; ow ad oy A on _ ne = THE DAILY EXAMINER . ‘ WALTER BAKER & C9. The Largest Manufacturers of PURE, HIGH GRADE AX COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES On this Continent, have received HIGHEST AWARDS from the great Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS Ih Europe and America. Tuttke the Dutch Process, no Alk lies or other Chewicals Ly a weed in any of their pre “ Their delicious BREAKFAST COCOA le abe pere and soluble, and costs leas than one cont a cus “Pat SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS. NEA el. (O} East at-) | eee ITh HYPQPHOSPHITES >= LIME & SODA Biatable as cream No oily taste .ike others. In big bottles 50Oc. and $1.00 Delivery Express. | _—— } fou Trunks, baggage, et convey to and | from al! trains, steamboats, etc., at short | notice Please leave uur orders at C.J Patten & Co's. Gere, north cide of Quee | Square | A. McQUAID. | J iver vii € i HSN ANODYNE | LINIMENT were my OTHE, Yer INTELUAL os EXTERNAL wae im i810 Originated by an Cid Family Pnysician. { ° : In use for more than Fiesty Think Of it. Years, and still oie Gene ; ration after Generation ha used and blessed tt | bottle in his satwehed j Every Traveler should ‘hee a From theumati Every Sufferer rime Se Nervous Headache, Piehtheria,Ceug chitm, Asthma, Chelera Morbus, Dia a, Lameness. Soreness In Botyor Limba, Stiff Joints or Straipa will Mud in this eld Anodyne relief and speedy cure : Should have Johnson's } Every Mother Anodyne Liniment in the | house for Cr up, Colds Sore Throat, Tonsi! E i itis, Colfe, Cuts, Bruises, Cramps | ss lable to oceur in any family witheut 4 Delays may coset a life. Relieves all Suinmes i Cowpilaints like magt Price, % cts. post-paid; 6 bot Ges, Si Express paid. 8. Johnson & Co.. Boston Mas | Trwle supplied by_W. R. Watson Char ettetow nh. Wood's PHOSPHODINE. | The Great English Remedy. Siz Packages Guaranteed to promptly and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotency and all effects af Abuse or Excesses, | Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opium or Stimu- Beforeand After. nts. which scon lead to In. Armity, Insanity, Consumption and an early gruve. Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of cases; is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine known. Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless med!cine In place of this, tuclose price ta letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, ome package, $1; six, $5. One will please, siz will cure. Pamphieta free to any address, | The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. by Geo E Hughes promp!y filled 5 SPAI Sold Charlottet Urder “DOWT DE AM - WILL GURE YOU ... case of Bright's Disease “ “8 Twopey, Kheurhatisns, Heart Disease, Female Troubles. Impure Blood yey ref 4 iat Salogs in snedicine. of } n Six $- ‘ pt of rs soc. per box, ors DR. L.A. SMITH & CO., we'can sell you Dodd’s Kidney Pills at the following prices, viz.:—56c. per box #ix boxes for $2.50. To the trad —$4.00 | ner dozen, or three dozen at $3.75 per lozen. pa i. Sent by mail to any address post HUGHES Charlottet GEORGE E “we may29 Nerves REGULATE and CONTROL % the Brain « the Stomach x the Heart the Lungs the Muscles the Intestines the Liver x and Kidneys. WEAK NERVES ARE MADE STRONG HAWKERS Nerve and Stomach TONIC. It gives new strength and vigor to Nerves, Brain, Stomach, and Blood, and all weakened organs. All Druggists sellit. 50c.a Bottle. Six for $2.30, Md. only by Hawker Medicine Co Lid St John. NB. ONE PILL AFTER EATING INSURES GOOD CIGESTION. PGE 25 CS Te ODO HE o-——...... | all interest in the | beed used for over fifty years b Moyrreat, N i7.