MINER peapixne Datiy NEWSPAPER or PF Te’ AND, ~™ the office of ee THE DAILY EXAMINER. —IF YOU Want a wife, Want a cook, Want a partner, : oe . Ss . nie ; “PANY, in the Went a elo ee Read. ae ; Want a servant girl, gates OF . om mus ‘i 0m Want to sell a farm, (IN 94.00 | Want to sell a houre, ay a... veeseees 2.00 | : ee ae ee aa ee a a ars Want to rent a house, pee menses 0.35 | ty . — - a es a . * Want to exchange anything, ne part of Canada or the TERMS : Four Dollars a Year Wa.t to eell plants or grain ped toa The Weekly Examiner | from the m ?ratng Want to} sell groceries o> drugs, Want to sell or trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, a a the ig ettions an | VOL 34. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, MONDAY, MAY 20, 1895. NO; 27)" 2 uae a THE EXAMINER en : = ~ MAY, 1865, gALENDAR FOR Quar 2nd ds - {6.5m p. m. fall Hoon, » 16th day 1 Om. p. m. ast Quer oa New Moon, 4 tay, Sh. O9.¢m. a Mm, Fist Qua”, 31s : am. gen i : ~—— - y . Sun | H Dyer es seta a oo Reniasron ———— | nf '& mi mor 1 | Wednes Lye 3 | q) Tharsca } 0 ip id 48 6 3) Friday i .% 4j Saturds) 40 | i 3] Sunday | 8 | 3{ Monday 43 | 1 2 Tuesday 27 Wy 10 g| Wedne= lay 40 2] 10-45 9{ Thursday y} 13 3.3 ia] Priday 3] lsjat 8 ll Saturday 7] 16} 0 49 g| Sunday i 61Y | 1 33 j2 | Monday 34} 18} 219 14 | Tuesday 33 19 | oe miwednesiay {| 32; 20 4 6 1g | Thursday cs one 8 7 1? | Friday 2$ asf. OS Ut jg; Saturday a0: Mi Fs J ' Sanday ai | 2 | i 69 | Mcadsy 2 26} 8 43 i Torsdas 24 | 27 9 24 2 We Ine ” oF 5 _ a li 5 Men a a) wae % Friday os ot | oo $j Ssturda 2 32, mor | Sunday : - 26 0 15 *t | Monday . oes a % #8, Tuesday 35 1 51 #! Wednesday IS} 36) 237 Miteeeiey =} 18| 37] 3 44 9.) Friday 41lij i 38] 454 E Island Railwa G4andatter THURSDAY, 27th December, Wi the trains of! tilway will run daily Gundars €xee; as follows .— fas Outward Trains Inward. | down. Read up su PM AM P M 211 12 113 2412 23 12 2) 1200 ll» AM 9 3 In 30 9 47 9 09 8 00 734 65 6 LO Ax Py AM Bie harlottetown. ........+.. 10 20 6%... ty RII, ccctmivceis 10 16 $3... E cap ee $%{ Ar ps 3 06 Stewart +My Ly (Ar) 850 a7 one 7 oe $i... 710 = 5 eS: rx AM o Mount Stewa .o = More 7 $2... St Peter’s 7 48 6a... Sear River 7 3 $9... S SB .cxecak oneness 6 PM oa AM ve AM 42... E i 7 i=... --Cape rse 6 35 Px AM Trainsarerun by Eastern Standard Time D. POTTINGER, Gen Mgr Can Govt Railways Moncton, N B. A McDONALD, Superintendent, Charlottetown. a FOR STEAMER PORT. TIME TABLE SOUTH Tie steamer S vill ply or the Eéttand West ani West River fur- ther notice : Will leave Pr Sireet wharf on every Motday for East River at 3 o’elock p. m., r Charlottetown; leav- t 7.20 a. m., calling key’s wharves leav- feutning Tuesday { ing Hayden’s Wharf a Hagzarty’s and H ing Charlotic: for East River at 3 P-™.and making return tri Will leave Prince wharf for East River « irday 5 a. m. leaving = Hay len’s W harf Char- loteiowns 27.30 a. m., calling at Hag- Gye and Hickey’s wharves making re- torn trip at p. m. from Prince St. € steamer will run to Mount Stewart aver alternate week as the tides may suit. WEST RI‘ Fill ive Ch’town for West River Bridge, 7 rsday, at 4 p m, calling at Westville when required. Friday morn- Mgbeaving West Liver Bridge for Ch’town 7.20, ca rat Westville, making re fmm trip fr Chtown to West River Bridge at 4 k, p. m. j ¥ POINT FERRY. Leave Cha vn for Rocky Point tilly, (Sunday excepted)—6.30, 8 and 10 $m; i2 noon; 2, 4 and 6 pm Leave I Point for Charilottetown— 1 $aad 11 &2m;12, 0 5 and 6.30 p m. ROCKY 1 SDAY TIME TABLY. Lave Ciy’town at 8 30 and 9.30am; 12 hoon: 1, 2 Leave P. and 10 an 12.20, | a.e p 1 Tie 7 : SOUTHPORT FERRY. Eili rong v | yn the Southport ferry til) fart eas follows: —Sun- Maye excepte, aving Charlottetown ily at 6.20 a m, and ivery half hour up Wopm. | : Southport at 6.45 a m, Mak ng ha y trips up to 9.15 p m. Sinday triy 1s Jast year. On Tues- and Frida , week steamer will TS On time t modate the travelling 4.3: PAdlic. Gierative & Prosthetic Dentistry. DR. MURRAY, OPFOR, 145 QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN. aplo