‘a ; ; 1 et & C0. Limited, Largest Manufacturers ot E, HICH CRADE AS ani CHOCOLATES On thie Continent, have received HIGHEST AWARDS from the great ustrial and Food EXPOSITIONS EUROPE AND AMERICA. ; « In view of the AutioNn: Fry imitations the lIabeleand wrappers om our is. consumers should make sure co "Dorchester, Mass. ed on each packag SsOLt CERS EVERYWHERE WALTER 6- Wood's PHOSPHODINE. The Great English Remedy. Six Packages Guaranteed to mptly and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotencyand all effects of Abuse or Excesses, = Mental V z : a of Toba , O} Beforeand After. annie. Armity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been prescribed over 35 years In thousands of cases; Is the only Reliable and Honest Mecicins known. Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if | he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, [ inclose price in letter, and we will send by return LTD. DORCHESTER, MASS. sof | “= j “y, e@cessive use ior Stimu- which soon lead to In mail. Price, one packaffe, $1; six, $5, One will | please, siz cil cure. Pamphlet» ‘ree to any acdress, | The Ww ‘ompany, | t.. Canada. So Cha by Geol Hughes | Drugg 0 romptly filled. } Ph 4 I » a Dame a lok dP e3 Six boxes $2.50. fr per box ix t Da. L. 4. SMITH & CO., Toronto, « we'can sell you Dodd's Kidney Pills at he following prices, viz.:—50c. per box six boxes for $2.50. Tothe trade—$4.00 ur dozen, or three dozen at $3.75 per dozen. Sent by mail to any address pos’ aid GEORGE E. HUGHES, may 29 Charlottetown. oVRe . ONSTIPATICN,| SILIOUSNESS, [\ DYSPEPSIA,® Sick HEADACHE, REGULATE THE LIVER. INSURES GOOD DIGESTION. & Th ; nco [PRICE 25 CTS. Tae JOBDS MED co iro, FMULSION * 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 PUTTNER’S wasted muscles. All Druggists keep it. Price 50 cents per bottle. june TO LET a The Shop now occupied by J. T. Me- Kenzie, Tailor. Possession immediately. Apply to F. W. L. MOORE, Solicitor, sept27—tf } In the Building x NJ gt For Sale or To Rent The well-known Busness Stand, the * Central Hotel,” formerly the “ Railway House,” situated Richmond Street. This Hotel contains 21 rooms, with large Shop and good stabling for 25 horses. Is centrally situated, and within two minutes walk of Market House and Post Office Apply to on THOMAS CAMPBELL, Richmond Street. ap23—dy 246 & wky CHARLOTTETOWN BUSINESS COLLEGE. Established 1878. eee Intending Students should enter at once if possible. Remember, only accommodated. Lecture Course begins on che 16th inst. Terms, course of study, ete., furnished On application to 70 students can be L. B. MILLER, Principal. Charlottetown, Sept. 5, 1895—d&w MONTAGUE Carriage Factory. We are showing this season a finer line of Carriages than shown by us heretofore. The assortment consists of Top and Open Buggies, Jump Seats and Road Carts. For style, comfort, durability and excel ence of workmanship our stock cannot be surpassed, Also at hand, at lowest prices, CARTS, TRUCK WAGONS, and all Carriage Findings, such as Pocket Boots, Whip Sockets, Washers, etc., usually found in @ first-class Carriage Shop. Prompt attention to Repairs. Painting & Specialty. Terms reasonable, JOHN McLEAN & SON. | churned perfectly sweet. THE DAILY EXAMINER . — BAD BUTTER IN THE FALL. Bitter Cream and Cream That Swells and Foams In the Churn. | Autumn is the time of the year when | some domestic butter makers are plagued with bitter cream, and others with cream that will swell and foam in the churu and refuse to yield up its butter. Occasionally where we find the ‘‘gath- ered cream system’’ at butter factories in vogue, makers report the same trou- ble in the autumn months. There is a popular belief that there is a specific remedy for every bodily disease and ail- ment, if it were only known, but I think butter makers have a better right to be- lieve that a remedy exists for all of the complications that occur in the working of their art. Take, for instance, cream that will foam and swellin the churn and refuse to ‘‘come.’’ I never have been troubled with that kind when I have been careful to follow out a line of preventive treatment. I believe it tobe often but not always | caused by an alkaline ferment developed at a low temperature. It is in cold weather that we meet with this trouble and in cream that has stood long not | and 18 | far above the freezing point This cream gets its first warming up in the churn, | where, instead of breaking down into butter, it swells, due to its gaseous na- ture. If I had such a mess of cream on niy hands, I should take it right out of the churn and set it away in a warm temperature to sour, or mix some sour cream with it to hasten the ripening process, provided, of course, it had not been previously matured. Better yet isto take preventive measures by treating the creaming and churning proc- ess intelligently from beginning to end. Set the warm milk under conditions that will send all of the creana to the surface in the quickest possibletime. A temperature of 40 to 45 degrees 1s about the best for this, which is very easy to obtain at this season of the year. More often the ‘‘set’’ milk stands at a tem- perature of 35 degrees in an open dairy room and is not skimmed for several days. This isa nice way to sow seed for foamy cream that will cut up ail sorts of capers in the churn. Set under fayorable conditions, the cream should be all on the surface in from 12 to 18 hours, and then skim it. It is pernicious to its quality to let it stand there a day or two longer. It is a prevalent practice to do so, however, under the impression that more cream is obtained thereby. But you should remember that you can hasten or retard the raising of cream ac- cording to the conditions under which you set the milk. As soon as the cream has been lifted from the milk it should be placed in a vessel to ripen; not in a temperature of 50, for there it will age, not ripen, but surrounded by a warmth of from 65 to 68 degrees. It will mature ina few hours. The whole process from setting the milk to churning the cream should not be dragged over the period of half or a whole week’s time, as is sometimes done. Expedition in fine butter making is not undue haste; it is a necessity. As is well understood, the milk from far- row cows, or animals long in lactation, will also cause cream to yield its butter tardily. With thisin mind many makers attribute to this cause all of their trou- ble in the autumn when often it may have only a remote connection with it. There is no doubt but that it is fre- quently the one cause, especiaily when other precautions have been taken to obtain a natural result. Bitter cream is the sequel also of holding it a long tims at a low temperature. An unnatural fermentation develops, that might be compared as analogous to mold in bread. Once taking the place of the natural butter flavor, it can never be eradicated. The remedy is to cease from holding miik and cream for several days at a time at a temperature a little above the freezing point. Few besides local dealers have any idea how much decidedly bad butter comes to market in the late autumn mouths. Owing to the cool weather, be- cause milk does not get thick and cur- dle, it is popularly believed that it can be held for days withimpunity. But by this means natural fermentation is ar- rested and unnatural bacteriological changes occur, which ruin butter quali- ty as thoroughly as sprouting in the bins ruins wheat. —Exchange. Dairy and Creamery. The time has come when every cream- ery should experiment with some kind of pasteurizing system. When butter selling is dull, a profitable trade to fall back on is always cream selling. Such a trade may be worked up by every creamery in the land. If in addition it is once known that the cream is pas- teurized before being put on the market, it will go off like hot cakes. Dealers find a constantly growing market for cream. It is not difficult for the careful creamery man to pasteurize cream, be- ginning slowly and carefully, using a little at a time, till he has got both his cream and his market for it just right. Creamery supply houses are beginning to have in stock pasteurizing apparatus, but it will not be difficult for a man to arrange one for himself. There seems hardly a limit to the uses to Which