Aegon penineins Coageae tien san: 5 aRallaattetatIES ete aN, Sp ” ae ab * + AA Ae me 2 ee coli. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies —on— Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & C0.’S reakfastGocoa which t¢ absolutciy pure and soluble. W Ithasmorethanthreetimes ) the strength of Cocoa 1 | with Staroh, Arrow . Sugar, and is far more nomical, costing less than one cent a It is delicious, nourishing, and E\stL. DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass J. A. MATHIESON, Attorney-at-Law OFFICE—Kehwe’s Building, Ma Str Georgetown, ~ _— s Loans negotiated may31—3m NOTICE. A. HERMANS, of the old firm and old a new kind of stand, has manufactured Wrought Iron Railing, far superior to ca: ron, and spyendid designs. Parties desir- | graveyards wellby calling at his store be- jag to fence m their plots in would do fore purchasing elsewhere, at Lower Queer Street AUGUSTUS Ch'town, dune 15—tf HERMANS Envous MEnt| Nervous Men: EXHAUSTED VITALITY. ‘The arrors of Y hb, Pr Manhoo and al) Dierases aad W eax ses eause. permapeniiv ar Teserwewr. No Fa as person or by lect e s0833 zee Find Almost Every- * THE DAILY EXAMINER |! where You Go ” Wse-The Best Paper FOR ADVERTISERS. Grateful—Comilorting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of the nat- ural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the properties of well-select- ed Cacoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavored beverage whico may save us many heavy toctors’ bills. auch articles of diet that a constitutior may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist ev ery tendenc vy to lisease Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is tweak point. We may escape many a tacal shaft by keeping ourselves well fort tie! by pure blood and a properly n« ‘d frame.”——Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in packets, by Grocers, labelled tius, JAMES EPPS & CO., enn Chemists, London, Enyland. urishe NERVE BEANS are 8 new ‘is et ca NERVE Charlottetown by G. E. Hughes druggist When we assert that . ; Dodd’s Kidney Pills ee ee Cure Backache, Dropsy, § Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed ae the testimony or " € Leama Dane BASB2AAMA who have used them. Tier CURE TO STAY CURED, By ali teuggists or mail on receipt of price. © §ocenta, Dr. L. A. Smith & Co., Toronta é I can sell you Dodi’s Kidney Pills the following prices, viz. :~-50c. per box, six boxes for $2.50. Tothe trade—-$4.00 per dozen, or three dozen at &3.75 per dozen. Sent by mail to any address post | waid GEORGE E. HUGHES, may 29 Charlottetown ee VK] NORWEGIAN a IEOD- LIVE R OIL da! iS el a ee aiatable as cream. 0 oils tuste.ike others. In big bottles 560c. and 81.00. " ke = world. Wl positively cure or relieve vi manner i. Tie Rtemenic pa nox is worth ten os the of a box of pills out ebvet tnem, and you will always be hank fut ma - across & COW. What Paper do You} “5 It is by the judicious use of AFTER 2) LONG YEARS. FEELINGS OF MEN RELEASED LONG IMPRISONMENT. FROM | Everything New to Them-—-Gathered Flow- | ers Like Children— Wonder Expressed at the Sight of Cows and Poultry—One of the Men a Canadian. i ‘“Are those geese or ducka?” That was a question asked by a» man 40 years old in Lansing, Kan., last Sunday. } It was Arthur Winner. Winner and Me- Nutt were the two most famous prisoners in the Kansas penitentiary, These men were liberated on Sanday, after an incar } eeration extending over twenty years. At 5 o’elock on Sunday morning Warden | Chase unlocked the celle. He took Win- } her and McNutt to the prison barber shop, and after they were shaved gave them two | j Government suits, which did not fit at all W er, wi worked in the prison shoe shop, had brought two pairs of patent- eather shoes The men put these on. With the highly japanned and stylishly pointed foot-gear and the ridicaleusly cheap and awkward clothes, they, iu com } pany with ex-Senator O. H. Bentley of this |} ity, stepped outside the great stone walla. For twenty years they had seen neither | tree, shrub, bird, flower, grass nor domes- tic animal. Twoof Warden Chase's daugh- ters met them just outside the door and them with two beautiful fowera trusteea approached them, beam- presented them with bouquecs as t| they went down the patn. } Tears