CEN ae ALENDAK FOR JANUARY, 1895 First Quar it} lay, ‘95m, a m. Full Moo ith day, 2 75m a. m past Quar layoh 4 m. Pp. ™m. oe MM lay, i3.5m p. m i i S | Sun High Day 7 7 sets water ..- | ———— | —] — ! hon hm] morn 1|7 [749/418] 2 4 2 | We ay i 5 if 2 43 3/1 lay i9 20 3 26 4) Fr : 21 4 27 3| Sat Ly i 4) | 7 ° 4} 31S ; 8) 2 6 68 | Monda | 48] 2 “o 8 | ’ ; 48 2; 9 4 9} a + - Set 2 9 59 ie} 7 ; at 3 | 10 48 Lit { 30 li 36 21S 16 | 31 } atr’nlS 13 }3 | } | 0 59 14 | Monda | a) ee 1 48 15 | S| 35] 224 16 ‘ 44] 37 3 12 tT 17 44| 39] 414 i. ¥ : 40) 5 3i WIS ay 42 i} 6 47 26 | a isi 42 54 2) i 2¥ 4 43 | 8 4% 22 . i a 93 23 | ‘ } JJ | 45 10 15 24 | | asf 47] 10 47 25 | 1 7] 48] LL 2 26; 5S | 6 | 20 ll 53 2718 y ) ] | morn 28 | } ay lt 6 @ 26 29 i : 4 0 54 30 sday i a2 | 6 | 1 26 Phursday [7 30)457| 2 2 , 7 } ML DAY Tue Leapine DatLy NEWSPAPER op P. E. ISLAND, s issued every afternoon, from the office of the Examrver PusiisnHine Company, in the Loadon House Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCE) Owe Year $1.00 Bee POTD. 26660002 veccosccccocccsvesscees 2.00 THRE MONTHS... ....-- ee ceccwececccenecs 1.00 Gast WIGWTE. .ncccecccscvcccvccesepstaceesce 0.35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the U nited States ADVERTISING RATES For smal! advertisemente whieh are ordered for only one or two weeks the eharge is ch for the frst insertion, and { cenis per ir eents for each continuation. Rate cards are farnished on application at the office. Special contract prices at a reduced rate are quoted for advertisemeuts four inches in size or larger, which are to run for three months or longer. No special notices inserted unless paid for at the rate of 10 cents per line, and under no eircumstances will such paid notices appear in the local column. Ssecial discounts made on all advertise meats connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Pienics. ete. No notices will be inserted with he same Ualess the regular rate of 10 cents per ine is paid. That Tux Examiner is considered by our Merchants and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements public, is abundantly proved by the fact that in erder o accommodate Our suvertisers we have ‘«en compelled to enlarge the paper to its present size. v Examiner is for sale by the fol- THz Dar i is #92, Post Office, Charlotte town > Mal peque Road, - C. Paal, Lower Spring Park Road, - W.-M > fia, Grafton Street, ~ S, ‘deey. coc. Water and Prince St. 7 D. Carvospell, Priace Street, a Bazaee Store, Queea Street ste Geo. Carter & Co., Queen Street. wn S% Gray, News Stall, P. E. 1. Railway and on tie traing RJ Wood, upper Euston St. K K Brace, Cor, Euston and Hillsboro St. CU Henry, Gt. George St. Evans & Sun, Cor. of Prince and Richmond M.&T merside D. Sx utherl J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- ind, Souris. Hon, b. Gordon, Georgetown, DD. A. Egun, Mi. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton. A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge. — FESS t The Weekly Examiner ® issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. ft is made ap of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and is 3 first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and full of the latest news. The sudscription for Tae WeeKiy Exam; INER, post paid to any part of Canada or the United States, is ene doliar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for THe DaiLy EXAMINER. McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FOR 1895 Yol IV. Begins December, 1894 A splendidly illustrated life of NAPOLEON, of which will the gr SEVENTY-FIVE PORTRAITS of Napoleon, showing lim from youth to “at feature be death; ale» portraits of his family and contemporaries, and pictures of famous battlefi ; in all nearly 200 PICTURES. Begins in November and runs througy eight pumbers. The Right Napoleon Numbers, $1.00. TRUE DETECTIVE STORIES by authority from the archives of the Pinkerton PBetective Agency. lincoln and Pinkerton (Nov. 1894); the Molly Magmres; Allan Pinkerton’s Life; Stories of Capture of Train Rebbers, For- gers, tank robbers, ete. each complete suc, 12 inal. SHORT STORIES BY W. D. Howells, Rudyard Kipling Jonan Doyle, Clark Ruseell, Robert Barr, Octave Thanet, Bret Harte, Capt. King, Chandler Harris and many others. i NOTED CONTRIBUTORS. Robert Louis Stevenson, F. Marien Crawford, Archdeacon Farrar, Sir Robert Ball, Prof. Drummond, Archibald Forbes, Thomas Hardy. Clubbed with Taz Dairy Examiner at $ 4.60 per year S. S. McCLURE, Lrp., 30 Lafayette Place, i New York. © Ot Church School for Girls