—-A Star cable is as follows: London, Nov. 16. A meeting of the British Commission merchants mp ri Canadian cheere has ' who been called an arly date to protest against the Riliewve frauds said to rpetrated on the irade by some of th largest Canadian sh per A deputation is to wait on Si Charles Puppe rand request that the Dom ti Groverntvent legislate forthwith to ensure that each cheese, instead of . each ox, be branded with the date of making wee + WANT NO OTHER. Dodd's Kidney Fills now Asked For by every Sufferer from Bright's Disease vent Nov 19 Contemporaneous vith the publication of the letter of Dr. A. G. McCormack, of Richmond, with res- pect his permanent cure from Bright's lisease by Dodd’s Kidney Pills, every lruggist in this city ordered a generous supply of the pills, but so great has been I lemand as the result of this testimonr ‘ mso eminent an authority, that the excess of the supply. All r proprietary medicines have been re egated to the sheives and ii would appear lemands made upon the drug sts as if eve: ym kidney dis- the city was bound to try the re- commended by Dr McCormack. y sufferes fr nature’s grand restorative,and is only ound in its entirety and purity in Miller’s Emulsion, “the kind that cures” colds, bronchitis and all affections he throat and lungs. Every bottle warranted. No oily taste like -s. In big bottles, 50c. and $1.00, at mu coughs, thers jruggists Mrs. Orsmann—What on earth do you suppose the Sultan of Turkey bas his horses fed dried currants for ? Mr. Orsmann—To give them sand, I suppose. Anything else vou want to know! —Ind al ayy lis Jo irnal. —_<— - Cause and effect; constipation is the cause of a host of diseases. Hawker’s liver lls eure constipation, thereby preventing — : 9 a1 e a) Ss conse lent 111s, “You must goto bed now, dear. You know the chickens al} go to roost with the “Yes; but then their mammaalwars goes wit them.”°—Boston Beacon A Graduate of Toronto University Says : “My children have been treated. with Seott’s Emulsion from their evrliest years! | Oar physician first recommended it and I , : w whenever a child takes cold my wife immediately resorts to this remedy, which always effects a cure.” : -_--. Her father—No, yours Her adorer—I beg pardon; I laughter, I want her to be Harlem Life — —_——-- —_ young man, my daugh- ter can never h« Her 4 be mv wife THINGS TO REMEMBER. A cold in the head is the first cause of cattarr! Cattarrh is an unhealthy disease and is often followed by consumption. Hawker’s cattarh cure positively cures catarrh, i in the head and all catarrhai trout Miss de Fashion (a few years hence)— e wanted at the telephone. le Fashion—Oh, dear, I presume de Style to return my telephone call. I hope she won't talk long.--New York Weekly Tam not surel ever told you whata safe and excellent, as wel) as palatable cure for Coughs, Colds, Consumption add | all Wasting Diseases is made in Halifax, Nova Scotia. If not, let me now say that there is no other Remedy quite as good for these ailments as Perrxer’s Emvsion. I need not enlarge~—a word to the wise is sufficieot—remember it is Purtner’s Ex- ULs1on—for sale in your town by all the | first-class Druggists, in large eight ounce bottles for 50c. (jealously)--What’s this long hair on your coat, sir ? *rofessor—Oh, that is—er—oh, I have | just been coaching a football eleven, my } A Seasonable Exeuse —Mre. Professor } i } dear.—Truth iS MARRIAGE A FAILURE ? | “Thou source of all my bliss, and all my woe, That found’st me poor at first, and keep’et me so.”—Goldsmith. is the wretch who learns his life to ruc, And blest the { man whose better half is MORAI | Use PRUSSIAN OIL, instead of drugs a and pills, | ‘Twill keep you healthy, save you doctor's bills, from debt, | Add to your wealtl bet. Then use it, prove it, and you'll say, There’s nothing like it in our day. and bhappinese, you “What made Sadie Tillinghurst resign from the woman’s suffrage league? She was one of the most earnest members. “Yes, I know, but she seemed to lose canse after Joe Gibbs They are to be married in a f months.” proposed cony ‘ Por Over Fifty Years, Ax Otp Axo Weity Triep Rewepvy.— Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has millions of mothers for their children while teeth- alg, with perfect enccess. It soothes the | child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggiate in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no | other kind.