stn ata! asi Saige Gey ’ il) LLANE THE DAILY EXAMINER. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Earipides. Single Copies Two Oents CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1895. 261 | —IF you- Want a wife, Want a cook, Want a partner, Want a Want a servant girl, Want to Want to ,sell ‘a Want [to Went to exchange anything, situation, sell a farm, house, rent a honse, Wat to sell plants or grain Want tol sell groceries or drugs, Want to trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, Wat to sell or buy horses, pigs or cattle ADVERTISE IN ‘THE EXAMINER sell or 1 . Leaprve DatLy NEWSPAPER or P. EB. Istaxr. caued every afternoo ™ the ‘ be Examines Pust a a yadon Hevs q RATES OF SV? (IN ADVAN — $i =e Mont as a ; z Mos Hs > Oxe MONTH a aii . Sent post paid to any } Canada « TERMS : Four Dollars a Year Un ted Stalies The Weekly Examiner s ss i every F : from 8 ; « > of matter , ‘ o ; of mate WOT, 34.2 sa first-class W vspape nteresting CALENDA MAY, 1895 i _— ~~ oi “<x A t At ? y,! F p. 2 Fe — ews Se ne le oe eg ae tans Last \ m eS oe bem eee ae x te ae ete oe STMR. FASTNET : S S ao : - sets water | Wilt commence the season of 1895 ly o eM Bue — |} —___ | Sting from Halifax on the 30th April. } for freight, ete., apply to { 7 4 W. W. CLARKE, & | Agent. ts 6 April 18 ‘ fi 71 7 531 Seen : | 9 8 49 | Si . Mi = . so so 9leamer Miramichi, a ii iv | 81 W lay 10 | } 10 45 | ocin Me r ty | al il ~ Wil! Sail «Ice Permitting), i F : 36 | 1S aft Oe | 3 li t M1] Sauriay | 37/16) oa FROM MONTREAi, 27th APRIL, 2] £ anday | 4S i3 iM i at 46 2 19} to commence the season, and will be fol- 14 . | i9} 8 vi lowed a little later by the S.S. “ CAM- 15 | lay 2 20{ 4 §|PANA.” This new Steamer will have 1617 Ly } 22] 5 7 | everything in the shape of comfort for vit om 99 231 6 11} Passengers, and accommodations for an ~ iay j 28 94 | 7 Q | t¢ ased number. Sanday 271 2 7 59 For freight and passage apply to , Wie den y = . .apURP . 4 oe Dae <6 > . CARVELL BROS.. 2 Lay | 24 | zi 324) apl5—2w 135 pat Agents, : ay 23; 291 10 & ae Q slay i 23 | 30 10 4 24 “y j 22 | aL | ll 50 | me siete 2 2, more | One of the Black Diamond « ay 20 f | 0 ; bp ' . Sa ots \ ~ $7 | Monday m1 Stl 3:3 Steamers 291 ¥ ‘ cnt : 51 will leave Montreal about the 8th May. Z ’ a) 18 | 6 | 3 32 i dus here ahont the 113): WM: ; —' the” a , ° “ a i Bue NCTE Bt pul the llth May, at l will go . . a 1s = 7 ° 44 to St. John s, Nfld » Carry ing freight under say 447,738] 4 54) deck and hve stock on deck. sed PEAKE BROS. & CO., p B | | ( R i] : | ap29 Agents. oe | ter THURSDAY, 27th Dec>mbrr, | I is O s Railway will run da | Ss xcey 1) as follows .— Tr2 itward Trains Inward. | " A M AM PM| 711.9 7 -Charlottetown..... 1 1 2 30 7 -.. 7 ; Royalty Junction ‘m= 20 | ” a =~ #3 4 Nor Wiltshire $a) i 27 $17 {ir H : m= 551 LIS] 64 8 45 I ane S17 12 42 “57 7 auld 8 OS 1233 5 Q Freetow 7H 22 K sington 733 12 & i ee Ar iv70 liso]. . . M PM Summerside AM AM | Pp a $100 Oy h - W ht 12 5 Ly Ar 10 30 | 1) aaa J : ee jow | EPIGE hy Welgnt. i 37 - Wellington ‘ edee 947 | 219 vi Port H . ooo ——— 334.... O'Leary ...... vendes SOE t : \ 3 5s Bloomfeld coos 734) If you want a good, reliable 5% PEG ciketteicakes $0 Wheel, fully guaranteed by a eee een eee en, SROe. eet a : sarees i3| COMET.” Noted for its 5 5 oyaity Janction........... 010 . : > $23.02. > . Bedford -..- #8 | ease (f running and beauty of 355 § ar) av S05 es bio} ie Mount Stewart : | finish. LV AF sw ‘ r 522 73] See the sample Wheel at 54 i 1 + 10 2 ; PM : * «M| Davies’ Drug Store, and ask P) AM Ii for ;« + : eae me A™M/ for a catalogue. 445 “s Mor a 17 . ‘ 7 i oy cs. 2 F. Be, DAVIES, on + OMEIS oe Sole Agent for P. E. Island. PM o - A M mch2] dy 4 i : - ...