} } ON re ee erm ce es oe THE WALTER BAKER & CO. The Largest Manufacturers of PURE, HICH CRADE x << IS AND CHOCOLATES On this Continent, have received HIGHEST AWARDS from the great fF iy Industrial and Food i ; i EXPOSITIONS if pen Eur — Ualt the the QD ¥ ver Chemicals r Dyes er any r preparations mo BREAKFAST COCOA le abe tely and ® ble, and custs less than one cent a SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WALTER BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER, MASS. ASK YOUR DRUGCIST FOR TERR PANTY so - * 2 : r + , p< °°, = ab hese e ; Presa" = > . a /, in eae. See 1 OLY P) pa a ‘ * WN a\' ; Hi) text i a ~~ manele ' A z , > Pg a. * a wit ‘P ‘ he ye e : et ra’ “a = Ee » : as Go | © - te-.. > ORD eis i aes ee Ta oie & " I No oils ce oth i potties 1 81.0 nee se ANY OTHE INTDIV AT as EYTENTAL ce. oases es 43 |‘ Originated by an uid Family Pnysician. Think OF It, Year ami'sull eats. dene stil if leacta, = n Every Sufferer’: 08 ‘ Piphtheria,Ce » Be ’ , Limbs, latica, Neuralgia, vacha,Catarrh, Bron . Diarrhoea, Lan eness, Joints or Strains . iyhe re lef and speedy cure have Jobnsou’s Every I Mother w= xiyne Liniment i the | mune for mp, Coida, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, Colte, Outa, Bruis ses, Cramps and ofttimes the pocket-knife. Painters | and senlptors will probably not be inclined | to aecept this ‘Yo them art means only the covering of canvas with paint, or the cutting of stone, or mouldi ng of plaster into form, but the | the rare embroideries of Japan to open our ari Pa e to oerer In any family without net.ce ays in ~2 cost a sige. Relieves all Suminer | Complaint Price, 5 cta. post-paid; 6 bot thes, 32. Rupresapetl. “L & Jo pacon & 0.. Boston Mase Crale snpplied by W. R. Watson Char lottetown 5 DUNT DESPA ' | waf : ‘ ’ | ) i K | at the f ving prices on Se cis s for $2.50. Tothe trad £4.00 Mer or three dozen at $3.75 per i Sept by mail to a address post pa GEORGE E. HUGHES, mayev Charlottetowr Are you WEAK: >’ NERVOUS? TIRED £ SLEEPLESS? PALE "} BLOODLESS THIN & DYSPEPTIC? you need HAWKER’S Nerve and Stomach TONIC. It makes weak nerves strong, prom id, refreshing Sleep, aids digestion, restores lost appetite, is a perfect blood and fi lesh builder, restores the bloom of health All Drug Six for $2.50. Md o td. St John. NB. woond'’s PHOSPHODIN E. The Great English Remedy. Siz Packages Guaranteed to promptly. and permanently eure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions,Sperm atorrhea, Impotency and all effects of Abuse or Excesses, Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opiumor Stimu- lant, which soon lead to In- Before and After. Armity, Insanity, Conswmption and ax early grave. Has been prescribed over 36 years in thousands of cases; is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine 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 mail, Frice, one package, @1; six, $5. One will please, siz will cure. Pamphlets free to any address, The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. dr : | : ONE PILL AFTER EATING ; (NSURES GOOD BDIGESTION. co ‘PRIGE25 CTS. Tre | enamel is put on with metallic oxides, the | process being so delicate that no two teeth | variations } | to render them more deceptive to the eye, | The best plates are of rubber. | the prettiest material for the purpose, but | | | Oil, DAILY EXAM ART IN IRISH CABINS. | BEAUTIFUL WORK OF PEASANTS IN | THE GREEN ISLE. Just Coming Into Notice—Embroidertes, Wood Carving and Earthenware—The Porcelain of Belleek—Frall and Beaut! ful Wares Produced by Skilled Hands In these days of drought—art drought— in the season between the going out and coming in of artists, one turns sny place for rare things, and that is how it came about that out of the depths of the Irieh Store, on Wabash avenue, says the Chica- go Times, there was raked up the other day some of the rarest bits of wood carving, embroidery, and Belleek porcelain in the city The carving was of course of bogwood, that wood which soaks in the