ts Daly Exar -. THE DAILY The Examiner P ib! n Street BATES OF STEBSCRIPTION NA ANC sil cilia a sai ‘ition @ac Year 84.00 _ a six Months 2.00 . wanes Months a: fEP ~~: our Dollars a Year one Mouth ey ~> aent p> sid y part of Canada or the Ubi ~ meee ocamlll - a THE WEEKLY EXAMINER lishing Company — = ~ aaa ee tage age ATCC “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise 44dPu . ONDA INER. - ~-gak free.”—Enripides. a Single Oopies Two Oents VOL 36. = Er CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. ISLAND, MONDAY.3@2TOBER 26, 1896. | ems NO 58. Book and» ... 00) Printing We have first-class facilities for turning out the best qual- ity of Job Printing, from a Visiting card to the largest display work. Prices low. Work prempily done. Call and see us. ‘Examiner Publishing Company DICKENS WROTE. The Novelist Was Systematic and Method- js sete ‘ 2 iy morain It is made gp of matt eared in the Daily = yn sw &'Y LO wspaper ) eouta sie st Hew — CiurNDAR FOR OCTOBER, ive | HOW New Moor, | lay, 6b. 4.2m. a. m Firet Quar, 13th day, 10h, 34.9m. a. m ical in His Work, Stephen Fiske presen Full Moon, Zist day, Oh. 4.8 m., noon]. : & most inter- bth day, Li 21 t esting pen picture of Dickens, his at « rier, é¢ i é . uu. 5 et. & ID farniley ws ‘ ’ Last qua a | family and of “Gad's Hill,” where he x= _— s Day of Week: | ine] cote | water | | j | I ay 16 4]5 5 43 9 | Frida Poe a #59 8); Sa ay i j j 7 4| Sunday i 4 9} 8 &é 5) M ’ ns6sw, 6 6| 10 22 7 | j i il 2 a) ' ‘ i - | ll 3! 9) ; , 19 | morn ; | 0 28 .. is : aes t i lf 12) lay | 19) mi 63 13 | Tues 20] 13] 3810 ‘4 | Jay a1} 10; 423 $j Thur ‘yo 23) 2 a 16 | r ‘ 24 ‘ 0 32 17 | Sa ‘v j 26 a | i 4i 13 ; Sunday si «68h: O88 is | M ’ a . Fs | : ' 01 9 40 3 Ay | 4 } 1013 32 | ay 10 41 3) F | i t} 3117 $4 | Saturday 36} 53] Il 48 3/8 | 87) Gliet 30 W | Monta | 38) 650 a] no: } af er is 38; \ jay ae 46; 2 46 49° Thursday ; -@ 451 3 49 a t tay ; ' i+ 435}; ) 0 81 | Saturday le 46} 441] 6 20 a 3 3 she i ¥ i PE island Railway On and after SATURDAY, Ith October,1386 the trains nis Kaiiway wil) rua daily Sanudays eccey ted) as follows .— Trains ‘ Trains In ward. RK STATIONS. ward. Read down. up. . A. Me > Basan 815 6 1s ‘ tte wn 6 3D) 9 5S $ 36 6 2)!. Royalty J 6 16) 9 34 4 th North Wil 5 42) 8 45 440 7 13,..Hunter River 5 321_8 30 § 2! 7 37). .Bradalbane ..| 508 7 & & 31 7 43). .Emerald.. ..... | 5 02] 7 43 5 > 7 > Fre TOWD cece t 52 7 24 6 06 8 07)..Kensington .... | 4 3s) 7 of 6 40, 8 BD Ar. { } Lv.) 4 15 6 30 Pp. M S's . lA. M. 14) 8 45 Lv | } Ar. 4 00/11 00 202 8 59)..Mis De coceus 3 45/10 37 220 9 17)... We 3 28/10 19 318 O i... Poet Taal scececs 3 00) 9 21; ¢ 3610 35). .O’Leary........ 2 11] 8 638 6 0110 51 Blo ield ] 55] 7 38 5 4011 15)..Alberton........ 1 30! 7 02 6 45.11 &3’..Tignish .... «+: 12 SO 5 55 A. M./P. M ‘. MIP. M. 645 3 Of,..Char tow 0% 15) 5 40 763M Roy y Ju i 9 O1| 5 BW 4 38) 3 37) .Bedfor conc t a eeee $10; 4 OOIAr. 1 ag, 1 Ly.} 8 15) 4 15 $30 t O5/L MiStew j Ar. 8 10 4.00 900 43 rell : 7 42,3 DW @ 2 4 54)..St. Peters ...... 7 2) 250 0 165 2 Bear River ......| 6 46) 2 ll © 6° Be. cis tt. eo A M.?. M A. M.|P. M. § 2 4 (| .Mt. Stewart 810358 9 37| 4 SS). . Cardigan T1V2% 10 oO 5 15 . Georgetown i 7 UN} 2 10 * ve A. M.iP. M. ee M A. M. 5 35) .Emerald ...-- 7 ® 6 2 Cape Traver | 6 45 4 is. M —..- ———— eae oe Traine are run by Eastero Standard Time A McDONALD, LD. POTTINGER, Superintendent, Gen Mer Govt. = Charlottetown. Moncton, N B. Railway Office, June30 , 1896. e : — Wedding Rings—, * WELL, SAM, since the engagement ring wears so well these long eight years you bought from G. G. Jury, I accept was a fre juent and welcome guest, in ' | the September Ladies’ Home Journal#® } Of Dickens’ method of work Mr. Fiske says: ‘During my visits Dickens was not at work upon a novel, but be shut himself in Fee hter’s cKalet f¥om ll a.m. to3 p.m. almost every#wy. This was another part of hish ~ Mhodical system, if he felt im t®mood he woul . _ Write an ‘Uatommercial Traveler’ article; if not, he would {answer letters, read “All the Year ound’ proofs, jot down ideas, fill up the time with some sort of literary labor. This, he told me, was