were in both men's eyea cried Winner, the most demon- strative of the two “There is a town, There was no town here when I went in.” “That is Lansing,” said Mr. Bentley. *‘Let’s not go there,” said Winner. ‘‘I want to go over to those woods.” MeNntt agreed, and they went over to a thicket by the roadside. The two came ' | neenented : r+ Se eeu = | ing, and reverai “pee ’ “Is that a cow?” said Winner, hesitat- ingly. ‘Don’t goon. Let me look at at,” And he circled around the animal, much as & man examines a lion at Barnum’a Thev he approached her timorously, and laid his hand on her back. ‘’This,” he said “is the only cow I have seen in twenty years A little later they met a flock of geese. *‘Look, said Winner, again. ‘Tell me, I Teally do not know, are those geese or ducks?’ He was told they were geese and he tried to pet them. *“Winner,’) said McNutt, a moment later, “whatis that scent? Do you smell it?” “Yes. It must come from those flow- Both men descended upon an elderberry bush and stripped it of its blossoms. They were hike two children. They picked every flower they saw and carried it with them "See here,” said Winner, ‘‘here is a good old milkweed. How green and beautiful itis.” And he plucked it and added it to his armmfnl of variegated vegetation. When they reached Kansas City they both began to place things that they had read about in the newspapers. MeNutt conld not distinguish between a cable car and an electric car. He insisted on trying both, and finally got it fiw his head which was which. In the evening they went to a park and saw an ice toboggan slideinaction, Neith- er bad rend about this in the papers, and both were greatly excited over it. Thry also insisted on stopping and examining every high building. “In these 20 years, said McNutt, reflee- tively, ‘the world has moved along a cen tury.” McNutt’s case is the sadder. Winner's folks are wealthy, among the most wealthy in Kansas City, and he went at once to their palatial home, where he was received with open arms, McNutt has no one to whom to go. His old motier still lives in Nova Scotia and is very poor. His wife is married to another man and lives sume- where in Missouri. Winner was 19 when he went to the penitentiary and McNutt 20 years of age. McNutt has secured a job of decorating in Leavenworth and will open a shop there. Winner will go back to the penitentiary as general manager of the Burr Company's shee business there, that company having } the convict contract of the Lansing prison, The young men began to serve their sen- tence on Jane 10, 1874, just 20 years ayo. MecNutt’s wife secured a divorce and a few years later married again. She is now in Clay County, Mo., and has a family of growing children. Nothing was done for five years in behalf of the young men. Then efforts for a pardon were made. Ex-Senator Bently finally secured their release. Both were good prisoners, neither having received a demerit mark in the 20 years. —Widita Eagle. About Cactuses, me A writer in the Popular Scienee Monthly who isa snecessful grower of cactuses, says that if you ask thatconvenient fiction, the Man in the Street, what sort of a plant a cactns is, he will probably te!l you it is a leaf and no stem, and each of the leaves grows ont of the last one. Whenever we set up the man in the street, however, you must have noticed that we do it in order to knock him down again, like anine-pin, the next moment; and this particular fnatance is no exception to the rule; for the trata is, that » cactus is all stem and no leaves, what looks like a leaf being really a branch sticking out atan angle. The true leaves, if there are any, are mere spines or prick- les on the surface, while the branches in the prickly pear and many of the ornament- al hot-louse cactuses, are flattened out like a leaf to perform foliar functions. In most planta, to put it simply, the leaves are the mouths and stomach of the organisin ; their thin and flattened blades are spread out horizonta’ly in a wide expanse, covered with tiny throats and lips, which suck in carbonic acid from the surrounding air, anc disintegrate it in their own cells un- der the influence of snnlight. In the prickley pears. on the contrary, it is the flattened stem and branches which under- take this essential operation in the