A 6990 WATCH At a Low Price ISWHAT YOU WANT. kK szx | OURS. 2m G.H. TAYLOR, “North -SidejQueen}Square. l.6m, p.m] > | leave Plant Wharf, Halifax, every WED ‘Canada Atlantic and Plant - « STEAMSHI? LIVE. FOR BOSTON, — CALLING AT—— 8S. S. OLIVETTE will leave Navigation Co’s. Wharf, Char- lottetown, FRIDAY, May I7, at 12 noon, and every Friday thereafter until fur- ther notice. Will | leave Hawkesbury at 6 p.m. same days, and Halifax on Saturdays at 10 p.m., ar- riving at Boston Mondays at 7 a m. | FROM BOSTON—Tuesday, May 14, at |12 noon, and every Tuesday thereafter ~ | until farther notice, calling at Halifax and | Hawkesbury, and arriving at Charlotte- ’ | town on Thursday evening | For rates of passage, freight, etc., apply | to local agents, or the general agents as [+ } bDelOW. SERVICE. * Olivette” MALIFAX S 8 “Melia” of will i NESDAY, 8 a. m., and SATURDAY, 10 p. m., until farther notice. for Boston direct. Returning, will leave north side of Lewis’ Wharf, Boston, Tuesdays and Saturdays, 12 noon, until further notice. | Passengers arriving in Halifax TUES- | DAY evenings can go directly on board the steamer without extra charge. Tri-weekly services by S.S. Olivette and Halifax, between Boston and Haiifax, and weekly service by S. S. Florida between Boston and Charlottetown will be resumed in June, as last season. Through Tickets for sale and baggage checked at al! stations on the Intercolonial Railw ay. For rates of passage, freight, etc., to local agents, or H. L. CHIPMAN, Agent for Canada, Plant Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents, north side, Lewis’ Wharf, Boston. apply Se Ss STMR. FASTNET Will commence the season of 1895 by sailing from Halifax on the 30th April. For freight, etc., apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent. April 18 Black D ~ — = , = — -~ er _— oma = @ The SS. COBAN, sailing from Montreal on Friday, I7th instant, will be due here at Char- lottetown Tuesday morning, 21th instant, and will sail for St. John’s, Newfoundland, via Sydney. carrying horses, cattle and sheep on deck and produce under deck at lowest possible rates. : : For furtber particulars as to freight and passage app'y to PEAKE BROS. & CO., mayl¢ Agents. CHTOWN TO BOSTON Fast Steamship " Glivette,” BUY YOUR TICKETS W. W. Chuke. TICKET AGENT, Corner of Queen and Water Streets. Charlottetown, May 14, 1895. INKERMAN HOUSE AND GROUNDS, The residence of the late Col. Grey, situated on the North Riv r, will be sold at Auction, in lots of one acre each, on WEDNESDAY, 22nd May, instant, at 3 o’clock in the afver- noon. : The sale will take place on the premises. A plan of the property may be seen at the office of Robert Beairsto, Auctioneer, Char- lottetown, on and after Saturday, 18th inst, Terms easy an‘! made known at sale 3 For further particulars apply to A. B. War- burton, Solicitor, Cameron Block, Charlotte- town. SARAH C. GRAY, _ A. B. WARBURTON, mayJ—dkw ‘Trustees. Dominion Coa! Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appointed sole selling Agents in the Province of Prince Edward Island for the above Com sany, are now prepared to issue orders for Reced, 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, Charlottetown. Mav 25. 1894—+tf PHOTUGHAPHY ! Superior workusns'iip, re fined finish and moderate prices combine to make these Photos the most satisfactory in Charlottetown +o-day GEO. H. COOK Corner Queen & Grafton Sts. nov26—135w ly For Sale or To Rent. The well-known Business Stand, the “ Central Hotel,” formerly the “ Railway House,” situated on Richmond Street. This Hotel contains 21 rooms, with large Shop and good stabling for 25 horses. Is centrally situated, and within two minutes walk of Market House and Post Office. Apply 0 uMAS CAMPBELL, Richmond Street. ap23—dy$246 & wky P. E. 1. Wospital. Public notice is hereby given that in pursuance of the Act of Incorporation a Public Meeting of all contributors to the Prince Edward Island Hospital will be held in the Parlor of the Young Men’s Christian