— ee THE DAILY EXAMINER - : fe SPAT DeNT DE Se SAN UNQUALIFIED 7 Pirot* ae irs | Se sm ~~. =~ ~< @> = . ~ ee Sh a es ——"RUDTART TQIPLING @ d one a 7 Now First Published —All Rights Reserved.) Almost any pilot will tell you that his Work is much more difficult than you ; imagine; but the pilots of the Hugli know oy | that they have one hundred miles of the A. ad | most dangerous river on earth running “ERB : | through their hands—the Hugli between } Caleutta and the Bay of Bengal—and say x thing rheir service is picked and iL CURE y | sifted as carefully as the bench of the su- Wi preme conrt, for a judge can only hang v » Dodd’s Nidney Pillsto cure ary | ¢he wrong man, but a careless pilot can ‘ & Diseas | Female sea f thousand ton ship with crew ) and cargo in less time than it takes to S ; Se nee Oe . } reverse the engines, r . I gt neal | rhere is very little chance of getting off D L SMITH & CO.. sere again when once you touch in the furious we'can 8 y Dodd's Kidney Pills at} eurre f this river loaded with all the he ving pr y 5 per box | fat silt of the the fields of Bengal, where a : : ~ - , To ; $4.00} surt indings change two feet between : a r t $3.75 per!:- des and new channels make or efface : : ag ; a idress peor? themselves in aseason. Men have fought 10z sent by ” en | the Hugl r two hundred years till, now, ts GEORGE E. HUGHES, the ves owns a h we building with . iwing, survey and telegraph depart- may 29 Chariottetown, its exclusive service, as —— | well asa body of wardens who are called ry’ ) I ET } the port commissioners T ¢ A . e They and their officers govern absolute east aa ty from the Hugli Lridge to the last buoy a i 7 lon | at Pilot's Ridge, one hundred and forty . . : » J | miles away, and out in the Bay of Bengal, Hou g i | where the steamers first pick up the pilots ’ ~* | from the brig a i - r A Hugli pilot does not bring papers App y aboard or scramble up rope ladders. He N. DAN DAVIES, arrives in his best clothes with a native DAY on f. servant or assistant to wait on him, and } rs Estat ate G Da g he behaves as a man should who can earn ' ten thousand dollars a year after twenty 0 P.W M - , “| years’ apprenticeship. He has beautiful I - cee rooms in the port office at Calcutta, and ” 7 eo gene rally ke eps himself to the society of his own profession, for though the tele- 9 u = graph reports the more important sound 5 ings of the river daily there is m@ch to be 4 & ¥ : f learned between trip and trip a Some millions of tons of shipping must Nreset Scott’s Emulsion of find their way to and from Calcutta each ’ + TI twelve-month, and unless the Hugli were Cod-liver Ol and itypophos- watched as closely as men watch the At- 7 t find their lantic cables there is a fear that it might 6 a silt up as it has silted up round the old ee ee a Dutch and Portugese ports twenty and i o does not upset thirty miles behind Calcutta. So the port ‘ » nor derange ie office sounds and scour: and dredges and a a builds spurs and devices for coaxing cur- Cigestion like the p! 1in oil rents and labels all the buoys with their Scott’s Emuls is as much proper letters and attends to the sema- ; ; phores and the lights aad the drum, ball € to digest than the piain and cone storm signals, and the pilots of oil milk is easier to digest the Hugli do the rest, but in spite of all the care the Hugli swallows a ship or two th: tter Besides, the fish- every year. fat taste is taken out of the oil, When Martin Trevor had followed this . ; ‘. cs 4 life from his boyhood; when he had risen and it is a.most palatable, — The to be a senior pilot entitled to bring up to Way si kly children, emaciated, Calcutta the big ships drawing over anemic and consumptive adults, twenty-four feet that can (cr could till 4 gain flesh on Scott’s Emulsion | few years ago) ouly pass by special ar- : - e434 rangement; when he had talked nothing 1s ver remarkabie ’ Don’t be persuaded to accept a substitute? Scott & Sowne, Belleville. 