bogs until it is black as ebony and twice as beautiful. i shapes, and the articles were both ornamental and useful. Owls and other birds cf the night looked mened eyes out of the casein they stood, and tall candlesticks told eerie tales of Irish homes snd Irish bogies. On them were carved the great wolf-dogs—the dogs of Ireland long since passed away, save in the traditions of the It was in all ode with ill-« which peo} ié@ Fancifal trays and boxes, tiny vases and paper cutters, everything to which the wood carver turns his attention, were there; and all the work of the peasante of Ireland. Beautiful to look upon, and yet something one must approach with sad- dened heart, because each carved leaf and scroll, each tiny feather of bird, each hair of the gaunt wolf-dog, tells the story of a gauuter wolf which ever stands at the Irish peasant’s door. And so with the embroidery, In every stitch it was what we call high art, and yet Mra. White, whose heart and soul is with Lady Aberdeen in her work, says: ‘‘Each stitch, each drawn thread there, tells a atory to me of hunger and privations. My country women work these things in peas- ant homes, where never a ray of hope en- ters, unless—uniess it is the hope of death.” And looking at them through Mrs. White's eyes one could no longer see the looks at rare embroideries as one those turned out by machines, but each bitof linen seemed stamped with the ir nai v ie ility of her whose fingers had beantitied i Upon each leaf and flower some woman's tears had dropped, and with the stitches some woman's heart- strings had been woven in thecloth. There were visions of homes of which we cannot earthen floors and peat fires; of women and wailing children; of men grown desperate with suffering. But over all and throagh it all art seems to have held sway—tbe art of the need‘e conceive, bungry layman accepts more. Perhaps it needed eyes to the fact that needlework may en- croach vpon the realm of art, but having onee been opened they will never be closed. And so it is that among the artiste the Irish peasant, man or woman, is not all unworthy to stand. With the needle and with the knife they work, as they bare worked for generations, buat no longer without recognition As for Irish porcelain, that is different, There is no need to plead ite cause. For the matter of twenty years or more Ameri cans have been proud to own a piece of It is manufactured in Fermanagh: County, works Ireland can Belleek porcelain. Belleek, Lough Erne, at the only porcelain [he ware is peculiarly beautiful. The e is iridescent, of a lustrous silvery ap- It is translucent and is like an It is rarely made in ynal patterns, the designs usually sessing all the charm of originality. A pe is that of a shell, and when ide in that form itis hard to detect it ma beautiful sea shell, so like the pearly lining is the glazed surface. France and England both try to duplicate the Belleek ware, but have to substitute an artificial metallic glaze to produce the ister of mother- of- pearl. | earance, n thinness, raneii 1 tuvorite sha c none Artificial Teeth. Inasmuch as real teeth are so easily lost it is a comfort to know that artificial ones only 15 to 18 cents each at the mann- Oue maker in New York sells They are por- The cost facturer’s. 8,000,000 teeth every year. celain,. composed chiefly of kaolin. are exactly alike in coloring, After being finished thousands of them are taken to- getber and matched in shades. There are fifty different shades, corresponding to i the coloring of natural teeth. Defects are often made in false teeth so as Celluloid is | ic to the Spanish national sport INER ’ - = s-—_— en ee Defence of Cull-Pighting. The terrible death of a promising young torero iu the bull ring has again at tracted the attention of the English pul One is accustomed to hear bull-ftighting denoun: ed as both cruel and cowardly—crnel be cause of the suffering it inflicts on ani mals, cowardly because the risk run by once the bull fighter is infinitesimal. The firs