his self- dis e. The one room in the chalet Was Spars: furnished, and had win- sides commanding quiet, s ly dows on all peasant views of tields and planta- tions. He seldom talked of his books, but one rainy day he showed me the Lound manuscript of one of them, and told me his method of planning a story. Having selected a subject he would write down the name of the hero and rround it with queries: ‘Shall he be rich? Parents or guardians? De- frauded of his property? An early love?” and so on with the other charac- ters as they occurred to him. He al- ways used blue ink, and so did Yates and i llid - i } i i Hallids ay, and the other writers ‘ rhy« | ‘ : of what was then ‘the Dickens school.’ ney all called him ‘Chief,’ and he liked the title.” EQICH RED BLOOD is the foun- . dation of good health. That is why Hood’s Sarsaparilla, the One True on gives HEALTH. burns in Edinburgh, 1787. Those who think that im- ported soap must be the finest do not know that the material of which Royal Oak Soap ° made are the best to be four: anywhere. Send 35 Royal Owk wrap- pers to the Ch’town Soap Works, and receive free the beautiful picture, “Burns in surly blasts? bY / seat. How is your wardrobe? ulster we are selling at $3.95? : Soo AFT : SEATON BER GEE ALES ONS SSO Edinburgh, 1787.” gee SHPOSSSO SOS SIOFDSOOHSOOSOOS Prepare Now for the Cold O06 4 —KrI | ) ees i \| A/Men Children Fig 4 (a Here Cae Linalf -) Y + sen iidhs Vente LJ Wh | mt et Wi ib! Fibre Chamois label. differe > : ; j ’ ifierence in pric€ doesn t count. Reduced to 25 cents 2 yard. 3 06545600600000606006600690000000000000000 SOOSSSOH OS HSESSH OOS OK OOO SHOE by seeing that all your ordered clothing is interlined with Fibre Chamois. and omy but it cives a grateful comforting _| warmth to men’s, women’s and children’s clothing which will defy the coldest blasts of winter. For your own sake don’t try to do without this backbone of alt winter comfort. Don't buy any ready-to-wear suits Think of the healthful warmth, the It will not add weight cosis a few extra cents, which haven’t the 2900090000000 96O00 0004 phbhbphihbbbbAbb hab bbb bb bbSALS bSO44AAAASDD sevrverrr7"7"""""""°"rr".jr,rrerrrrrvrrevwrerrtrrTrTe? It Pleases your proposal if you promise to buy the Wedding Ring from him also. My friend Nell was married a few days ago, and you should see the veantiful ring she has, and oh,so cheap. She says Mr. G. G. Jury hae a fine assortment from 14k to 18k, and he buvs them from the largest estab- lishment in Canada, and they will last a lifetime; and you know one wedding ring must do these hard timer.” | “Agreed, I will go and bay the rivg from G. G. JURY, Watchmaker and Jeweler, Charlottetown.” WORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE, OPPOSITE P. O. sept23—dy & why. We Don't Claim To have the cheapest boots 'on the Island. To be able to sell you boots at or below cort. To be the only people who can give you good boots. We Do Claim That we can give you good boots at low price a. That we can give you as good boots &* you can purchase anywhere. That we can sell you boots as cheap as any person in tbe trade. TRY US. R. K, JOST, STAMPER’S CORNER Julv 30 Howis Your Wate Keeping Time A Watch is @ delicate piece of machinery, and to give satisfaction sould not be kept goiog year after year without cleanining If yours needs attention. bring it at once to us and we will put it it in good runoiug order at a moderate charge G.H. TAYLOR, ago oa o> ac da oa > oa >a at examination. ’ at! Graduate Optician. North Side Queene Square, Ch’town. t Tt stands the wear. they get it home and live with it, Us To have people critically examine our furm'ture. It stands criticat sell. We won't sell anything that people won’t satisfied with after There is no profit in such selling. A dissatisfied customers will syoil lots of business. We wont ailow a customer to feel dissatisfied eithez with what he gets or what he t pays for it. Many people buy all tLeir furniture here—DO YOU? ee JOHN NEWSON FURNITURE “wv SS SSS T TTI T VT VV T > latest shoe shapes. @ Extra thick ball ; and heel. B > Sold everywhere. hip hist issiiihhhihAA hpi he heb be tedateted