ae > & i ? ; The Daly Examiner a Serate Read, LF: , Puoushing Vovapany : : _—" pe . ue a RATES Tien a Vear 4.00 vereedees 2.99 fERM3 : Four Dollars a Year Gane «, : = ) ¥ pa Canada or the - INER It sm d the Ll? v we pr i WEECLY EXAM ‘ st VOL 36. ‘loom lespondency and despair, vy to the sunshine of hepe, d health, upon taking i Sarsaparilla, because gives e aad vitality to the blood, rh that lmparts eth, Vigor rev tot W i | i this letter: i ar sapa lla } I wonderfully, i sickness to health, gloom to scun- ~ ca scribe what I suf- f s deathly sick, had sick head- aches ev y few days and those terrible tired espondent feelings, with beart troubles se that I could net go up and unshine stairs without clasping my hand : over y heart and resting. In fact, it st take my breath away. I suf- fered so I did not care to live, yet I had t live for. There is no pleasure in life if prived of health, for life becom« a ! Hood's Sarsapariila does far more than advertised. After taking one t it is sufficient to recommend Mrs. J. E. Smrru, Beloit, lowa. Hood’ Sarsaparilla Ist li druggists. $1. Pre pare by C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass Hsod’s Pills tess. heyiache. 2s cents Cc. -~2c AB FOR DECEMBER, isve New Moon, 4th day, lb. 38.6m. p. m First Quar, Lith day, 8h. 16.9m. p. m ®all Moon, 19th day, llh. 52.9m., p. m La*t yaarter, 27th day, Th. 56.2m. a.m. | Dav of Week | 5" Sun | High viees | sets water Secrets ta i (hmijh m aft t;} Taesday 7TH I4 Ol UT aS 2 | Wednesday i | 19] 8 5i 3 | fharsday 3k | 3 | 9 44 4} Friday 2 | 9; 10 33 5 | Saturday 33 | 9 ll 21 & | Sunday } 4 x morn 7! Monday 3S | ee 5; Pneaday } 6 8; 0 49 ${ Wednesday | 37 8} 131 cet Tharsday 33 Si: a9 tL} Friday 39 8 2 56 12 } Satorday 40 8 | 3 BF {2 | Sunday ' 4l | 8 4 4; 41: Monday i 42 8 5 46 5 j Tuesday i @& | 9 } 6 Sh) 16 i Wed esday 4° 9 76 17} Thursday 44 9} 8 35 18 Friday ; 45 i 9; 9.19 If | Saturday : i Mi ws 20 i Sunday 46 10 j 10 4 21 | Monday . ai 2 ae 2) Pwesday | tt BWiek 3 $3; Weduesday | 47; 13] 0 41 24) Thursday 48} 13 1 ig 26 | Friday .. et ms Ss 26 be r ay j 43; 14 2 45 27 Sunday | 48! 15] 3 40 48 | Monday | a3] 15) 460 29 1 la 49} 4; 614 2; W -~ 0 Bae 31 Tiursday 49 13} 8 38 P. E. island Railway The January number of the D lineater 18 Calle tHE DELINEATOR, ithe Winter Holiday Number, and ™ ule CHARLOTTETOWN GOSS : DONT CET JHALOUS If we turn out the best clothes in the city; we would not be satisfled with turning + 4a P. thoee whe» bave not yet choie of their holiday gifts will find } }pful its record of what the shops have to olkr in this ,as well as the mview of new , : b oks, calendars and juvenil terature / suitable for presentat on Withthe new year is begun a feature of person: | interest () to women i the series of “Talks Ur Beauty,” by Dr. Grace Peckham Murrey, \ a recoznized anthortv on thie sul ject ! | F . . so ] Mrs. Mery Cadwalader Jones gives a com () Oul cutter IS { 1€ prehensive glance at ‘ Social Lifsin An er a,” treat neg of the t gciths. Alt the Bavou, by T. C. deLeon, is as t «te ; . . . pear eee See, Sue oe? you want; he can fit you. | writers, and the division of the inceme_ is TA ia suggestive consideration of how to make \ both ends meet firancially. Mrs. A. B. } | ( Longstreet furni-hesareadable biograc tical Q / sketch of Miss Stimson, the roted Maire! mill-owner and Jumbcr dealer. In her} Sf) rehearsal of the six important days in a i } woman's life, Maud C. Murrav- Miller des- X Zl erites the debat in society. Evma Hay-) 74) Out any other | ind. wood tei/s how to embroider fancy screens, { “ . and :here is an article on the Mountellick | | TePrens { . Q work now so P ypular M ra. Witherspoon’s 9 OV C I € oat I omus, will als« tattirg; mmu lishing Rich mo per year Some lamps a u st Siow’. Januery tea-table chat, Mr garden‘and the pages devo'’ed to seasonab'e crocke ry will all be to this sterling magazine for ay & present to be appreciate ocal az St bseription price of the Delineator, $1.00 crockery store.—W. P. Colwill. At the Queen Street Jeweiry Rings, Broocnes, Watches Bracelets, Gents’ Chains. Received last night, will be sold at speci! prices G. PL HUTCHESON, fhe First of 1° “eat Prizes, 2° < --«8' Bicycle, , , $ 1,000 6 Second ' a cold Watch : . . . 