—m. w. f. wkly—l v «ar ier—W wat’s the row upstairs ? Latvliady—It’s that professor of hypno- | tism trying to get his wife’s permission to 76 out thie ev ing & hi eveniaog. ~_--o-_ --— stow to Get # Sanlight Picture, Send 25 “Sunlight soap wrappers (wrap pers bearing the words “why does a woman look oid sooner then a man”) to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, and you will receive by post a pretty picture free from advertising, and well worth framing. This is an easy way todecorate your home. The soap is the best in the market and it will only cost 1 ¢. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the end« open. Write your address carefully. Darson€ PILLS Make New. Rich Blood! aw a ke thera inthe wold, WU Jimancer of dbeare, The inten v8 is worth ten thace the cost sone then ro nm alw -— DosK. ex | ia ee hac pate ee ree, lor % cts stam five Musas econ ae ieee House St, Peet Be sure and ask for Mrs. | } i | | } —_ > 2 << Jones—What’s the big policeman club- y that ttle man for? Brown — Because he’s little —Detroit | Free |} > 2+ Ihe oil of the Norwegian Cod Liver is } ; ° | dont want ey | Relieve your pains and aches, keep you | ARE YOU IN NEED. ~iini nicl: A Fall Overcoat for the chilly evenings, and the cold weather coming ? 9 Fashionable Fawn, Brown and in all the Anyone in need of a nice Ove JOHN McLEOD & CO. goods. Charlottetown, September 12, 1894—1m w f Sbades — Blue, We Have a Fine Range of Fall Overcoatings Oxford, Grey. thes reatt s‘i9uld = gee Sh Z Z, 4 we Castoria is Dr. Samus! Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Children. It contains rcither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. $ is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil It is Pleasant. Its gucsrantco is iuirty years’ usc by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and cllays fevorishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, and cures Diarrhea tecthing troubles, cures constip: Castoria assimilates and bowels, giving toria is the Children’s Panacea—t s Castorin. * Castoria isan excellent medicine for ch‘! @ren. Motors have repeatediy tolc mo of its | pood eifect upon their children.” ' Da. G. C. O=acon, Lowell, Biass. Wind Coli e. Castoria reltves ttien and flatulency. the food, regulates the stomach healthy and natural sleep. Case he Mother’s Friend. Castorix. “ Castoria is so well adopted to children tim I recom known to r me: if as superiar Coany preseriptiog ’ TY, A, Ancrenr, M. D., v 371 Go, Oxford St., Lrooklyn, N. ¥. the childrer none * Caatoric is the best remedy for children of * Our physicians in 2 depart which loin acquainted. I hops tue duyi ment have spoken highly of th iy expe rie far Giant when mothers willcoasiler tue roa! exce jn their outside practice with Castoria, jute st of fair children, an! use Casteria in aud althourh v hare airong ocr §: ad of te various quack nestrums which are medical plies is known 48 reeuir d -stroring their joved ones, by forcing opi product morphine, soothing syrup and other hurt‘t agents down their throats, thereby sendinz thc ta .o premature graves.” Da J. F. Kisecretos, Couway, Ar favor u i Tae Centaur Compazy, TT Merraz oe ae THEY PLEASE ALL merits of Castori s, yet ree to confess that the ; won us to look wid pon it.” Unitzp Hosritan aso Dispersary, Boston, Mosq Atisn C. Su:vu, Pres., In Quality and Price. Another lot of those WOVENSWIRE SPRING MAT. TRESSES and SPRING COTS, beautiful Rug Drawing Room Sets cheap. buying. the place. JOHN N Charlottetown, Angust 18 1894—t ts the We please the people every time. cheapest yet. Ou and Parlor Suits, very Look at our new line of CHAMBER SETS before Don’t forget EWSON. poe a wo oe EFFECTUALLY CURES CATAREH, COLD IN THE HEAD, CATAGRHAL HEAD- ACHE AND DEAFNESS, INFLUENZA, ETC. Sold everywhere. Price, 25 cents. M’fd. by THEM a WK eR MEDICINECO’ ¥., L’td., 8t. John, NB. Dress Goods 3 Priestley’s A good name is n doms. ARE WRAPPEC.