L244 rasa AAS ee be le be be bb bb bbe lb bn bin vwvVvwuewrervyeeyeeerrrrYyY > ; Honestly made fan of pure Rubber. , Thin, Light, , Elastic, Stylish, > Modeled each Durable. » year to fit all the Rubbers They Wear like Iron, +A tat 4. ighland Ranges — «Made in Boston —SOLD ONLY BY— tHennsl & Chandler. Charlottetown,J uly 22, 1896—246 & wy It’s made to wear, not merely to se a tae spanner at - AaLAaeoSs S SSA 2 A 4 4AA&8 se A424 es 44422224444 £2244 £44252435 224i» a= pf oa aa o> ot pf o-a -a> a > at An Interesting Probiem Devised by Sportive Californians Jerry Lynch has finally learned the funnel trick. He took it in two doses —one on one evening and the other the next. The senator sauntered up to the Bohemian Club the other day and saw two or three of the younger members attempting a new feat; and he watched them with interest. One of them stuck a funnel in the top of his trous- ers, threw his head back, placed a fifty-cent piece on his forehead and tried to drop it in the funnel by slowly lowering his head. After all had failed Jerry insisted on trying it, though all had tried to dissuade him from attempting a feat too difficult for them. The funnel was placed in the waistband of his trousers and he threw back his head to receive the coin onhis expansive brow. At that junc- ture a pitcher of ice water wasemptied into the funnel, and by the time Jerry got through dancing the jokers had vanished. The senator's temper im- proved with dry raiment and the next night at the club he started in to show a couple of friends the funnel trick. “Tt’s this way,” he explained, ‘‘you put the funnel in the top of your panta- loons, so. then throw your head back, so, and——wow!” Again Jerry was forced to change his raiment, and he is not showing people what he knows about the fun- nel trick.—San Francisco News Let- ter. The British Musician and Money, The foreign musician at least loves music; in all cases his youth was spent in hearing as much of it as possible; and in many cases he continues to the end to be an inveterate concert and opera goer. But to the British musi- cian music ismerely a means of making money. Even in his youth he is rarely enthusiastic; he begins early to look foraline that will pay; and in his middle and old age he is merely a hardened place grabber. If he gets into one of the musical rings, he never dreams of taking advantage of his position to press jorward this or that kind of music, or even his peculiar theoretical views, but uses it simply to add places as fast as he can to those he has already secured. Itis reckoned matter of course in this country. that a man sheuld be professor at two or three music schools, organist at a church, lecturer for a society, conduc- tor of a choral society, conductor of a provincial festival, and shouldturn out a large number of popular part songs and anthems. One organis’ eompiained to me of the labor of running five churches, the plan being ta put in deputies and take a profit om their work; and when I asked why he did it he stared as a grocer would stare if you asked why he sold groceries. Musicians of this class are happily in the habit of dying of ‘“‘overwork;” and the musical and other papers print pathetic obituary notices in which the fact is never mentioned that the de- ceased would have ‘ed a happier and more useful life, and probably would have lived longer, had he not been such a place grabber. These ‘‘music- ians” are the curse of music in England. They grab everything and draw big pay for doing badly what the few genuine musicians would gladly re ceive small pay for doing well; and by their talk and their example they in- culcate the basest and most sordid views of lifeand of art in these who come under their influence. So long as wealth and reputation reward place grabbing on the one hand, and poverty and obscurity or contempt re genuine effort on the other, so long will we produce a thousand place grabbers, big and little, for one genuine musician, and so long will we have to go abroad for our genuine music. your own interest at 8 take, Trade with the Star Tailor if you lave if it has not it it time you were making a