& ae ee ee ee fo am te oe NEW i. cw PIAL 7“ tw ie Lab iti i «ty evenip ihe X tpar Pruhlichine (7 Y ahh. bs I wi HEilis, WO From t - . Core of W ater and irreat i+ : , Vharletteto wh, island. aiPLlIoON— a rin hciwar —RATES OF ai ee Ae ee vous sake cee ee I 6 6 odo, cc ne dele cae 1,25 CS WE kb kn divide Cala ee, eeece 50 Z Advertising at moderate rates iS Coatracts may be made for monthly, quar. | — *o-———— terly, hati-yearly, or yearly advertis»ments, on application. ) Examiner es : et “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having CHARLOTTI ETOW N, . Si Eo Bed > a ” ve * To een LEK PROWSE does not offer ALMANAC YOR DECEMBER, 1886, MOON'S CHANGES, First Quarter 3rd day, 10h. N. E. (below horizon.) Full Moon 10th day, 5h., Last Quarter 18th day, 2h New Moon 25th day , dh, 12.5m., c.7mk, Sate W , 26.6m., a.m..S. E. 1s. & ©, B. {below horizon. ) ) Sun ‘Sun |Moon! High! Day's ,} DAY OF WEEK _ ; M rises sets rises w ater| le n ‘h h mh m/morn taftr'n h m | Wednesday 7 284 Sill 44 : 51; 8 = 2) Thuraday 30 9 aft 16) 2 34 3 Friday 7 9 vu 43) 3 24 = 4) Saturday 32 9 1 9 4 23 37 5 Sanday 33 9| 1 34) 5 29 36 6 Monday 34 &} 1 59) 6 33 i 7 Puesday BD 8 2 26 7 35 8; W ednesday 36 8| 2 57); 8 25 9 Thursday 37 8 3 31) 9 10 10 Friday 3s S$! 4 11) 9 52 1} |Saturday » 81 4 58110 33 39 2/Sunday 10 Si 5 541) 14 13 Monday ti S| 6 56/1] se; 14! Tuesday {2} $| 8 4iaft 39) “26 15| Wednesday <3) 91910! 123) 26 16 Thursday © 4° 9110-27) 2 2 «25 ¥ friday 44 9111 30:1 3 6 Za) 18 Satur 45 10) morn) 4 13 25 19 San lay £5 i0! jl; 5 3l 24 20| Monday 5, 10) > 02 6 56 24 21) Tuesday 7 Lt; 319) 7.75 25 22) W ednesday 47 12} 4 22) 8 48 25 23'T iursday + 13; & 28) 9 34 25 24) Friday isi 13) 6 31110 16 25 23| Saturday S| 14] 7 2910 55} 9-26 26 Sun lay 49} 15) 8 20/11 34) 26 Zi Vio n l &y £9 15 7 9 5) morn 26 28/Tuesday 19, 161 7 47/0 10; 27 a0 \W edueniiey 49 16)10 16 0 45 27 30 Thursday 49| 17)10 50} 1 2) 28 31) Friday 749i 1711 12;}2 O88 2 NOTICE 1. MiErsons indebted 16 ou bse er ABLE here! by notified . sat all Ace day. of DE EMBE R next, his attorney for immediate the PSth banded into tion. collec- J. B. DONALD. Cart 0. va, Nov. 25, 1608 ly & i A Pr’ 252 be ok ALO JUST 5,000 Shipping @a2ezs. WEEKS & BEER. eod. M Af wy BA RECEIVED, G3 Nov o7. 1886—1w BOSTON. —=<- -=—~ WITTER ARRANGEMENT ee ee THE PALACE STEAMERS NTERNATIONAL S.S. 69. Leave St. John for Bostou, via Eastport and Port- ‘and, every Monday, and Taursday at 6.00 a. m. Ware from Charlottetown to Buston, $5.50, 2nd class ; 39.50, lat class. For tickets aad other information apply to A.SH ane. F. W. HALES, i Ps 1. Ry. P. E. L Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent, | Nov. 15, 1886—eod wky hs. ARTHUR & CO, Hit uissin: i ‘Merchants, 12) ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS.) Recs and Produce a Spaciaity. Inlw 15-—diw wkiv BARCLAY & 09, | GENERAL mmission & Shippiag Merchants, 191 Atlantic Avenue, Sestor a ee gy! ve years’ experience in ¢ market i) Or tifty tho sad = brrshe ; | potatoes receiv: yd by as lastisilt, Use p r ali satisfied. Vorrsls ef Fost i fre 12 1%3 at shor ,yMICS i Tove n -et rao’ rte : ' . 