cream may be put. Inya- lids eat it instead of other food, a deli- cious ice cream soda is one of the regu- lar drinks, retail liquor stores use it in large quantities. In restaurants it is not uncommon for a glass of half and half to be ordered, which is not at all the tld fashioned ‘’arf and ’arf,’’ but a glass of half milk, half cream. Cheeseboxes are made of swamp elm and $500,000 worth of them are turned out every year. The wood must first be *‘cooked’’ or dried thoroughly before the box is made. The hoops are made by the rotary cutting machine. The aver- age size box holds from 60 to 65 pounds of cheese. Alfalfa makes dairying profitable in California the year round, even during the dry season. The alfalfa is grown on irrigated ground, and it can be cut every three or four weeks for seven months of the year. POTATOES. | Breakfast and Luncheon Potatoes Ia Nnu- merous Styles. Potatoes left over from another meal | have a wide range of usefulness. Maitre d@hotel is prepared by cutting eight po- tatoes of moderate size into slices a quar- ter of an inch thick and placing them in @ teacupful of boiling cream or milk sea soned with half a teaspoonful of salt, half a saltspoonful of pepper and a ta blespoonful of chopped parsley. Allow the potatoes to simmer, closely covered, for five minutes, remove to a hot dish and squeeze over them & tablespoonful of lemon juice. oe For lyonnaise potatoes cut asufticient quantity of potatoes into dice to make a pint and season with salt and pepper. Then fry a teaspoonful of minced onion in a tablespoonful of butter or salt pork fat until the onion is yellow, after which add a teaspoonful of vinegar and the po- tatoes. Stir carefully witha fork until | the potatoes are a light brown and have taken up all the butter and place them on # hot platter, sprinkle with a tea- spoonful of chopped parsley and set them in the oven for two minutes, after which dhey are ready to be served. : Cold potatoes chopped moderately fine aud browned in a little hot sausage gravy, ham fat, poultry drippings or but- ter afte delicious. They should be stirred to make them an even brown, so that they are neither too moist nor too crisp. Judgment must be used in seasoning, be- cause the fat in which they are fried has already been flavored. Cold sweet or white potatoes may be sliced to give the pieces as large a surface as possible and then broiled on both sides to a delicate brown. This should be done on a wire gridiron and must be done quickly to prevent the potatoes hardening. Arrange the slices in an orderly manner upon a warmed platter, putasmall bit of butter upon each and sprinkle lightly with salt and pepper. White potatoes may be fried and gerved in French fashion thus: Cut them in slices half an inch thick and fry them flat in a hot pan that is covered with the drippings from ham, sausage or salt pork. When the slices are brown on both sides, season with salt or pepper. Old Mantel Decorations. A scheme for embellishing an old time mantelpiece, the beauty of which has been destroyed by age, is to place a board about 3 feet high against the wall at the back of the shelf and cover EASY TO Do. it with cloth or velveteen. The same covering is used for the shelf, and a gimp is held around the edge of the up- right board. Against this may be placed small pictures, plaques or medallions or fans and yet have a fine background for mantel ornaments. The shelf may be simply covered or have a long square scarf thrown overit. It depends upon the quality of the mantelpiece whether it is desirable to cover it up. Baked Omelet. Heat 8 cupfuls of milk with an ounce of butter. Beat 5eggs with a table spoonful of flour and a little salt. Pour this into the hot milk, stirring all the time. Butter a hot spider, pour the mixture into it and bake 20 minutes. Turn into a hot dish and serve at once, as a lukewarm or cold omelet is almost a3 unappetizing as cold mutton. Spanish Curls. Roll puff paste very thin and cut in strips three-quarters of an inch wide. Wind these around sticks three-quarters of an inch in diameter and bake in a hot oven about 10 minutes. Brush over with white of