625 12 Total given during year 1897, $19,500 WR V ick *a tlower funod entertaiinng, as » the usual departments of knitting lace~making, ete. A subec ription “ar best will} nications to The Delineator company, of Toronto, Ltd., nd Street, Weet, Toronto, or nt for the Butterick Pa‘terns.! \ . or 15 cents per single copy. ‘ “ ads, very nice parlor and hanging re being sold cheap atthe cheap decl2 dw 2w Bring Store. Ladies’ and ntil Xmas Competitions eee tty eatineed one”) «0. commence Januar, ist, 1897, 695!" Bees | GIVEN FREE ,OC |v > ~watonEs | EACH MONTH pa. = FOR Sunlight APPERS «ad Watches given each month. . ~~ 4,625 7 On and after MONDAY, lth Decernber,1396 th traius of this Railway will run daily Suaaays exces ted) as follows .— T s Trains In- Wal STATIONS, ward. Read wi. up. P 4 : M.j~ M 810 7 ricttet 3 10)20 10 32) 7 Royalty | ion.| 2 3, 9 BO 417 & Nos Wi ure 2 OA! 9 431 8 17).. Hunter River 1 49) 8 5! 6%: & 32 bra an 115 817 61 i Emera! 1 07) 8 OS 6 27 & 15). Freetown i2 53] 7 54 5 47 % 36) Kensington .. 12 33) 7 3 G 2) WO\Ar. | ) Ly 12 00} 7 OO S’sSide 1A. M 12 DiLy | } Ar./10 30) er Mi De snes iv 10 1 S7|_. Welling 9 47 = I wet BE + coeces 0 OD) st O'Leary & 00) 81. . Bloo 7 31] 4 Alberton. ... «++. 6 So) 1 I G Ot M M > M.A. BM 2: i 2 i , 5 4010 & ah) 7 | 5 210 i $23 5 2-2-1 4471020) 8 5 “ Tat 7 Ly 1 lS 9 05' 419 # sic FA Ate 5 i M ceas 32 8 17 6 12 St. Peters ..eses 2 SS 7 48 6 a7 iv 5 I v onasee 2 03| 7 08 6H 2 . 1 24 6 &) A. M.\P. M i | it. Stewart 8 DO! 8 DO} >2 gan 7 35) 7 3 t wh 7 Wo 7 10 A. M.P. M. \ M. D I i 7w { [ravers 7 0 ~_ — —.. : = — = Traice are run oy Kasvern Standard Time & McDONALD D. POTTINGER, Saperintendent Geu Mar Govt. Rys, Chariottetown Moncton, N BR Baiwiy Om Dee's 1886 Special Discounts UNTIL XMAS Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Bee our prices in Watches fore purchasing; they are , low in price, and quality guar- Anteed. W. fh. TANTON. JEWELER. Great George St. be able to sell this season, we make this genuine offer to pose of them. seldom get an apportunity like this to retail. We are no am tion to do as as any within the cutters and workmen to do it. in winter Overcoats. Notwithstanding this we have s over $20 than we have under $20. tailors are the cheapest. HOW TO OBTAIN THEM. RULES. Competitors te save a5 man “Sunlight” 1. Every month during 1597, tn each of thes roup ruppers as they can collect. Cut off | districts, prizes will be awarded as foliows : the top portion of each wrap- ———————- The 2 competitors who send in the har- r—-that portion containi gest numbers of coupens from the he ading “SUNLIG “ie Seno TH Toe PoRTION| aistrict in which they reside, will each soar.” hese (called “Cou- receive, at winzer’s option, alady's or gent 8 pons”) are to be seni enc | Stearns’ Bieyeie, values $100, with asheet of paper on The $ competitors who send in the mext the competitor has written his SUPA jargest wumbers cf coupons from er hertull name @ ad < een f/ | the district in wii b they reside, willench and the nvmber of Coupons | ’ receive, at winner's option ladys oF sentin dl, to Messrs. as Watch, vel a y > re compeusicss =" e la: ores to. marked on no Wen ” day ofeach month during ar Coupons tal Wre ee received too for one month’s compe orner), With the NUMBER of the DIS- | tition will be pot into the next, Fulcr Competitor lives in. | 3. Competitors who obtain wrappers from unsold soap Se —_—__—_———— | in dealer's stock will be disqualified. Employees of Messrs. uO. OF we NAME OF DISTEICT | Lever Brothers, Ltd., and their families, are debarred from . tun Weatera Ontario, consisting of Counties | ——r Printed List of winners tn competitor's district will 1 York, Simcoe & ai! Counties W. and 5. of these | be forwarded to competitors 21 days after each competition ‘un Ontario, consisting of Counties On- | closes. i ' : | 5, Messrs. Lever Brothers, Ltd., will endeavor te award : taste, Demet 6 mn 5... the prizes fairly to the best of their ability and judgment, 3 but it is understood that all who compete agree to ace | Province of New Brunswick the award of Messrs. Lever Brothers, Ltd., as final, _ Ezpvince § 2 Nova Scotinand Prince | LEVER BROS., Ud., 23 Scott St., Toronto ward