7 ee” Speciaities — Potators scxerel, Can- ned Lobsters, lg cs. Jane (7, 86 --ara0 eo are } ounts na paid after will be; ‘ A. K. ISLAND, a LY, DEC MOND a dis count of 33: per cent; to do so, 69 per cent profit would need to be added Such profit would rain a farmer or any other “ Man---BB per cent discount means a profit of 50 per bina But the facts are: He bays ore buy froin 4&0 to in the trade, and ¢ who pretend to give those Fabulous | fen Thousand Dollars ing at wonderful low prices, # Suits from $4.00. up. ” price. Sacqgue Cloth, Eadies’ Mats s, &e., y and Underelothing below con wee per cent less and pot as bo Ps M: | yh Chest << wins gs —- : sities MO i aN Ad. _ ROE aC a We must have a Seitlement at once of All Accounts due the late firm of W. A. Weeks & Co. VIPORTANCE JAMES PATON & CO. (iP GREAT ine A ethno ay CASH BUY aRS. Nselecting DRY GOODS, most people like to bay where they can get the Largest Assort- _ ment and Cheapest Goods for RE ADY CASH. Our importations this Fall are larger — any other Dry Goods’ firm in Charlottetown, and in order to induce Cash Buyers we fer SPECIAL VALUE. Our Millinery Department is very complete—for Wedding and Mourning Outfits we can- not be surpassed. es ore. PATON & CO, WHOLESALK AND } CHARLOTTETOWN Nov. 22, 1886. BRITISH WAREHOUS = |. i o Stock of FALL AND WINTER DRY G0QD8 is ROW — ___ Complete in Exvery Department, Comprisig all the Latest NOV REEIES OF THE SEASON Ee. Our ef as Grood Value as is te be had in he City. ee Ch’town, Nov. 12—why RETA{L DRY GOODS MERCHANTS, | BEOW IN. for cash onty, there- than many hiouses an afford to sell even fess than those Episcounts, ($910.6G60) worth ef Cloth- Overcoats from $2.7, | Joh Lot Clothing at about halt: Luarge stock of Dress Goods, Sacques, Ulsters yery cheap Shirts(: npetition. hKivery sensible man ca woman siould see his steck fed away by sensational advertisements. OW SE a ARE OMPT. LJ7 | favor ean ee , Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. Ifis as pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colda, and Astigona, which lead to Consumption, have Spedlily cured by the use of ADAMsON’s Batsam after all olier medicines have failed rs from either been Suffere recent or chromic couchs or bronchial affections, can Tesa@t to this great remedy, confident of obtaining spealy relicf. Do mot dk olay cet it at once FOR SALE B Bettled at St. Steyr B., by KINSM AN CO « DREGGISTS, e proprietors, y. . Drugzgists, ira Arz.. N. Y. Ee PAYS ' TO SELECT ONE'S i AWS PTeSEll AS EARLY AS POSSIBLE. — -—— Our show this year both of SILVER GOODS —AND— JIBOwW Bi. RY of all descriptions, is LARGE, WELL ASSORTED & CHEAPER, Quality considered, than ever before. | Ladies’, Youths’ and Gent’s WATCHES that will Keep Time, from $6.09 to upwards of $100.00. Cheapest Watches Not Kept in Stock. Anyone, by paying a small deposit on any article they may select, can have it laid aside for therm til required. E. W. TAYLOA, j den tow {6 advise the Public, may speak free.” EMBE | EURIPIDES. *R 13, 18 36. Bifty-Dellar The ibiil, Mus. DEAN sat alone in her little kitchen. She never used her parlor. There was the extravagance of an extra fire to be consi- dered—the fact that the best rag carpet, woven by her own skillful hands, must not be worn out too recklessly, the dread pos- sibility of sunshine fading out these econo- - ~ . - some ~ - Corres Two CEnts. NO..16 . herself among the SINGLE VOL. ] D.77 crowd Ol pursnel mom ber. When she of Goal be ny candle was laughing waked up, roused by the noice poured upon the burning and Mr. nt ner. Betsy,” saidhe, ‘‘l thought you were Never going to wakeagain. Here you sat, with the fire dead out, and i've had to kindle it up again.” stove, is Dean waa ‘*Whr, mics. She believed in making