life of the plant-—-the sucking in of carbon and | giving ont of oxygen, which is to the veg | ctable exactly what the eating and digess- | ing of food is to the animal organism. In their old age, however, the stems uf the prickiy pear display their true character by becoming woody in texture and losing their srticulated leaf-like appearance, 560,000 Doga in Paris. Paris is interesting itself in a dog crm one has discovered that there e 500.000 dogs ip that city, and that it | sade. Some | costs $5,000,000 » year tu feed then, This } isone of those statistical fallacies that of the discontented penda- alculutes how > the owners much the remind one lam. No one n loyalty, nd) = protection All that is | 8 tue ULMIATIAN aggregate of dog ib it = tlt ni lt si. . ~ ASE, | | Lansing People Hear of His Illness and Subsequent Cure while in London, Ont.—Much Pleasure Manifest- i ed Over the News, | Laysine, Mich., July 2—A friend of William Langley formerly of this city, | now of London Ont., received a letter a few | months ago stating that Mr. Langley had | Bright’s disease. Ofcourse no hope of | his recovery conld be held out. Within a | month, the same friend has received a let- | ter from Mr. Langley stating that he is completely cured of the supposed fatal disorder. Mr. Langley says no medicine | did him any good until he began using | Dodd’s Kidney Pills. These helped him | from the first and in the end restored him to perfect health. | i | For Over Fifty Years. Ax Ovp Asp Wett Triep Rewepy.— Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth- nig, with perfect snccess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world, Twenty-tive cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs, Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, ard take so ONO'S EXTRACT THIS IS THE GENUINE. Our trade-mark on Sutff Wrapper around every bottle. THE WONDER OF HEALINC. FOR RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, WOUNDS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, PILES, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, Betoun: INFLAMMAT LONS, CATARRH, cheaply. ’ HEMORRHAGES, and ALL PAIN. Used Internally and Externally. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Refuse Substitutes, Prices, 50c., Cheap, Gt, Cheaper, $1.76, Cheapest. Genwine is strong and pure. Can be diluted with water, Sele Manufacturers POND'S EXTRACT CO., 76 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK What is tA : f oA N Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Children, It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nareotic substance. it is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. + is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays fevorishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, eures Diarrhosa and Wind Colic. Castoria relicves tecthing troubles, cures constipation and fiatulency, Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Case toria is tho Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Fricnd. Castori2. Castoria. * Castoria is an excellent medicine for eh!!- fren. Mothers have repeatedly told me cf iis good effect upon their children.” Da. G. C. “ Castoria is so well adapted to chil’ren the I recommend it as superior toany preseription known to me.”’ Hi. A. Ancase, M. D., 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Oscoon, id ae Lowell, Mass. * Sastoria is the best remedy for children of | “Our physicians in tho children’g depart which Iam acquainted. I hope the snot | ment have spoken highly of their experi- far distant when mothers will cons 16 real ence in their outside practice with Castoria. interest of tacirchildren, aud use C rizin and although we only have among otr st ad of the variousquack rostrums which are medical supplies what is known as rejruicr dectroyiag their loved ones, by forcing opium, products, yet we are free to confess that the morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful merits of Castoria has won us to leok with agents down their throats, thereby sending favor upon it.” them to premature graves.” Usitep HosprraL aNp Dis?Ptrsary, Da. J. F. Kincuerog, Boston, Conway, Ar Auten C. Surru, Pres., The Centaur Company, T7] Murray Street, New York City. SURE ——1Q THE -—— UGS ! OUR IF THEY TASTE Faris Green. We