Edgehill, Windsor, N. &. The Lent Term of this Institution be gies on January 19, 1895. For Calendar and forms of admission * pply to DR. HIND, Windsor. Edgehill, Windsor, Dec. 20, °94—1Lm eod NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, &ce. The subscriber is now prepared to meke Surveys of Land, run Boundary and Division ase, rele —. ete.; also, Mechank al aad Architectural Drawings, Plans, Speci fi- cations and Estimates. . - J, P. NICHOLSON, Land Sa ARMSTRONG & CO., Mechanical Drawing, &c evening lessons in Mechanical and Indus- cations for Patents, Copying, Blue-print Dominion Coal Company, Ltd sole selling Agents keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coal ow hand to supply customers at lowest prices. Vear tr, ki ‘Ve iy TERMS : Four [Se,;, lla ‘ P. E. Island Railway ISM. the trains of this Railway will run daily Sundays exces ted) as follows .— Trains Inward. Read up Trains Outward Read down, \M Leave Arrive P ¥ FW cress .. Charlot'etown - wa 74 oe Royalty Janct on 21 $038 North Wiltshire 12 UF oc ccncedees Itunter River ae $48 Bratalbane 12 42 357 ..Emerald 12 910 Freetown ‘2m OD .caci ‘ Ken-ingtou nonvceuee lu (Ar Lv) 11:0 yw ) ( Summerside ) ¢ AM 25) éLwvs far 1630 ili .... Miscoucke.... bt bo 1 7 Wellington obama a7 219 nee ..Port Hill #09 t3i ; OP Leary ....2. Konvese TE Pa cdehbciaveres PEs once creennen Se SIE. obdineia bens eT ae . 6B 530.. -Tignisdh.... .. 600 PM AX PM AM 2h .. Charlottetown. ... 10 3 230.. Royalty Junection........... 0 10 Mk bb dedcoseces ee SN 9 37 $55 ‘ Ar; ‘ Ly 9 U5 ; Mount Stewart ! 4104 Ly} dAr$ 850 es dene .. Cardigan auscuen a ae 645 Georgetown 710 PM AM PM AM £0 ‘ Mount Stewart.... 3 57 a ies -»-Moreil = 8 5S De venes oo eee 6 Peter's wa ee .....Bear River .-7 #40 ‘ RTOS occas ..6 2 P M AM PM AM iw -+--Memmerelkd.... a? DD 1» . ape Traverse 7 30 PM AM Trains are run by Eastern Standard Time D. POTTINGER, Gon Mgr Can Govt Rallwars Moncton, N B. A. MCDONALD, Supevintendent, Charlottetown. dec26 Don't Be Blindly Led CLOTHING AND CLOTH WHEN YOU CAN GET THE Home-made Goods, Which cannot be approached for Durability or Cheapness, —AT THE— McKAY WOOLEN CO. Charlottetuwn, Noy. 26, 1894. Lippincott’s Magazine, 1sss. The special feature of LIPPINCOTT’S— A COMPLETE NOVEL in each issue, in addition to the usual Short Stories, Novelettes, Essays, Poems, etc., All combined, make it ene of the most de- sirable magazines now published. We avoid the objection held by so many readers to a continued story. During the coming year novels may be expected from Capt. King, Amelie Rives, Gertrude Atherton, Mrs. Stickney, Mrs. Alexander, Miss Train, (Author of “The Autobiography of a Professional Beauty”), and other well-known writers. Price, $3.00 per year. Single copy, 25c Send five 2-cent stamps for specimen copy LIPPINCOTT’S MAGAZINE PHILADELPHIA, PA. dec 7 50 YEARS For the last 50 years Cough Medicines have been coming in and dying out, but durirg all this time SHARP'S BALSAM OF HOREHOUND Never left the Front Rank for Curing CROUP, COUGHS AND COLDS. All Druggists and mest Grocerymen sell it. §@~ 25 cents a bottle. Proprietors, St. John, N-B, nov23—d : The undersigned is prepared to give trial Drawing; to make Plans and Specifi- ing and Draughting in general. L. W. MACDONALD, Land Surveyor and Draughtsman. Nov 21— The undersigned having been appointed in the Province of Prince Edward Island for the above Com- ny, are now prepared to issue orders for nd, Slack and Run of Mines, and will PEAKE BROS. & CO., ‘ Pownai Charlottetown, Aug. 25, Ishi—dy & wy Selling Agents. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Coal! prices. given entire satisfaction. ~o Ltd., in Cape Breton. PEAKE Charlottetown, January 5. 1895 -tf Coal! ¢C ——— FROM-—— — Hominion Coal Co's. Mines in C. B We have a large quantity of ROUND, RUN OF MINE and SLACK COAL, which we are selling at very lowest We have aold thousands of tons of the above COM- PANY'S MINES COAL during the past season, which has We sell our customers just the kind of Coal they require, which includes “Sydney” a and the other Mines belonging to the DOMINION COAL CO., Since we accepted the Agency for the above Company the public have got their Coal mnch cheaper than hereto- ore, and we wish to inform them that we do not handle Jogzins,” Kelly Cove or New Campbellton Mines Coal. The Coal we sell is GENUINE. tity of superior ANTHRACITE COAL. See BROS. & CO. We have also a quan- have made it such. agreeable. trade. Charlottetown, January 8, 1895~~eod & wky 1394. Our business for the year 1894 has been very satisfuctory, and