charge is absolutely true, so far, at leas as concerns the unfortunate horses. The second is equally false, as the tragic death of Espartero the other day should serve to teach the amateur critics who, for the most part, have never seen the spectacie they denounce in such unqualified terms If the Spaniards would only revive the original form of the sport they from the Moores—that is to say, the ridiny, not of wretched cab horses, only fit for the knacker, and mounted by professional pieadores, but of valuable horses, with ! “owners up,’ who would, of course, exer cise their skill in trying to save their mounts—there would be little to be said against bull fighting on the score of cruelty.—London Graphic borrowed Dogs and Insomnia, On the occasion of a dog show in Paris a French statistician has published an esti mate of the number of dogs at present be found in that city. Evidently it is wit! no good feelings towards the poor animals, for after informing the world that ther are no fewer than 80,000 of ¢! + French capital alone the-« ceeds to speculate upon the persons who are kept awake } ings. Onan average, he thinks, o1 in ten would be restless and i i bark during the night, and in ea ax the barking would cause at least one j»« son to lose his night’s rest. On this! he arrives at the dreadful conclusico there are in Paris at all times 8,000 per who cannot sleep from this cause alorne And yet, he coruplains, the barking of do is not even mentioned in medical works a one of the causes of insomnia.— London Daily News. A Curious Custous. A custom that has existed for several centuries is still maintained in some towns | on the lower Rhine. On Easter Monday auction day—the town crier or clerk ¢a!l all the young people together and to thi highest bidder sells the privilege of dan ing with the chosen girl, and her onl) during the entire year. The fees flow into the public poor box. Valuable oll. Cottonseed oil, now so important mercially, has been known to commer for along time. New Orleans onc tempted to use it for stre¢ lighting I was an oid charge of abolition days t slaves were fed on cottonseed, a charg 3 dignantly ! laveholde: con denied by tne sia though cottonseed was then used as food by the peasants of southern Europe. One of the Latest. At a late meeting of the Royal Society of England an appliance called a thermoxer was exhibited. It was a q! ited cu with fine wires arranged insid it could be heated to any desi ture by electricity. It seems to | nsed with success in the it makes it possible to keep up th ature of patients during prolonged opera tions with hemorrhage witheut such cu bersome appliances as blankets and vessels | of hot water. John B. Gough, says: “For sore throat, especially when tending to ulceration, I | have found Pond’: Extract very beneti- cial. hospital The Boston Transcript has a pleasant | story to tefl of James Anthony Froude. It seems that the historian was in Boston during the city’s great fire in ! 872, deliver- ing a course of lectures in Tremont Term- | ple. He had just finished his course the | evening on which the fire broke out, - 1} the mnanager of the course held in his hand a check for $1,000, the net pro of two or three of the lectures. He ered the check to Mr. Froude but warm-hearted Englishman immediately ordered it paid to the prope roo ty for the benefit of the euffe rers by the fir ecds prot All inithiinia, Female Compla &c., are quickly controlled by that ho hoki remedy, Pond’s wutrent. He—I chall never n larry woman my direct opposite. She (encouraging!y)— Well, Mr. Duifer there are numbers of brig a it, inteliige girls in this neighborhood. unti The sight oremell of fo sometimes sickens you, that’s because you’re billious Hawker’s iiver pills cure bill usness and all billious ills. Northumberland, Shipped per steamer it does not resist the acids of the mouth. — Providence Journal. Snap Judgments. An extremist is always a misfit Slyness is the only vice that does not write itself upon the face “A good