egg slightly beaten, sprinkle with sugar and return to the oven for about three minutes. Remove from the sticks and when cold fill with whipped and sweetened cream. The cream should be thick, sweetened and flavored to the taste and beaten with an egg beater or in a whipchurn until stiff enough to hold its shape. Puta lady finger tube in a pastry bag, fill the bag about two-thirds full with the cream and pressit into the hollow curls. Cream horns are made in the same way, using cone shaped sticks about 5 inches long and three-quarters of an inch in diameter at the large end. Te Clean Black Dresses. An old and tried cleaning solution for black dresses is a handful of fig leaves boiled in a quart of water till only a pint is left. Dip a brush or bit of sponge in this and rub the spots and stains. Black cloth that is only dusty and generally grimy may be washed in soap bark wa- ter, drying without rinsing. Make the Home Happy. Don’t shut up your house lest the sun should fade your carpets, nor your hearta lest a merry laugh should shake down some of the musty cobwebs there. If you want to ruin your sons, let them think that all mirth and social enjoyment must be left on the threshold without when they come home. When once a home is regarded as only @ place to eat, drink and sleep in, the work is begun that ends in disappoint ment. Young people must have fun and relaxation somewhere. If they don’t find it at their own hearthstone, it will be sought at other and less profitable places, Therefore let the fire burn brightly at night and make the homestead delight- ful with all those little arts that parente so perfectly understand. New Table Cover. A lovely sateen table cover has a pale rimrose ground covered with clamber+ « honeysuckle. Itis fresh and sume mery for the cottage parlor. Ff SOME PEOPLE GET FAGGED OUT nervous, weary, depressed, headaches, palid or blue Mps, energy all gone~—just Wasting away, REGAIN HEALTH by building up worn out tissues—pure blood does it. SCOTT'S SARSAPARILLA makes pure blood, cures nervous and wasting dis- advertisers, julyla—dy & wky Advertisers! Lhe home circulation is the most valuable for Tue EXAMINER reaches the homes of our citizens every evening. for our large advertising patronage. THE EXAMINER PUB. COMPANY. That accounts $10 per Set.Partial Set TEET $2 and upwards. Gold and Porcelain Crowning. Best material, best workmanship, best satisfaction. DR. J. P. MURRAY, u25 Queen Sireet, Charlottetown, WANTED. A good man in your district to represent the “Fontbill Nurseries of Canada,”— over 700 acres. The largest in the Dominion. Position permanent. Salary or commission to right man. With the increasing demand for fruit, a osition with us as saleemau will pay you better than engaging in farm work. Send us your application and we will show you how te earn good money. School Teachers! ! it’s just the thing tor you during the summer. Write for particulars, STONE & WELLINGTON, Montreal J. W. Beall, Manager. June 20~—w 3in |just received and selling at prices no higher than formerly charged for a poorer quality. Now is the time to buy. G. H. TAYLOP. North Side Queen Squaie. july9 DR. H. D. JOHNSON oe EYE AND EAR, NOSE AND THROAT Office - - Kent Street Aug 16, ’94—-ly SEVENTY-FIVE American Ranges SOLD WITHIN THE YEAR, Kvery One Giving Satisfaction ——— (1) ——— HIGHLAND RANGES, FULLY WARRANTED, $20.00 AND UPYWFRDS. CHANDLER Ch arlottetcwn, September 10, 1895-25 SIMEON JONES BREWERS, ST. JOHN, N. B. Ale and Porter Sole Agents for the Maritime Provinces for REINHARDT & CO’S, wivantiy"acte Salvado: in bottles is Especially Suited for Family Use. June 25, 1893. {Se 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, FOR SALE. House in Georgetown. That Dwelling House in Georgetown the property of Mrs. Capt. John MeDon- ald, formerly known as the “ McDonald House,” together with the outbuildings. This House is in first-class repair, con- tains fourteen large rooms, and is well adapted for a Dwelling or Boarding House Any party or parties desirous of secur ing @ summer residence wil! find this capital opportunity. his property will be sold at a bargain For terms and