everything last as long as it possibly could. And se she made the kitchen her headquarters, and sat there knitting, with her feet comfort- ably balanced on the stone hearth, the saucepan of apples bubbling softly away at the back, and the sound of her husband's axe ringing from the back shed ashe cut and split the kindling wood piled up there in well-seasoned logs. She was a little wrinkle-faced woman of fifty, with stiff brown bows to her cap, hair that seemed dried up instead of silvered, and keen blue eyes that twinkled as if they had discovered the secret of perpetual motion. ‘To saye money was her chief end and aun in life. The very mittens she was knitting were to be sold at the village store in excha inge for tea, sugar, spices and all necessary groceries. ‘‘ A penny saved is as good as a penny éarned,” was the way she shaped her life. ** I'm glad I took the money out of the savings bank yesterday,” said Mrs. Dean to herself, as the bright needles clicked mer- rily away. ‘* People say it isn’t quite safe. And one can’t be teo careful. But then, again, there's danger of burglars—though, to be sure, no burglar,” she added, with a complacent inward chuckle, ** would ever think of looking in the folds of the Clinker- ville Clarion newspaper in the wall pocket on the wall. It’s the bureau drawers, and the trunks, and the loeked-up chests that they aim for. A fifty- ull{ a clean, crisp, new fifty-doYars bill} al. sav- ings, too, out. ofthe house inony.” Just then there sounded a knock at the door, anddn eame old Dr, Bridgman, rubi- ‘self had shet. ‘he. ** No, thank you ; cund with the touch of the March wind, ;and muffled “up in the fits of the w ild fanimals which, from time to time, he him- **Good day, Mrs: Dean, geod day !”’ said I can’t sit down. I’m a deal teo busy for that. But 1 heard yesterday that you took fifty dollars out of the savings bank.” ‘* Yes,” said Mrs. Dean, her face volun- tarily hardening. ‘* I did.” ‘* We are taking up a subscription to get little laine Dick B Sodley a cart and donkey so that he can go around peddling tinware, Said Line-ducter, 4's pretty, hard foray a j;and sent a loaf to ‘*Bless me,” said Mrs. Dean, ‘Il must have been asleep quite a wate. But,”-—as she started up she saw that the oid wal! pocket opposite was empty—‘‘where is that old number of the Clinkerviile Clarion?” ‘It was last .week’s paper,” said Mr. Dean, calmly. Ve had both of us read it, so I just took it to kindle the fire.” **You burned it up?’ ‘*Yes,”.said Mr. Dean; “I burned it up: Why shouldn't I?” ¢ For half an hour Mrs. Dean sat silent and never spoke a word. Her first utter- ance was : “Tt was thé Lord's judgment upon me |” Drs. Dean was a resolute woman, full o' character. She went to her table drawer, took out a sheet of paper and wrote to Dr. Bridgman, inclosing a dollar toward Jaiae Dick Bodley’s cart and horse. She sent another doilar for the poor little O Hara s, and promised to donate a barrel of russets, a bushel of potatoes and some of her hus- band’s cast off clothes to eut over for the children. And she sent for Helen Hurst to come and see her. **T can’t lend you ten dollars, my dear,” said she, *‘because I haven’t got it. But I'll tell you what | willdo. Ul! let you make your home here as long as you please There's a nice spare room,and it’s an eighth of a mile nearer than Mrs. Swipes’ to the district school.” “Oh, how very, very good you are !” said Helen, her eyes swimming