shape is in the shears’ mouth” and a good fit is all in the needle’s eye. If you wish to keep your friend you must langh at his — but you are not bour to hear his stories twice It is wn mistake to endow a man with imaginory cap-.bilities. He knows ne more than is known by his works. Make allowance for the follies of youth Cameron master, for Point du Chene on 29th: 1D Cases CG g8......ccerrereerccreereeG 97 | 440 a hay gh DEE ee Meee 1320 | Obs 2 horses......... as 190 | 196 sheep and lambs 392 | i iiesaecns 198 | Be NT ONOEH ici ooike voce 16 | $ 2213 | } SHIP NEWS. Oct 27—Ent schr Ida M, McFadyen, | Pictou, coal; bark Charles Lefurgey,Read, Pictou, coal; Surprise, Anderson, Tidnish, | bal; Matilda, Haines, Richibucto, Iumber. Oct 29—Advance, Orr, do, do. Oct 27— | Cld schr Ida M, McFadyen, Pictou, bal; | Surprise, Anderson, Baie Verte, produce; | Matilda, Haines, Baddeck, luniber in same bottom from Bichibucto. 2 = SHIP. NEWS, | and hope for the best. The cat, the grav- est of all animals, is the most frisky wheu young Ju ize fo Verfame Money. | is the latest in- int to woo coins ee m feminine pocketbooks It is a perfumed batton lalwood fragrance intended to lace in ckets of « purse to sweeten vii. greasy bills which earry un- sant Gggestions of their previous ies A “money disinfectam vention me With a sal Wie DK. MeCOR MICK Is, Montreal has something to say respecting the well Xnown Richmond Physician, MowrtreaL, Oct, 29.—Dr. A. G. McCor- mick, of Richmond, Que., whose remark- able cure of Bright’s Disease, by the use of Duxii’s Kidney Pills, has been set forth in his letter, recently published, is a graduate of McGill College, this city. He is well known, not only to the medical profession in Montreal, but throughout the entire province, as a careful and reputable phy; sivian, and his testimony to the worth of Dodd’s Kidney Pills is accepted by phy sicians generally as a guarantee of the efficacy of the remedy.” Such a communi- avion, coming from so eminent a gradu- ate ‘of McGill, will have the effect of mak- ing Dodd’s Kidney Piils universally popu- lar in Quebec. sitidledinitiiiacniiat Karly train your children in habits of industry, produce and economy, and you will contribute much to their success in after life. The greatest flesh and blood maker in existence and a life-saver to consump- tives is Miller’s Emulsion of Cod Liver “the kind that cures” bronchitis, coughs, colds and all lung troubles. | Every bottle warranted, No oily taste like others. In big bottles, 50c. and $1.00, at druggists. Pert ef Charlottetown. ENTERED. Oct 29—Foam, Moran, Pictou, Coban, | Fraser, Montreal; 30th, Flying Cloud, | Purchase, Sydney; Annie G, Boggs, do. CLEARED. Oct 29—Rustic, Hughes, Pictou; Calla Lily, Hirtle, Lahave; Coban, Fraser, North | Sydney; Foam, Moran, Orwell; Etoil du | Matin, Davies, Pictou. DIED. On Tuesday, 30th inst., of stomac., trouble, James W hite, aged 57 years, of Hunter River, Lot 23. RP. pRSOy PILLS” Make New, Rich Bloo: wonder! 1! discovery. No cthn | Piieatin' ate word Wl positively cure or reiseer | T..e information aronnd exact Sree ce post, of a box of pili Fin ut abvat Sr. you will always be thankful. ms mL A pritette wo ays expe! all impurities from the blo great benefit feu: using then, free. a ee ; ve boxes 1.00. DR t. a * "Mouse Bt teton, Masa mers WINTER KEEPING APPLES, Northern Spy, Sear | and Bishop Pip pin Apples for sale by the subscriber. BENJ. E. WRIGHT. ort 20—3w a the | | et « LT meet a | — - _ . ¥. — SUMMERSIDE EXPORTS. Scmmersipe, Oct. 27. Shipped per SS Fastnet, Churchill | master, for Halifax : 168 bush potatoes....................8 13 ee 343 Oe te I oon sevice coductacncts 54 238 cases lobsters... peti 1666 3 bria vegetables........... bas 3 $ 2109 | a we OCTOBER 31, WEDNESDAY, em — 1894. S PoND'S ou THIS IS Our trade-mark on Buff tesa soar eran PI LES, made crudely, sold cheaply. Used Internally and Externally. EXTRACT YVHE GENUINE. Wrapper around every bottle. THE WONDER OF HEALING FOR RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, WOUNDS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, FEMALE COMPLAINTS. Refuse Substitutes, INFLAMMATIONS, HEMORRHAGES, and ALL PAIN. CATARRH, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Prices, 50c., Cheap, $1, Cheaper, $1.75, Cheapest. Genuine is strong and pure. Sole Marwiactucors POND'S EXTRACT CC., 76 It is the supplying of this that has made uni versally esteemed. Priestley Cloths, etc., are such a cunnins CLO OHMOOOON PHOOOOOOO HD OMOVIE OIL MOOH OE ¥ 300000000000000000 00 OOOO OOOO OHIO OD ‘ A Beautiful Gown. It is a frequent experience with ladies that when the dress is bought with care, and made with taste, some indefin- eble thing is lacking te give it the perfect touch of beauty. PRIESTLEY’S DRESS FABRICS y's Black Dress Goods, made in Henriettas, Crape nd effective blend of silk and wool that when tue dress is made it drapes in periect grac efulness, giving to the figure that charm without which the costliest dress that Worth ever made is a mere Can be diluted with water. FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK. distress. ON WHICH THE GOOGS ARE WRAPPED.~ & Coal! Coal !: ON HAND AND DAILY Round, Nut and Slack, LEADING MINES. FROM ALL THE Also, R. Charlottetown, October 1, 1894—6m dy & wy HARD COAL and WOOD. before the streets are muddy. ARRIVING: Leave your McMILLAN. orders INSIST SENN Upon having Featherbone Corsets. Refuse all substitutes. See they are stamped thus: Ay .S WW fs RRR Nes PATENTED SEPT. 3rd, 1884. No. 20110. NONE ARE GENUINE UNLESS SO STAMPED. Always This season’s almost universal. Every dealer sells them. the demand is them octl9—dy m wf & wky SECIS erat - aS SS a 4 . ~ _ Cranby Rubbers to the front. goods finer than ever. Now that the public is familiar with the excellent Quality, Style, Fit and Finish of the Granby Rubbers, Everybody wants Granby Rubbers Wear Like Iron. SS cs woe . fastoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription fer Infants and Culidren, It cont other areotic substance. ft i3 2 soric, Drops, Soothing Ey;r Pls asant. sins neither Opium, Morphine nor lLarmiless substitute rups, and Castor Oil. Its guarantco is thirty years’ use by ns of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays foverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teoCiiag troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Ca nan » assimilates the food, regulates the stomachs end bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Case oer iz tho Children’s Panavcea—the Mother’s Fricnd. Castoria. Castori. * Sactori 1 is an cxcellent me oilieine for ch!!- “ Castoria is so well adapted toch ilJren the @rca, Mot have repeatedly told me ofits | 1 recommend it as superior toany »rescriptiog good ef iucir children.” known te me.” Da. G. C. Osaoon, H. A, Arecner, M. D., Lowell, Mass. 111 So, Oxferd St., Brooklyn, N. Y¥, “Os is to best remedy for children cf “Our physicians in the children’s depart w) ted. Lhope the day is 1.ot ment have spoken highly of their experi- far ’ ers willconsider the real ence in their outside practice with Castoria, futerost of ta Lillren, end use Castoria ia- and althourh we only hare among our sicad ie various quack nostrums which aro med cl supriies what is known as reguior @ «ts t} loved ones, by forcing opium, products, yes we are free to confers that the tnorph Ss) t syrup and other hurtful merits of Castoria has won us to iook with agent r throats, thereby sending favor upon it.” taem t ure graves,” Unitep Hosprrah asp Disyeysany, Dr. J. ¥. Krxcreroe, Beston, Maga Conway, Ar Auten C. Surru, Pres., The Centanr Company, T7 Murray Strect, New York City. Li ae Pa HUBERT PALMER & 60., Charlottetown Sash and Door Factory. READ We are now better prepared | DOORS and FRAMES, SASHES and FRAMES, POSTS, which are always kept constantly in stock. TH Zw ! than ever to supply Contractors with PANEL MOULDINGS and FINISH SPOUTING a»! CONDUCTORS, STAIR RAILS, STAIR BALUSTERS, NEWEL We are also prepared to do all kinds of