Association, in the City of Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, on THURSDAY, 30th day of May, 1895, at the hour of 8 o’clock, p.m., for the pur- pose of ¢ lection of trustees for the rovern- ment of the institution in aceordance wit] the by-laws, and for the transaction of such other basiness as shall be brought before the meeting. BR. BALDERSTON, Secretary of Board of Trustees. ORCC EO Gem Ce —— Weak, Ti : eak, Tired, Nervous faiau & &TED | Women, who seem to be all worn £ cP Ly RY a si out, will find in purified blood, made brs rich and healthy by Hood’s Sarsapa- That comfortable Brick Dwelling House | Tilla, permanent relief and strength. known as the Peake Homestead, a ey The following is from a well known on Water Street, now in possession of | nurse: Henry Douse, Esq, ©. C. “T have suffered for years with female given first of May next. — complaints and kidney troubles and I Also that beautifully situated two-story | have had @ great deal of medical advice ogo I rince Street, now occupied during that time, but have received littI- by James Reddin, Esq. Possession given | or no benefit. A friend advised me to take first June next. ; Hood’s Sarsaparilla and I began to use it, Also, Cottaze situate on Hillsborough | together with Hood’s Pills. have real- Street, now oceupied by Wallace Arbing. | ed more benefit from these medicines : . ©" | than from anything else] haveever taken. From my personal experience I believe Hood’s Sarsaparilla to be a most complete blood purifier.” Mrs. C. Crompton, 71 Cumberland 8t., Toronto, Ontario. ~ Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only mayl5—law (3) tl dte Possession | a Possession given 20th April next. Apply to PEAKE mehl9—tf 246 NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, &c. The subscriber is now prepared to make Surveys of Land, run Boundary and Division Lit@, furnish Plans, cte.; also, Mechani a! and’ Architectural Drawings, Plans, Speci fi- | cations and Estimates, True B food P urifier i.e NICHOLSON, | Prominently in the public eye today. Lan urveyor, oa " Se a ee >, : } > : easy to buy, eas tak 1arlottetown, Aug. 35, 1894—<1ly & wy } y ech 2c, 3ROS. & CO. = - = — oecinedlaeretioessteenenee eens — Goal! Goal! Coal! ——- F ROM———— Dominion oal Co’s. Mines in C. B Now that navigation is open, we beg to inform the public that we are prepared to grant orders for cargoes of Screened, Run of Mine and Stack Coal from the above Company’s Mines, and will deliver cargoes at any of the outports at very lowest prices To our customers, both in town and comtry, we offer to supply any quantity they may require, at prices which cannot be beaten. The large quantity of Coal which we have sold during the past and present year is a sufficient guarantee of the Coal being first-class, and our many customers are perfectly satisfied. Our motto is * Justice to All.” PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents for Dominion Coal Co., Ltd. Needs! GARDEN, “Quick Sales,’ “Small Proits and Charlottetown, Aprii 30, 1895.—dy & w Needs! FOR FARW AXD Timothy, Alsike, Mammoth, Early Red and White Dutch Clover Seed, White Russian, Red Fife, Colorado Bearded Seed Wheat. GARDEN.— Beans, Beet, Cabbage, Carrot, Cauliflower, Celery, Corn, Cress, Cucumber, Mush Melon, Onion, Parsley, Parsnip, Peas, Pepper, Radish, Sage, Savory, Spinach, Squash, Salsif, Tomato, Tobacco, Turnip, Water Melon. FLOWER SEEDS in variety. All of these Seeds are new, pure and_ reliable. sale at the lowest prices. WILLIAM GRANT & CO., QUEEN STREET. For Charlottetown, April 13, 1895—-135 w . + ange ——_ The Swell Tailors Are now to be found in the store Jately occupied by 8S. B. Enman & Co. You will also find our New York cutter there, who can give you the very latest tips in suits made to order. Try him for your next suit. There is one fact we want to impress on your mind, and it isthis: We are manufacturers and can purchase our cloths direct from other manufacturers at the prices wholesale houses buy at. In this way we save the middle man’s profit. No tailoring business in the city can give you the value we can. No apprentices in our workshop, all first class workmen. 