particulars apply at the office of J. A. Matheson, Solicitor, George town, or to L. W. MACDONALD, Box 694, Charlottetown. ap5 MEMORIAL CARDS. CABINET MEMORIAL CARDS, neat- ly printed gold on fine quality Black Cards, with velled gilt edges. The Card are suitable for framing, and are especiall adapted for Albums. They make handsome and very appropriate mementoes to distribute among relatives an | friends of deceased persons. The designs are original and artistic, and the workmanship is far superior to any imported. PRICES —One Card, 25 cents; four Cards, 50 cents; twelve Cards, $1.00. Write for specimens and particulars. Mail orders filled by return mail. JAMES W. O’REILLY, Designer and Printer of Memorial Ch’town, June 8, 19 95 ~6 &wy Cards JUST SO. For fineness of finish, artis- tic posing and moderate prices our Photos are unsurpassed anywhere. Children’s Pic- tures a specialty. All kinds of Copying and Enlarging done from old pictures. C. LEWIS, Entrance on Grafton Street, Opposite P.O septl6 Executor’s Notice. All parties indebted to the Estate of t+ late Augustus Hermans are requested to make immediate payment tothe under- signed Executors. Also all ersons hav- ing claims against sai’ Estate are hereby notified to present came, duly atvested, to us. M. P. HOGAN, W. E. SMITH, aixecutors Estate of the late Augustus Hermans. 122—law (1) 3m__— pat law 3m Hodgson & Crosskill’s COMMERCIAL COLLEGE: HODGSON & CROSSKILL’S Commer cial College and Shorthand Institute is now open. Young men and women de- sirous of acquiring a Business Education should embrace this opportunity. Subjects taught include Book-keeping, Commercial Arithmetic, Commercial Law, Business and Legal Forms, Business Correspondence, Penmanship, Shorthand and Typewriting. Students admitted at any time. We guarantee attention to business. 8. F. HODGSON, W.H. CROSSKILL, Principal. Teacher of Phonography. NELLIE M. HODGSON, Asst. Teacher. Box 242, Charlottetown. septld * W. & W. Popular Shoe Store. W. & W, | | | or | i} | au § || cash, OHOAn | The latest productions in _and Comfortable FOOTWEAR Our New Stock is up to date and well selected in the best market for spot cash. 1 Your purse will open quickly when you gaze upon the bargains we offer in our new | lines of Fall and Winter Stock of Boots, Shoes, Rubbers and Overshoes, | now selling at the lowest bottom prices for | Come and see , make the prices right. ‘JUST WHAT YOU WANT. Quality, Style the goods; we will Remember the place. . WEEKS & WARREN, Next to Lewis’ Paoto Rooms, Market Square. r = tetown, September 13,895 135 & wky ee MONDAY, INTERESIING INTERVIEW, An American will make Arrangements with a Canadian Firm, Orrawa (Special) Sept 30.—An Ameri- can who has been here interviewing the membera of the government On private business, has left for Toronto, where it is understood he will try and make an ar- | rangement with the Dodd’s Medicine Com- pany of that city for theestablishment of a manufactory of Dodd’s Kidney Pills in New York State. He declined to specify the locality. During hie stay in Ottawa he has been investigating the now celebrat- ed case of G. H. Kent, who was saved by this remedy when in the last stages of Bright’s disease, and has satisfied limself of the genuine nature of the case. He asserts that the medicine is now univer- sally used throughout the state. A Payine Boarver.—According to a recent despatch from Montreal there is a young lady named Bellemaire, at St. Bar- | nale, St. Maurice county, who has nct taken any food for 30 days, and yet walks about her room. Last year the same per- son abstained from taking nourishment of any kind during 30 days Why Contemplate Suicide. It is like tempting Providence for ccn- | sumptives to ignore the remarkable remedy | known as Miller’s Emulsion of Norwegii:n Cod Liver Oil. For any persen to die of | consumption without trying this remark able flesh and blood maker, after knowing of its evistence, is suicide pure and simple. All that the consumptive patient needs is new blood with which to batile against the destructive forces of the disease. M)!