Island he Bicycles are the celobrated Stearns’, manuf d by E. C. Stearns & Co., has compicte attachments leer of Que bee Syracuse, K.Y.. 2 ferentee Dak. Each wheel is ¢ 9 Strike You Dozens of Ulsters and Overcoits at INVOICE PRICE, with cost of selling added. goods than we may . dis- We mean to sel! exactly us we advertise. You buy at actual cost to As we have more of this Jin» of We don’t consider it necessary to be continually harp ing at {he good quality of work done in our Tailoring Department ateurs, but arefconfident that we are in a pesi- High-class Work : : " eS a radius of a thousand miles ef us. We have Extra good value given D. A Bruce Advertisers ! fhe home circulation is the most valuable ter advertisers. Tur EXAMINER reaches the humer of our citizens every evening. Tliat accounts for our large advertising patronage. JHE EXAMINER PUB. COMPANY, | | | Mr. 4 fred C. | Bat sfactory. | ty ihe pupils during the prizes for the younger ones, Single Oopies Two Cents Book and» ... 00) Printing | We have fiis‘-class facilitie. for turning out the best qual- ity of Job Printing, from a Visiting card to tne largest ‘display work. best in the city; that’s his fault, not ours. don’t fit you, don’t get mad about it, come to Mir. McDonald and You cau have the same ki: d if yon call and order Yot Fair to the Pablie —It would not be fair to the we did not blow about our cutter and workmen, when we are sure we We want the iahabitants if P.E.' to know it. tomers eve: y day, Garments Already Delisvered Have done more to advertise our high class tailoring department than all our GOOD GoopdDs good customers. We are We keep the finest goods we can get How is This —We sell the best $15 and $16 suits on top of this earth. old more suits and overcoats in the ~ Good goods are the cheapest, Cheap tailors are the dearest. oolen Company High Olass Tailors and Gents’ Furnishers, Tf your clothes ~ get just what ’ a suit of public if have the getting nsw cus- past year Good IL LLSROROUGH DAIRYING COMPANY, \ Splendid Showing For Last Year—Pleased With fhele Cheese Maker, Da'rying has Hillsbovouzh Compan? ist had a general statement printed giyiog creditable aumim ity of the past. season's work, which is a very creditable statement aide t j . nt Bue am yunt of milk received during the p was I,] eas 33.155 Iba. The amount of heace manufactared was 111,751 Ibs. The syst of manufacture per Ib was 1 67 cents. Che average price realized per Ib was 9.09 vente. The average price paid for milk was 71 3f cents per hundred !ks, Tue cheese maker employed Curing tae acason was Mr. Frater Morrowe Al- though a young man, he has proved to be a remarkable good cheese maker, and has y the company entire satisfaction. The neatness an fac - tory throughout the season, may have been equalied by a few cheese makers onthe [-land, but cert | vwiven { order maintained in the ainly excelled by nove. f the company also are 15 The build- ne icances ¢ a very sati-faciory cond:t on. ing aud cheese plant are entirely free of lebt. It is proposed to put In a butter plant at av early date, probably in the spring, in time to n rke the patrens sum mer bu.ter before the cheese season begins $$ STANHOPE SCHOOL EXAMINATION. The semi-annual examination of Stan- hope Fchoo was held on Wednesda. the 23rd inst., in the presence of a goodly punber of parents and visitors; sud, thanks tothe kindness and genero-ity of Mr. and Mrs. George Longworth, it proved quite an interesting event. The examination was conducted by the teacher. Miss Bessie L. Carr, as-isted by Lawson and 5, 0 ed very Yhe marked progress niaw.e past year under tie efficient management cf the present t-acber was remarked upon by more than o .e of the visitors. The distribution of prizes presented by Mr. and Mrs. Longworth was especially intere-t xg to the pupils. <A large num‘er of very valuable prizes was given for the der § berides a host of smaller None were uy the entertain- Oars, torgotton and, to wind | ment,ali went home happy. A bucket of candy, the aif «ft Mise loos th, was distributed among the children, A unant- | mous vote of thanks was tendered to Mr. and Mrs. Longworth and Miss Longworth, for their kindness in making this Xs as one of