4A GOREER. We have just placed an order with the manufacturers for a large quantity of <n Sa . ‘ indig ich we cloths, and among this lot is 5 full pieces of serge, warranted indigo dye, whic Res now offer to make to your measure in the latest New York style for $15.00. co goops would be excellent value in any other tailoring establishment at $18 50. e keep cloths from 50c a yard up to $7.50. We are are ready to take orders for our $15.00 serge suits. Call early as we are rushed with work. McKAY WOOLEN OO., Fine Tailoring Successors to C. Robertson. a - : SS Charlottetown, May 17, 1895—1 35 Shame Advertisers ! Lhe home circulation is the most valuable for advertisers. Tus Examiner reaches the homes of our citizens every evening. That accounts for our large advertising patronage. DULL UNIFORMITY. Matters Terd to That ¢oudition ta Gritain’s Parliament No institution can stand aitess it Is idealized, unless it is mirrored in the histroic imagination, unless our analytic judgments about it are taken, as George Eliot says, in a “stranc: so- lution of feeling.” No one, therefere, will critize too closely the tender sen- timent of reverence for the House entertained by Mr. and Mr. Peel. Where we should }.e in clined to criticize Mr. Peel's farewe!? ut- hoxtroie Gladstone terances is in his laying exclusive ctress upon the maintenance of the: }istoric dignity and traditions of the }louse. It would, indeed, be unfortunate if the lack of traditional digniiy, which char acterizes the American House of Ne- bpresentatives, were to pervade the Hiouse of Com#®.ors. But we do not think It probable, for unquestionably the manners of the House have improv- ed. The House rather tends to be com- menplace, to the colorless monotony of alu assembly of respectable city men In this, too, it reveals its representative character, for that is the note of an English public assembly to-day. We have no sleepy, ignorant country Squires, stupefied by strong ale: but then we have no Pitt, no Grattan, no Burke. Things is therefore likely, on the whole, to maintain its dignity, which has certainly never been lowered by a single labor member. The real question is whether it will maintain its efficiency. Old traditions are well enough, but we need them wedded to new mothods in order that the new tasks of to-day may be performed. The methods which did well enough for a narrow-minded, middle-class electorate and a less complex social life,are scarce- ly equal to the far more difficult and onerous duties of to-day. The machine is clogged, and the nation’s work is in serious arrears. If Parliament is to overtake its work, if the national de- mands are to be satisfied, a great scheme of legislative reform is ineyi- table. Until that is undertaken we fear that there wiil be little else than ane the sand.”"—London Chron- cle. BRAIN WORK —ND VITALITY. Mental Exercise ix Said to be Conductve to Longevity. As a factor in longevity the London Speaker calls attention to the fact that those people who have been acustomed to the continued disciplinary use of their brains daily and who have placed their nerve power under a highly-de- veloped constitutional training are en- abled by these very means to escape the so-called early decay and to avoid those alarming accidents to health from which so many apparently healthy men succumb. People who use their brains and observe ordinary hygienic care of their bodies resist diseases in the first place; and when they are actually il] they prolong their lives or recuperate sooner than do those who have lived less intellectual Hives, Thus there is given a new force to the as- sertion that you may kill a man with anxiety very quickly, but it is difficult te kill him with work. Whether the brain can actually give power to the muscles is not certain, though the enormous strength some- times developed in a tast rally looks very much like it. That it can mater- fally affect vitality ts quite certain. and has been acknowledged by the exper- fenced in ali ages. Victims of the “Rush” Habit. That much of the “rush” that fs so characteristic of American life is the resuit of habit rather than necessity is thown by the fact that it quickly yields te curiosity. Instances of this are i.