the sex to which Louisa belonged, I resolved to do penance in the wild islands of Zetland for the rest of my life. To subject myself to fasts and to the scourge, was the advice of the holy Catholic priests whom I consulted. But I devised a nobler penance—I determined to bring with me the unhappy boy Mordaunt, and to keep always before me the living memorial of my misery and my guilt. Ihave done so, and I have thought over both, till reason has often trembled on her throne. And now, to drive me to utter madness, my Clement—my own, my undoubted son, revives from the dead to be consigned toan infamous death by the machinations of his own mother !” ““ Away, away!” said Norna, with a laugh, when she had heard the story to an end, “this isalegend framed by the old corsair, to interest my aid in favor of a guilty comrade. How could I mistake Mordaunt for my son, their ages being so different?’ ‘‘ The dark complexion and manly stature may have done much,” said Basil Mertoun ; ‘strong imagination must have done the rest.” ‘« But give me proofs—give me proofs that this Cleveland is my son, and, believe me, this sun shall sooner sink in the east, than they shall have power to harm a hair of his head.” ‘‘These papers, these journals,” said Mer- toun, offering the pocket-book. ‘‘T cannot read them,” she said, after an effort, ‘‘ my brain is dizzy.” ‘**Clement had also tokens which you may remember, but they must become the booty of HM rcombined with the absolute certainty of at escent ener his captors. He hed a silver box with a Runic iascription, with which, in far other days, you presented me—a golden chaplent.” * A box !" said Norna, hastily ; ** Cleveland gave me one a day since—I have never looked at sa ag tagerly she pulled it out—eagerly examined the legened cieend the lid, B= i rly exclaimed—‘“ they may now indeed call me Reimkennar, tor by this rhyme I know my- self murderess of my son, as well as of my father +” The conviction of the strong delusion under which she had labored, was so overwhelming, that she sank down at the foot of one of the ee shouted for help, though in espair of. receiving any ; the sexton, however, ed hagas insanity, that |entered, and, hopeless of all assistance from ere your pretensions|Norna, the distracted father rushed out, to learn, if possible, the fate of his son. (To be Continued. ) The Farm Paramount. BY UNCLE SILAS. Are you homing on the farm, with fair to middling promprcts of one day becoming its owner? Stick to your moorings, my lad, hor let any of the blandishments of time allure you away from your heritage. What is that heritage? The best, strongest and most enduring bank in Christendom ; stable as the solid earth of which it forms a part, impervious to fire, wind or water. séfTCome weal or woe : stocks may fail, manu- facturers go to wreck, mercantile houses crash, and genéral commercial devastation follow, but there still stands the farm as steadily as ever, and waiting to return with manifold interest any kindnesses and atten- tion bestowed upon it. ‘** There’s no money,” say you? Whatis there money in? The professions? For every professional man reaching a compe- tence, ninety can barely live, my boy ; and for ninety bare livers there are nine hin- dred and ninety (preachers alone perhaps excepted)” who cannot earn three square meals a day and pay forthem. The coun- ty, the civilized world, is overstocked, saturated, surfeited with the professions, my boy, They are more than a drug, they are a bane upon the market. ‘JYou would be a teacher /’ Worse and w There are scores and scores of teachers now for each school to be taught, and the supply continues to increase rather than diminish the proportion. ‘**‘A merchant?’ No bet- ter. Read Bradstreet’s failure reports from day to day and week to week, and you will be cured. ‘* Oh, but you wouldn’t fail ?” Wouldn’t, eh? Thatis tantamount to saying you are blessed with superior brains to those of the average business man-—and there is just where you make your mistake. ** We're a’ Jock Tamson’s bairns ” my boy. With extremely rare exceptions human talents are pretty evenly distributed. And anyway, no amount of brain-power can un- naturalize nature by filling that which is already full. ‘*‘You would like to be a mechanic.” Well, there may be something in that aspiration, though, mind you, not very much comparatively. Noman under the blue canopy is more entitled to respect and a good living than the industrious mechanic. But good livings do not neces- sarily follow respect. On the contrary, there is frequently an abundance of the one without any appreciable quantity of the}ther —particularly in times of general depres- sion. At all events I fancy you will meet with but very few tradesmen in your ex- perience who would not willingly exchange places with you. No, my boy, take your experienced uncle's adyice. Stick to the farm. Cherish it, cultivate and prize it as amongst the most beneficient gifts the Alj- mighty has bestowed on mankind. Taken all in all, for the development of a pure and independent mind in a_ healthy body, least comfort if not competence in this life, there is nothing like the farm. Roumania. The firm tone maintained by king Charles of Roumania towards the factious oppon- ents of his Government will have a good effect. There is reason to believe that Russian intrigue had its share in promot- ing the demonstration that was to take place on the 1st inst., and had the authori- ties permitted it they would have been simply encouraging foreign aggression. Naturally the Austro-Roumanian alliance has been a sharp rebuff to Russian agents and sympathizers, The attempt to stir up popular feeling against the King and his ministry was a proceeding for which there was already precedent in Bulgaria. The King deserves credit for promptly setting his foot on any such manceuvres. He re- fused even to discuss the situation with the Oppcsition leaders so long as the least sign of disorder was visible. The -members of the chamber who had taken part in the late riots were arrested. The Oppos.tion, consequently, moved a vote of censure | against the Government and appointed ‘Sunday, the Ist inst., for a great indig- ‘nation meeting. But the censure was re- ‘jected by 87 to 36 and the meeting did not take place, Apvice To Morners.— Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup shoald always be used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little ee a a it —- natural quiet sleep by relieving the chi rom pain; and the little cherub awakes as ‘“‘bright asa button.” It is very pleasant w taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all in, relieves wind, regulates bowels, and s the best known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teething or other |causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be ee and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and takeno other kind mar 8 eod & wky ~~. -— Tea at Mowtacve.—Please bear in mind that on the 27th of June next the Tea of the | season will be held at Montague, in aid of the Methodist Church, which it is expected will then be well on towards completion. Notices of special attractions to the Tea will = ‘in the papers in due time, lin—mch15 pis Be a aes 2 eee | rae. § em we emenee