the happiest in the «Xperience of the school. The teacher wishes us to convey @1 @x— | pression of h rgra‘itude fr the beautifal present sent by Mis. Longworth, in k ndly rememb a.ce cf berself on the same ccasion. Avex MeLaveniin Brece Leirca ° +? ¢ Trustees. H. J. Lisle, representing Ganong Bros., 5. ow phep, pee thee ag * Chase’s Ointment cured me a very stubborn case of eee Eczema. everything advertised, several physicians’ pre- scriptions without manent relief. Know several cases of Itching Piles it has cured.” BrapForp, Jury 4,1394. —I consider Dr. Chase's ointment a God-send to auyone suffering from piles, itehing serotum or any itching skin ean its soothing effectsare feit from first cation.—J NO. Keaoas. A SENSATIONAL CRIME. Worthy of the Pen of a Balzacor4’ Dickens, A Paris correspondent writes: The murder of the Baroness de Valley prem- ises to bo one of the most sensational crimes of the year, not so much from the fact of the lady having been murdered for the purposes of robbery as because of the extraordinary life she had led, a de- scription of which would be worthy of the pen of a Balzac ora Dickens. I was enabied to visit hor apartment in the Rue de Penthievre in company with the police. It consisted of foursmali rooms looking on to a courtyard. In every room the utmost disorder reigned. Heaps of old and filthy rags were strewn about amidst objects of art of real value; upon the walls were pictures painted hy masters, amongst them one of the victim in bali dress at theage of twenty, which shows that she must have beon a most beautiful woman, Upon enquiring, I was enabled to learn the following details: She had a YE=FaB ABSOLUTELY PURE fortune of about 20,000 francs a year, besides being owner of a chateau in Poi- tou and a villa at Colombes, and yet she was so avaricious that she did not keep a regular servant and neyer paid more than £10 a yearrental. Like most misers, she wa; very distrustful, and would do anything in order to save a few frances, It was thus she had come into relations with a number of people of doubtful character, who acted as intermediaries in her money lending business. It has been discovered that a plan had already been laid to assassinate her by some acrubats, who were arrested some time ago for drunkenness and disorderly conduct at a fair, and upon them was found a plan of the Barouess de Valley's Baking Powder es : —— She haa cnangea her wpattment six times in eight years, never taking one with a higher rental than that in which she died. Each time she changed her lodgings her furniture was removed by commissionaires on trucks, to save the expense of an ordinary removal yan. Notwithstanding her avarice, the bar- oness was sometimes duped, Some months ago one of her clients borrowed a necklace of pearls on the pretence of showing it to a jeweler who would give her a price for It. When it was re- turned unsold the majority of the pearls had been replaced by false ones. The Age of Perfection. The costume of the woman cyclist remains the unsolved problem of society and trade. Fortune, 1f not fame, awaits the designer of a garb that will insure safety, while it preserves the modesty and grace with which tradition still hap- pily enshrines the fairest of creation. The bicycle academies and the boule- vards furnish lamentable revelations of ISLAND, WEDNESDAY,: DECEMBER 30, (396. | Prices low. | Work promptly done. 2 Call and see us. NO 15 1 A THE GREAT BUSTARD. Than Fifty Years. the level counties From the reign of Henry VIII. repeste head of game in the statute of year of the reign of William IV., whic codified and reformed the laws relatin to gume. The close shooting was and is from the March to the first of September. “But th native bustard is now extinct in land, of the bustard are, firstly, the sport the This largest of European birds, weighin as much as thirty pounds, could n closely crepped plains of England, Women’s Ways, “Baye you registered?’' was overheard inquiring of another. ‘Registered what?’ ‘‘ Registered to sote.’’ “*No, I have not."’ ‘But aren’t you going to?’’ “No, Tam not,’’ “‘Don’t you intend to vote?’’ **What can I vote for?’’ ‘School officers, and so on,’’ said gentle chirper. “T think it is a privilege that we wom en have something to say matters. "’ “T don’t. «1 don’t call any sop a privil house and kept me wut of all the others i warted to vote. votes, from the rearing of chiidren. ing to eat anybody else’s apple core? and prostrate himself before me. I vote Mr. Man wili bring me an unre- stricted ballot on a salver and say with his best bow, ‘Madame, will you the favor to go the polls with us?’’ “O, my dear, he'll never do it,’’ sae let him keep his ballot to him- ce we ‘*But there are more issues than per- sonal feeling at stake. Of courses those who are interested in public affairs would like to be treated handsomely—’’ “If there is one thing the American woman has learned, it is to make men treat her handsomely. Our men are the best trained in the world--the loveliest, the most adurable—really the most self- sacrificing. But in order to keep them so we must stay off what they in their stu- pidity consider their own ground. Let them claim it; we own them, Do you think I am going to come down in the esteem of these fellows we have taken so much pains to subdue by trying to run a little side show to their big circus elec- tion? Decidediy no, madame. They are welcome to their ballot. But I shall be sorry far them after we get through with them if they don’t vote to suit us.’’ ‘The common person, having this talk forced on his ears, meditated about the perverseness of women and their inabil- ity to appreciate that opening wedge called a concession. Though, of course, we have the best trained women tn the world—the love- liest, the most adorable—really the most self-sacrificing. What is Life? Wi.at is life? A subject inexhaus- tiLie. We come into life, not of our own choice, but by the will of the Almighty, Creator of all life. We look upon the foliage which appears with the warm rays of sunshine in the spring of the year; and then, in turn, when shivering blasts of winter come, all that has been life withers and dies to all external appearances. But, is that life extinct? No, not dead—-but slumbering, cared for by the Ruler of the Universe. So would I liken the human life tothat of the slumbering foliage. We live and for a purpose; we die and for a purpose. Man, the the ineffectiveness of necessity or art to devise to date a costume befitting wheel and rider. To such extremes has individ- ual fancy violated good taste and com- mon decency that a woman becomingly attired rarely fails to attract attentiun. Indeed, so flagrant has become the abuse cf bicycle toilettes that many sensi- tive, self-respecting women have been driven from the public thoroughfare and forced to forego the pleasure altogether. Exclusive society women are now rarely found an a wheel save in the suburbs. Their costume has little in common with those met on the bonlevards.—New York Commercial Advertiser. coshiinteitinduentntintsiateiiateiitelpatianntth Science’s Explanation of Moonlight’ ‘The moon is a mirror which reflects apartment. o° > Baroness de Valley was the daughter the sunlight to = aon am, Ww. of M. de Montbel, who was Minister j Quimpy in Ladies’ Home Journal. “An under the Restoration, She was born in 1814, and the events of her life had filled a page of history, She was consid- ered one of the most beautiful women of the court of Louis Philippe, an excellent examination of moonlight with the spectrescope shows, of course, the same spectrum as that of sunlight. The qual- ity of the reflection is indicated in the announcement that it would take no fewer than six hundred and eighteen musician, and had a remarkable voice. she was married ence, hut became a widow after six months. She ha‘ twins, who died very young. It may have been these early troubles which led her to live apart from her relatives and in the man- ner I have described. During the bombardment and siege of © Tangiers she was charged by the Prince de Joinville with a mission to the grand vizier of Morocco, on account affectionate relations she had with the wife of the African Minister. It seems that the signing of peace, or at least the basis of that signing, was the result of that interview. When only sixteen years old she started & paper, in connection with Georges Sand, called La Violette. It is