fnis is True Liberty, when Free Born Men, havine to advi. y sacing Room a % Common, Yolla r Vear. oe FUL, 3. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. FRED ee cea, o - @&i- wo 9 i ae coe T S$, £s0yYs OLE c: PAR Les a>. Fe Fh a te org ee wali AD tad ae a Lee” « . are goimeg fasi, frem Berlip / FALL HATS & C 3 A THE BARGAIN OUR BiG EXHIBIT — —— OF NEW GLOTH \ __ We are opening our different lines for the new season, with much the same feeling of confidence which a fel!ow ex. periences when he has a good thing. £0 many good cloths grouped together that it is impossible to tell you all about hem. Come and see the BEAUTIFUL LINES OF OVERCOATINGS the finest ever brought to the city. And Trouserings, the finest you ever laid eyeson; and for Suits, they are beautifu. mthe extreme. Those goods will be shown with much pleasure, and will be on exhibit this afternoon en to-morrow JOHN MACLEOD &C0 MERCHANT TAILORS. ME! TOIMCH! a Good Time to Buy Watches NOW. wea LL In spite of the advance in price at the Factory, I havt been able to buy,and will sell a nice lot of new Watches, a the old rate, the order having been yiven before the raise. Call and see them ; also our new Rings. a W. TAYLOR, Cameron Bl ck, OPTICIAN vity. i ———— ee LAMPS. — = 10 cases Lamps, in Hail and Table, all new patterns. VERY CHEAP CALL AND INSPECT. eereeves SOS. SHSSBASBOA SIMON VW CRABBE Walker's Corner 187 STOVES HARDWARE LEME LY ee a SS PTTL Le a ORR TST LA A TOE Tee LE ae 2 > se the Public, may speak free.”—Evniripgs. ters, all prices, SAC In these goods we show HOMEMADE SILO. Easily Constracted by Persons Unskilled In the Use of Toois, A writer in The Hural New Yorker gives at some length his manner of making a cheap and easily constructed silo. He says: The best place for a silo is inside the barn ata point near to the stock, to Rave steps and lifting, yet where the sile can be filled from the outside, I helped fill two siles last season and found that one needed three men more than the other, from the fact that the corn had to be carried up to the cutter in the one case aud was slid down to the cutter in the other. Where the cutter is placed out- side, there is room to drive up alongside easily and a bank can be constructed to drive on, so that the load will tip to- ward an inclined table, which should connect with the cutter. Then one man can unload as fast as needed. Owing to the great weight and saving of lumber, the silo should be built on the ground. So mach more fodder can be stored that, in most cases, a portion of the bay can be spared. A solid, airtight, dry foundation is best secured by dig- ging a trench, so graded as to discharge at the lowest corner any outside water which may soak into it. The trench should be filled with broken stones and mortar within a few inches of the top. This, if deep enough, will keep out the rats. A wall of masonry should be built one foot high on the broken stone. In this wall, two inches above the level of the bottom of the silo, a 2 by 12 plank should be imbedded so that the inner edge will project half an inch over the wall. The weight of the wall on the plank will keep it in place. The frame of the barn being large and framed together, but little studding is needed. In a silo 10 by 14 feet the first three pieces were 2 feet apart and 2 by 10 inches in size. The next one was 2 by 6, 214 feet above. The fifth one was 13 feet from the bottom, aud where the boards came together it was a 4 by 6. Three others, 2 by 6, 3 feet apart, were above this. It takes 9 pieces, counting the plank in the wall on each side. Thess were hori- pep ae lFe . b DIAGRAM OF CHEAP SILO. zontal and nailed to tae frame of the barn so that the edge was even with the inside of the post. A short post, a, in the diagram, was placed against the larger one to keep the studding from slipping down. A 2 by 4 piece, b, was nailed to each set of studs at the corners to stiffen the frame and make a broader corner. This piece should be so placed that when a foot wide board is nailed to it the board will just reach the shed on each side. ‘This does away with the sharp corner in which ensilage is likely to spoil. All studs and pieces should be in line with the silo and the beam above, so that there will be no trouble in getting it tight when boarding up. The silo was lined with foot wide hem- | lock inch boards. A space 20 feet wide SLAND; MONDAY } Was iacli irow 1 one side for the door. eR ery! y man wi yeu te ng S it ns ry yew $e —~ ee et WA od “4 3 wtiry ) > - + quantity surpasses anytuing of the kind ever seen on P. V\P od ov EUS 4 3 oh WY a Wis . % ve io a. - = Pieasure to show. We wish to Imipress upon the minds of sho BPA . a> @® 3 =, ¢@ Q LE 2 6} Fe SS ‘ a F : % ¢ 5 ‘ ~ * 8 “ aaa we CaRe eaiq ve O chk XX LoOtning tran any house th tue trade, a. > ‘ sy 5 , - '5 ee j G & wn ie Le e~ d €y * , fe - ts eR & ix — 2 fa BY Ay ° len’s € ail wool, $3.95, $4.80, $5 &0. $6.50, s a special value at $3.25 and are everything that fashion demands S—in alarge and stylish assortment. You get nothing but style the Bargain Corner BOO £2666 0388 e* SEUSS OCTOBER 4, 1897. 59, 'F.30, 10.50, In quality and and, and is really a source of ppers that we can do more for you as! a.00 Wouth’s Ulsters, all These Jackets are direct “edit DOlUis 2, The bourds wen uitiled securely to the studs, each zct- ing as a post. Two lengths, !3 feet long, Were recjuired to reach the top. A sheathing of tar paper which was oily and pliable was next put on inside the unplaned beards. This was in iong strips which reached from bottom te top, was lapped at the edges and held in place by tacks with thin tin heads. Great care was taken in handling it so that thee should be no holes. Inside ef this should be another sheathing of boards, so placed that the cracks should not be in the same place as the first set if the boards are unplaned. I found that I could get dressed pine or spruce for nearly the same price as hemlock, and used that. It was matched and six inches wide. With this we turned the corners without slitting out any pieces. The doorway was closed when filling. We cut boards to reach from one stud to the one above it only. They are not nailed. Then the tarred paper is put against them. Last doors made of the matched stuff are placed, and the corn filling against them holds them securely. No nails are used, and they come out readily when the silo is being emptied. The space between each stud is a separute door. I purchased a few cents’ worth of coal gas tar and painted the inside. Two of us heated the tar and painted the in- vide of the silo in half a day. The tar should be boiling bot and will then spread easily and fill all the cracks. After drying it is as hard and smooth as a blackboard. It not only fills all cracks, keeping out the air, but it pre- vents absorption of moisture by the boards) A cement of 8 parts lime to 2 parts sand was worked in under the ends of the boards on the bottom to prevent their rotting and make all airtight. Two of us, neither one hardly able to saw off the end of a board square, armed with a hammer, saw, square and ax only, built a silo 10 by 14 feet and 26 feet high in six days. The lumber bill was less than $50, and all other expenses did not make more than $75, including labor. It could be made for less, but I made it good, so that it would last and also be sure to save the fodder. 1 could not build a round silo alone. I would dis- like to cart ensilage from an outside silo and am entirely satisfied with this one. Not 50 pounds were uneaten of a!) that was put in. This silo will hold about 90 tons and cost 80 cents per ton capacity.—C. E. Chapman. Wo0ondD’s PHOSPHODINE The Great English Remedy. So LIP Siz Packages Guaranteed to Oe ee promptly. and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotency and all effectsof Abuse or Excesses, SS Se Ea Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opium or Stimu- Before and After. png ith cete tvakie Ie. firmity, Insunity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of cases; is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine known, Ask druggistfor Wood’s Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, inclose price In letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, $1; six, $5, One will please, six wil; cure. Pamphlets free to any address, The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Sold in Charlottetown by Geo, E Ew Ate? | Hughes, Druggist. ‘iia HARDWARE We sell Good Hardware, we sell Good Hardware Cheap, we sell Good Hardware Cheap because we sell Good Hardware. wut OR CASE... When you want Hardware, Paints, Oils, and any thing in the line, eall at CITY - HARDWARE - STORE ooseQUEEN STREET.... But Don’t Ask For Credit. R. B. NORTON & CO. J ¥. Norton- Propriator. Herring, Herrine Large, fat Herring in half barrels, barrels and quarter barrels, from Sydney, Cow Bay, Madalene and Arichat. We will warrant every package we sell, or refund the money For sale wholesale and retail by CRANT & Co., Queen Street, Charlottetown Heintzman Pianos are appreciated more each year by the ever increasing List or Purcuasers. They retain, as the years go by, that rich, mvsical Tone that is so characteristic of them. Better to pay a little more now when buying, and get THR BEST It will pay in the end. Ot MILLER BROS The P. E. Island Music House. Are Sole Agents on P. E. Island for this Piano Le iO TE. i ith lil AE Te ae oe Sal