50c. and $1. _—— — _ aa + ——— oo | Want a wife, Want a cook, Want a partuer, Want Want a servant girl, a situation, Want to sell a farm, Want’ to sell a house, 7 Want to rent a house, Want } Wat to sell plants or grain Want to ne ‘ Want to sell exchange anything, sell groceries or drugs, anything, Want to find customers for anything, Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or catt'e ADVERTISE IN or trade lLIOUSNESS, PEPSIA.® | EADAGHE, |REGULATE THE LIVER. ONE PILL AFTER EATING INSURES GOOD SCIGESTION. [PRIGE 25 CTS. Tee DODDS MER Co WH) 0 A =n Doman Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appo inte sole selling Agents in Province o 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 Coal on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents. ywn, May 25, 1894—+tf the tue Char!ottet PHOTOGRAPHY Superior workmanship, re fined finish and moderate prices combine to make these Photos the most satisfactory in Charlottetown to-day. GEO. H. COOK Corner Queen & Grafton Sts. PUTTNER'S FMULSION WILL RESTORE Pale, Weak and Emaciated CHILDREN toa normal condition of HEALTH and STRENGH, and bring back the BLOOM OF YOUTH more quickly than any other medicine, As a Flesh Restorer. Puttner’s Emulsion has no equal, giving substance and tone to the wasted muscles. All Druggists der bottle. Price 50 cents june keep it. Christianity vs. Agnosticism, Just published in Pamphlet fourm, 48 pp., the course of Sermons recently preached by the Rev. James Simpson, on “ Christianity vs. Agnosticism.” These Sermons have been widely read, and an opportunity is sow offered of securing the series in complete form. Price 10c. per copy; $1.20 per aozen copies. or sale at THE EXAMINEROFFICE, apli—ly & wy but Hugli and pilotage all his life, he was exceedingly indiguant that his only son should decide upon following his father's procession. Mrs, Trevor had died when the boy was a child, and as he grew older Trevor, inthe intervals of his business, noticed that the lad was very often by the no nice place for a voy. =~. SS river side Once, YOUNG JIM WOULD LIE IN THE BOW. when he asked him if he could make any- thing out of the shipping, little Trevor re- plied by reeling off the list of all the house- flags in sight at the moorings. “You’H come to a bad end, Jim,” said Trevor. “Little boys haven’t any business to know house-flags.”’ “Oh, Pedro at the Sailors’ home taught me. He says you can’t begin too early.”’ “At what, please?” “Piloting. I'm nearly fourteen now and —and I know where all the shipping in the river is, and I know what there was yesterday over the Mayapur bar, and I've been down to Diamond harbor—oh, a hundred times—and [’ve—” “You'll go to school, son, and learn what they li teach you, and you'll turn out bet- ter than a pilot,” said his father, but he might just as well have told ashovel-nosed porpeise of the river to come ashore and begin lifeasahen. Jim held his tongue —he noticed that all the best pilots in the port office did that—and devoted his young attention and all his spare time and money to the river he loved. Trevor’s son became as well known as the Bankshall itself, and the port police let him inspect their lauyches, and the tug boat captains had sake place for him at table, and the mates of the big steam dredgers used to show him how the ma- chinery worked, and there were certain native rowboats that J'm_ practically owned: and he extended his patronage to the rail that runs to Diamond harbor, forty miles down the river. In the old days nearly all the East India Company's ships used to discharge at Diamond hatbor on account of the shoals above, but now ships go straight up to Calcutta, and they have only some moorings for vessels in distress there, and a telegraph service and a harbor master, who was Jim’s intimate friend. He would sit in the office and listen tothe soundings of the shoalsas they were reported every day, and attend to the movements of the steamers up and down (Jim always felt he had lost something if a boat got in or out of the river without his knowing it), and when the big liners, with their rows of burning port holes, tied up in Diamond harbor for the night Jim would row from one ship to the other through the sticky hot air and the buzz- ing mosquitoes and listen respectfully as the pilots conferred