we feel deeply indebted to our numerous ‘customers who To them we tender our sincere thanks, and trust that our treatment to them has been mutually 1895. As for 1895, we-will continue to buy our goods for spot eash, and will sell them cheaper than any other house in the Any person doubting these facts can have thcir doubts removed by calling at the store of WILLIAM GRANT & CO., QUEEN STREET. = and Misses’ Gaiters. Skating Boots, JUST RECEIVED! A nice cheap line of Men’s, Women’s Also, Fancy Slippers and Felt-lined Goods, Women’s and Misse WEEKS & WARREN. Charlottetown, January 9, 1895—m w f & wky Club Skates. yourself, Ch’town, Dec. 19, 1884—m w f For Christmas! Sets of Carvers, Game Carvers, Spoons, Dessert and Table Cutlery, Silver Knives and Forks, Razors, Razor Strops, English Pen and Jack Knives, Scissors in cases and by the pair, Christy’s Carving Knives, Bread, Cake and Paring Knives, Children’s Sets, Peerless Lamp Stoves, Table Mats, Fire Sets, Chopping Bowls and Knives, Fancy Coal Vases, Coai Hods at 25c., Apple Corers and Slicers, Wringers, Sleigh Bells, Granite Ware, and last, but not least, Acme Don’t you think that there is something in the list that would make Xmas very happy to someone besides Just try and we can do the right thing for you D. MW. RICHARDS & CO., The Boys who Please the People. Coal! Coal |! Supply of Coal in, NOW reduced prices. Winter has set in, and if you have not your Winter IS THE TINE! as Town and Country alike are taking advantage of our PEAKE Charlottetown, December 12, 1894. BROS. & CO. Hubs, Shafts, American Hickory. wholesale lots, Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—tf Charlottetown, Dee, 21, 1894—1n fri Sleigh Runners, CARRIAGE STO! NE ee ee ee RECEIVING TO-DAY—Spokes, Rims, Dashers, i Backs. A splendid lot of Woodwork andi Special low prices in R. B. NORTON & CO., CITY H ARDWARK STORE. NEW SERIES : ~~ HARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1895. PHYSICAL CULTURE, ~ THE HANDSOMEST MAN) ALIVE WRITES ON THE SUBJECTs ~ Prof. J, M. Laflin, Who is as Described Above, and Whe Took the Prise for Masculine Beauty at the International at Vienna, Gives His Rules Parents do not devote enough attention to the physical development of their child- ren. Teachers neglect the education of the bodies of their pupils. I «lo not believe that a healthy mind can so with an unhealthy bedy, and I main- tain that the mind of a person with a healthy bedy must of necessity be a strong and a vigorous one. Most of the ilis of the body can be traced back to the lack of free and inteHigent physical ed» cation in childhood. I often think, knowing as I do what can be done with proper care, what a stupen- dous improvement could be made in the general health in one generation. The average man would be taller and more robust, capable of more work and of greater eujoyment, than the average man of the present day. The average woman would be stronger and more beautiful than the average woman of to-day, and both men znd women would live longer. That this can be easily be accomplished I am convinced. I would have agymnasium in every pub- lic school in the city. I would make it one of the requirements of attendance at the public schools that every pupil should once er twice every day gothrough a gymnastic exercise, however brief. It is not desired to make a race of pugil- ists, but it is desired to make a race of healthy men and women, which the chil- dren now in the publie schools will not grow upinto. Whatis needed for grow- ing children is such simple exercise as will every day bring into play every muscle in the body. Without exercise some muscles lie dor- mant, They never develop. Without ex- ercise for all of the body the digestion is impaired, the circulation of the blood is weakened, the quality of the blood is de- tericrated and the foundations are laid for ultimate chronic disease, which must come sooner or later. It must not be supposed that what I here propose would add any great burden to the expense of public school maintenance or require the erection of any new build- ings. The public school buildings now in existence are Quite sufficient for the pur- pose. All it would be necessary to do would be to set apart in every public school a large room to be used as a gymnasium. No ela- borate equipment of gymnastic appliances would be necessary. A few hundreds of doilars of expense would suffice to fit up a public school with horizontal bars, rings, trapezes, Indian clubs, rowing machines, boxing gloves, ete, A bare floor is better than a carpeted apartment