--Emerald —_ Th ae ee ee as 5 oe Cape Traverse 635 "OUNDE l e 3% 38 SUN FOUNDED A.D Trains are run by Eastern Stanilard Time - Db. POTTINGER, Gen Mgr Can Govt Railways Moncton, N B. INALD, Superintendent, Charlottetown. A. McD Operative & Prosthetic Dentistry. DR. MURRAY, OFFIC?, 145 QUEEN STRLET, CHARLOTTETOWN. : MONTAG oz Carriage Factory. a finer line O bys heretofore. The «a tment consists of ) and Open Buggies, Jump Seats and Road Carts. rt, durability and excel Ving this season ‘ ‘ : than shown stock cannot e I cmanship our Also ind, at lowest prices, CARTS, TRUCK WAGONS, and all Carriage Finding«, « as Pocket Boots, Whip 8 Washers, ete., usually found in a first- « Carriage Shop. : I . Repairs. Painting 8 Sy uity. Terms reasonable. -° JOHN McLEAN*®&.SON.% HIGKRY & NICHOLSON, | Tobacce Manufacturers, No. tf QUEEN STREET. Try their New §Bra f BRIGHT CHEWING and BRIGHT SMOKING AL oe I Old Reliable Brands of BLACK CHEWING and BRIGHT SMOKING l ST] Prices Lower Than Imported Toebaccos, ‘ April 1, 1895—6m 135 wy Mechanical Drawing, &c . ndersigned is prepared to give . ne CSS0n8 it Me at a and [ndus- a , ’ : sy ee . = Specifi pying, Diue-print } : g in general, MACDONALD, . Land & yor and Draughtsm : mie “an. Nov - Zl x » § | ; . a For Sale or ‘fo Rent. |3. Tae well-known Business Stand, the “ Central Hotel,” formerly the “ Railway Ho . tuated on Richmond Str This tote! contains 21 rooms, with large Shop a ] stabling for 25 horses. Is oe y sitnated, and within two minutes’ | Wark of Market House and Post Office. | Apply to THUMAS CAMPBELL, | . tichmond Street. Spss—dy 246 & wky j j INSURANCE OFFICE. HEAD FIRE OFFICE: Threadneedle Street, London, Eng, SURPLUS, $7,060.000 00. Tran acts Fire businesszonly, and is _the oldest purely Fire*Office*in ‘the_ world. 4 - 7 - ~ JOHN MACEACHERN Agent for P. E. Island. mch03—4w 136 SALT! SALT! To arrive per Steamships Sunrise and Tafua, 10,000 bags Liverpool Salt and 800 bags Fishery, which wil] be sold at lowest prices whilst discharcing. Both steamers are due here about Ist May. Apply to PEAKE BROS. & CO. Ch’town, April 18, 1695—tf guar ominion Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appointed sole selling Agents in the Province of Prince Edward Island for the above Com pany, are now prepared to issue orders for Round, Slack and Run of Mines, and will keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coa] on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents, Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—+tf AGOS0 Wi TCH At a Low Price IS WHAT YOU WANT. ksSakz OUAS.<2y G. H. TAYLOR, North Side Queen Square mch30 FOR SALE. liouse in Georgetown. That Dwelling House in Georgetown the property of Mrs. Capt. John MeDon- ald, formerly known as the “ McDonald use,” together with the eutbuildings. 7 bis House is in first-class repair, con- tains fourteen large rooms, and is well adapted for a Dwelling or Boarding House. Any party or parties desirous of secur- ing @ summer residence wil] find this a capital opportunity, bis property will be sold at a burgain For terms and particulars apply at the | office of J. A. Matheson, Sclicitor, George tow nh, Or to L. W. MACDONALD, Dairymen, Attention |The Only Great and thoroughly re. liable building-up medicine, nerve tonic, vitalizer and Of the Cheese and Operation in satisfact Sutter Factories in 1894, we furnished, to the n of all concerned, the necessary apparatus for the following:—Winsloe, Hampton, Tryon, Crapaud, Grand River Dunk River, Mount Stewart, and Vernon | Rood ? River Bridge. ame { Purifier In the summer of 1894 we made nine Cheese Vats (each holding from 650 to 700 gallons of milk), and two Butter Vats . h ever: ai aioe of milk); no | Before the people today, and which stands preeminently above all other medicines, is we are than ever prepared to meet the wants of Dairymen. We guaran | LOO D’S tee satisfaction, and respectfully solicit | the patronage of those who are contemp lating he theese or B er ; “ee I meer" Sarsaparilia Our make of Vats is superior to al! Pa and our an twenty eaten It has won its hold upon the ngs the best and cheapest in the pro. | hearts of the people by its Terms to suit puchasers. | own absolute intrinsic merit. M. STEVENSON. It is not what we say, but febl4—Sen dy & why what Hood’s_ Sarsaparilla vine? a | does, that tells the story:— What’s the time? | ees Hood’s Cures Even when all other prepar- ations and prescriptions fail. “The face of my little girl from the time she was three months old, broke out and was covered withscabs. We gave hertwo bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla and it com- pletely cured her. Weare glad to recom- mend Hood’s Sarsaparilla.”” THos. M. CaRLING, Clinton, Ontario. Be sure te Get Hood’s = oe i ’ ® act harmoniously with | Hood’s Pills iood's sarsapariils. 