~ Great. Britain, while on this side, they have what that means in the success o! a costume. In business a good name is vital, Priestley is a synonym for what is delicate, durable and ' beautiful in Black Dress Goods. hold word. Priestley’s dress fabrics are worn by the well dressed women of should buy no other black dress goods till they have seen Priestley’s. They add to an unequalled durability, a beutiful draping quality. nore potent than thrones and king- The name of In England it is a house- Ladies attained to general favor. Women of taste understand be te bp be tp he bt he te be be Oe te te et be i RUN DOWN WATCHES ee Patronize Watchmakers of recognized ability. We make a specialty of bringing Fine Watches to keep close time. Special ! atteniion given to Railroad |Men’s Watches. Correct time your watches will keep if we repair them. lowest prices in the city. Watches and Jewelry at . G. G JURY, North Side Queen Suuare, Opposite Post Offies. Charlootteiown, August 15) 604. COLD STORAGE PLANT. REFRIGERATION HAS NOW REACHED A STATE OF PERFECTION. Bomoe of the Advantages Derived—Market Gluts Prevented--Nursery Stock Mept for Three Years and Taken Out in Good Shape. The first experiments with cold storage were made in New York 18 years ago, and developed iuto a commercial industry three years later, says Garden and Forest. 5ince then the knowledge of scientists and in- ventors has been combined with the prac- tical experience and capital of warehouse- men, until now the business of cold stor- age and freezing is a considerable factor in the market supply of the world. At first cold air for refrigerators on the ground floor was forced to storerooms above, but this plan was soon given up for the system, still in limited use, of massing ice at the top of buildings, so that a current of cold air is drawn by gravity through shafts to the lower floors. By this system only cold storage at 38 degrees and above is pos- sible, while actual freezing is necessary for many Classes of goods. One of the nine large cold storage ware- houses in New York uses asystem of metal pipes 16 inches in diameter, which encircle storage rooms. These begin below the “charging floor,’ the upper story of the building. Here ice is broken by hand power, the sectional trap doors are lifted, and the pipes, set close beside each other and extending down to the floors below, are closely packed with ice and salt. The drainage from these, which is collected on the second floor, is utilized to cool rooms on the ground floor to a temperature of 40 degrees. This method of cold svorage is especially adapted for holding compara- tively small amounts of perishable goods, without the cost of expensive machinery. The system most generally in use, how- ever, is that of producing intense cold by the evaporation of ammonia, and one of the largest and best-eqnipped cold ware- houses uses the so-called ‘direct expan- system, which it is not necessary here to explain. In this immense estab- lishment which comprises in two ware- houses 1,500,000 cubic feet of cold storage and freezing space, eight boilers, each of 7 horse power, are used in the smailer building alone. The engines, compressors, and all parts of the machinery are in duplicate, so that if one set is disabled the’other set of ma chinery may be started and the reqnisite temperature thronghout the building Stveadily maintained. Whatever the metiol osed, the effect aimed at is the re- t am heating, that is to grasp and carry heat out of the rooms which it is desired io refrigerate. The brine which is produced by the ammoniacal gas pro- cess, and conveved throughout the build- ing in rain pipes and smaller coils, leaves the manuiactaring room in the basement 4° zero and returns fromthe circuit only 5 dewrees higher. Allthis anpara®us is espe i- ally constructed; buildings cost and at the present time more than #4,00°,- 000 are invested in cold storage in this city alone. The first floor of these great buildings is usually occupied by offices and open space necessary for receiving and dis- charging goods, and the storage floors above are reached by heavy freight cleva- tors Passing through a small an te-room on leaving the elevator, the “bulkbead,” or thick wall, which is air spaced and pad- ded so as to Pe nearly a3 possible a non conductor of beat, is reached. The heavy door