and blank walis better than walls elaborately panelled. In a good- sized room of this kind hundreds of public school pupils could take exercise at one time. Where the schools are crowded the ¢.asses could succeed each other, and thus the gymnasium would bein yse at every hour of the day. The teachers would find this the most popular of all the attractions of the schools. The pupils would look forward to their gymnastic exercise. It would teack them how to play. It would teach them the use of their bodies. It would teach them to respect their bodies and to sutive to excel in feats of agility and strength, thus leading them to love out- door games and to feel at home in all hinds of play. For it must be remembered that it is as natural for a child to want to play as it is fora kitten. Nature instils this into each for the distinct purpose of exercising every muscle ata time when the muscles are growing, and the child that gets a chance to play freely in the open’ air all day has an enormous advantage at the very com- mencement of life. Another duty of the public schools should be to teach every pupil to lear how to swim. It is just as important that a man know how to swim as how to earn a living, and even more so, for in the one case he must rely absolutely upon himself when the time comes, It is a very easy thing to teach children of the proper age how to swim. During t'.o past summer I taught a couple of lit- tic girls how to swim in less than an hour. A swimming tank should be a necessary part ofevery public school gymnasium, and it could be fitted up at very little expense. uot acguired this easy accomplishment, which, unlike all other accomplishments, is never forgotten. They may forget what they learnfout of the books, but they can never forget how to swim. One of the advantages of children know- ing how to swim is this, that it induces them to take exercise in the water. Boys who cunnct swim, and there are thousands of them, are careful about going into the water. The consequence is that they lose the inestimable advantages derived from this most exhilarating and body-building sport. I would also have every child in the pub- lic schools taught to know what the human bey is like, andthe functions of the dif- ferent parts. They should know every muscle and how to exercise it. They should know what are the proper and im- proper things to put into the stomach,how the lungs work, and the ill-vffects of to- bacco, the effects of alcohol on the system and the necessity for pure air in the mak- ng of pure blood. These are simple ques- ions in anatomy and the science of health what would not take halfan hour a week rom the time devoted to other studies in the public schools, where now the mind is feveloped at the expense of the body. I] believe that children taking constant exercise every day, who know how to fol- low the simple rules of bodily health, can learn more per hour than the unhealthy children now crowding our schools. Their minds are brighter and more alert, their memories more retentive, their reasoning fxeulties more sharply developed when the blood courses freely through their yeins than when it is sluggish asthe re- sult of indoor life without proper exercise for all the muscles. A healtby mind in a growing child islike a sponge, eager for knowledge at every pore. The dull and stupid children of whom we hear in every school are in near- ly every instance sickly. The healthy child is happy under all circumstances. It eats Welland sleeps well. Its body and mind expand together, the one stimulat- jung the other, One of the advantages of the kind of hysical education for children which I ‘ere suggest is that it teaches them how tu play. It induces them to seek outdoor gxercise and amusement. Many thou- gadis of children donot know how to play. € BLOOD is the source of health. Take Hood's Sarsaparilla to it pure and rich. Be sure to get HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. There may be rich fools, but poverty is no particular sign of »bilitv. Tocorrect a sour swmache, or cure & sick headache, Hawker’s liver pills are without an equal 100 pieces Flannellette es in stock, they have got to go, and so are going fast. The are the Best Value ever seen In this city —Prowse Bros. No child should be graduated who had | EMILE ZOLA. the Prince of Reabistic Fistion, Thus looks the masterof realism. Thie is the man who has produced more work, excited more comment, probed more morai anatomies, than any living author. Needing a strengthening stimulant, Zola drinks ««Vin Mariani,” of which he