warrant every peund to be strictly PURE. Five tons Fergusson Alexander's in stock. DODD & ROGERS. j Charlottetown, June 29, 1894—tn th Tcl we aa (* Does Your Wire Do HER OWN WasHinc? Seeton and Mitche'l, Halifax, agents for Nova Scotia and P. E. Island. F she does, see that the wash is made Easy and Clean by getting her SUNLIGHT SOAP, which does away with the terrors of wash-day. Experience will convince her that it PAYS to use this soap. WE DON'T KiicW MUCH About writing ads., but WE KNOW A GO0D DEAL about making FURNITURE; also about marking it at prices that make it sell. Try us and see if we don’t do all we say. We are going to keep up our reputation for selling THE BEST FURNITURE FOR THE LEAST MONEY. JOHN NEWSON. other kind,—m. w. f. wkly—-1 y Charlottetown, March 21, 1894--m w f ——— : TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1894. NAVAL MOBILIZATION, Preparation for Tactics in the English Channel and [rish Sea. A late London despatch says that the Admiralty has issued an order for naval mobilization. As soon as possible there- after the ye will put to sea and practice tactics for about a week. The object is to enable the officers and men to get some experience of the ships put in commission for the manceuvres, and eettle down in their quarters before hostilities are de- clared. The number of vessels of all classes will be more numerous than last or the previeus year. Vice-Admiral R. O. B. Fitzroy, C. B., will command the combined “Red,” and Rear-Admiral Edward Seymour (Admiral Superintend- ent of Naval Reserves) both divis'ons of the “Blue” fleet. The scene of th? operations will be the English Channel and Irish Sea. Chief among the qnestions to be solved are means of preventing scat- tered squadrons from coming together and turning the tables upon an enemy only temporarily superior in force; and, on the other hand, of circumventing with a fleet weak in one class of ves-els only, an op ponent strong in cruisers and battleships. This means that, besides the chances of heavy fighting between ironclads, there will probably be fierce conflicts, in which torpedo boats will be caught napping by their specially created enemies, the tor- pedo boat “destrovers.” To secure occa- sion for the execution o* the operations in- dicated, after the return from the week’s crnise the fleet will be divided into four squadrons, one of which will be consider- ably stronger than the other three. The war operations will begin about August 3 or 4, after the ships have coaled, and hos- tilities will be allowed to continue ten days. e+ eore Avoid the mood Byronic, Dismiss dyspeptic fears ; Take Hawker’s Pills and tonic, And live a hundred years. The sad-eyed soulful poet wrote An ode to rippling rlll; His readers found an antidote In Hawkers Liver Pills. TT A uow to Get a Suulight Picture, Send 25 “Sunlight soap wrappers (wrap rs bearing the words “why does a woman ladte old sooner than a man”) to Levey Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, and you will receive by post a pretty picture free from advertising, and well worth framing. This is an easy way todecorate your home. Tie soap is the best in the market and_ it will only cost 1 ¢. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefully. THE §.3. PASTNET Sails every Saturday Evening at 4 p. m. POR HALIPAX, Calling at Hawkesbury, Arichat & Canso. Returning, leaves Halifax every WED- NESDAY EVENING at 6 _ o'clock, making same calls. ‘Phrough [Bills of Lading issued to all ints in Great Britain and Continent at owest rates. W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Ch’town, June i6—dy. CANADA ATLANTIC ——AND—— Plant Steamship Line, TO BOSTON. Fast Direct Line, Not Calling at Halifax. CHARLOTTETOWN SERVICE. The SS. “FLORIDA” will leave Navigation Co’s. Wharf, Charlottetown, TUESDAY, iUNE 26ra, at 7 p. m., and every Tuesday thereafter, until further notice ; Hawkesbury, Wednesday, at 10 a. m.; arriving at Boston early Friday morning. FROM BOSTON—Saturday, June 23, at 10 o’clock, a. m., and every Saturday thereafter until further notice. Superior Passenger Accommodation. Quick despatch for freight. HALIFAX SERVISE, Beginning Tuesday, June 26, the favor ite steamships “OLIVETTE” or “ HALIFAX ” will leave Plant Wharf, Halifax, every Tuesday and Thursday at 