stact. them,as to buy them when the winter is half over. question is settled once you see our stock and prices. In Readymade WwW e Lead $30.000 is a low estimate of our stock. a ee a ee ee eee SS a i ne a | ymanson, Bates & Co,. manfrs,, Toronto, Has it been replenished with good warm clothing to protect you frum winter's As well to buy them now and have the good of The next qustion is where is the best place to buy? Have you seen the men’s If it is not the best ever sold at the money, we'll take a back We have also the best values in overcoats, reesers and suits to be had. clothing, warm shirts, warm caps in abundance. — Dent Forget the BOYS. The boys that play leap frog and slide down the roof of the house on the‘r pants We have suits made especially for these kind of boys, suits that wear and dont tare. Also reefers, ulsters and overcoats for all sizes of boys. away down, our stock away up. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov’t Report Royal YEARS ABSOLUTELY PURE —_—_—_—_—_—_———— Incandesecnt Sign Lamp Attachment. A handy way of making an ordinary incandescent lamp serye as a show sign is being turned to account br many storekeepers. A nickle wire spring clamp, which grips the bulb on either side, carries a transparent disk, upon which any required letters or in- scription can be painted. When the lamp is in place and burning the disk js illumined andthe inscription is dis- tinetly seen. device is a semi-opaque, natural glass disk upon a frosted background. As the signs are entirely separate from the lamps they never require removal. and the combinations or the devices can be changed every day. This is found an excellent medium for outside or show- window signs. ‘The “ice” lamp is another decorative bulb, which gives a beautiful and artistic effect. The en- tire surface of the bulb is broken by ‘hundreds of crystals that flash light from a thousand facets when illumin- ated. It looks exactly like a mass of snow and ice. Have You a Boy to Sparc? The saloon must have boys, or it motist shut up shop. Can’t you furnish iittene? Itisa great factory, and un- less it can get about 2,000,000 from each yemeration for raw material, some of these factories must close out, and its wperations must be thrown on a cold sworld, and the public revenue will @windle. “*Wanted—2,000,000 boys,” iis tthe notice. One family out of «very five must contribute a boy to keep up the supply. Will you help? Which of your boys will it be? The Minotaur of Crete had to have a tri- mene full of fair maidens each year; Yuxi:the Minotaur of America demands macaity full of boys each year. Are *you a father? Have you contributed a.boy? Ifnot, some other family has hatito give more than its share. Are xou not selfish, voting to keep the saloon open to grind up boys, and then redoing nothing to keep up the supply?— iPresbyterian. THE “BIG” FOUR -& Quartettes of Remedies that are Effeet ing Wonderiul Cores. __ Dr. Chaso’s four great remedies are; Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, Dr. Chase's ‘Ointmeat, Dr. Ohase’s Catarrh Cure, and Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Liuseed and Tur- fpratine, his latest and greatest discovery :for all throat and lung affections. “I was wick for three years,” says -James Simpson, of Newcomb Mills. “I tried various alleged patent cures and weveral boxes of a certain pill which has “been greatly cracked up. 1 got no re- ‘lief. Then I tried Dr. Chase's Kidney- ‘Liver Pills. Since, I have been able to work every day and feel like a new man. Your pills alone cared me at & ‘cost of 25c.” “TI have been subject to severe coids ‘every fall and spring.” says Miss Hattie Delaney, of 174 Crawford street, Toron- ‘to. “T used many cough medicines, but none cured me until at a cost of 25 cents lL tried Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and *Turpentine.” “My bueband wae troubled with the ‘worst kind of piles,” writes Mrs. Jane ‘Potts, of Meyereburg. ‘‘ He was often “unable to work. Stnee wsing your Chase’s ‘Ointment he is completely cured. It is ‘traly worth its weight in gold instead -of the price you charge, aaa 60 cents.” “Tt bought a