JOBBING in Planing, Jointing, Mor ticing, Tennoning, Jig and Fret Sawing. All kinds of GOTHIC WINDOWS made at shortest notice. Our Machinery is new and of the very best description, and we manufacture of the best Quebec pine. Give us a call. ROBT. PALMER & CO., Ch’town, Nov. 3, 1893-—-wky PEAKE’S NO. WHARF. month. understood number. KITTIITILITITITTITTT TTT TTT a bnew subscribers, The The Leading Paper of P. E. Isiand. THE LARGEST | in Size and Circalation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. One Year, --- - $4/Three Months, $1 Six Months, - $2! Read hie Splendid Offer to Subscribers McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 aus 8, 40 cents a month. enabled to make a most exceptional offer to send MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fills out the following blank form, subscribing for THE DAIL<¢ You will please send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months from date, for which I agree to pay 40 cents a month, it being extra charge, MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magazine. Tha Examiner Publishing Co... vaily Examiner One Month, - 35c By special arrangement with the publishers, we are XAMINER for 12 months at 40 cents 4 CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. ave TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT | ITTTTT—-TITTTT Ie D 119 Twe Examuer Publishing Co., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. that you are to have sent to my address for one year, without at ccenssecideresocmmescinntinieiaionaal Seer eee eee eeeeeeeeeeee Vs Tn Ns Nn Mn hn nN bn NL Nn Ni ln tlh NN lo Nl Hl Se Mo Bo SL Lb Sb in Soll Ln Sb> NL Lin Lo ln Sb lb NS Iolo li LLMLbbbbbLLLSLLSLALLLESS MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE also cvntains most interesting articles under tLe heads The Edge of the Future,” The Present Hour,” “ Stranger than Fiction,” etc. We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for ealy $4.60 a year, payable in advance or in monthly instalments of 40c. as desired. We make this exceptional offer i» order that we may secure @ large number ot “ NewestK wowledge,” “ Knowledge of Immediate Value,” but all who are slevady subscribers may avai! themselves of this Address : SHARLOTTETOWN., P. K, ISLAND Runa Also, SL whilst landi Vale Charlottetown, — — _ with or w $8.00; I. X. Island. New * PRINGBIRD, CYMBERLINE DOMINION, ACK COAL per following schooners : CLOUD, LADY SPKEDWELL, R. W. SMITH, HOWARD L., This Coal is all of best quality, and will be sold low C.LYONS & C QUEEN’S WHARF. Ch’town, Oct 10, 1894—tt o & wy Landing and to Arrive from Dominion Coal Company's Mines, ef Mine Coal per following Schooners : 154 TONS. WARRIOR, i799 SWAN, lil « P. WALSH, 93. GE. iF 100 “ ia 150 . RUSTIC, UNION 130 TONS, 76 116 - 140 i ing. Feake Bros. & Co. Charlottetown, October 18, :894—lw = COAL COAL. Landing and to Arrive 4,000 TONS COAL a ——— Old Sydney Mines Round e& Slack. Acadia lntcucolonuial * Nut. ee ee sé se — 29, 1894-~dy Gw pat guar her wat ———— a — = Ensilage and Hay Catters, IN ALL SIZES, ithout Hay Carrters; Turnip Slicers, cheap, L. Feed Mills, only $8.00. ALSO— Plow Repairs, Mould Boards in Steel or Metal, Land- sides and Shares for alk Plows in general use on the FINLAYSON, H. T. LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. D. Ww. ‘McKay Woolen Uo. | - —— OUR SPECIALTILS, READY-MADE CLOTHING, | | TWEEDS, a WORSTEDS, UNDERCLOTHING, @ HATS, | CAPS, aa BLANKETINGS, FLANNELS. ‘ ‘Come and See Our Show, McKAY WOOLEN (6 Gane. Sept. 25, 1894—dy 4 To arrive, per bark R. B. Peake, from Liverpool, due here about 15th October, — 8,000 Bag 3 Salt. Parties wishing to pur” chase can book, now at low rates, ee PEAKE BROS. & CO. Charlottetown, Sept. 26, 1894. Mortgage sale, To be sold by Public Auction, atthe Law . Courts Sunes in Charlottetown, in Queen's County. in rince Edwa i THURSDAY, the third day of January oent. ot A D 1885, at the hour ot twelveo’clock, pocat All that tract, piece or parcel of land situ- ate