20. (each complaints were made—satisfaction given. From ovr large experience in the past now better erection of If yon have a Cough ii fe time you were ixkizg GRAY’S RED SYRUP SPRUCE fee — —__GUM THE OLD STANTIARD CURB FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all 1.UNG AFFECTION®, Gray's Syrep has bees on trial for more than 80 ycare end the verviict of the peeple is that kt is the best remedy known. S8¢. and 996. per bott!s. Seld everywhere KERRY WATSON & CO. Prarsisvens MON TEAL. Behold the Perfect Injector, which we furnish with our Cheese and Butter Fact wry Boilers and Engines. The best in the market. Can be regulated to feed Boillers steadily without change. Weask the Dairy Companies of the Island to buy their seilers anl Engines from us, as they will get a better machine for the money than by importing them. By so doing you will save the profits of the midd!emen, and the money and machines will both remain among our own people. In any other vase we have only the machines, and the money is gone from us forever. Estimates furnished and contracts entered into for Cheese or Butter Factories complete or any part thereof. WE DEFY COMPETITION. Teiephone connection. REPAIRS attended to promptly. Satisfaction guaran teed by McKINNON & McLEAN. DAIRYMEN! 1 am now prepared to furnish the Dairy Associations of P! E. Island with all sizes of Milk Cans of superior material and workmanship. Sample Cans for examination will be sent free of cost on application, and may be seen at the store. Also, Vats and all heating and other appara- tus necessary in such establishinents. I am also prepared to furnish handsome Wrought Iron, Scroll and Crescent Cemetery Palings at very reasonable prices, according to quality. ‘To see them is to be con- vinced of their merits. Remember, I guarantee all my work to give entire satisfaction. such as it has been doing for the past thirty years. At the Old Stand s , > QUEEN STREET. AUGUSTUS HERMANS. Charlottetown, April 11,1895—dy & wy STOM WORK $ID oii EPAIRI! We are prepared to fill all or- ders for Custom Work promptly. Stock, workmanship and _ prices right. Repairing of all kinds done neat and cheap. ob. fi. BELL, The Reliable Boot and Shoe Dealer. Ch’town, April 19, 1895—dy = =— : : : a : Seeds! Seeds ! FOR FARW AND GARDEN. Mammoth, Early Red and White White Russian, Red Fife, Colorado Timothy, Alsike, Dutch Clover Seed. 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... Charlottetown, April 13, 1895—-135 w QUEEN STREST. For a Leave your order at Tur Examiner office. We can print anything you PRINTIN apo Box 694, Charlottetown. need See our samples. ed. LETTERS 10 THR EDITOR. LETTER FROM THE NORTH-WEST. Sir,—As promised in my last letter, I now undertake to give your readers the result of my personal observations in the eastern portion of the territory of Assini- boia. Eastern Assiniboia is, for the most part, a rolling prairie dotted with wooded biuff:, principaliy of poplar, and with innumer- able “sloughs,” or little lakelet*, varying from the size of a town lot to several acres in extent. These sloughs fill every considerable depression. They are form- ed in spring by the melting snows. As the weather becomes warmer they gradually dry or “contract in size, and where the water had been heavy hay grows. This ay, besides being fresh, is of much bet- ter quality than our marsh hsy. When cut down and cured it makes an excellent feed for horses and cattle in winter. The country has been surveyed and the land laid off on a uniform principle. Let