rays that “ it is the elixir of life, combating human de- U:lity,and giving vigor, health aud energy.” This is high praise, but it is consonant with what has been said about this great tonic-stimulant, by all the celebrities of the day. ‘ Vin Mariani” is the great nourisheri It strengthens the enfcebled constitution, makes the convalescent strong and well; ix very palatable, never produces constipa- tion, but rather aids dig: stion and assimila- tion. If yousend your name to Lawrenee A. Wilson & Co, Montreal, you will receive a littlealbum of portraits of celebrated people, and you will thus Jearn something, not merely of the celebrated coca stimn- lant, but of the great people who drink it. BRANDOLATRY AND LOVERS OF LABELS A THING CF THE PAST. Judges, lawyers, bankers and merchants of Montreal jhave visited the Bordeaux Claret Company’s cellars, and have pro- nounced their $3.00 and $4.00 wines, ex- cellent and wonderful value. The cellare coniain over twenty thousand dozens of Claret, Burgundy, Sauterne, Ports and Sherries all guaranteed pure and direct from the slacvesti of France. Address for price list to the Bordeaux Claret Company, 3¢ Hospital Street, Montreal. ° 9O0S0S0SOSOSOSIE ¢ @ WANTED HELP) weecicev locality (local or traveling) to introduce anew discovery and keep our show cards tacked upon trees, fencesand beid: throug! town and country. Steady employment. Commission or salary $65.00 per month and expen- Ses, and money deposited in any bark when started. For i World Med LINIMENT yrelke ANY OTHED Yor INTESNAL as EITERNAL use, In 1810 Driginated by an Old Family Pnysician. use for more than rs, and still leads. ter Generation have used and ay Every Traveler should have a bottle im his Every Sufferer 2tom Bbcumatian, ay Shere. Limbs, Seise Joints or $10 per set. Partia Trade snpplied by W. R. Watson Char lottetow sets $2.00 and up wards. Painless ex TEETH Sis: DR. J, P. MURRAY, Office, 145 Queen St., oct6 Charlottetown, P. E. I. BILLIARDS. I have opened a Billiard Room in connec- tion wtth my Restaurant. About 5@ barrels of the finest Oysters In the city will b> sold in outy form. og men « o ene Fa lomestie 3 temperance drinks of a kinds; fresh Batcermill always on hend, also Fluid Beef Tea. aa P. P. GILLIS. What’s the time? - If you have a Cough it ia time you were taking GRAY’S ,, RED SYRUP ~ SPRUCE GUM THE OLD STANDARD CURE ¥OR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS. Gray’s Syrup has been trial for more thas So pare sad the verdict of the people le that it is the best remedy knows. 2c. and a. per bottle. Sold everywhere. MERRY WATSON & CO. Paoraisress MONTREAL. ARSON PILLS Make New. Rich Blood! ie were the world. Will v ror disease, The informat trees one from the city. “erms easy. sept2j—im dy « wky ane THE DAILY EXAMINER. They are afraid of rough games. They do not know what tedo when they get into the country, where the names of tue trees and plants, and even the appearance of the fields, are strange to them Simple sanitary lessons should be taught in all the schools. Children ought to have the advantage of personal cleanliness drilled into them. They should be taught to know that bathing as often as possible is good for them, a fact which too many parents neglect. Children should be taught to know that pure air is pecessary for their well-being. They should be made to learn that the fou! air of tenements is injurious, and that ventilation is better than close and overheated rooms. One of the most injurious practices of parents is putting children to sleep with each other or with older people. A father recently brought tome a weak and sickly child. He did not know what ailed it. As soon as I learned that the child slept with an older member of the family I asked him to stop it at once, and the child, without any medicine, and sleeping thereafter alone in a well-ventilated room, began to pick up immediately. In a couple of months the child was completely restored to health. In conclusion, I have to again repeat that the health of the rising generation is as important as the health of the present generation. The care of the physical well-being of the children in the publie schools isas much the true duty of the State as the care of their mental well- being. The true glory of a people is not their wealth, but their health. We should strive to make not millionaires but men. It is easier to improve the public health by beginning with the children than by attempting to cure the adults. The im- provement of the whole race is within easy reach on these lines, and must surely be followed by intellectual and moral im- provement where che body is healthy. As the twig is beat so shall the tree grow. You cannot teach people to take proper exercise and to give proper care to their bodies after neglecting those duties for the larger part of their lives. But when these duties are inculcated in early youth the habits of childhood are re- tained through life. A well-developed body is more precious than a well-developed bauk account, and a good appetitite is worth more than $1,000,000.