with grateful tears. ‘““Good !” cried Mrs. Dean. beginning to what a sellish, greedy creature I’ve been all my life. But you're welcome, my dear, and your board shal] not cost you_a cent.” She opened her curtains and built a wood-stove. ~ *Dean likes the parlor,” said she, “*he- eause it has such nice south windows, and | don’t see why we sho lint enjoy it.” She baked a fresh batch of gingerbread, old Mrs. Mudge; she took out a°basket of hickory nuts for poor littly Harry Jones, who was trying t@ crack dried up peanuts on a stone by t “i'n just see shook out the in the air-tight parlor, hre the.church charities, Visitor was Helen Hurst, a eighteen. ‘* Excuse me for interrupting you, Mrs. Dean,” said she, *‘ but Larry Johnson was at the bank yesterday, and he telis me you drew out your money.” ‘** Was all creation there ?” Dean. rosy girl of thought Mrs. ‘**] am trying to get a boarding place at Mrs. Swipes,” added Helen, coloring, *‘* so as to be near the district school, where I am to teach this spring. But Mrs. Swipes requires payment in advance by the month, and unfortunately we have used up all our slender means in providing my outfit. A teacher, you know, must be dressed decent-} ly to command the respect of her pupils. But if you would kindly lend me ten dol- lars. *] never lend, * said Mrs. Dean, curtly. ‘**] will be sure to pay it up when I re- ceive my first quarter's salary,” plea’ed Helen. ‘‘And | don’t know of any one else to go to.” ‘It’s ‘altogether against my principles,’ said Mrs. Dean, with her face as hard as it had been carved out of hickory. Helen Hurst crept out, feeling humiliated | and disappointed beycnd all expression. Mrs. Dean, chuckied at her own shrewd- | ness, but she hardly had time to stir up the| apples in the sausepan, before Mrs. Graham | entered with a little leather-covered memo- le randum book and pencil. ‘Iam looking for charitable people, Mrs. Dean,” said the squire’s wife, with a laugh. ‘*Then you've come to the wrong place,” said Mrs. Dean, frigidly. **Poor Patrick O’ Hare was killed yester- day, in the machinery of the rolling mill,” said Mrs. Graham, ignoring her neighbor's response. ‘‘He’s left a widow and eight children, totally destitute.” *‘And whose fault is that ?” Dean. ‘**Will you not contribute something to- if said Mrs. roadside ; she renewed her subses ~ b down the sp.luters, i pocket itself, a rade structure of lined with red cambric and tied with cords and tassels of red worsted, to dust it out. ‘*Yes,” she said, ‘I am afraid 1 was getting to be a little miserly, and—- Why, what's this 7” Mr. Dean stoppel and picked up a slip of - ; : paper, which had fallen out from the wall But she said nothing, only knit away pocket as his wife tipped it upside down until her needles seemed to glance and} nq tapped her fingers against it to remove clitter like points of fire. | all s.cueetiiie | tined “It’s the ; Mt eyes open ifty dollar bill!” said he, with inunison, ‘it must mhousit Ai have slipped down from the fold of the newspaper and lodged here.” ‘The Lord has sent it back toe me,” said Mrs. Dean, fervently, ‘‘and he has isent us a lesson, wise and mereiful with it.” ‘“‘Well,” said Mr. Dean, after a moment or two of silence, ‘ehare's i lesson in almost everything He does, if we did but know it.” And all the theologians in the world ‘could not have improved upon the faith of this simple, unlettered old farmer. What True Merit Will Bo. The