the reader imagine an immense chess- board, each block a mile square, and the number of blocks practically unlimited. One such block is called a section, and the alternate sections—the red blocks, we will say~-belong to the Government, and have been settled or are open to home- steading. The other sections--the white blocks-~are principally C. P. R. land, the Hudson Bay Company owning about one- ninth of them. ‘The best portions of the Government land, and the most convenient to the railway, have been already occu- pied. The C. P. R. lands are still held for settlement, and are selling at various prices. There are besides, scattered here and there, some farms which were worked for a few years, but whose owners have left the country. Theee were held chiefly by young Englishmen of means---sporting characters—who, having no previous knowledge of farming, became tired of the work and abandoned their holdings. Such farms can be bought at a low figure, and, considering that they have houses and stables and large areas broken, it might in the end pay better to take one of these than to enter on a homestead. The sections are subdivided into quarter sec- tions of 160 acres—each 40 chaius square. Where the land has been settled, there- fore, four families are found on a section ; and bearing in mind our familiar illustra- tion, the chess board, it will be seen that a number of families—sixteen at least— would be living quite close together. It follows, generally, that a settler seldom finds. himself too far from a echool, where his children can receive the benefits of education. The mar- ket facilities are good. Thus at Moosomin, where grain is being bouglit all the vear round, there gre three eleva- tore, one of them and a mill in connection with it being owned by a local company. The same is true more or less of every important station along the line of rail- way. At Moosomin, toc, there are stores which would do no discredit to our eastern towns. Having said so much in a general way I shall now come to particulars. Travelling over ahundred miles of this aountry in varioysdirections, I was able to make inyself acquainted with the con- ditions under which farming is carried on. Theesoilis generally a black loam, very rich looking, and from eighteen inches to three feet indepth. It rests on a sub-soil of tough, blueish clay and is re- duced toa fine seed bed by a couple of cuts of the harrow. There are of course tracts which are rendered unfertile by the presence of alkali de- posits—-but these, if not visible, are easily detected by the peculiar quality of grass found in such places. Wheat is their staple crop but they grow oats and barley aud an excellent quality of potatoes. Good water is obtained by digging to a depth generally not greater than twelve feet. The earliest settlers are here about ten years. Their houses are comfortable, if small. They are well supplied with agricultural machinery. At pretty nearly every house there are to be seen a self-binder, a mower for hay, disc and spring-tooth harrows, seeders and wheel rekes, besides ploughs, truck-waggons, expresses, sleighs, etc. I found from fifteen to forty head of horned cattle toa farm—the average I think would be about twenty-five. The herds I saw looked well after coming through the winter. Every farmer has at least a team of working oxen and a team of horses. Fine sheep too are found, and hogs. The areas of unbroken prairie supply good pasturage. It is only during the months of January, February and March that cattle have to be fed altogether in stables. The weath- er is then very severe but the snow is not deep. This was an early spring—the snow left before the middle of March,— which generally does not happen till the first of April. Once the snow goes it is gone for good and as soon as the frost has drawn to the depth of a furrow, ploughing and cropping commences, At the present writing most farmers have completed seed- ing. There are drawbacks, of. course,—scar- city of timber, liability to*early