in Charlottetown af ng one- fourth partof Town Lot Number Seventeen (17) in the Second Hundred of Town Lois in the said city, bounded on the north ty Gamat Square, on the east by land the 0 Se Zion Church, on the soutu pe bees rty of Richard Heartz, and o: and the rty of the Unto Be Bank «a Martin O’ Halloran’s estate, the said Jand hay- ing a front of forty-two feet or thereabouts on Queen Square, and extending back eighty f. et or thereabouts. The above sale is made nnoder and by virtue ofa power of sale contained inan Indenture — of Mortgage, bearing date the sixth day of . } June, A D /873, and made betweeu the © ae lottetown Y oung Men's Christian A ofthe one part and John Ings of the other 4 part For further particulars apply to A. Ernest Ings, attorney-at-Law, or to the ae . ~ rated at Charlottetown this sixteenth dag ofVctober, A D 1891. octl6—12i law (tues) MORTGAGE SALE, To be sold by Public Auction, at the Supreme Court House in Charloitetewn in Queen’s County, on ‘1 UESDAY, the Sixth day of November next, A. D. isg4, at the bour of twelve o'clock, noon: All that tract, piece or parcel of iand. situate, lying and being in Charlotietown, in Qieen’s County, in the Province of Pr nce Hiward Island, being part of Town Lot Number Twenty-six, in the first hun dred of Town Lots, and bounded and de s-ribed as follows, that is to say: Comr mencing at the south-west angle of said Town Lot Nun.ber Twenty-six, on the north-east side of Hillsborough Street; tience northwestwardly along said street e ghty-nine feet; thence on a right angle thee rewith northeastwardly forty-four feet thence south-westwardly parallel with <aid street sixteen feet seven inchee; thence nortb-eastwardly parallel with Water Street one foot; thence south-east wardly parallel with Hillsborough Street seventy-two feet five inches to Water Street; thence following the course thefe- : of south- westwardly forty-five feet to the place of comraencement. oy The above sale is made pursuant to power of sale coutained in a certain In denture of Mortgage bearing date the ~~ | twenty-fourth day of June, A. D. 1891, * made between Owen Coyle of the one part x and James Eden of the other part. For further particulars apply to Mr. James J. Johnston, Solicitor, Charlotte town, Dited this fifth day of Octeber, A. dD. 1894 JOHN _INGS, Mortgages. JAMES EDEN, octh—4i law (fri) Mortgagee. MORTGAGE SALE, To be sold by Public Auction, at the Court Honse in Summerside. on FRIDAY, the Thirtieth day of November next, A. D. 1894, at the hour of Twelve o’clock, noon, lunder @ power of sale contained in & | Mortgage, dated the third day of Septem- ber, A. D. 1891, and made between Philip Gain and Elizabetin Gain (his wife) of the | one part, and the undersigned, James > Salen. of the other part :-- All that tract of land situate in Lot Eleven, Prince County, adjoining land on the north and south of Thomas Lynch, being the northern woiety of that tract of land, bounded as follows: - Commencing at a stake eet in the west side of the main Wetern Road, in the north-east angle of land of Alexander Gillis; thence weat sixty] three chains fifty links to Lot Ten; thence * north nineteen chains € ighty links ; thenee east forty-eight chains twenty li nks to the road ; thence to the south-east along said road to the place of commencement, Con- laining one hundred and ten acres, the moiety of which is fifvy-live acres. For further partic ‘ulars epply to J. Edward Wyatt, Barrister-at-Law, Sum- merside. Dated this 2ith day of October, A. D. 189%. | | j | } | JAMES BARCLAY, oct26--4w lew (fri) Mortgagee. BILL HEADS. | ‘One Thousand Assorted Sina | FOR $2.75, ‘THE BEST PAPER AND PADDED. Envelopes from $1.50 per 1,000 | up (Printed). Yoa will save money by ordering now. Orders by mail promptly attended to, JAMES D. TAYLOR, Queen Street. Street. ang27 Steamer MIRAMICHI will leave Mone real on 29th October, for the last trip his season. Returning, leaves Charlotte own on 2nd November. dl CARVELL BROS, pat guar oct20—2i