—J. F, Laflin, in New York World. BATTLE BETWEEN FOREST KINGS. Twe Big South American Pumas Torn te Pieces in s Death Struggle. “On our return trip to the coast,” a traveler returned from the foothills of the Andes said to a Globe-Democrat man, “I saw a thrilling incident of life inthe South American forest, a fight to te death be- tween two big pumas. Those great beasts are flerce, hard fighters atall times against acommon enemy, but it is only during the mating season that the males fight among themselves, and when they do con- test means death to one or both of them. “For strength and courage they are the equalgof the African lion or the tigers of the Indian jungles. We were making our way down a narrow wooded ravine in the foothills of the Andes, and had stopped for our midday meal on the bank of a small mountain stream of clear water. After we had finished the meal I laid down fora short rest, but in less than five minutes I was aroused by the most terrific roaring, snapping and snarling of wild beasts I had ever heard. “*Pumas, and there’s going to be a fight,’ said our guide in a whisper. “It was not difficult to locate the ant- mals. They were not more than 100 yards away, and by creeping through the brush as quietly as possible we were able to get near enough to see the fight without dis- turbing them. “When we caught sight of the two ani- mals they were crouching close to the ground, faciag each other, in asmall space under some large trees. They were the finest specimens of the puma I ever saw. “They were probably thirty feet apart, and as they crouched there glaring at each other they looked like giant cats about to spring on their prey. Puzgilists never sparred with greater caution than did those big brutes. Their tails were switching back and forth, and their eyes were like balls of fire. Slowly they moved around in a circle, all the time cautiously getting closer and closer together. It was evident thateach was waiting for the other to make the first lead. For more than ten minutes they watched and waited. The roaring and snarling we heard when they first met had ceased. They made nosound now as they watched for a chance to spring. “Our own nerves were trembling under the strain, when at last the two great brutes rose in the air atthe same instant and, like catapults, came together with a thud that could have been heard 200 yards away. They dropped to the ground and for almost ten minutes all we could make out was twe great brown bodies rolling over and over in a death struggle. They made no outery of any kind, but eve_y few sec- onds we could hear their powerful jaws eome together with a snap like the clos- ing of a well-oiled steel trap. Finally they began to weaken, and as their strug gles grew less violent we could see that both of them were covered with blood, while their flesh was torn to shreds. In five minutes more the fight was over and the two giants of the forest were stretched out at full length on the ground, clasped in each other’s limbs, just as two playful kittens sometimes liedown together. They struggled feebly a little longer and then both of them lay perfectly still. Both were dead when we got to them, and I never saw animals so torn to pieces. The entrals of both were torn out and scatter- ed over the ground where they had fought, and in their necks were great ragged holes, from which the blood had flowed in streams while they were still fighting. They each had a score of wounds that would have killed any animal with less tenacity of life.” A Peppery Queen. Here is an amusing incident of stage life. A certain actress having been disengaged for some time, had packed her wardrobe in pepper to preserve it from moths. She was suddenly called upon to take the part of the Queen in “Hamlet.” Being rather late for her first scene, she omitted to shake out her royal robes, and her dignified entrance had an astonishing effect. The King, after s brave resistance, gave vent toa mighty sneeze that well-nigh made the stage vibrate. All the royaj courtiers and maids of honor followed suit sympathetically. Hamlet came on with a most sublime tragedy air, just after a con- vulsive movement of his princely features he buried them in his somber robe, while sneeze aiter sneeze was all the public heard from him. Amid the hubbub on the stage and the shrieks of delight from the audience the stage manager, between the sneezes, rang down the curtain.