frosts, dry seasons, etc; but opposite these are great advantages, and without exception the peo- ple I saw spoke of the couutry in terms of praise. I should add, perhaps, that, owing to the quantity of water ever present in the subsoil and within a few feet of the surface, crops do not suffer as much from a dry season as would be the case other- wise; also that no early frosts had occur red in these quarters for four years. Rey. A. E. Burke, of Prince Edward Is- land, is well-known in the Territories. Father Burke, it appears, visited this neighborhood a few years ago, at the re quest ofthe Government and the C. P R., to ascertain its suitability as a field for colonists and report thereon. From the many persons who mentioned his name, I conclude that his investigation must have been pretty thorough. It seems, however, that Father Burke preferred Alberta—at any rate, he is working out a colonization project in a portion of that territory. Railway extension is beginning to be an interesting topic, and before many years branch lines may be expected to connect outlying districts with the-trunk, or to open up remote townships. There are other matters to which I in- tend to refer, but for fear of encumbering your space I shall hold them over till a yore convenient time. J. O’Briey. eer HE MOST remarkable ctres cn record have been accomplished by Hood’s *trsaparilla. It is unequalled forall BLOOD DISEASES. There is a movement on foot te hold a convention of Irish Americans in one of the Jarger cities ot the United States at ew early date. It is the intention to in- azgurate a new and bolder policy in the imterest of Irish independence. The idea is to force the Irish question upon the at- tention of the world, which, it is alleged, will compel a settlement satisfactory to’ Gool work, promptness, low rates,, te Irish people. te ene ‘( THE MAN AND THE WOMAN, DiMiculties im the Way of Settling the Ques ion at Issce. ‘The Pall Mall Budget comments on ain article by Strindberg in the Janu- ary number of The Revue Blanche calle el “The Inferiority of Women.” It is a coincidence that The Spectator of the same week contains a review of a book by Eliza Burt Gamble en- titied “The Evolution of Woman.” These two facts, placed side by side, bring home to us at once the utter fu- tility of the endles discussion on the relative positions of man and woinan. ‘ithe defense of men is undertaken by a man, the defense of women by a woman ; they are both special piead- «rs, and as such can be no more than advocates ; it is impossible for them to set themselves up as judges. Until some being, neither man nor woman, at once above yet in perfect sympathy with both, can be brought into court the question will ever remain an open cne, The fact is, it is impossible for us, constituted as we ure, to measure things which do not contain a common. unit. Man and woman differ not in degree but in kind. It is as absurd to claim that man as a whole is superior to wo- man as to claim the reverse. On what grounds can we go ? Take that usually selected by the opponents—intellectual capacity. All men are not cleverer than al! women. No one in his senses would assert it, and its opposite is not affirm- ed even by the most ardent “woman- ite.” If we regard not the exceptions but the mass, what do we find ? The or- dinary man declares the woman to be devoid of faculty, power of concentration and judgment: she retorts he is dull, lacking in imagination, un- observant. They probably both right. But it is be their brains are differently constituted or because loth are strong in the faculties which have been brought forward ? I’rom his earliesi school time,through- out his busines life, the boy end man has been forced to cofcentrate his at- tention, however, repugnant the process may be to him, or the peralty wil) be un- endurable, he wil be left altogether be- hind in the race. And so with the cther qualities. The ordinary woman, on the other hand, is bound to be ob- scrvant, to get what pleasure she can out of