together. Once, fora treat, hisfather took him down clear out tothe sand heads and the pilot brig, and Jim was joyfully sea sick as she tossed and pitched in the bay. So he had to go down three or four times more with friendly pilots till he had cured his weakness. The cream of life, though, was coming up ina tug or a police boat from Diamond har- bor, to Calcutta over the James and Mary —the terrible sands christened after a royal ship they sunk two hundred years ago. They are made by two rivers that enter the Hugli six miles apart and throw their own silt across the silt of the main stream so that with each turn of the A Child Cured of Eczema by Chase's Oint- ment, “My six year-old daughter, Bella, was afflicted with eczema for 24 months, the principal seat of eruption being behind her ears. I tried almost every remedy I saw advertized, bought innumerable med- icines and soaps, and touk the child to medical specialists in skin diseases, but without result. The doctor advised the use of Chase’s Ointment, and since using, the eruption has all disappeared, and | can confidently say my child is cured. (Signed) Maxwell Jchnsion, 112 Anne St., Toronto. _——~<00> Emperor William is said to have writ- ten to the Prince ot Wales expressing the hope that the Duke of York’s next son will have the name of Shakespeare bestow ed upon him in addition to his other hames, Cured Weak Back for 25 Cents For two years I was dosed, pil!eJ and plastered for weak back, scalding urine and constipation, without benefit. One box of Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills 1eliev- ed, three boxes cured. R. J. Smith, Tore onto. One pill a dose, price 25 cente, nantes ee = see = sa pee as a a eee weather and tide the sands shift ‘and change like a cloud. It was here, (the tales sound much worse when they are told in the rush and growl of the muddy waters) that the Countess of Stirling, fifteen hundred tons, touched and cap sized in ten minutes; and a two thousand ton steamer in two; and a pilgNm ship in five: and another steamer literally in an iustant, holding down her men with the masts and shrouds as she lashed over. When a ship touches on the James and Mary the river knocks her down and buries her and the sands quiver all around her and reach out under water and fake new shapes. Young Jim would lie up in the bows of the tug and watch the straining buoys kick and smother in the coffee-coiored red current, and the semaphores and flags signal from the bank how much water there was in the channel till he learned that men who deal with men can afford to be careless on the chance of their fellows being like them; but men who deal with things dare not relax for an instant. “And that’s the very reason,” old McEwen said to him once, “that the James and Mary is the safest part of the river,” and he put the big black Bandoorah that draws twenty-five feet through the Eastern Gat, with a turban of white foam wrapped round her foot and her screw beating as steadily as his own heart. If Jim could not get away to the river there was always the big, cool port office, where the soundings were calculated and the maps were drawn; or the pilot's room, where he could lie in a long chair and bist- en to the talk about the Hugli; and there was the library, where if you had money you could buy charts and beoks of diree- tions against the time that you actually steamed over the was exceedingly hard for Jim to hold the list of Jewish kings in his head, and he was more than uncertain as to the end of the verb “audio” if you followed it far enough down the page, but he could keep ths soundings of three channels distinct in his head and, what is more confusing, the changes in the buoys from Garden Reach down to Saugor, as well as the greater part of the Caleutta Telegraph, the only paper he ever read, Unluckily, you cannot pursue about the Hugli without money, even though you are the son of the best-known pilot on the river, and as soon as Trevor understéod how his son was spending his time he cut down his pocket money; and Jim hada very generous allowance. In his extrem- ity he took counsel with Pedro, the plum- colored