box of r Catarrh Cure ‘for 25 cents at Mr. yle’s drug store “here,” says Henry R. Nicholls of 176 “Rectory street, London. Ont. “I am thankful to say it cured me.” Chase's remedies at all dealers. Ed- SEE ESE I> GEES, x SLD OSes oF SS c Our prices on all children’s clothing is We again repeat, don’t iorget the boys. . Another form of the same | time for giving answers without caus- t Queen at Windsor castle there are Phat B a full length heavy frieze Als> warm under Baking Powder Learning From the Chinese. The instinct of the plain people has been right in not calling our oriental visitor “Lee.” for, acting out his name as popularly pronounced, this wily diplomat has, in England as well as here, required English to be translated to him, whereas it now appears that for years past he has spokenit fluently. This Chinese device of a needless inter- preter is a ‘“‘first-chop” one to gain ing the delay to be noticed; the man- darin has the time taken in translation for reflection, and, if further reflection is desired, ambiguity in interpretation may be pretended and a new form of the question required. And yet men tell usthat nothing can be learned from the Chinese.—Time and the Hour. A MARTYR TO PAIN. A mother telis how her daughter suffered and how ghe get relief. A letter came to us the other dry teliing how a daughter who suffered so much at each period as almost to bring on convul- sions has been completely cured by Indi an Woman’s talm. The mother is de- lighted, and while not wishing us to pub- lish ber name, will gladly allow us to send it toany sufferer who may desire it. Pamphlet sent to ladies by addressing The Balm Medicine Co., Ltd, Torcnto, Ont. “Cough Chaser” for Coughs snd Colds, 10:. For sale by Geo. F Haghes and Johnson &Johnson Charlottetown and:Souris. The Prohibition state committee ha: issued an appeal to the voters of the Com- monwealth of Maseachusetts in which it is stated that “The success of either part) means the continuance of 232,000 saloon: and the annual waste of $1,300,000 and 60,060 lives. ficeping a Prince's Memory Green. In the private apartments of the many touching evidences of the man- ner in which the memory of the Prince Consort is revived by Her Majesty. The door of the Queen’s boudoir is in- scribed: **This chamber was altered and decorated under the superintend- ence of H.R.H. the Prince Consort, in the twenty-fourth year of the reign of Queen Victoria.” Everything in the chamber remains as it was arranged by the Prince thirty-six years ago, and a conspicuous object under a glass shade is the bouquet he presented to Her Majesty on her wedding morning. February 10, 1840. Inthe vestibule of the long corridor leading to the Queen's private apartments thereis a beeuti- ful life-size marble group of Her Majes- ty andthe Prince Consort, which was executed by William Theed shortly after the Prince’s death in December, 1831. The Prince is arrayed as a knight, The Queen has her arms around his neck, andis gazing loving- ly up iato his face, while he, with his right arm extended, points on high. Underneath is the appropriate line from Goldsmith: .**tHe -allures to brighter worlds, and leads the way.” The group is covered with lace, and stands before a bright red. background, which adds very considerabiy to its striking effect. Our heavy weight linders, sad to be well worth 32 cts, now eelling al 25 cts.— i MEN FAIL AS LOVERS. All Good in Deeds, but Most Fail in the Mandling of Words, “It is a question with me,” writes Lilian Bell, in Ladies’ Home Journal *‘whether a woman ever knows all the joys of love-making who has one of those dumb, silent husbands who doubtless adores her but is able to ex- press it only in deeds. It requires an act of the will to remember that his getting down town at seven o'clock every morning is all done for you, when he hasn't been able to tell you in words that he loves you. Itis hard to get a letter telling about the weather and how busy he is, when the same amount of space saying that he got to thinking about you yesterday, wher he saw a girlon the street who looked like vou, only she didn’t carry herself as wellas you do, and