- ler’s Emulsion prevides new bloed in abundance. It is acombination of Nor- wegian Oil and hypophospbites of | lime and soda—a triumph of science | Miller’s Emuleicn is the great | nerve strengthener and blood maker, and and all lung affections. In Big Bottles, | 50c. and $1, at all Drug Storce. Leapvitie, Col., September terrible explosion of giant powder occurred in the Belgium mine this afternoo:, kill- ing probably twenty men. Seven dead bodies were taken ont, Thirteen are known to have been killed. A Remarkable Cure.—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 I consider myself cured, and with a 25) cent box at that. Wasuixcron, September 26—Dr. Tal mage’s formal acceptance of the call tendered by the First Presbyterian church, this city, has been received. He will preach his first sermon as a pastor on Suuday evening, October 27. SEPTEMBER cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Scrofula | 26.—A | more good than all other remedies, in fact | In Reply to Oft-Repeated Questions It may be well to state, Scott’s Emul- 8'on acts asa food as well as a medicine, | building up the wasted tissues and restor- ing perfect health after wasting fever. testant Episcopal diocese of New York, the following resolution was adopted : Whereas, The opening of liquor saloons is forbidden by the laws of tue state ; Resolved, That this convention rejoices that the efforts now being made by the authorities for the enforcement of the ex- cise laws have beeu so successful. This is Concentration, One pill a dose, one box 25 cents. One pill relieves constipation.. One box cures an ordinary case. One pili taken weekly neutralizes formation of uric acid in the | blood and prevents Bright’s Kiduey disease and Diabetes. True only of Dr. Chase’s Kidney Liver Pills. The defence in the case of Theacdore Durant opened in San Francisco on Thurs day. In his opening speech the attorney for the prisoner made the sensational charge that the Rev. John George Gibson, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist church, the scene of the tragedy, was the murcerer of i At the annual convention of the Pro- i i } Blanche Lamont. For Over Fifty Years. An O_p Ann Wet Trizp Remepy. Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty years by millione of mothers for their children while teeth- nig, with perfect snecess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and 1s the best remedy for | Diarrheea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold | by Druggists iu every part of the worid. | Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incaiculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind.—m. w. f. wkly—1l y Photographic @utfit Complete for $17.00. Lancaster’s Camera, rapid lens, patent in- stantaneous shutter, patent adjustabl> diaphragms, Camera beautifully made « polished mahogany with brass mounting tri to fuld up, takes picture trifle larg than cabinet; ist cash price in England £448; mahogany double slide, about 10} lates halt dozen magic lantern plates not opened, three baths for developing, tonir.g and wash- ing, light proof japanned tin case for holding printing paper, two printing fram:s, ete, manual of instruction, Also, **Ixmon” Detective Camera, nickei plated, cost in Eng jand i2sé6éd. rhe lot for 517. Carriage to be paid by purchaser. Addre-~ “ W,” this office septi9—dy & wy tf The Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association of New York Did a larger business in Canada in 1894 than any other Company. Since its organization in 1881 has paid its policy holder for death claims over a twenty-two million dollars. Is now paying atthe rate of overa quarter of a million each month. 