°- forded daily in the busiest thorough- fares. The familiar spectacle of a man or woman frying egridle cakes 1m the front window of a restaurant is one that never fails to attract a knot of cbservers, even in the most crowded part of Broadway, at an hour when business is most brisk. The tide of travel always has to turn aside when a big safe is being hoisted to the seventh or eighth story of some tall office build- ing because of the crowd of clerks, salesmen, and men of business who bave stopped for a few minutes to look cn, and most of whom will soon be tearing through the streets at a rate which would seem to indicate that life or death depended on the speed they made. It is at the elevated railroad stations that there is the greatest display of haste. Men rush upstairs and push and elbow one another about on the platform as though to miss a particular train would involve a delay of several hours and no end of inconvenience to each and all of them. And yet, only a few days ago I saw two score men and a half a dozen women let threc trains pass them while they watched a sign painter at work on a patent medicine advertise- ment on a blank wall. And before he attracted their attention they had all been struggling like mad to catch the first train that came along. Some day as a nation we may awake to the discovery that we can waste time now and then when we feel like it.—New York Sun. A Snake the Negro Fears. Mr. Powe, in speaking of the other kinds of snakes, said that the ‘“‘coach~- whip snake" was the terror of the negroes, There was an old superstition among them that the coach-whip would whip a man to death, and then put the tip of its tail into the nostrils of the yictim to see if he was dead. An old negro man went out to catch the horses of the party, which were turned into pasture, while they were out fishing and hunting, and on the way began to think about snakes. The old man had a bridle on his arm, and by some means one of the long leather reins had got loose, and was dragging behind him. His imagina- tion had worked him up so that the sweat was standing out con his black skin. He chanced to look back and catch a glimpse of the rein. He let a blood-curdling yell and ran. He looked back and on came the rein which he took for a coach-whip snake after him to beat him to death. The negro actue ally ran till he fell exhausted, and then fearing the superstitious act of having the tip of the snake's tail run up his nose he clapped his hands over his face and prepared for the whipiag.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Kealism. Tie (resuming his seat after a brief visit outside)—What an atmosphere of realism there is about this play ? She—Yes. Smells like cloves.—Chicayo Tribune, oe GREAT BATTLES are contin- ually going on in the human svs- tem. Hood’s Sarsaparijla drives ou disease and Restores Health. “Paintings,” caid the artist, flattered by the presence of the millionaire in his studio. “Yes, sir, I shall be happy to show you my canvasses, Something.-alle- gorical, or do you prefer a landscape ? “What I want,” said Mr. Boodelle, the eminent contractor, with decision, “is something about a yard and a half long | when you can get five “Some- Christianity vs. Agnostisism. Just published in Pamphlet form, 48, pp-, the course of Sermons recently preached by the Rev. James Simpsoa, on “ Christianity vs. Agnosticism.” These Sermons have been widely read, and an opportunity is now offered of securing the series in complete form, Price 20c. per copy; $1.50 per dozen copies. For sale at THE EXAMINER OFFICE. apli—dy & wy Why pay a quarter for three cigars Merely a suggestion. thing Goods” for the same money ?