swings open, and a change of 5) de. grees to 70 degrees is realized in a second of time The purity of the atmosphere and the uniform temperature of each room or “box” are evident. Tiers of goods extend to the ceiling, closely packed along immense floor space-. or in smaller lots in separated rooms. To the visitor, who, as well as the 2uide, is protected with heavy wraps, the long airetches of pipes and rafters covered with frost crystals glittering in the electric light present a strange and beautiful spec- tacle. Poultry, meats, fish, butter and egus are stored in largeat quantity, and actual experiments shew that these usually perishable goods can be held in cold storage almost indefinitely, and meat and fish frozen and kept for five years have come eut in good, marketable condition, By this preservative process a glut is preveuted in periods of too plentiful sup- ply, the season for perishable goods is lengthened to extend the year through, and j:sices are equalized, to the proiit of both proiucer and consumer. For ex- ample, yearling tarkeys, which last Feb- ruary were stored and frozen, and since kept in a dry air of 10 to 15 degrees, now pring in the markets three cents a pound more thau the best spring turkeys. But even in this favoring market there is not much profit to the merchant sineso a cent per pound is charged for the cold storage ef poultry a month, and the higher rate of half a cent a pound each month for freez- ing. The prices charged for storage are, however, nearly }} per cent. lower than they were 10, or even 5, years ago. The artificial low temperature, besides their uses in arresting the decay and re- tarding the maturity of fruits and veget- ables, are applied to horticulture. Nursery stock has been kept in a cool temperature {n good ecndition for Chree years, with the poots ready for growing when taken out. Hardy plants which are intended for forc¢- ing are often frozen after they are lifted, 80 as to give them their needed experience of a winter, after which they will push forward with energy. Imported pips of lily of the valley are largely held in calg storage, not only to preser¥6 them, but be. cause they start more quickly and strongly after having been frozen. Bermuda lily bulbs and other stock of this sort are also treated successfully in this way. sion” verse of nooney, A Foarteen-Year-Old Girls Dreas, A typical gown is an olive green wool sateen, and the skirt, while it ie rathan full, is almost plain acrass the frunt and hips, and is laid in coarse gathers in the back. <An invisible hem is iis finish, andit reaches almost tothe ankles. The bodice js a round one, arranged in full folds in front, where it is invisibly hooked, and gy each side of these folds aye two revers, sq that a vast effect is obtained, The ribbon girdle, which is fastened on the skirt, is of three-inch-wide olive ribbon, the ends of which hang long and straight at the hack. The sleeves are very full and are drawn in below the elbow to tucked cuffs of the material. The high collar is 2 falded one of the ribbon with « little rosette on one side, under which the fastening is con- cealed. Black stockings and black shoes are worn With this dress.—Ladies’ Home Journal. More Rexalistic, “What is your next novel going to be, Timmins’ “Tt will treat of the influence of tight shoes on woman’s moral and spiritual na ture.’’-—-Indianapolis Journal. Ulsters are the correct thing this season, and more uleters are worn in the large cities than any other style of overcoats. We have a large assortment of Irish and Canadian frieze, in all the different makes to fit any size man er boy—Prowse Bros, the wonderful cheap men. nl3 2i Shingiss—I’ve changed my boarding hoyse, Dinwiddle. Uinwiddle--[ thought you were well pleased with the table at your old place ? Shingiss—I was; but there was no piano at my new one.