trifies, to make her own interests, or her penaity will be excessive, the weariness of a life too dull to be borne. We are all familiar with the brilliant eaceptions, the women who, without the advantages of the men, have out- stripped them on thelr own ground. We wonder how M. Strindberg would deal with these ; they are getting a little too numerous to be lightly thrust aside 2s “proving the rule.” Besides these many of us have met women who rever have done nor will do anything brilliant, Lut who are strong in the very qualities man claims for himself. T’usiness-like, self-controlled, with ad- mirable judgment, capable in every re- spect, even if they have lived with all their lives at home. The petulance which classes them in a mass with “negroes and children” shows some- thing of the fretfulness of a “sick child” itself. Until we can find our angelic visit- ant who is to tell us definitely once for all the truth of the matter, is it not wiser to cease quarrelling and aNow each sex the fullest opportunfty for de- veloping what capabilities it has ?7~ London Queen, business are ause Corney Grain. Although a lover of fun, and ever full of boyish spirits, he would never permit a liberty to be taken with him. Famil- jfarity was the one thing he resented in the most unmistakable form. I have seen an unfortunate hilarious youth, scon after his first introduction to Grain, siap him on the back and call him “Corney.” Grain would give that youth a look, or rather a glare, with his big eyes, such as a lion would give before springing on his victim. The look was enough. The hilarious youth was in- stantly transformed into a sober, solemn worm. I heard that once Grain was giving an entertainment at Cambridge --from whence he hailed, and where he was an enormous favorite—the under- graduates were shouting to him for more, and calling “Encore, Corney—an- other son, Corney !’ But Grain would not respond. Presently one ‘grad shout- ed: “Please give us another, sir!’ All the students took it up—‘‘Encore, sir !” Grain then came on, and obliged them te their heart’s content. Among his intimate friends he was al- ways called “Dick’’—never “Corney.” I have always rather envied the clever eynicism of the patter in his sketches. In one of his entertainments he was sup- pesed to be rebuking a badly-behaved boy at an afternoon party. You could eimost see the boy standing in front of him. The rebuke, as far as I remember, was :— “Now, look here, my boy, you must net talk when people are singing. You are only a boy, and such conduct is very rude, and ill mannered. Of course when you are grown up it is a different thing all together. It’s expected of you then.” What a fine piece of satire that is ! His entertainments were crammed full of such gems —Pall Mall Budget. Wanted—A Curate! The rector of a hundred years ago had somewhat peculiar ideas as to the qualifications of a curate, if one may judge from the following curious ad- vertisement, which appeared in The St. James’ Chronicle of May 4, 1795 : WANTED ~— immediately, a good, strong, bony man to act in the capacity ef curate. He must be subject to the following particulars, viz.: To have no objection to act as gardener, husband- man, and occasional whipperin. Any gent whom the above may suit, on ap- plication to Mr. B.,-at the Gray’s Inn Coffee House, Holborn, may meet with finmediate employ. N.B.—Character will not be so much required as eques- trian skill, and none need apply who has not undergone 2 complete stabala- rian (sic) education. The curate of 1795 was evidently in- tended more for use than ornament. It is often the other way about with «he curate of 1895.—Tit-Bits. Transatiantic Penny Post This dream of postal reformers was actual fact as far back as the year 1648. At that period masters of vessels bound to America used to hang up bags in the coffee houses for the reception of let- ters, which they were glad enough to convey across the ocean at the rate of me penny each “single,” or twopence per “double” letter.