mulatto atthe sailors’ home. And Pedro was a bad man. Heintroduced Jim toa Chinaman in Machnatellah, a nasty place in itself, and the Chinaman, who an- swered to the name of Erh-Tze, when he was not smoking opium talked English to Jim for an hour. “S'pose you take. Can do?" he said, at last. Jim considered the chances, A junk he knew would draw about eleyen feet. and the regular fee for a qualified pilot out- pigeon ERH-TZE BEAT HIM DOWN TO ONE TWENTY, ward would be two hundrd rupees, the other hand, he was rot qualified, so he could not ask more than half. But, on the other hand, he was fully certain of a hrashing father for pilot I license, >o he d oue hundred and = seventy-five rupees, and Erh-Tze beat him down to a hundred and twenty, and that was likea Chinaman allover, The cargo of his junk vas worth anything from fifty toa hund ed thousand aud Erh-T'ze was <ctting enormous frieght on the coffins of thirty or forty dead Chinamen whom he Was taking to be buried in their native ountry. Ric: Chinamen will pay faney prices for their services, and they havea superstition that the iron of steamships is vad for the health of theirdead. Erh Tze’s junk tad crept up from Singapore, via Penang and Rangoon, to Calcutta, where Erh-Tze had been staggered by the pilot dues On from his WZ without ask rupees, This time he was going out at a re duction with Jim, who, Pedro said, was just as good as a pilot. CHAPTER II. Jim knew something of the outside of junks, but he was not prepared, when he went down that night with his charts, for the confusion ot cargo and coolies and coffins and day-cooking places and other things that littered the decks. Jim had sense enough to haul the rudder up a few feet; he knew that a jnnk’s rudder goes far below the bottom and he allowed a foot extra to Erh-Tze’s estimate of the ship’s depth. Then they staggered out into mid- stream very early, and never had the city of his birth looked so beautiful to Jim as when he feared he would not come back to see it. Going down Garden Reach he dis- covered that the junk would answer to her helm if you put it over enough and that she had a fair, though Chinese, notion of sailing. He took charge of tLe tiller by stationing three Chinese on each side of it and standing a little forward gathered their pigtails into his hands, three right and three left, as though they had been the yoke lines of a rowboat. Erh-Tze al- most smiled at this. He felt he was get- ting good care for his money, and took a neat polished bamboo to keep the men at- tentive, for he said this was no time to teach the crew pigeon English. The more way they could get on the junk better would she steer, and as soon as he felt a little confidence in her Jim ordered the big rustling mat sails to be hauled up tighter and tighter. He did not know their names—at least any name that would be likely to interest a Chtnaman—but Erh- Tze had not banged about the waters of the Malay archipelago for nothing, and as he went, he rolled forward with the bamboo the sails rose like eastern incan- ee (T> be Continued). DANGEROUS CONSOLATION. All Richt tn a Day or Two, But the D Never Came. . 7 “All right in a day or two” is the thought that consoles every one who is suffering from any indisposition that does not pros- trate him, Jn the case of a per-on bed- ridden for months with disease of the Kid- neys being asked, “ Did you not have an warning of thiscondition you are now in?” “Yes, I was bothered at first with back- ache, with occasional headaches, but did not consider myself sick or the necessity of medicine further than a plaster on my back or rubbing with my favorite liniment. It was months before I began to realize that it was useless to further force mysel. to ignore my condition, The backache had become a pain in the back and sides weak and tired feeling, high-colore urine with obstructions and stoppage, ro in the bladder, palpitation of the eart, poor appetite, indigestion, and a dull, languid feeling, with entire lack of energy.” _ Had the el signal of distress from the Kidneys—Back-ache—received the assistance of Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, the after state of misery and suffer- ing would have been avoided. A few doses dispel first symptoms; delay re- sults in liver, heart and stomach becom- ing affected. It is useless to expect to overcome this complication without a persistent and regular use of Chase's K, and L, Pills, Price 25c., sold by all dealers. Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. Sold Wholesale avd Retail, by Geo. E Hughes’ Chaclottetcwu. NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, &c. The a ped is now to make Surveys rub and Division Lines, furnish Plans, ete. ; Architectural Drawings, Plans, Speci &- ns and Estimates. J. P. NICHOLSON, lands or, | higlotts wa, Aug, 25, ls4—dy & wy places themselves. It | | Pills in a few weeks, speaks FROM ALL POINTS OF THE COMPASS, Canady’s Fiscal Policy Defended. Loxpox, Nov. 23.—The Standard this morning says that speaking at Newcastle-on-Tyne yesterday, defended the tiscal policy adopted by Can- ada in her relations with England. He contended that Canadas’s system of 1n- cidental protection are immensely increas ing instead of decreasing her trate with Great Britain. England, he said, was the only country which, in respect to trade, treated her colonies af foreigners, and he thonght the time had arrived when this subject should be dealt with in a manner likely to prove to the aduantage of both England and her colonies. 2 +ere TD Ur. THE DEAD RAISED A Former Resident Thought to be Dying of “right’s Disease—Cured by Dodd's Kidaey Pills Listowet (Special) Nov. 25.—A des- patch reaching here relating to the re- covery in Neepawa, Man., of Mrs, T. H. McKee formerly living here was a sur- prise to her friends and acquaintance. It was met by doubt, however, until confirm- ed by a reply from Neepawa. Her case was well known here as this lady was treated by severs! of the local doctors for Brght’s disease and her friends thought, as did her physicians, th@t her case was hopeless, and it was as a last resort that she left here totry climatic change That Mrs. McKee was cured by Dodd’s Kidney volumes in their favor. annaapieiiieiay Mr. F. A. Rowe, of East Conneaut, O., grew 62 tons of pumpkins on three acres, the sum realized being $186. It took three teams and five men three days to deliver them at the Canning factory,, netting Mr. Rowe about $150. That Pale race, : For Nervous Prostration and Anemia there is no medicine that will so promptly and infallibly restore vigor and strength a- Scotts "Emulsion. ali dlbtsiemiom Cured of Chronic Ca arrh, A Remarkable Curc—J. W. Jennison, Gilford. spent between $200 and $300 in consulting doctors; tried Dixon’s and all other treatments, but got no benefit. One box of Chase’s Catarrh Cure did me nore good than all other remedies; in fact, I consider myself cured, and with a 25.cent box at that. A small planet, the tenth discovered th's year, and the 4v8:h in the list, was re- cently discovered by Prof.. Max Wolf, of Heidelburg. —_oe Medicai Testimony During half a century proves Cod Liver Oil to be the most necessary thing to take for consumption. But the trouble has been its improper methods of preparation for invalids. Miiler’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is the only reliable formula on the mar- ket. None but the livers of the Norweg- ian Cod are used in makingit. In con- junction with the hypophosphites of lime and soda it has the most wonderful effect on consumptive patients, who, after taking tt for a while, get new strength. rise from heir beds and enter upon a new lease of ife. Miller’s Cmulsion is the great nerve strengthener and blood maker, and cures coughs, colds, bronchitis, scrofula and all lung affections. In big bottles, 50c. and $1, at all drug stores. 