8a. m., Saturday 10 p. m., (until further notice) for Boston direct. Returning, will leave north side Lewis’ Wharf, Boston, every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at noon. Passengers arriving in Halifax Monday or Wednesday evenings, can go directly on board steamer. Through Tickets for sale and baggage checked at Prince Edward Island Railway stations, ‘ For full information as to rates of pas- sage, freight, etc., apply to oifice of Charlottetown Navigation Co. H. L. CHIPMAN, Agent for Canada. Plant Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents, North Side Lewis’ Wharf, Boston, June 16 4Nopyne pret mm OTHE, Yer INTERNAL as EXTEINALce «26 by an Gid Fi Physician. use for more than ul nk Of Lt, Ses pee Rheumatism, er rer From Stason eer ade Severna i a in an Every Mother Anodye Liniment in the Seep Percet Topatiitla, Cot JOHN MACLEOD & CO. facture. McLauchlin Gears require no puffing. purchase a Carriage inspect those. LINIMENT 4 aicn o= ciccic The waily Ex The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. One Year, - - - $4/Three Months, $1 Six Months, - $2/One Month, - 3c Read his Splendid Offer to Subscribers McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINEK tor 12 minsm a 40 cents a month. By special arrangement with the publishers, we are enabled to make a most exceptional offer to send MeCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fills out the following blank form, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 40 cents a month. CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTATTTTIT1 7 0I—-TTIII TIT i TUITTAT TTT Tee Examiner Publishing Co., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. You will plecse seni to my address the DAJLY EXAMINER for 12 months from date, for which I agree to pay 40 cents a month, it being understood that you are to have sent to my address for one year, without extra charge, MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current num ber. Wn Nn Sh Hs Soh DSi NS Sb Soil Soi lS Lb ln nS in rE icndietbiihinratbvdiagtanpdicbticasdibeas dcctbbascieinncs FN iicincsbnntenpniiscccisiinsinaali RAD i viriisviivcrviesisecs puetoesios sedinenee ose TATA ITTV TTT TTTTTTTTTTTATT 4 * FAM Wb tli. SSS SoS So db Mo lS Sb So Sb So SS InSb ISS So SSS Sb SoS Sb bb Sb Sb McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under tle heads The Edge of the Future,” “ Newest Knowledge,” “ Knowledge of Immediate Value,” The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” etc. =® We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for only $4.60 a year, payable in advance or in monthly instalments of 40¢. as desired. We make this exceptional offer in order that we may secure a large number ot new subscribers, but all who are already subseribers may avai! themselves of this opportunity to secure practically tree this great popu’ar Magazine. Address: The Examiner Publishing Go. SHARLOTTITOWN, P, &, ISLANT Priestley’s Cravenettes ON WHICH THEGOODS ARE WRAPPED .~ cloaks, wraps and all over garments. No other material is so satisfactory. Thev¥ are Rainproof, Porous, Durable, Stylish, Healthy, Comfortable. —xj oS nt a — ae ae rat a A cS = a —< s = ~— RALPH B. PEAKE, § 700 TONS REGISTER, RICHARD RENDLE, Comm Now on the Berth at Liverpool, will sail from that port For Charlottetown Di About the Ist September next, and will carry Freight at through rates the different Railway points on the also Picton. ba For Freight apply in Londo Johu Pitcairn & Sons, 7 Union Court, Broad Street, E. C.; in Liverpool to Pj a cairn Brothers, 51 South John Street, oc re here to the owners, a PEAKE BRCS. & CO, 7 Charlottetown, July 12, 1894—eed ¢ HATS | We have now a large g complete assortment of Hat to fit Boys, Youths and ecured at a great discon in Canadian, American Come before English markets, see our Hats anywhere else. Charlottetown, April 9, 1894, & Dominion Soa! Company, Tih» The undersigned having been sole selling Agents in the Pro ‘ Prince Edward Isiand for the above om pany’s Mines in Cape Breton, are now pre pared to issue orders for Round, Sleato and Run of Mines, and will keepa of each kind of Coal on hand to customers at lowest prices. z PEAKE BROS, & CO, | Selling Agents, ~ “ea Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—t§ am | Ladies who