—Ueber Land und cePr. Experience Has Proved It A triumph in medicine was achieved when experience proved that Scott’s Emul sion would not only stop the progess of Pulmonary Consumption, but by its con- tinued use, health and vigor could be fully estored. American women, says Dean Hole, are reat readers, and if they are, possibly, ess beautiful than English women, they are altogether brighter from the mental standpoint. SMALLEST MEN. the Pygmies Mave Lived for Centuries in History and Tradition The story of pygmies lives in our earliest fairy tales, and must have al- ways existed.. Homer writes of cranes that “fly over the ocean, and bear car- nage and death to the men called pyg- mies and from high in the air give them dreadful combats.” Strange enoush, to-day we reverse somewhat the legend, giving to the crane much amiability, especially in regard to small Hiomer does not indicate where combats took place, and yet ft? knew of the migration of the and how they “sped from Europe to Africa, and back again.” Aristotle wrote “the storks pass from the planes of Scythia to the marsh of Upper Egy toward the source of the Nile.” ‘hen he says: “This is the district the pyg- n.ies inhabit, whose existence is not a fable. There is really, as men say, a peopl x" these poct storks, yt VS, species of men of little stature, and their horses are little, also. They pass their lives in caverns.” Aristotle does not exaggerate conditions as to size, and leaves out the combats beiwceen the uirds and the little men. far was Aristotle out of When Schweinfurth among How very the way ? recent travelers followed up the Nile he did not come across men who were small. When Schweinfurth found the Akkas they were possibly the men Aris- totle described. What about the little horses ? Baker tells us that the animals teionging to the Bari tribe, living near Gondokoro, were “‘Lilliputian.” If there were no horses among the Bari to-day it might not have been impossible that there were such animals in the early Iegyptian times. Pliny is wild and in- ventive. Pygmies he places in Thrace, in Asia Minor, or in the locality of Cairo, though he adds that these little creatures were common to both Asia and Africa. It is amusing to find that Buffon rather defends Homer and Fiiny in their asertion that the storks fought the pygmies. The French nat- ural historian who wrote in ruffles and a dress sword only substitutes monkeys for pygmies; nevertheless more than one traveler has mistaken n.onkeys for real pygmies. Everything the learned author writes points to the fact that Africa was the scurce of negroes of diminutive size. They once formed populations denser and more conterminous, and they have been crowded out, separated, divided by superior races, Of course,there can be no future for a race which cannot face a superior, aggressive force, and in the not far distant time these pygmies will pass out of existence. Grateful—Comlorting. EPPSS COCCA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorcagh knowledge of the nat ural 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’ bille. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitatior may be gradually built up uatil strong enough to resist every tendency to disease Hundreds of subtle maladies are floatin, argund us ready to attack wherever there is.a weak point. We may escape many s tacal shaft by keeping ourseives well foru fied with pure blood and a properly nourisb ed frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk _— ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelled thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homocopathic Chemists, London England. THE TWIN BAR AX SELLS FOR ALL GROCERS SMALL'S TIN SHOP MILLNER'S OLD STAND, Great George Street, Charlottetown. ROBERT B. SMALL, Bell Hanger, Gas Fitter, Sheet Iron and Tin Plate Worker, Water Works Plumber. Tinware of every description for house- keepers kept on hand or made to order at lowest rates. Satisfaction guaranteed. Give us a call. Don’t forget the place,— MILLNER'S