-—and they are equal to any fen center. We don't want you to take our word for it either, we only ask you to buy a quarter’s worth and judge for yourself. They are on sale every- where, and are manufactured by the EMPIRE TOBACCO CO., may3--246 & w Montreal. Gratelul—C smforting. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thoroagh knowledge of the nat- urs] laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application ot the fine properties of well- selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavor ed beverage which may save us many heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitutiorz may be gradually built up uatil strong ome to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating aryund us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many @ tacal shaft by keeping ourseives well forti fied with pure blood and a properly nourish ed frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelled thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homoeopathic Chemists, London England. > Ne SOLD BY ALL GROCERS To Dye Or Not to Dye that is the question : whether it is better c THE A TWIN BAR to wear that faded, shabby dress and endure the scornful looks of all your well-dressed neighbors, or to purchase a package of Diamond Dyes and festore its freshness in another color — making a new dress for ten cents. Diamond Dyes are made for home use. Absolutely reliable. Any color. Sold everywhere. 10 cents a package. 3#~Direc- Won Book and 40 samples of colored cloth, free. WELLS & RICHARDSON CO., Montreal, P.Q. ~ HIGKEY & NICHOLSON, Tobacco Manufacturers, NO. 1 QUEEN STREET. Try their New Brands of BRIGHT CHEWING and BRIGHT SMOKING 8's to the pound. ALSO— Their Old Reliable Brands of BLACK CHEWING and BRIGHT SMOKING TWIST. Prices Lewer Than Imperted Tebaccos, Ch’town, April 1, 1895—6m 135 wy Dissolution of Partnership, Notice is hereby given that the Partner- ship heretofore existing between Norman R. Wright and Elisha H. Wright, doing business at Victoria, in Queen’s County, P. E. L, under the tirm of “Wright Bros.,” is this day dissolved by mutual consent— Norman R. Wright, the senior partner, re- tiring from this branch of the business at Victoria, and Edward Boswell being ad- mitted a partner therein. All debts due and owing to the said firm are payable to the said Norman R. Wrigt, who is hereby authorized to collect all debts due to the said firm and give discharges for the same at their store at Victoria, aforesaid, where the business will be continued as usual by the new firm under the name of “ Wright Bros.” Dated at Victoria this first day of May, 1895. NORMAN R. WRIGHT. ELISHA H. WRIGHT. Signed in presence of Tazo. McKivynox, : THE EXAMINER PUB. COMPANY. and a yard wide, to cover some cracks in the frescoing.” apl3 —3i law ViCTORIA’S HOUSEHOLD. — the Queen Max Employed Aronynd Mer. One Thousand People Queen Victoria's household ts a large one, consisting of just under a thou- sand persons, for the maintenance of whom the nation sets apart the sum of $2,500,000 every year. Most of the posts are sinecures or fixtures for life. In the early part of Quéen Victoria's reign a mistress of the robes may pos- sibly have done a few hours’ work in the year, giving orders that the apparel of the sovereign should be carefully preserved from moth and dust, renew- ing the regal ermine, velvet and lace at stated times, and seeing that the crown jewels were always locked safely uftera public airing. She could not affix her name to war rants empowering one worthy trades- man to sell sewing cotton to the royal household and allowing others to put vp the royal arms over their doors be- cause their various wares were bought by personages of !lustrious degree. Marriet Sutherland's signature was al- Ways most as good an addition to busi- ness advertisements as ‘““To the Queen” emblazoned in big gilt letters over the shops. Some of the posts are entirely orna- mental and others have very little duty attached to them. Probably the only additions to the household since the time of Henry VIII. are