related of herthatin 1870, whilst at Wiesbaden, » Prussian officer proposed a toast to celebrate the fall of Metz. The baroness, who was present, indignant at the insult to her country, smacked the officer's face. She was related to the families of La- rochefoucauld-Mortemart, the Marchion- exs de Courcy ana Dr. Favreau. The concierge told me that yesterday morning she went out as her breakfast, accompanied by her two dogs, her only friends, While she was atsent two men of doubtful asnect called to ask for her. Being informed of her absence they left, to retarn after 10 o'clock. They were seen to leave the house about 11. This did not cause much surprise, on account of the strange class of visitora daily received by the baroness, About the same moment a coachman, who was washing his carriage in a courtyard, heard the baroness’ two dogs howling furiously, but he did not pay particular attention to the fact, as it was of common occurrence, ‘These two men aro supposed to have been the mar- derers. Her most frequent visitor was a young man named Charles Laguenie, whom she had to a certain extent taken under her protection, He was supposed to be the son of one of, her former servants. of the ; usual to buy. thousand full moons to supply to us an amount of light equal to that which we get from the sun, and there is only sky room for, say, seventy-five thousand of i them, Some heat comes from the moon, but ordinary methods will not measure it. However, it is calculated that is is about one eighty thousandth of the amount which the sun supplies to us. The inclination of the moon's orbit to the horizon accounts for the ‘‘Harves?’’ and the ‘‘Hunter's’’ moon, which occur when the tipping is slightest, thus per- mitting the moon to rise about the same time for several successive evenings. The moon often appears much enlarged when on the horizon, but this is caused by the refractive feature of the alr about the horizon and the natural tendency to com- pare it with terrestrial objects.”’ What Wears the Brain. The brain is capable of a great deal of continuous labor in so far as its exercise is that of mere construction—in other words, so ‘ong asthe work it does is original. For in that way the brain is working freely, in full accord with its own fancy, as it were, and therefore is not likely to tire soon. Take as a corres- ponding illustration the use of the voice. So long as it is natural, and not forced | by artificialities, it may be called upon for hours together, simply because it is used naturally. Original work of the brain is natural work, and the parallel heds true here. When, however, one is reproducing acquired knowledge, the ; brain ts put to an extra strain, having not merely to be exercised in construc- tive work, which is its ordinary func- tion, but also having to traverse through the memory, and make a selestion of the knowledge stored in the brain. JYERVOUS Troup?2s are due wo impoverished bleod, Hood's Sar- saparilla is the One True Blood Purifier and NERVE TONIC. superior of all that has life, endowed with all our ever-loving God can give to the human life, that which we may wish for, unless it be a keener sight that we may penetrate.the clouds and the heavens, that we might see beyond the scope of our present comprehensions. It would be needless to add, that would bring about a chaos anwelcomed, indeed. Therefore, we are not content to live, but to live is not allthat we were intended for There is a wide tield in which to make life what we live for. We see the in- fant inthe mother’s arms fondled with all the love and care that only a mothe can give, that the little one may live te become useful member of the com- munity and a comfort tothe parent; and yet, without a moment's warning, the innocent babe, too young to have sinned, withers and dies, like the foli- age, gone back to mother earth again— and this we call life. We see the young just entering upon or 50 a their career in life, with such bright prospects; some wandering far from the path which they might have trod with honor -a life’s long sorrow to the loving parents. This, we call life, but it must be said, without living. Then, again, there are those who seem never to wander from the right path. with success just promise of a long and useful life, a benefactor to their feilow-beings; is called life. suddenly begins t asthough it were but a reed, picture of an ideal life. whose very presence seems to illumin stowing beneficence with hand. doing.