—London Tit-Bits. Travellers, away from the comforts of home, will find iu Hawker’s liver pills a speedy cure for all dtsturbance of the stomach. Greatest value in thecity in undercloth- ing, children’s clotb' «and ulsters at Me Kay Woolen Co. ee Why pay regular prices for goods when you can buy them at 20, 25 and 30 per cent. discount at Prowse Bros. A few more good fur caps left, now sell- ing at 33} per cent discount—McKay Woolen Co. Like a Miracle Consumption—Low Condition Wonderful Results From Taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla. as Toronto, Ont. “Four years ago while in the old country ‘ England ), my daughter Haonal was sent away irom the hospital, in a very low condition with consumption of the lungs and bowels, and weak action of the heart.” The trip across the water to this country seemed to make her feel better for a while. Then she began to get worse, and for 14 weeks she was unable to get off the bed. She grew worse for five months aad lost the use of her limbs ard Jower part of body and if she sat up in bed had to be propped up with pillows. Physicians Said She Was Past All Help and wanted me to send her to the ‘Home for Incurables.’ But I said as Jong as I could hold my hand up sheshould not go. We then began $ a- rs Hood’s:"Cures to give her Hood’s Sarsaparilla. She is getting strong, walks around, is out doors every day; has no trouble with her throat and no cough, and her heart seems to be allright again. She 4as a first class appetite. Weregarcd her cure as nothing short of a miracle.” W. Wyatt, 88 Marion Street, Parkdale, Trento, Ontarie. Hood’s Pilis 2re purely vegetable and perfectly harmless. Sold by all drugzists. 25¢. ' be eS i i. : . ik. TMT eRe ee OME ae ee Sere oy [Til =O} } APPETITE THOROQUGHLY restored when Adanis’ TUT?! FRUTTI is used. See that no imit ation is pats Zs : ot ay att ; BOUK BINDING ! ee Any persons having veclumes of Maga zines, Newspapers, etc., to bind, or any books that require to be retouad, can have the work wel] done at the lowest possible rates by leaving them with DAVID BETHUNE, jan8—Im d&w Rotehford Square. > CHARLES E. THORNE, Having for a numler of years worked in the United States with an experienc Plumber, will now furnish first-class work and jobbing of all kinds at short notice. TESTIMONIALS—Arthur Johnson, Eaq., Druggist, Revere Hotel, ete. All orders teftat REVERE HOTEL. oct3I—dy 3m eed Don’t Forget that when you buy Scott's Emul- sion you are not getting a secret mixture containing worthless or harmful drugs. Scott’s Emulsion cannot be sec- ret for an analysis reveals all there is in it. Consequently the endorse- ment of the medical world means something. Scott's Emulsion overcomes Wasting, promotes the making of Solid Flesh, and gives Vital Strength. It has no equal as acure for Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consumption, Sgpfule: angen, Emaciation, and © asting Diseases of Children. Scott & Bowne, Belleville. All Druggisis. 50c. & $1. Grateful—Comilorting. EPPS'S GOGOA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of the nat- ural laws which govern the operations of digestiun aud nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well- selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps hus provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flaver- ed beverage which may save us manyfheavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constituticn may be gradually built up until slong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there isla weak point. We may escape many a tacal shaft by keeping ourseives wel! forii fied with pure blocd and a properly noarish- od frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk, Sold ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelle thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homecepathic Chemists, London England. REVERE HOTEL (Formerly Rocklin House.) This centrally located Hotel, which is within five minutes’ walk of Bailwa Depot, has been thoroughly cleaned, painted and renovated. Is fitted with hot water, and pussesses the finest bath rooms in any Hotel in the city. Terms moder- ate. Coach meets ail trains. P. 8S. BROWN, Proprietor, septl9—dy 6m wy l yr