two steam ap- paratus men. Although there is no Jonger a royal barge uor any pageantry on the Thames, there are still a bargemaster and a waterman, with a salary each of $2,000 a year. For the past 200 years there has been ne hawking in the forest of Windsor, but the office of grand falconer, held by the Duke of St. Albans, has onlv been suppressed within the last two years. There are four table deckers whose sole duty is to lay the dinner cloth and see that the plates, dishes and cutlery are fairly set forth, There is also a wax-fitter, who sees the candles properly disposed, and a first and second lamplighter, who re- ceives the same salary as that of the peet aureate, which is $500 a year This may seem shabby payment, but it mist be confessed that most of the poets laureate have been overpaid for the stuff supplied. Then there is the “keeper of the swans,” who annually pockets $150 for looking after the sacred birds on the royal waters. Lastly there is the “Queen's rat-catcher,”’ who is especially attached to Buckingham Palace. His salary, $75, is provided outside the civil list. Every session the House of Com- mens, in committee of supply, considers this vote and gravely agrees to it.—Bos- ton Globe. The Girls of Cuba. It is not to be accepted as true that Cuban women are all beautiful. It can be stated, as a rule, however, that the Cuban woman has beautiful eyes. Faces that would otherwise be plain and un- attractive are glorified by ravishing dark eyes with arched brows and long lashes that cast shadows on their cheeks. When the face, as is sometimes the case, is a perfect oval, the features prettily formed, with a touch of volup- tuousness about the mouth, the hair raven black, such eyes complete a beauty that is well worth a journey to Cuba to see. One will often catch a glimpse of a face like that, framed in by a mantilla, at the opera or in the street. He (for I do not suppose a ‘she” would be underthe same spell) will often find himself coming to a sudden stop tn the street at the sight of such a face, peering out from the shadows of a car- riage, perhaps with a fan provokingly held, so as to hide half the beauty. He will see such beauties, too, now and then at the windows of the houses, and this is likely to encourage him in a habit of looking into the wide-open windows as he sidles by them on the narrow footwalks. He will rarely see one walking on the street in the day- time, and when he does she wil] be ac- companied by an elderly woman or ea negro servant.—Washington Star. The Habit ef Saving. The French suffer less from panies end depressions than any other people on the globe, and it is because thrift ts the basis of their prosperity. In France nearly every person saves something for a rainy day. The habit is almost universal, and those who earn the least are sure to be found in this great saving class, The French savings banks have more than 8,000,000 deposi- tors, and their deposits amount to about $£00,000,000, and this large sum is made up of large amounts. The French schools teach the chil- dren to save money, and the most fre- quent prize given to a bright pupil is a savings bank-book with a smal] sum to the credit of the owner. This is given where, in this country, we would give a medal or a book. When a community has a lot of money dcposited in savings banks it is easy to borrow money without going to out- side capatalists. The local banks are prepared to loan to home people at a moderate interest. In large cities and factory towns of the Eastern States the savings banks are the great safeguards of the poor wage-earners against hard times, and if the saving habit was as general here as it is in France, our peo- ple would have passed through the re- cent financial depression without seri- ously feeling it. Every child should be taught the tm- portance of saving without being avar- icious and niggardly. We need more tnrift. The average American wage- earner wastes enough in his lifetime to make him comfortable in his old age. We shovld take a lesson from the French int .is respect. They know how to enjoy life and at the same time work hard and save money.