Gress well are now wearit.g these waterproot goods ‘or z When asking for them ladies should be sure to say “ Priesthey’s Cravenettes. ” Arernunemnecareeern cen eemerety see r os ‘ Imeem TT — - - — — ALL UR SPRING SUITING AND OVERCOATINGS INOW IN. ‘Taverner erence ret Now is the ee Charlottetown, April 23, 1894—m w t Mowers, Reapers and Rakes. ITHICA RAKE are the best luplements to put into | re t the | heavy hay crop of this season. | We are selling them low for cash on short time. REPAIR» always on hand for Mowers of any manu- ALSO—A Carload of Genuine MeLauchilin Carriayes. | | If you are going to | ». W. FINLAYSON. | Chitown, July 9, 1834—+od & wy H. T. LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. that will not keep correct time is worse than none at all. We have Watches and Clocks regulated right up to time, and our prices are regulated by the hard times, We also have the latest styles in Jewelry. In our Repairing Department we are giving excel- lent satisfaction, as we are paying special] attention to it. We also repair Land Sur Vveyors’ and Ships’ Compasses. Bring your Watches and Cleeks to be repaired. yea or Crow ; notice. vs life an ny Ook Smite fee oie tes Trade enpplied WR. Watson Ci e laine om G. G. bU RY, Time to (Order Your Spring Suit | ig The NEW MODEL BUCKEYE and the wide-wheeled | | bimseiforany other perso. for the sale, Gi | merchandize w.thin this Province, either If North Side Queen Square, Opposi¢e Post Office Potatoes To Protect Your Potato ‘The Ravages of the Potato Bug, APPLY Our Pure Paris Green © MIXED With Land Plas One application with pl does more execution and longer than two or three plications with water. Paris Green Land Plaster | silica FENNEL & CHAND VicrORIA ROW i jane29 Lee at Notice to Commer Travellers. eect The atfention of Commercial Travellers” ealled to the following sections of aa passed by the Legislative Assembly of Edward Isiand, Session 1894, intituled “Am Act to Impore a Direet Tax on Certain Cla) of Traders" :— « J. “From and after the passing of this Act every casual trader not pcrinanently re infhis Province doing business within Pro vinee, commonly known as * Conpmer Tray ellers,” and every person not permanea* ly re-tding in this Provines, and whe either Sor himself or any other person goods, wares or merchandize tn this Provil or solicits or canvasses tor orders either change or purchase of any goods, wares 6 the production O/ samples, photographs, cata logaes, printed ar written matter, or Gil by word Of meuth without the production sampies, photograp!.s, catalogues, prin etd skataee shall, before be or she ental upon the bus -O slling any goods, es wares or merci: , or solo tng OF GAs vassing fer such orders, pay to the lrovinelal — T:easurer of this Province 9» annual leem® “ fee or direct tax of fifteen Collars. : 2*Upon payment of the sad lice 10 8 or direct tax, the said Provincial Trait shail grant a nee autioriziog the persaie therein named to -e!l Gouge, waies and MARR, chandize in this Province, and .o solicit an® < canvass for orders for the saiec, « xchange oF er purchase of goods, wares and merepandig= within ths Provin hou bh liccnse shall be > Y granted and re wait fo or ihe 8 és one year fo) « » which the said license slit! ¢ grate ain 0 longer.” : it ae ge 3. “ any such Commerelal Traveler or son not permanently residing in this vince as aforesaid, who, after the passing this Act, shall seil any goods, wares or mer ae chandize, or solicitor canvass for orders BF yo the sale, exchange or purchase of any wares or merchandize in any manneg afore ‘ said within this Province without h@ zee first paid the said license fee or direct tax, ‘ obtained the said licen-e, shall for each every occasion upon which he or she sell any goods, wares or merehandize, or soli- eitor canvass foran order for the sale, ef change or purchase of any goods, wares Of meéerchandize as aforesaid, be liable to pay. the sum of two hundred doliars ww the sald Pre vincial Treasurer.” This Act is now in force. JAcense can be procured in Charlottetows atthe Provincial Treesury, in Summe from Wm. T. Hannt Esq., in Georgetown, George B. Aitken Esq. ANGUS McMILLAN, Provincial Secretary-Treasurerm Provincial Treasury, } Prince Edward Island, : lith May, 18%. \ . mayli—dy tf pat pio tf ee