that he loves you, good-by—would have fairly made your heart run over with joy, and made you kiss the hurried lines and thrust the letter in your belt, where you could crackle it now and then just to make sure it was there. Nearly all nice men make good lovers in deeds. A great many fail at some important crisis in the handling of words. “But the last test of all, and, to my mind, the greatest, is in the use of words asa balm. Few people, be they men or women, be they only friends, lovers or married. can help occasional- ly hurting each other's feelings. Acci- dents are continually happening even when people are good-tempered. And for quick or evil tempered ones there is but one remedy—the handsome, honest apology, The most perfect lover is the one who best understauds how and when to apologize.” WHERE , Vihere Kid Comes From. The raising of kids for the skins isa leading industry among the French mountaineers, who obtain no small part of their substance from this source. Softness, delicacy of texture and free- dem from blemish are principal factors in the value of kid skins, and to secure these essentials great pains are taken. So soon as the young animal begins toeat grass the value of the skin de- clines, for with a grass diet its skin im- mediately begins to grow coarser and harder in texture, and its chief merit vanishes. It is, therefore, kept closely penned, not only to prevent it from eating grass, but alsoto secure the skin from accidental injury from scratches or bruises, which impair its value. When the kids have reached a certain age at which the skins arein the best condition for the use of the glover, they are killed, and the hides are sold to traveling hawkers, through whom they reach the great centers of the tanning industry. Valuable Information. ‘‘Are you the celebrated Mme. Bom- baston?” he asked, after he had climbed four flights of stairs, and was admitted into a mysterious apartinent. “Yes,” replied the bizarre-looking personage who had received him. ‘The great clairvoyant?” vats Yo ‘‘And you foretell the future?” “Tea “And read the mind?” “oe” ‘And unfold the past?” “Yes, yes.” ‘*Then,” said the visitor, as he took a col] of bank notes from his pocket eagerly, ‘tell me what it was my wife asked me to bring home for her to- night!” The Weather Cure. The latest idea in medicine is to ex hibit yourself to the sun and air clothed as nearly as may be inthe manner nature turned you into the world. At the noted sanitarium in the moun- tains of Carniola, not far from Trieste, the patient lies stark naked on the dry soil, or on a plank platform out of doors exposed to the burning rays of a July or August sun, from fifteen min- utes to an hour atatime, the head alone protected from the blaze. Patients are also required to accus- tom themselves to wind and rain. Little by little they are brought toa point at which they can support with- out any protectionor shelter at atmos- pheric variations, the sun’s rays, or rain and wind. Pr. Parkhurst on the Theater. “The theater I believe in profound- ly,” writes the Rev, Charles H. Park- burst, D. D., in the Ladies’ Home Journai. ‘As a means of intellectual stimulus and of moral uplift there is nothing, with the possible exception of the pulpit, that could stand alongside of itasanenginery of personal effect, provided only it would maintain itself in its proper character as the drama- tized incarnation of strength. Person- ally, I would like at least once a week to get out from under the incubus of ordinary obligation and to yield my- self up intellectually and emotionally to the domination of dramatic power. I could live with a fresher life and could write and speak witha more recuperated vigor, I am sure.” Woman ‘Suffrage in Australia. The “South Australian Register” has compiled a table showing the pro- portion of men and wemen who voted at the recent elections. The returns show that 66.33 per cent of the men and 66.44 per cent of the women enrolled voted. Inthe districts of East Ade- laide, East Torrens, West Torrens, Barossa, Flinders and Sturts the women exercised the franchise much more numerously than the men. A Clever