—Atlanta Consti- tution, The Lake of Bleod. Gen. Neal Dow may profitably cite his own case in proof of the benefits of total abstinence. There is probably no live- Mer man of $1 in all Maine, a State pro- lific in vigorous old men, and none sounder in mind and body. When Gen. Dow celebrated his birthday, a week or so ago, he greeted all his numerous call- ers. with a hearty handshake and ex- hibited a liveliness of demeanor that was surprising. He is as active as ever in the cause he has championed for co many years. During the winter just passed, for instance, on five occasions he left home at daybreak to journey to Augusta to make protracted arguments before legislative committees.—Fiank Leslie's. Experience Has Proved It A triumph in medicine was achieved when experience proved that Scott’s Emul sion would not only stop the proges« of Pulmonary Consumption, but by its conj tinued use, health and vigor could be fully estored. oe What is the use telling a poor stick of a player how to act in an emergency. He can’t act in anything. er from eczema. SUMMERSIDE ADS, WsXinaon’s English Ointment. Me. New. McKrxnow, — Dear Sir,—For five years T was a suffer - Physicians could not help me. At last I bought a box of your Ointment, which helped me won lerfully, while two boxes made a compiete cure. I can recommend it to all others similarly afflicted. Avex. McKay. ly~—apt DR. J. E. McDONALD DENTIST, WILL BE AT Dr. Robertson's, Crapaud, —ON— Thursd:y, May 30th And remain until Saturday following. This is the only trip the Doctor will make to Crapaud this summer, and any- ene requiring Dental attention in that sec— tion had better callon him while there. Mayl7 W. B. MALLETT, HAIR DRESSER, 4 Shaving, Hair Cutting, Shampooing. Having lately renovated and refitted my Shop, I am now prepared to give satisfac- tion in all kinds of Barber work. apS—dy 3m S’side, Oct. 10, 1853. The Professor of Chemistry, Toxi- cology, and [ledical Jurisprudence, New York City College— R. Ogden Doremus, f.D., LL. D.—highly recommends Adams’ Tutti Frutti for} indigestion. ny See that no imitations are WANTED. Customers for 106,000 Bar- rels of Lime, vhich IT will sell this season at the follow- ng reduced prices, delivered at Kilns on the Mulpeque and St. Peter’s Roads :— Unriddled Lime for Farm purposes, 6c cash; 65c. payable Nov. ist. Riddled Lime for Building, 65c. cash 70c. payable Nov. Ist. Any orders for car lots will be delivered f. 0. b. at same rates. JOHN T. PEARDEN, Upper Great George Street. apl3—dy 246 & wy THE 1895 COMET. Price $100.00 —Any Weight. If you want a good, reliable Wheel, fully guaranteed by a reliable maker, then get a “COMET.” Noted for its ease (f running and beauty of finish. See the sample Wheel at Davies’ Drug Store, and ask for a catalogue. F, De€. DAVIES, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. mch2]_ dy Dairymen, Acai Of the Cheese and Butter Factories in operation in 1894, we furnished, to the satisfaction of all concerned, the necessary apparatus for the foliowing:—Winsloe, ampton, Tryon, Crapaud, Grand River, Dunk River, Mount Svewart, and Vernon River Bridge. In the summer of 1894 we made nine Cheese Vats (each holding from 650 to 700 gallons of milk), and two Butter Vate (each everaging 400 gallons of milk); no complaints were made—satisfaction given. From our large experience in the past we are now better than ever prepared to meet the wants of Dairymen. We guaran tee satisfaction, and respectfully solict the patronage of those who are contempi lating the erection of Cheese or Butter Ftories. Our make of Vats is superior to all others, and our fifteen and twenty gallon Cans are the best and cheapest in the pro. vince, Terms to suit puchasers. M. STEVENSON. febl4—3m dy & wky PRESSED HAY, Man was born to mourn, but he has fix ed things so that his wife has taken it off | his hands, Tn lots to suit purchasers, cheap, JOHN NEWSON, a930—2m « pai * A eye se *e 4