98,900 policies, and $300,000,000 of Insurance in force, attest the popularity ot the Company, its system and the confidence of the public. IT IS THE PEOPLE’S INSURANCE, and is sold at about half the rates charged by old system companies. During the first “hree months of 1895 it was thorough- ly examined by the Insurance Depart- ments of New York, Illinois, Ohio, Texas and South Dakota, and pronounced to be sound to the core. For rates and other particulars apply to ROB ANGUS, Agent, — PO, Box 3, Ch’town. une29—~eod 3m. TENDERS will be received by the undersigned until TUESDAY, the 1st of Sea for the entire Undertaking Stock and good will of the business of the late Isaac W. Wad- man, comprising Horses, Wagons, Sleighs, Harness, and a large assortment of Under- taking supplies, a list of which can be seen at his late residence on Grafton Street. We don’t bind ourselves to accept the lowest or any tender. _The remainder of the property wil] be disposed of at private sale on easy terme, or at Public Auction, of which due notice will be given, All parties indebted to the estate are requested to make immediate payment at his late residence, Grafton Street. REBECCA WADMAN, Executrix. HENRY WADMAN, Executor. pt9-—2w dy 135 &w —— ee em ate 30, 1895 ~ 2 TORIA MRSS ee C.storia is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Inf.nts and Childrea. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. I[¢ is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantce is thirty years’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays fovcrishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, eurcs Diarrhea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves tecthing t. «bles, cures constipation and flatulency, Castoria a..-milates the food, regulates the stomach an¢ Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cage twria is tho Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Fricad, Castoris. “ Castoria is so well adapted to children tha I recommend it as superior toauy prescription known to me.” ant a5 Castoria. * Qastoria is aa excellent medicine for chil- fren. Motlecrs have repeatedly told me of its good ees. upor. their ciidrer.” Da. G. C. Osaoon, Lowell, Mass. H. A, Arcres, M. D., 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y, “ Our physiciras in the children’s depart ment have spoken highly of their experi- ence in their cutside practice with Castoria, and although we only have among our medical supplies what is known as regul2 products, yet we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it.” Unsrvep Tosrirat axp Dispensary, = * Castoria ia the best remedy for children of which lam acquainted. I hope the Juy i3 not fr distant when mothers will consi.ler the real intercet of their children, end use Castoria in- stead of the various quack nostrums which ire destroyiag their loved ones, by forcing opiat, inerphine, soothing syrup and other hurt‘ul agents down their throats, thereby sending tuem bo preiaature graves.” Da. J. F. Kincuexcz, Boston, Masa Conway, Ar Auien C. Surru, Fres., ‘Tho Contaur Compazy, 77 Murray Street, Neu York City, ~~ — ’ é ceteteee VSESSESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSESTess 'FEATHERBONE SKIRT BONE A light, pliable, elastic bone made from quills. It is soft and yielding, conforming readily to folds, yet giving proper shape to Skirt or Dress. The only Skirt Bone that may be wet without injury. The « elebrated FEATHERBONE CORSETS are corded with this material FOK GIVING STYLE and SHAPE TO Ladies’ Dresses. For sale by leading Dry Goods Dealers. septl3 —d&w FOR $22.50 SELL YOU —— ——WE WILL A Six Hole Highland Grand Range With all the Cooking Utensils and Warranted. We have the latest Range and best one It is called the Souvenir. DODD & ROGERS. Charlottetown, September 11, 1895—135 on the market. ——— ELS TOE? Creme de la Creme wo La Fayette} CIGARS and CIGARETTES : ; a Are for sale in every store In the alt) Give them a trial and convince yoursel that you are smoking the finest. Manufactured by J. M. FORTIER, Montreal. sept24—dy & wky tf Jeet SOE TAT A tat at atatatatatatatatatats ttt ttt. + + te 3 hd 4] King of all Vl; £ Absolutely | +) x Bicycles. the Best. [i + i Light Weight and Superlor fiaterial [4 TE t th Rigidity. Every Ma- and Scientific Work [4 ;4)| ——_—__—_—._ F rel : chinefully warranted 7, manship. b > ¢ BS SP ee Highest Honors at Scag twa-cent stamp for our 24-page Catatogue—A work of Art. iia World's Columbian Exposition, A Ge $ i Moaarch Cycle Company, > Ba Retail Satesroom, 280 Wabash Ave. Lake end Halsted Sts., CHICAGO, ral . +. aratataratataratatatatataratat ttt ttt tg ttt ttt tt tt ttt tats