—Pittsburg Chronicle. DR. CONROY Has removed his Office and Residence to P, P. Gillis’ new building, corner of Great George and Dorchester Streets, opposite the Bisbop’s Palace. Entrance to office on Dorchester Street octh1—tf POTATOES, OATS AND PORK WANTED We will pay high prices for produce this fall, a8 we want to collect every dol- lar due us; also, we intend to clear out our entire stock, so that farmers will find it will pay them to deal with us. Would give a kindly but firm warning to all who owe us tO pay up. ARCH. CURRIE. Souris, Sept. 18th, 1894—3 mos eow. No Change Y mzss.rs TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1894. _— - -—— A. MeNEILL, Auctioneer, pat d&w i! dte CHARLES BE. THORNE, fe Peactical Plumber, Sanitary Renee” and novl4—dJ&w t) dt at j Wanta ou Want a cook, Want a partner, Want a situation, Want @ servant girl, | Want to sell a farm, Want to sell a house, Want to rent a house, Want to exchange anything, Want to sell plants or grain, Want to sell groceries or dru Want to sell or trade auything, Want to find customers for seythings Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or ADVERTISE IN THE EXAMINER Mortgage wale, — To be sold by Public Auction, at the Kap Courts Buliding in Charlottetown, ip = County. in Prince Edward Is THURSDAY, the third day of January I) 1895, at the hour of twelve o'clock, x sie = ——— premises, on WEDNESDAY. ca hd a of December, 1894, at 12 o’cle ok, The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. {vie ee i . in an ee | Willem Joho THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. Terms ary Go ‘or furtner particulars app'y t¢ —————— IM. & D.C. McLeod, Ateoeneon Chafee THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers — One Year,---$4/Three Months, $1 4 J Having for a number of years worked im i Plu rber, will now furnish first-class F : | Re Read Vhis Splendid Offer to Subscribers | Drucelet, Revere Hotel, ete, Seaaas Mi | ectti—dy 3m eod McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FREE | to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 ana... a! enabled to make a most exceptional offer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fille out the following blank form, | oe for THE DAIL&¢ EXAMINER for 12 months at 40 cents 4 | month. ! ; 7 ! E a | a | T will it at : | 52, in King’s County, fronting on tow: s Six Months, - $2/One Month, - 35c 5 ; the United States with an ex All orders leftat REV ERE HOTEL, j 40 cents a month. By special arrangement with the publishers, we are | ! CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. UUTTTTTTT TTT TT TTT | UTTTI-TETTTT IT TT IT TTT TTT TTT Te Tot Exauuver Publishing Co., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. You will please send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER fer 12 mouths from date, for which I agree to pay 40 cente a month, it being understood that you are to have sent to my address for one year, without extra charge, McCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current number, Pe ccttvinessiiacdieieesean pekoasbns Sosleeneud peedebbnnsh IIISITTVITVITITITIGT TT All that tract, piece or parcel of laud site: | ate in Charlottetown aforesaid, bei pe fourth part of Town Lot. Number Se ie (17) in the Second Hundred of Town Low ie the swid city, bounded on the north by e Pi chilniissstencdendkbceniisarcdon A BESS cs. o. w ineeiiindaioks eke bhbbbbbbibbbbbbhhbhh hhh KIIT4 A < Mb SS lS i Sn ii Nl i Sn i Nn Sb Nn Sb Sn Sin in Sb nS be Se Sb> nl ln Nn i Ln Sin Spl Sop Sn Sn lS Si ln Sn Sb ln Sn i Nip lll Se McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under the heads The Kdge of the Future,” “ Newest Knowledge,” “ Knowledge of Immediate Value,” The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” etc. The above sale is mad» under and by virtue ‘e We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE ofa power of saleconta&ned inan I DAILY EXAMINER for only $4.60 a year, payable in| J.2°Cs Rs Wey eee she ee lottetown Young Men's Christian A sociation = i. iat ‘ ofthe one part and John Ings o other advance or ia monthly instalments of 40¢. as desired, | {itr °°" eae For further particulars apply to A. Ernest Ings, Attorney-at-Law, or to tne Me Dated al Charlottetown this sixteen! of October, A D 1884. uare. onthe east by land the Zion Church, On the south by land on = pert of Richard Heartz, and on the weal ar andthe property of the Union Bank Martin O’Halloran’s estate, the said land : ing a front of forty-two feet or thereabouts on Queen Square, and extending back : feet or thereabouts. We make thie exceptions] ofler in order that we may secure a large number ot new subscribers, but all who are already subscribers may avai! themselves of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magazine. Address: The Examiner Publishing Go. HHARLOTTETOWN, P JOUN INGS, Morigages, octl6—12i law (tues) ‘WINTER-KEEPING APPLES, Northern Spy, Swaar and Bishop Pip” pint Apples for sale by the subscriber. BENJ. KE. WRIGHT, — oct20—3w eod kK, ISLANP ee EE —— = a}: So ee eee ee Sails every Saturday Evening © e i ed at 4 p. m. Se No Change in Prices! No Change in Satisfaction ! JEWEL STOVES Have No Equal! FOR HALIFAX, §& Calling at Hawkesbury, Arichat & Cansa, é Returning, leaves Halifax every WED. > NESDAY EVENING at 6 o'clock, making same valle. : Through Bills of Lading issued to al : : | points in Great Britain and Continent at Have No Rival ! | lowest rates, W. W. CLARKE, Agent. SALB. To be sold by Public Auction, at ie Court House in Summerside, on FRIDAY, the Thirtieth day of November next, A.B. 1894, at the hour of Twelve o’clock, MPA under a power of sale contained in a | Mortgage, dated the third day of Beptem- ; | fr, A.D. 1891, and made between Philip | Gain and Elizabeth Gain (his wife) of the one | art, and the undersigred, James Barclay, of the other part :— that tract of land situate in Let Eleven, Prince County, adjoining land em the north and south of Thomas Ly being the northern moiety of that tract of land, bounded as followa:- Commenei | at a etake eet in the west side of the , | Wetern Road, in the north-east angle of land of Alexander Gillis ; thence west sixgf three chains fifty links to Lot Ten; thenee — north nineteen chains eighty links ; thenes east forty-eight chains twenty links to tht | road; thence to the south-east along said road to the place of commencement, com = | taining one hundred and ten acres, the moiety of which is fifty-five acres. Local References. For further particulars apply to a Edward Wyatt, Barrister-at-aw, merside. Dated this 24th day of October, A.B. | 1894. | | i | | Ask for the list of three hundred happy homes on | _ Ch’town,"June 16—dy, P. E. Island y using (WEL for sé 1 sland now u - the bie For 2 only by | MORTGAGE Ri. E. NORTON & CO., | —— CITY HARDWAR# STORE. Charlottetown, Oct. 26, 1894—tu fri Are as a rule objectionable, becanse they benefit the few at the expense of the many | But there is at least one combination that will commend itself favorably to ev« rybody | All and that is the celebrated Which combines ia itself all the good features of the ordinary Cook Stoves, with severa! distinctly its own. We gre the ouly people in Charlottetown selling AMERICAN STOVES. Buy a Highland and haye peace and comfortin your home. Every Revge Warranted, JAMES BARCLAY, FENNELL & CHANDLER. 9: ime, _ BILL HEADS. > One Thousand Assorted Sizas i «FOR $2.76, , : 8 z ‘i BEST PAPER AND PADDED. Envelopes from $1.50 per 1,000 : up (Printed), Arrive: eo ae | You wil) save money by ordering Bow | Orders by mal prompiiy attended to, COAL JAMES D. TAYLOR, | Queen Street. Old Sydney Mines Round & Slack. (23) oe ee a duced, and the crop throuzhont the West Acadia +“ Nut |ern and Middle States a failure. Prices ;}mustrule high. Consignments sohicited 2 . Intercolonial ‘ ‘“ Vale sé és and prompt returns made. Write for pam isculars and references to D. P. LEONARD, | C. LYONS & CO,, 2 =" Ss e 5 a Eeareteee oles for cate his vals ‘ ning about sixty acres. QUEEN’S WHARF. Penn’s Grove, N. J. isin good repair. There are six outbutl Charlottetown, September 29, 1894—~dy 6w harlottetown, Noyemher 3, 1884—m w f Landing and to 4,000 TONS aug27 =. O, Box 22%, d&w bip-—netd Ee some are pew y built. There are twoorch | Ohe containing sixty troes of different ; tles of fruit. About one and a haif i from the city. Terms exay. vat guar her wai €. re sept2}—Im dy & wky RENO