0-2 ——— On the day when the Queen give Lord Rosebery the ivsignia of the Order of the Thistle, she also gave a silver medal to Edwin Miller, her chief coachman, in re- cognition of his 37 years of faithful service. Catarrh Cured for 25 Cents Neglect cold in the head, and you will surely have catarrh. Neglect nasal cat- arrh, and you will as surely induce pu)- monary diseases or catarrh of the stom ach, with its disgusting attendants, foul breath, hawking, spitting, blowing, ete. Stop it by using Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure, 25 cents a box cures. A perfect blower enclosed with each box. Youths’ ulsters, size 33 to 35; boys’ overcoats, size 22 to 27 at special low rates for one week at the Bargain Cerner. ~—McKay Woolen Co. Bad Blood Betwecn Them, The ever slaving farmer's wife, her delicate sister in the city, suffer more than they care totell. The dark rings round the eyes, headaches, dizziness, palpitatio: or rhenmatic twinges, betoken a run-dow? system. The blood is poor, and isa bar to eujoyment of life. Scott’s Sarsap .rilla purities the blood, strengthens and vitalizes | the It cures the system, and speedily restores bloom of health to the cheeks. when all others fail. MORTGAGE SALE. To besold by public auction, at the Court House in Summerside, on FRIDAY, the twentieth day of December, A. D. 1895, at the hour of twelve o’clock, noon, under a power of sale contained in a mort- gage, dated the twentieth day of March, A. D. 1890,and made between Dominique Peters and Lucy Peters, his wife, of the one part, and Albert L. Anderson and George Compton, trustees, of the other part, and duly assigned to the undersigned. All that piece of land in Lot Five, Prince County, bounded as foliows : Com- mencing on the north side of the Howlan Road, in the southwest angle of land now or formerly in possesston of the heirs of the late Ronald McDonald, thence north to the Duvar Road, thence west ten chains to land sold by said Dominique Peters to Lamob Gallant, thence south eighteen and one- half chains to the north boundary of twenty-five acres of Jand also sold by him to said Gallant; thence east along the same three and one-half chains, or to the east boundary thereof; thence south to the Howlan Road, and thence easterly along the same eix aud one-half chains to the place of commencement, containing sixty-five acres of land, more or less. For further particulars apply at the office of J. Edward Wyatt, Barrister at- Law, Summerside. Dated this 16th day of November, A. D. 1895, GEORGE COMPTON, HOLDEN C. MILLS, Assiguees of Mortgage. nov19—4i law (2) To the Citizens of Charlottetown : We have gone to considerable expense this fall increasing our plant to supply Incandescent Lights. and we are now about prepared to con- tract for any number of lights that may be required within the limits of the city. We, therefore, ask ai], not to enter into any contract before getting our rates. About first of December we purpose run. ning our plant twenty hcurs out of the twenty four, P. E. |. Electric Co James Waddell, MANAGER. Noy. 13~—d Im eod Sir Charles Tupper, | ——— SS ag. — = es Ronse oo ~ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1895. — ~- ee aes os aw ce tt NN OCT ttn e s Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has led to the placing on the market many misleading and unscrupulous imitations of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu- facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are used in their manufactures. Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.’s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. | HIRTY years’ observation of Castoria with the patronage of millions of persons, permit us to speak of it without guessing. . It is unquestionably the best remedy for Infants and Children the world has ever known. It is harmless. Children like it, It gives them health. It will save their lives. In it Mothers have something which is absolutely safe and practically perfect as 9 ohild’s medicine. Castoria destroys Worms. Castoria allays Feverishness, Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd. Castoria cures Diarrhes and Wind Colic, Castoria relieves Teething Troubles. Castoria cures Constipation and Flatulenoy, Castoria neutralizes the effects of carbonic acid gas or poisonous sir, Castestn does not contain morphine, cpium, or other narcotic property. Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is put up in one-size bottles only. It is not sold in bulk. Don't allow any one to sell you anything else on the plea or promise that it is “just as good” and “ will answer every purpose. See that you get C-A-S-T-O-R-I-A. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. The fac-simile signaturo of Creme dela Creme _ i sx» La Fayette CIGARS and CIGARETTES Are for sale in every store in the city. Give them a trial and convince yourself that you are smoking the finest. Manufactured by J. M. FORTIER, Montreal. sept24d—dy & wky tf Soe eS eee EE True Lovers of delicious TEA are satisfied when supplied wthi our lines of English Breakfast Congou, India, China, Oolong and Ceylon Teas. We believe our 22c. Blend to be the best on the market for quality, strength flavor and price. The public realize a good article when they use it, and to-day our sales on this Tea are larger than ever before. We carry a full line of Canned Goods, Jams and Jellies, Fish, Boned and Skinned Dried Codfish Flour, Meal, etc., which we will sell at the very lowest prices. the most reliable gool and Eggs taken in ex delivered to all Ouc aim is to bay sell then at the low est prices. change for cash or goods. Goods parts of the city. WILLIAMIIGRANTE& CO. Charlottetown,-June 19, 1895—135 79 QUEEN STREED. FEATHERBONE SKIRT BONE FOK GIVING A light, pliable, elastic bone made from It is soft and yielding, conformed TYLE ani CHAP. rests to folds, yet giving proper shape to Skirt or Dress. TO The only Skirt Ladies Dresses. Bone that may be wet without injury. the Celebrated FEATHERBONE CORS*TS are corded with: this material. For sale t yfleading Dry Goods Dealers. A GREAT MANY PEOPLE imagine they cannot get a stylish, up- to-date, made-to-order Suit of Clothes under $20.00 or $25.00. These people have never seen the Suits we make for $12.00; $14.00, $16.00 and $18.00. Fit, workmanship and material guaran- teed, thoroughly made and trimmed. Also, Rubber Coats, Fur Coats, Fur Capes, made-up Ulsters. All our stock up to date, and every- thing in the store genuine value. JOHN MACLEOD & CO., Charlottetown, October 9, 189595135 w ~——————- el Well ~ Dressed. 3 Acs ast 1 hha ABEL Ds RRO I aa i osu Ladi Now-a-days have their Skirts bound with > ar .— eo eee > a ae ~ <r, Ve es "I aus a 3. > 5 a sah SES «* mae SS TS ' e " shirt Prot ot re axticell 4-Nards Shade -!0e e pete soar SUPERIOR B PLUSH ATLESS COST. No Raw EDGES. STITCH ON EROUT.TURNING Over. . = pe Women are usually anxious to make their money go ag far as they can, hence the great popularity of the Corticelij Skirt Protector It is economical and adds to the beauty of a garment as well. Sold in 4 and 6 yard lengths. The Mohair isin 5 yard lengths. Can be had in same shades as Ccrticelli Sc wing Silk, Corticelli silk Co, Wanufacturers, St. Johns, Que. octli—dy 36 & wky tf a ————— — ——___—_—— ————————— H. STANWAYE 6O., Wholesale Wine & Liquor Merchants, ITALIAN WAREHOUSE, 243 Hollis & 48 Upper Water St, HALIFAX, N. S. P. O. BOX NO. 475. HAPPY WEDDINC. LOW PRICES and HIGH GRADE GOUODs4 were joined tugether at the “City Hardware Store,’ especially “Jewel” Stoves and Ranges. R. B. NORTON & CO,, City Hardware ‘Store. Charlotteown, Oetober 22, 1895—25 ly (14) octlS — Ee = = i = Still at the Front! Bo not lese sight of the fact that we have a tull and complete stock of all kinds of Footwear in Boots, Shoes, Rubbers, ete. . Men's, Boys’, Youths. Ladies’ Wiises’ and Children’s. Unequalled for style, fit and wear. The place to buy your footwear is of | WEERS & WARREN, North Side Market Square. § Charlottetown, Nov, 15—135 wy. Now landing fresh from the Mills: Ground Oil Cake, Blatchford’ CalfMeal, Bran and Shorts, Selling at owest prices. AULD BROS. a a ee | FIRE. Haszard’s Sea Shooting Powder, F, F, Acadia 2 Smokeless 1-22 Papers ” Shells, Nos. 8, 10, 12, Wire Cartridges, Loaded Cartridges,10 and 12, Shot, all Sizes, Wads and Caps, 1 Double Barrel No.8 Gun (Muzzle), Guns, Muzzle and Breech Loaders, 10 & 12 SIMON W. CRABBE, = Ch’town, Aug. 23, 1895—135 & wy Stoves and{Hordware, Walker's Corner, ii; a Ee Se —— JOB PRINTIN need, See our samples, Leave your order at Tuk ExaMInE® office. We can print anything you Good work, promptness, low rates cows wine asia ey re lee a ace i ‘a ee ss, ee wi