—D. W. D. in every part of the world. cent? a bottle. Its value Be sure an It Has Been Extinct in England for More The great bustard formerly haunted all | of England, and was | particularly common on Salisbury plain. measures were passed in order to protect | it; and it is expressly included under the | the first season for bustard first of Eng The last was killed at Swaffham, in Norfolk, in 1838. Any that have been shot since have been merely casual visit- ors, probably coming from the plains ol Saxony. The causes of the disappearance | afforded, for they were hunted with grey- hounds as well as shot; secondly, the in- crease in the amount of culitivated land. longer find any sufficient support on the one citizen the in such ege. If my husand inverted Bluebeard's plan and gave me one little room in the I shouldn’t cackle very loud about my privileges. I shouldn't let a man know I merely reserve the right of censorship over him while he lt infuriates me to see women rushing to the polls to deposit ballots on school matters, as if they hadn't brains enough to comprehend anything apart Am I go- Do I want to chew his gum while he rests his jaws? Let him get down on all fours When do us within their grasp, the when. at last, that little spark which flicker, and goes out, like a stripling of a tree snapped in twain by the winds, The aged parent weeps, and we wonder, what is life? when all that we love is taken from us and returned to earth again. Then, in more somber thoughts, we draw upon our imagination the They whe bring sunshine into every home and ate the darkness of the unfortunate by seeking the careworn and needy, be- a liberal Happy are they in their good An Orp Axp Weit Tried Remepy.— | ° Mis. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has been | thie> weeks, and h iving also ~_ E ‘Examiner Publising Comp:n- PAVIA p ASE ; (™ 2 SRB P, pm ee ~ sat biné ' Poe Uy Rem ENCLISH Al ST CYCON Possesses the H sim . Vistinctive DELICACY C= TLAVc: L Lda yu she SUPERIORITY in QUALITY, CRATSIUE and to thy KERVO Asatart d' pape £ % i r Ar A S>Newins ae h a) e DYSPEPTIC. TRITIVE CUALITITS UNRIVALLED. La Quarter-Pound Tins unt Puctets onls. T2 v> CP Bere iw ’ : Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Lid., Liommopathic Chemists, London, Eroa land 254. 2 i c PP XRTrASrS aAsagryg , The stock we hav> left at Cost to Clear & Hel 4s 9 & 2 % * A & 4 % ” ® ? g % 0 8 a > 4 \ \ q é \ ° é \ $ s s s \ 6 \ 9 \ 7 \ ¢ & ‘4 ; & Wholesale and Pctail. DWHWMHMMBMEARMACMVLMEMM CME CM MWwAWAV MDL MMW ~= A crsesrazwrwrrwav4 Before Starting ona journey, lalways provide myself with a supply of Adams’ Tutti Frutti. I find ic keeps the digestion right, and with it I can enjoy travel by land and by sea. Sce that the trade mark name Tutti Prutt “ave coupous inside of wra pers for » Latest Books, Etc. 129 SOS 1 OSOSOSS FOSS VES TOOD Give the Baby Chance avo Mar tid J Cardine! Food a simple, scientific and highly nutritive prepa: ation fur infants, delicate children and invalids. KERFY WATSON 4 CO , Prormetrons, & " MONTREeL. © OS 9FOOOS9S9OO5OO0556 1 OH 9 The only food 3 that will build up a weak cons- tit: a‘ly bit surely is tion gradu- SOSOSOSHHSPOOO SOV SS 2 2 090009000 O070O08 0006 FRESH GROUND "= Coffee Coffee loses its aroma and strength very quickly after | being roasted and ground. In ‘order to give our customert the very best value, we have a Coffee Roaster fitted up on our prcmises, where we roass igreea Coffee every two or used for over fifty years by millions of the larges: mill in the city in mothers for their children while teething | with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all ; ain,cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Is p'eacant to the taste. Sold by Druggists Twenty~five is incalculable ask for Mrs, Winslow’s Sooth ing Syrup, and take no other kind 1 35 w |our store, we grind it every day as required for our trade. Try our 40c Mocha and Java B end; BEER & GOFF