Teacher. That was a teacher who wishing her class of boys and girls totake up sewing and fear- ing revolt on the part of the young lads, cleverly managed that their sewing should take the form of sailmaking for small boats, learning to stitch balls and to mend sweaters. The result was keen interest and complete succeas. Now is the time to get supplied with glass and crockeryware as we will sell off cheaper than ever before removing. W. P. Colwill. Morey Wanted. On a good investment. Seven or hundred dollars is wanted at 6 per cent. for 5 or Cyears on Real Estate. Insur ance on same for $500. For further par- eight Paton & Co. clever kindergarten | os Cripple The iron grasp of scrofula haa no mercy upon its victims. This demon of the blood is often not satisfied with causing dreadful sores, but racks the body with the pains of rheumatism until Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures. “Nearly four years ago I became af- fiicted with scrofula and rheumatism. Viade Running sores broke out on my thighs. Pieces of bone came out and an operation was contemplated. I had rheumatism in my legs, drawn up out ofshape. I lost ap- petite, could not sleep. I was a perfect wreck. I continued to grow worse and finally gave up the doctor’s treatment to Well take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Soon appetite came back; the sores commenced to heal, My limbs straightened out and I threw away my crutches. I am now stout and bearty and am farming, w four years agol was a cripple. I[ glad reo- ommend Hood’s Sarsapariliia.” Unnaw HaMMOND, Table Grove, Illinois. Floods Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1. Prepared only vy C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. cure liver ills, easy to Hood's Pills take, easy toaaenah O08. SUN LIGHT! SOAP PICTURES WRAPPERS} A pretty colored picture for every 12 “ Sunlight” or every 6 “Life- buoy” Soap wrappers. These pictures are well worth getting. ADDRESS : Lever Mros., Lid. 23 Scott §t., Toronto ; Seeton & Mitchel!, Halifax, eae =e ns 222 for Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, 2 @] @e ®t 22888 Horses Wanted, IMlorses, Wanted to purchase, a matched pair horses, broad block built, weighing 1,200 iba to 1,300 Ibs, age 4 to7 years. Bays preferred, Must be sound good condition, nice looking and fast walkere, Apply im mediately to. W.S. McKIE, oct2L——dy4i, wh yli Hillsborough St It's Rasy to Forget Anything, but this is worth remem bering, When you want lumber in any quantity, however small or large, “come to our yard,” it will pay you for your trouble. It Pays to Remember That there are d fierent qualities of lumber. We Keep all the qualities, and would like to show them to you It pleases us to please you. Visit us; if we can’t please you don’t buy Do you want Cedar Posts, Cedar or Sprace Shingles, Lathe, Floorinsy, Studding, Scantling, Hemlock or Spruce Boards, Planks or Palings ? We Have Ir! Terersoxe Con- NECTION. JAMES BARRETT, sept 11 Connolly’s Wharf FOR SALE. { FFERS wil! be received by W. L. Strick- land, Counsellor-at-Law, 82 Water 8 Boston, Mass, and the undersigned, for th valuable property situate on MALPEQUE ROAD, Charlottetown. being part of Common Lot No 20, and owned by heirs of ls te Joha Mtanlake, The pao will be sold by Pub- lie auction if not disposed of by Nov For full particulars apply to the under~ signed, ™ PETERS, PETERS 4 INGS. Solicitors, Cameron Block, Charlo’ Oct 16—moné& wed EPPS'S GOCOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED., Ia Quarter-Pound Tias and Packets only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd., iLomeopathic Chemists, London, Engtand. Percy W. Carver, LLB. Formerly with Davies & Haszard, Ch’town, P. E. 1, Attorney & Counsellor-at-law Commissioner for the Provinces. Tremont Building, ticulars to P. 0. Box 154, octl§ — BOSTON, MASS, Room 629, he mae au 3G tee te . . eel Fp e ; 1% ie * aOR Ht iar 0 ge . a ao * od ‘igae® Muerte epee Powenaeti. Su Bt Lt ek aes TO Baies® ee Pe deistlingbiiiiiedh 2 OTe Es in PA RR eR? een Ee te Fp ORO IAL Ste QFE AN p86 Fates, ame, Be oe ge dee 8 ON OE Re ger ar"® ate és 3 > : a . te - oe rote. |