OLD STAND, Great George Street. ap8—3m 135 PUTTNER'S EMULSION has for twenty years HELD THE FIRST PLACE as & strengthening and tonic medicine. PUTTNEF'S EMULSION is agreeable to the most fastidious palate. PUTTNER'S EMULSION is acceptable to the most delicate stomach. PUTTNER'S EMULSION be taken with perfect safety may at all times, and for any length of time, by the most delicate of women and children. PUTTNER'S EMULSION has, by its timely use, rescued many hundreds from untimely graves, PUTTNER'S EMULSION MAY RESCUE YOU!!! Kept by all good Druggists at 50 cents or an honest eigut ounce bottle. ap30 SUMMPRSIDE ADS. W. B. MALLETT, HAIR DRISSER, Shaving, Hair Cutting Shampooing, Having lately renovated and refitted my Shop, I am now prepared to give satisfac- tion in ali kinds of Barber work. apS—dy 3m McKinnon's English Ointment, Cures Old Sores, Erysipelas, Salt Rheum, Eczema, Piles, Burns, Corns, Cuts, Sore Eyes, etc. Made and sold by NEIL McKINNON, Summerside, P. E. I. TOOTHACHE! This is addressed to all those who are suffer- ing from Toothache, or who may uire treatment of any kind at the hand« of ry tist. I make the very best Teeth, guaranteed, for $'5a set. If not satisfactory, money re- funded. Gold and Silver Fillings a specialty. The following letter from Dr. Robertson, of Crapaud, as regards the PAINLESS EX- TRACTION of Teeth, speaks for itself:— ToJ E McDonald, DDS,Sua umoarside,P E Dear Doctor,—I am so well pleased with the work yeu bave done for me, fnat I will take it as a special favor if you will give publicity to this letter. I positively assert that after an experience extending over twenty-two years under the hands of many dentists, you are the only one who ever extracted a tooth for me ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. The TEN teeth you removed forme atone sitting did not hurt a particle, as Mr James Dawson of Tryor, who was present at the operation heard me testify, The man who invented your method snould be knighted, Iam yours, gratefully, - W. RoBERTson, M. D. Crapaud, Jan. 10, 1895. J. E, McDONALD, D. LD. 8., api—ly Summepsi caer TER The Professor of Chemistry, Toxi- cology, and [ledical Jurisprudence,or New York City College— R. Ogden Doremus, M.D., LL.D.—highly recommends Adams’ Tutti Frutti for ') indigestion. ap4—ly See that no imitations are palmed off on you. ] SPRING, 1895. -— - % . ; Spring is here, and so is my annual sup- p'y of Seeds—Red Fite, White Fife, White Russian and Bearded Whest, Barley, Black and White Oats, Buckwheat, Fod- der Corn, Field Peas, Vetches, Timothy and Clover Seed. Also, Garden Seeds in variety. F. L. MACNUTT, Queen Street. wky 2i WANTED. Customers for 16,000 Bar- rels of Lime, which I will sell this seasen at the follow- ing reduced prices, delivered at Kilns on the Malpeque and St. Peter’s Roads :-— Unriddled Lime for Farm purposes, 60c. cash ; 65¢e. payable Nov. Ist. Riddled Lime for Building, 65c. cash ; 70c. payable Noy. 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 DR. H. D. JOHNSON EYE AND EAR, NOSE AND THROAT Office -- Kent Strect Aug 16, ’94—ly 90 YEARS For tne last 50 years Cough Medicines have been coming in and dying out, but during all this time SHAR?Y’S ~ BALSAM OF HOREHOUND Never left the Front Rank for Curing CROUP, COUGHS AND COLDS, ap25—dy 4i 2aw | All Druggists and most Grogerymen sell it. pa” 25 centa a bottle, ARMSTRONG & Proprietors, St. John, N B anov23—d SEED WHEAT. White Russian and Manitoba Ked, grown on Rosebank Farm last year from import- ed seed. Extra good. Apply to FRANK McKENNA, Queen Street. Ch’town, March 19, 1895—~—246 & wy NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the Annual General Meeting of the Shareholders of the Charlottetown Gas Ligkt Company will take place at the Gas Works on TUESDAY, the 14th of May, 1895, at the hour of 11 o’clock in the forenoon, for the purpose of electing Directors and the gen- eral transaction of business. LEMUEL McKAY, Co. ap27- tl mtg e ae el eed gee > anal ee or eee ee Ay REESE TT sete thy we: