{ Et q. } oy A : * ; ' ’ * ae oe a SiG Abe THE Pullets Should be Laying. WALTER BAKER & C0, | vere putictstatebed in March an rhe Largest Manufacturers of \ ight al be laving this month wi) PURE, HIGH GRADE Late itched ones if not lay‘ng in Novem- X obths MD GERAIS | Snr bets spring when dggeaed levees Industr trial ani F fn | t me pullets in April following, EXPOSITIONS the profit was $14.97, and he got 50 dozen \ more eggs in April than in December, ik h Ei Tp and Ame. lesson to all who Get all the eggs you other crops are Now this is a striki ng keep | hens tor profit. season; if , an at this ef emicals x short, eggs always bring cash. Pro- Their de s BREAKFAST COCOA Is a bably 45 ets. per doz. by Christmas. t a die, * } " ee ! re get the puilets to Jaying early SOLD BY GRK mS EVERYWHERE when prices are highest. Rev. “Ss. W. WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS, | Savires, of Franklin, Mass., says: “For the purpose of seeing how many eggs I | ould obtain last winter from twelve hens, ASK YOUR DRUCC I used four large cans of Sheridan’s Con- : ‘ lition Powder. I believe it is the best pre- | paration known to increase egg produc- i tior [ saved part of the eggs fur hatch- ing after forcing the hens four months for all they were worth with the Sheridan’s | Powder nd IT never hal a greater per cent. of fertile CER" or more vigorous chickens. In brief, I do not believe I can | ; : ° afford to be without i powder to give gf health and vigor to young hens.” If you v7 > annot get it near home, I, S. Johnson & tg ~ ae 1 E ce Re) t Es Co., Boston, Mass., the only makers of Ma AL at 50 cents ’s Powder, will send for 25 cent packs, five packs for $1.00 ; or i She t dan ream. No “Oly | te b ste 8 ot c In big bottles | », $1.20 one large two pound can of Pow- bVc. ana 81.0% | der, postpaid ; six cans $5.00, express pre- } . | , 4 , Daw Ria , paid. Sample copy of the best poultry a eu he “ae i . . Delivery EXpress. ~ | tazazine sent tree. Trunks, baggage, ete., conve and Landlady’—~ That new boarder needn’t from all trains, steamboats, etc., at short} try to make me think he is a bachelor. notice. Please leave your orders at C.J.| He’s either married or is a widower. Patton & Co’s. Store, rth side of Queer Millings—How can you tell ? Square Landlady—He always turns his back to A. McQUAID. me when he opens his pocketbook to pay } his board. A PRINTER'S ILLS, | A Brantford Compositer has Diabetes--He Drops 40 poundsin weight in a short time—How he was Cured, Brantrorp, Oct. 15—Thomas Hazel- 26 —3n t, a compositor in the Courier office hurst in this city, has seen some ups and downs 0 in health within the past few months. Last spring he found himself suffering from diabetes in a very severe form. Ina | few weeks, he lost forty pounds in weight. st | His system kept on running down end Mr | Hazelhurst was very naturally alarmed. | After trying many remedies without bene- | tit, he began using Dodd’s Kidney Pille. | Three boxes made a big change in his con- | dition, and six bottles worked a complete ALIKE An ae OTHE sure, Mr ‘t is to-day better . Hazelhurst is Add one v0 P. | than he has been for years. 2 IVTESY TT te Se EIEN ce SETEEEAL we | more to the list of diabetes cases cured by im 1810 iD ? Ki P is Oud s Iney iis Originated by an Cid Family Pnysician. | iin Think Of It. B22 SuTree Bes | «well, Tommy, I'm glad to see you are ration after Generation have used and blessed. tt re sal og 2 ’ Every Traveicr should have a bottle in his satehe! | getting along so mu h better From Rheumatisan | Said that young man’s uncle. very Sufferer = ; j Oe SROs Hang tiatica, Neuraigta, “Vor ‘ .o >a Ww ak ww Sepveus Headache Diehthetateatntne bee | You have gone a whole week without chitis, Asthma, Chelera-Morbus, Diarrhoea, Lameness, | being whipped, haven’t vou ? Soreness in Body or Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains | “Ye - teacher’ vs ‘ WOll Geen Ses Shs oll Anedy ae relies aud opens dy cure es, #8 Tr; teachers got a Should have Johnson's | Jer.” Every Mother ~ —% 4y.~ iment jn the | ler. for Croup, Voids, Sore Throat, To nsiliti 4, Cone. c vats, Bruiace. Cramps | api Pains lia! le to oceur in any family without | notice lays? ay cua 8 BES. Bedieves ali Sasnme e Complaints 'ike magi “e, S cts. post-paict; 6t tes, Ss. Express paid. LS. Johnson & Co.. Boston.) at school,” lame shoul- in Reply to Oft Repeated Questions wt It may be well to state, Scott’s Emulsion . o acts as a food as well as a medicine, build- ed by W. R. Watsor : he di ng up the wasted tissues and restoring " oO perfect health after wasting fever. GN q DESPA A | Sanford—W hat would you do if you found your wife in tears every time you arrived home late. Merton—I should quietly ask her to | iam Ler eves. Trade snpp When the system is all run down, and no hope of obtaining nourishment by the | ordinary food supply, then take “Milier’s Es mulsion, the great flesh and blood maker ? vee ». » aes Poke ty" 2 ‘the kind t that cures” colds, cough, bron tog | chitis vid ali diseases of throat and lungs. ay Every bottle warranted. No oily taste like I others In big b ittles, 50c. and $1 00, at lruggists He le (play? ally )—Ah, Miss Somerleight, __ | [I find vou still engaged in thought. 599 She (with memory of a fruitless sum- 05Gb mer) s, it’s only too true; nas” but I would it were otherwise “He’s billious,” your friends say when , | vou are irritable. Take Hawker’s liver S $2.50. | pills, they cure billiousness. L.A. SMITH & CO., Toronto. ~ - = i le : He—I am going out west, ar I am not we can sell y Dodd Kidney Pillx at | coming back until I have succeeded in the following prices, viz.:—50c. per box | earning my own living. six boxes for $2.50. To the trade—$4.00 She—Then I shall say goodby, not ner dozen, or three dozen at $3.75 per | ay revoir. : ; d Sent by mailto any ad ss post . . pad. : Safe and pleasant to take, sure to cure, GEORGE E. HUGHES, Hawker’s Balsam tolu and wild cherry. miy29 Charlottetown - = . 7 \vitated voung bridegroom (immediate . 0 g ‘ : ly after the ceremony)—Serena, shull —shal! I—shall we—shall! we kiss ? Self-possessed bride (her third exper- 3 “er > ience)—It is my custom, Williain. suai A quick and pleasant cure for coughs and colds is Hawker’s balsam of tolu and what |" rich in proportion to the > } . - ~~ number of things which he can affurd tu kiliee man. (inne ne Not only relieves, but positively catarrah, Hi uwker’s ‘catarrh cure. that’s { man is cures 7s Tis woe $F ery ‘ Wearlés lré B Qin. 4 tr ’ ' a of ie iin aie . CaAKENS ine Nerves. | To help a young soul, add energy, in- ge See ee , aw spire hope, and blow the coals into a use- impc re ee & Te Organs ty flame; to redeem defeat by new thought, vy firm action, that is not easy, that is the H AW K }; R’S. Serk of divine men. .— Emerson. For piles, blind. bleeding or itching, 9 Pond’s Extract is the best remedy known. Nerve and Stomach For continued application use Pond’s Ex- tract Oi 50 cts. Buy the genuine: [ () NI rs If you do not wish for His kingdom, don’t pray for it. But if you do, yon P. gpartiditin tape ut mpinliias hs must do more than pray for it, you must fe 7 rho ini i" » 3 45 @ Ceriaik’ Invigorator Jor the s ‘Sahu Reskia: | WOTK victim of worr) Ys overstrain of nomen ntment, ¢ when eggs are down to On this Continert, have received en cents per dozen A well known | HIGHEST AWARDS farmer showed us his account for | » the great 0» ber with 125 pullete The net profit hat month from eggs alone was $39.39; Pona “a THIS IS VHE GENUINE. Our trade-mark on Buff Wrapper around every bottle THE WONDER OF HEALING. FOR RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, WOUNDS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, rm“ PILES, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, Refuse Substitutes, INFLAMMATIONS, CATARRH, made crudely, sold Fr ORRHAGES, and ALL PAIN. cheaply. Used Internally and Externally. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Prices, 50c., Cheap, $1, Cheaper, $1.75, Cheapest. Can be diluted with water. Eee Genuine is strong and pure. Sole Marwtacturers POND’S EXTRACT CO., 7G FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK- OOPOOOOPHSOOOOOO OL SOL HOOOPOO POOL IOOOIO OOO OOOO OOD : venettes j > Be » Priestley’s Cravenettes | ; (In light and medium-weight goods) ; Are not only rain-proof, dust-proof and porous to air but are extremely stylish aad come S ; in the following shades : 7 ’ * % Navy, Myrtle, Brown, Grey, Castor and Black. % 7 . 6 Cravenettes are uni- The Priestley trade 3 versally admitted to mark is always a guar- ¢ be the only satisfac- antee of good wearing % tory porous waterproof quality. Always ask < ot =» goods on the market. Poy (uicn tHe oons for Priestley’s. 1% Seree soosoeeeeoe> |_AREWRAPPED-~ | < poncecoccoononnoonneeeooy - - Miodern ! Featherbone Corsets must not be confounded with those which were made five or six years ago. The Foatherbone Corset of to-day is as far removed from the old as black is from white. YOU WILL BE PLEASED. style Suyic, BUY A PAIR AND tiow to Get a Sun light Picture, mind or body, or EXCESSES of any Send 25 “Sunlight soap wrappers (wrap | ; 6 Ay res Nervous Energy, \ pers bearing the words “why does a woman al oy fatigue, aids Digestion, | iook old sooner than a man”) to Levev | ebic > 47h tae? ik oe ithe ‘Ss wi ; . . 4 : N | Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, and you | estores lost Appetite, promotes sound, | will rece ive by post a pretty picture free 1 al ng Sleep, and is a perfect from advertising, and well worth framing. : : ‘ Santee Sal ana This is an easy way todecorate your home. i and Flesh Builder. The s is the best in th k j 1¢ soap is the best in the market and it .@ Bottle, Six for$2.50. | will only cost 1 c. postage to send in the y by Hawker Me dicine Co Lid. Si John NB. wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write ou al lress carefully. Las? Ge te ty ¥ hay 5 E® ya) a2) J ieee : 4 2 = eee a a 2 . As : 2a SUMMERSIDE EXPORTS, a, hag a i} be Sees ah § NPB hee eR es eneg) Ae by Fh >. j a Pe Fo) Re Sa nea etre aS | CONSTIPATION. Summersipe, Oct. 25. Shipped per SS Miramichi, Baquet mas er. for Montreal : SIiriousNEssS, BIND PII oc csisadecanctidsbensios S : A Ge ee OI 6s cies ss seseseects 27 Sick HEADACHE, Be ee NOR i adeunsoudics cies 19 . iCK tH EADACHE pre E21 Beds CPA j5cnn5cies icdecctecies DER REGULATE THE Vv (c : NS Bsa erin ss tk xsceabianseaass 8 ONE PI LL ASTER Em TING Wy Rs hire icc sii diene toa 250 INSURES GOOD c1GESTION. CED CRI iireccerecticnucniccce EE oP 1GE.25 CTS. Tee HODDS M Ed ¢ pace 2 IO 55 icctins dgisdicdichdswoovanhs 3 al $ 1425 S | Shipped per steamer Northumberland, 5 Caeneven master, for Point du Chene | on 26th: } er No coiccciicass a nsec $86 ; BS Geteind Bae ios ec cece cdot ig Dae eel cise ie 2 16 bris mackerel ........... 224 34 bris potatoes.......,.......00086 «4 rT 102 bags potatoes..............000000¢ : EAD BON OCIS: ticcice, cavedeimeee 578 ; Make New, Rich Blood! TT These tills were 5 wonder.2i di-covery TS ae them in the wo ‘4. pow tively « ure on Sa we = ae ee {i panner of di-ca, te informatoon aronhad of te Worth ten ines the ‘ont of 2 box of pills at abot them abe thankful cms UL & DOSE, They expel al { ‘teaputtiier from tie Dieog Jelicate on find greet benefit frris : oe them ustraged t free, Boid everywhe Or sent ll foe pou iu eae five boxes Loo, DRL House bt. J+) (on, Mami SHIP NEWS. Ent, bk Chas E Lefurgey, Read, Pictou, coal; Sadie Brackman, lottetown, bal. , and you will alwa Cranby Rubbers Always to the front, This seasen’s goods fiver than ever. Now that the public ts with the excellent Quality, Style, Fit and Vinis ch of the Granby Rabbers, the demand is almost universal. Everybody wants them Every dealer sells them. Granby Rubbers Wear Like Iron. octl9—dy m w f & wky CSS ee DOCTGRS DIFFER Occasionally, but never on the question of ‘‘HEALTH BRAND” Combinations being absolutely the best thing for women and children to wear, Every first-class dry goods ’ house keeps them. Look -> for the word “Health” *<°> on silk label at neck. Buy no imitations. = THE MONTREAL SILK MILLS CO.,, Ltd, “Coal y ARRIVING: Stetertatll-neenasinndlnaiaeetintiaiemaeiaies ON HAND AND DAILY Round, Nut and Slack, FROM ALL THE LEADING MINKS. Also, HARD COAL and WOOD. before the streets are muddy. KR. MeMELLAN. lv & wy Leave your orders Charlotietown, October 1, 1894—6m eS OE 7 eS (GS What is prescription for Infants t2ins neither Opium, Morphine nor Casteria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s and Children. It cor other Narcotic substance. {ft is a harmiess substitute for Paregeric, Drops, S otaing Syrups, and Castor Oil. it is Pleasant. Its cu a tee is thirty years’ use by Biillions of Mothers. € s oriadestroys Werms and allays feverisianess. Casteori vevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhea acd “Wind Colic. Castoria relieves tecthing troubles, cures constipation and Aatulency, Castoria assimilates tho food, regulates the stomach and bowels, givinc hewlthy and natural sleep. Case toria is tho Children’s Panacea—the Mothers Fricnd, Castoriz. “Castoria is so well adapted to chiidren thas I recommend it as superior toany preseriptiov known to me.” Castoria. “ Castoria isan< an excelle nt 3: redicina #>r chil- @ren. Klot!-ors have repeatedly tol¢. rm of its good effect upon their children.” Da. G . % Ca op, Low: cil, Massa. Fi. A. Arcner, M. D., 111 Se. Oxford St., Drooxiyn, N. Y¥. * Castoric is the best remacdy for children of “Our physicians in the children’s depart which lam acquainted, I hope the day is :.ot !) smemé have spoken highly of their experi- (ar distant when mothers will consider thc real ence ia th. .* outside practice with Castoria, iaterest of tacir children, cond use Castoria in- and altho we only have among our stvod of the variousquack nostrums wich aro d-stroyiag their loved ones, by forcinz opium, morphine, seothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats. thereby sending tnem to premature graves.” Da. J. ¥. Kiecaeror, Conway, Ar . ine C. Surra, Pres., The Centaur Company, TI Mur-ay Stroet, Now York City. Se: BSS ee a, SES a. + deter sacdical sup, 2s What is known as regular oreducis, yet we are free to confess that the merits of Casteria has won us to look with favor upon it.” Unirsp Hesprra, anp DisPensary, eeietenrenenemernenaenione eee i BP a SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, TO MY GIRL. If I should ask you to be mine, What would you say? Would you my proffered hand deoline And say me nay? é Or would you temporize, and say Nor No nor Yes? And have me, tortured by delays, To try to gucss? Or would you tell me Yes to-day, You little flirt, And No to-morrow, just in play, To see it hurt? Or would you grant me happiness For good and all, And make me earnest answer Yes, Without recall? I wish you'd tell me, dear, the truth Without a mask; For if you promise Yes in sooth, Perhaps I'd ash! * “HAS NO SCIENTIFIC B. BASIS. Vacination Has, However, the Support of lucontestible Expertence, Ought we to continue to vacinate if we cannot give a scientific why and wherefore for our work? asks the Lon- don Hospital. This question may be answered by asking another, or severa) others, Ought a baker to bake bread and his customers to eat it if he cannot give a scientific demonstration of the process of fermentation which takes place in the dough? Onght a farmer to sow cornu who is not able to explain the chemico physiological progress of the development of the radicle and the pul mule? The truth is—and weare almost ashamed to put such an elementary pro position into the pages of a scientific journal—that the facts and empiricisin, arts and manufacturers, all take pre cedence of science in the order of humar development. Whole generations 0: men—the majority, indeed, of mankind —have lived and worked and died with. out the consciousness that science was 80 much as possible. Science—tke knowledge sndcomprehension of things in their essence and causes—is the latest of all human Gevelopments. We must, then, do with vaccination as wedo withopium. We ask of opium: What is its history? What has it done in medicine? And the answer is that ot all substances which mankind has yet discovered it is the most indispensank for the beneficent work of the relief o, human pain. Therefore, though we sti. lack a complete demonstration of the therapeutic modus operandi of opium, we continue to use it and shall probabiy go on duing so to the end of time. Sim ilarly we ask of vaccination this question of questions: What has it done in the world? And the answer is that it has defeated in open conflict one of the dead liest enemies of mankind, and has put us on lines of investigation which may rob all pathogenic organisms of their ter- rors. If such should be the grand re sult, it is obvious that the mind of mau, by how much itis delivered from ig noble bodily fears, by so much will it rise to greater and greater heights of boldness and intellectual achievement. This we can all see. But medical men, as custodians of the science as well as the art of healing, must constantly re- member that vaccination and inocula tion can never achieve these magnificent results until they are firmly esta lished upon a basis of scientific reason, as well as upon a foundation of solid and un- challengeable fact. ~ Sncred Rights of Property. A curious fact has been brought to public notice in England by the couduct of Rev. John Vallancy, perpetual curate of Rosliston, who. in the Burton County court, prosecuted the daughter of one of his parishioners for trespassing in “his” churchyard, and damaging “his” hay, by visiting her sister's grave and placing flowers thereon. For this out- rage on the sacred rights of property he claimed damages to the amount of 1s 6d. He contenced, says the New York Evening Post, that the churchyar. was his private property, and that no one had a right to go into it without his per mission. He cut the hay and stacked itin his yard, anc had by a formai notice interdicted the defendant from damaging the crop by trimming the grass over her sister's grave, whicu ha: been done for three years. When the young lady persisted in visiting the grave he followed her, took hold of her, and, with a contemptuous remark upon the flowers which she had placed there, knocked them off the grave with his stick. The reverend suitor iost his case because he was only a perpetual curate. Had he been a rector he could have recovered. A London newspaper in commenting upon the case says: ‘ By two sentimental fictions the churchyar-.. is God's acre, and the church the na tional or the people's church. Dat in dry law God's acre is the incumbent’: freehold, and the only right of the people in the ‘national’ churchyards is the right to be buried there. ‘he rude fore fathers of the hamlets’ the ‘village Hampdens,’ and all the rest, when once laid to sleep, merely serve the purpose of enriching the parson’s hay crop, and their posterity may only visit their graves subject to the permission and convenience of the lord of the soil.” Simple Explanation of Grip. Medical writers make it clear why grip is so fatal. They tell of hemor- raghic and pywmic or septico pywinic results, with purulent and gangrenous inflamation of the lung tissues and fre- quent metastzsis to other organs. One case of hemorraghes and hematomas in the muscular tissue, parenchymatons bleedings by diapedesis, pachymeninygitis hemorrhagica interna, ismentioned. In many cases there is hyperemia of the pia, also meningeal inflitration and sup- purative meningitis and hemorrhage into the lateral ventricle, and very frequently lobar pueumonia.—St. Louis Post Dis- patch Sissy “ nyback’s Natural Mistake. Johnny Wayback—Did you see that young lady from the city? She's got on a coat, and vest, and shirt. and collar, and necktie, and a man’s hat, and u.ost everything! Little Sister—Hush! It’s wicked t- make fun of crazy people.—Cinciun: Enquirer. Last ‘Trip ! Steamer MIRAMICHI will leave Mon- real on 29th October, for the last trip his season. Returning, leaves Char!otte- own on 2nd November. CARVELL BROS. pat guar oct 20—2i Provincial Loan. Provincia, TREASURY, Prince Edward Island, 25th June, 1994, Under authority of the Act of last Ses sion, 57 Vic., Cap. 6, the Government ot Prince Edward Island is now prepared to receive, from any person or persons, Tem- porary Loans, at 4 per cent. interest, on call or on such termsas may be agrerd upon. This will afford a good opportunity fr the investment of a large or small sume tur short or long periods. or MoMILLAN, Prav Trea su: er. june225—pat The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in n Size and Circulation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. One Year, -- - $4/Three Months. Six Months, - $2/One Month, Read his Splendid Offer to Subscribers McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 aioe @ 40 cenis a month. By special arrangement with the publishers, we are enabled to make a most exceptional oifer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fills out the following blank form, subscribing for THE DAILY AMINER for 12 months at 40 cents a month. 35 CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. TTVTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT | .TTTTTI-TITTIIIITT iii iiuaay Tue Examter Publishing Co., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. You will please send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months from date, for which I agree to pay 40 cents a month, it being understood that yon are to have sent to my address for one year, without extra charge, MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current num ber. Name eeeeeeeeeses seeeeereses A eeererewereeees eeeeee eeeereeerees { 4% NSS AnbbSNSSSASOLAGAGOS ss cceeoncces Address........ FOC enna eee eeeeenee Peer eeerereeenee KITT ITTTIVATTTTTTTTITT TTT Wyo LL MN LN i> NL n> Nn nin Nn Ln NL ln SLL > lb Nb bb i bb ll ini ln Ln nn nip lb ln 's lo ln bo te McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under tle heads The Endye of the Future,” “ Newest K 1owledze,” “ Knowledge of Immediate Value,” The Present Hour,” “Stranger than F iction,” etc. We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE: DAILY EXAMINER fer oaly $4.60 a year, payable in advance or in monthly instalments of 40c, as desired. We make this exceptional otter iu order that we may secure a large number ot new subscribers, but all who are ei)eady subscribers may avai! themselves of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magazine. Address: The Examiner Publishing Co. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. &. SLANE WE ARE RUNNING OFF our stock of Latin, English and French Dic- tionaries, also a few Liddle & Scott's Greek Lexicons. White’s Latin English, reduced from $2.00 to $1.25. s English Latin, 6 “« $2900 to $1.25. French Dictionaries, 50 and 75 cents. L. & S. Greek 5. Lexicon, 31.25 Allen & Greenough’s Latin Grammar, reduced from $1.25 to $1.00. All the English and Freach College Text Books at the lowest figures at the BAZAAR STORE. Bowls, Toilet Sets, ete. We want to hustle off a let of to make room tor our Xmas Goods. We will give you the profit. BAZAAR Charlottetown, October 25, 1891--t t s Toys and Fancy Why not help us? COMPAR Y. COAL. COAL. and to Arrive: Landing = Sydney Mines Round & Slack Acadia a Nut Interco!onial és 6 Vale ‘ _ C.LYONS & 09., QUEEN’S WHARF. Charlottetown, September 29, 13914--dy Ow pat guar her wat eo ~ ee a : ae a ~ —- se THEY PLEASE ALL In Quality and Price. Another lot of those WOVEN WIRE SPRING MAT: TRE-SES and SPRING COTS, beautiful Rug Drawing Room Sets and Parlor Suits, ver) Look at our new line of CHAMBER SETS before Don’t forget the; cheapest yet. cheap. We please the people every time. JOHN NEWSON. buying. the place. Charlottetown, Angust 18’ 1894—1 t « L894. The vaily Examiner’ $1 We received to-day anew lot of CHINA, including) Flower Potr, Fairy Lamps, Berry Dishes, Vases, Rose Goods | < E | dated th between | part, and Is: ecessel, of the other at, | parcel of land situate, lying and being Mf | township number three, in ‘Prince Count?” Our | NicKay Woolen Cy U2 SPECIALTNES | READY-MADE CLOTHING, TWEEDS, WORSTEDS, UNDERCLOTHING, HATS, CAPS, BLANKETINGS, FLANNELS. Come aud See Our Shep, eee ‘McKAY WOOLEN CO. Charlottetown, ms 25, i894—dy j Salt! | | Liverpool, due here about 15th October, | 8,000 Bags Salt. | chase can book, now at low rates. PEAKE BROS. & CQ, Charlotictown, Sept. 26, 1894, MM ortgage Sale. Tobe sold by Public yoni atthe Law | Courts Building in Charlottetown, in Queen's | County. in Prince Edward Island, on THURSDAY, the third day of January uext, A D i895, at the hour of tweive o’clock, nocn : All that tract, piece or parcel of land situ- ate in Charlottetown aforesaid, being one- fourth part of Town Lot Number Seventeen 17) in the Second Hundred of Town Lo's in } the said city, bounded on the north by Queen's | Square, on the east by land the = out ‘hurch, on the south by land the af riy of Riehard Heartg, and on the w 4 ” one the property of the Unien Bank a Martin 0” ‘Fiatioran’ *s estate, the sard land have ing a front of forty-two feet or thereabouts on ~ | Qa: en Square, and extending back eighty | feet or thereabouts. The above sale is made under and by virtue | ofa power of salecontained inaa Indenture | | of Mortgage, bearing date the sixth day of | June, A D 1873, and made betweeu the | lottetown Young Men’s Christian Association } of the one part and John Ings of the other rt. ‘For further particulars apply to 4, Ernest Ings, Attorney-at-Law, or to the M lated at Charlottetown this sixteent* | of October, A D 1894. JOHN INGS, Morte ocil6—12i law (tues) MORTGAGE SALE, To be sold by Public Auction, at the Supreme Court House in Charloitetown in Quneen’s County, on Sixth day of November next, A. D. ieg4, | at the hour of twelve o’clock, noon ; z } } } ‘ j } } j } : ! } situate, in Queen’s “County, Prince E lward Island, being part of Towa Lot Number 7 dred of Town Lots, and bounded and de | scribed as follows, that is to say: | Town Lot Nan. ber Twenty-six, on the | north-east side of Hillsborough Streets | thence worthwedkwaraly along said etreet feet; thence on a right angle northeastwardly forty-four feet thence south-westwardly parallel with said street sixteen feet seven ina thence north-eastwardly ypurallel Water Street one foot; thence south-east wardly parallel with Hillsborough Street eventy-two feet five inches to Water Street; thence following the course there of south- westwardly forty-five feet to the | place of commencement. The above sale is made pursuant to @ power of sale contained in a certain Ip | denture of Mortgage bearing date the sat 8, Soran day of Jane, A.D. 1891, made between Owen Coyle of the one part | and James Eden of the other part. | For farther particulars appiy to Mr. James J. Johnston, Solicitor, Charlotte town. Dated this fifth day of Geteber, A, D. 1894 e ighty-1 ine therewith JAMES EDEN, M Morigagee. Mt ort vag ze Sale. To be sold at Public Auction atthe Court House at Summerside, on Monday, the 29th day of October next, A. D. 1894, | at the hour of 12 o’clock, noon, under & | power of sale éontalned in a mor he 7th day of July, 1887, and Cc eensiins Murphy, of the one : Wortman, now di to —4i las (fr ) all that tract, piece, ¢ e i bounded and described as follows, that #@ mencing at astake set in ide of the Centre Line Road in the | northwest angle of land now or formerly | occupied by James Mac intvre; themee | along the said road twenty chains to wae farm now or formerly ow ned by Henry Squarebriggs ; thence south along the ea-tern bounds ary of said Squarebrigs’ for the distance of one bundred chains t0 the line dividiag townships there and four; } thence east alony the said tow nehips line | tw nty cliains to the aforesaid javd pow or | formerly occupied by James Melntyre, thence north along the western boundary of Ja-t mentioned land for the distarce of me Lundred chains to the stake at ihe suv, COM i } pac | hundred acres of land, a little more or being the piece of land described in a: ted by two se veral ledentarer ; wal tively, 7 aring date the second day of ember, A. D. 1862, and the t hird 3 January, <A. D. 1868, and expres-ed to be made between Walter i annan of Ten Mile House, St. Peter's Re ad, and Marv, his wife, of the and Dernis O” Brien of the other me part, part, ant whie th said Tndentures are Te spectively registered in the office of the Registrar of Deeds on the loth day of April, A. D. 1863, in Book 81 fol. 22 on the firet day of October, A. D. 1868, in Book 91 folio 215. Alo ail that other tract, piece or parcel of lan i zitwate, | ing land being on township vumber three aforesaid bounded and described as follow® that isto say, commencing a: the sout angle of a farm now or formerly in P& | session of Arthur Curley on the | side of the Centre Line Road; thence, (ae | cording to the Magnetic North of year 1764) north for the distance of one | hundred chains or until it meets the div ision line between townships number t#@” and three; thence east along the same 0 | chains; thence south ove hundred chait® | or to the said road; thence along the came west ten chains to the place of com | ment, containing one hundred acres & littie more or less. For further particulars apply to M. a \.D. C. MeLeod, Solicitors, Chea MARTHA A. McLAUGHE Executrix of the last will and ment of said Isaac Ch’town, Sept. 29, 1894 —4i, ot+ Salt! To arrive, per bark R. B. Peake, from Alithat tract, piece or parcel of iand lying and being in Chariotietowa, a in the Province or Com- j mencing atthe south-west angle of seid ~ e of commencement, containing tWO™ Parties wishing to pup ‘, UESDAY, the ‘wenty-six, in the first hum SS a 5 ‘gt = Be ee