unprecedented sale of Boschee's German Syrup within a few years has astonished the world. It is without doubt the safest and best remedy ever discovered for the speedy and effectual cure of C oughs, Colds and the severest Lung troubles. It acts <n an entire ly different principle from the usual prescrip- tions given by physicians, as it does not dry up aC “ough and leave the disease still in the system, but on the contrary removes the catse of the trouble, heals the parts affected, and leaves them in a purely healthy condition. A bottle kept in the house for use when these diseases make their appearance, will save doc- tor’s bills and a long spell of serious illness. A trial will convince you of these facts. 1t is positively sold by all druggists and general dealers in the land. Price 75 cents, large bottles. -_—_-21m + special Notices. A SPLENDID show of Ls um ps at W. P. Col- ward relievthg their destitute condition,” urged Mrs. Graham, opening the book and holding the pencil ready for use, “Certainly not, ’ said Mrs. Dean, money to spare. a “But I was told- **() yes— about the money that was drawn out of the savings-bank,” said Mrs. Deane ‘*But I intend to keep that mc ney for miy- self, Mrs. Graham. ‘‘He that givcth to the poor,lendth to the I've no will’s. nov 24 3wks dy $1.90 will get a new pair of Acme Skates at Norton & Fennell’s. decll Si dy wy THE cheapest Acme Skates ever sold are now at the City Hardware Store. decll 3i dy wy Cu’rown Lake.—For the skating on the Ch’'town Lake, buy you skates at Norton & Fennel’s. decll 3i dy wy Ca.t and see the splendid lot of Bohemian Glass in Amber, Ruby, Roses, Amberina Rose Lord,” softly spoke Mrs. Graham. “Yes, yes—-I know!” said Mrs. Dean. ‘pnt nobody interprets the Bil! nuw-a-Ga" s. Mrs. Gisham took her departure ,acknow-! : Cae oe if ; j ledging within herself, t her errand was a failure ,, and Mrs. Dean, left to herself at ji indulg ged in a nap — Bee _ kauaitting work an her lap — »vap wherein she dream- ed that the fifty-a Alar bill ken to haa iteelf legs and was running eway from a! and Asiher, also, anew lot of cae} and Li wary Lamps,cheap, at W. P. Cr s nov “2 : dy AMERICAN rubbers and overshoes sey Goff & Co's. st 22 tf A GRAND show of Bohemian glass ana Li- brary Lamps cheap at W. P. Coiw IT ‘ ‘ noy 24 3wks dy Krzr your feet warm. A superiox lov of Felt Boots at Dorsey Golf & Co's, «= cast a se cs iain aatialianeeee a = * oe one afflicted as he isto get aloug, and if ‘““T can’t be very liberal,” she % ee help us * little— i D jl am determined to dc what I can."“2ar= But [ can t, interposed N rs. Scan; = **That’s right, my dear— that’s @five hse hl breathlessly. The money wastan invest-;..34 her husband. °“We shall be fi ne ment. I don’t propose to cut it up into} ou. never fear. I’m aw fully - little bits. ' rm A ,,| bugning up your fifty dollag ila 3 ‘It'sa deal of charity, Mrs. Dean,”) going to open your heagt. 9Re"t eh z said the good old man, ** to help lame Dick | pos; thing that coat” ate hee nee ee Bodley. oes : to us.” _ “I dare say,” said Mrs. Dean, a little} fps. Dean was sweeping out the kitehen. cane, A ' But I never pretended to be 4) She looked aroun 1d with a smile us she CORsESe te character, : moved the wide-leaved table which always Che old doctor went away, and the next} stood under the wall-pecket. and touk ae ener enaeTT paras = me open cc settee Mean el TL LEAN LON LEON AH C ’ " w ee Se ee eT fe ee Y SEeE 7