e ~ funder a Mortgage, dated the third day of Septem- | her, TERMS: Four Dollars a Year NEW SERIES Me ORTGAGE SALY. Te be sold by Public Auction, at the Court House in Summerside, on FRIDAY, the Thirtieth day of November next, A. D 1894, at the hour of Twelve o’clock, noon, power of sale contained in a A.D. 1891, and made between Philip the north and south of Thomas Lynch, being the northern moiety of that tract of | bounded as follows:—Commencing } land, ut a stake set in the west side of the main Wetern Road, in the north-east angle of land of Alexander Gillis; thence west sixty} three chains fifty links to Lot Ten; thence north nineteen chains eighty links ; thence east forty-eight chains twenty links to the road; theneeto the south-east along said road to the place of commencement, con- eg et - CALENDAR FOR OCTORER, 1894. | ‘ Quar lay, 2h 58.6m, p. m., E ' Ml { lay, 2h 28.3m p.m., “ ‘ ; ‘ ar Z -— 4 2m. p m, W N ; ‘ he Read, ' hy oi p. m., Dav of Week Sx Sun | High : rises | sets water | } ae Po Pee | h m | hh m l | Monday . 4 ‘| |5 35] morn 2} Tuesday | ; 33 0 4 3) Wednesday | i 31 0 39 4) 7 la 29; 121] bi] ay | 27 s © $ | Saturday | Hi | 25 2 58 fs Vv | BI 23 4 6 ~ Vi av | 21 ’ 2 | 9} Tu ’ 19 6 40 7) day 18 7 36 | Li} T raday ; a 8 24 | Friday ‘} 14] 9 4 l Sa lay 20} 12 > 3 I AY Zi | 10 10 15 tay 23 8 10 46) vesclay , 2 7] 1b 22) ; i esday =o | >| ater’n | 18 Thursday 27) | 0 42 I I lay l 3i i 20 | Saturday 10 0 2 28) 2) | Sunday SL} 458) 3 39) 2 M iay i 33 56 4 59 | é i nesday ‘ t4 b4 6 25 | zi W aday | 236 | 53] 7 25) 2 i rsday | 37 | 51 8 28 20 | Friday 38 | 50 & ii 27 | Saturday 40 48; 10 28 28 , Sanday 41 46; ll 4 29 | Mouday | «& 45] 1l 31 luesday | 44 43 morn $1 | Vee nesday | 6 46) 4 42 0 20 ’ ] , 7 } | 4 4 vy a i Tus Leapine DaIL¥Y NEwsPaPeR or P. E. Istanp, s iesued every afternoon, from the office of EXAMINER PustisnHIne Company, in the Loadon House Bullding, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCE) the One YEAR Six MonTss Turee MonTHs One MonTa Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States ADVERTISING RATES For smal! advertisements which are ordered for only one or two weeks the charge is cents per inch for the first insertion, and 0 cents for each continuation. Rate cards are farnished on application at the office. Special contract prices at a reduced rate are quoted for advertisements feur inches in eise or larger, which are to run for three monstbe or longer. No special notices inserted unless paid for at the rate ef 10 cents per line, and udder no circumstances will such paid notices appear ip the local column. Seceial discounts made on all advertise- meats connected with Charch Fairs, Bazaars, Picnics, ete. No notices will be inserted with the same Unless the regular rate of 10 cents per line is paid. That Tax Examrever is considered by our Merchants and Manufactarers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements public, is ebandantly proved by the ‘aet that inorder o accommodate our suvertisers we have --.n compelled to enlarge the paper to ita pr sent size. Tue Darcy EXamtner is for sale by the fol- lowing nts :— K. H. Mason, Post Oifice, Charlottetown J. Mcintyre, Malpeque Road, ” C. Paul, Lower Spring Park "Road, - e W. M. Goffin, Grafton Street, 4 S. Grey, cor. Water and Prince St. - D. Cha ll, Prince Street, 1 Bazaar Store, Queen Street, = Geo. Carter & Co., Queen Street. ™ &. Gray, News Siali, P. E. 1. Rallwa; and ou the trains. JI R Woods, upper Euston R K Brace, Cor, Euston a Hillsboro St. C C Henry, Gt. George St. x vans & Sov, Cor. of Prince aud Richmond Me & T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- rside. D. Sutherland, Souris. Hon. D. Gordon, Georgetown. bD. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton. A. J. MeNe!l Stanley Bridge. Se th el The Weekly Examiner ® issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. It is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and is « first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and full of the latest news, The subscription for Tuk Wreexty Exam. tINER, post paid to any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for THe Dar_y EXaMINER. JOHN CALDW WELL JOHN MAIR ESTABLISHED 1883 JOHN CALDWELL & C0, Fruit and Produce Commis- sion Merchants, 187 McGILL and 131 ST. PETER STS. MONTREAL. Malpeque Oysters a specialty. Corre:- pondence solicited. Telephone 1876. augl4--3m pat Winter ‘FloweringBulbs. We have now n on heed a fine supply of good, sound Bulbs, cx uprising the fol- lowing well-known Flowers :— Tulips—Single Mixed, Queen Victoria, Yellow Prince, Crimson King, La Canadiens White. Double Superfine Mixed , Narcissus—Poeticus Ornatue, Double White, ‘ Vou Scion, Crocus Named Sorts, Snowdrop-—Sinzle and Double, H yacinth-— all varieties, Easter Lilie Chinese Sacre! Lilies, Purchasers when baying Bulbs may bring their own pots and have bulbs potted free of charge. These Itulbs are for vale at the lowest price Nothing is so beautiful as a dis- play of thexe flowers, which are very easily grown in winter. JOHN WILLIAMS, Ridgeway’s Old Nursery, eept29 Upper Prince Street. YO HIRE. A first-class Horse and Buggy, also a Double-seated Phaeton. Enquire at G. G. JURY’S Jewelry Store, north side Queen Square, opposite Post Office, Charlotte- town 2aw (w f) ef) 3m—may25 TINWARE eines C) Bipmncine Creameries and Cheese actories. The vety best work guaranteed on all _ for Creameries and Cheese Factories. VE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF THIS KIND OF WORK. M. STEVENSON, MANUFACTURER OF Tinware, Stove Pipe, &e., 55 QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. All orders a ly attended to. opo—if prompuly taining one hundred and ten acres, the moiety of which is fifty-five acres For further particulars apply to J. Kiward Wyatt, Barrister-at-Law, Sum- merside. Dated this 24th day of October, A. D. L894. JAMES BARCLAY, oct26—4w law (fri) Mortgagee. Newfoundland Markets | i. T. McCOUBREY, General Commission Merchant. Oats and Produce of all kinsls. Ship- ments from P EK. I*land carefully attend- ed to and account sales given promptly. Wha and Stores. Correspondence solicit H. T. McCOUBRREY, P. O. Box 307 St. Johu’s, N. P. sept4d—dy lm wy 3m THE §.8. FASTNET Sails every Saturday Evening at 4 p. m. POR HALIFAX, Calling at Hawkesbury, Arichat & Canso. Returning, leaves Halifax every WED- NESDAY EVENING at 6 o'clock, making same calls. Through Bills of Lading issued to all = in Great Britain and Continent at owest rates, W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Ch’town, June 16—dy. Tickets to Boston. Buy Your Tickets for Boston by §. §. “FLORIDA,” (Canada Atlantic and Plant Line), ——FROM—— W. W. CLARKE, Ticket Agent, Corner Queen and Water Streets, Casclotiet»vi, 22, June 1894 BILL HEADS. One Thousand Assorted 81388 FOR $2.75, BEST PAPER AND PADDED. Envelopes from $1.50 per 1,000 up (Printed). You will save money by ordering now. Orders by mail promptly attended to. JAMES D. TAYLOR, Queen Street. THE aug27 Quebec Steamship C0. STEAMER MIRAMICHI Leaves Montreal Leaves Ch’town 6th August, 10th August, Ul 24th ~=¢ 3rd September, 7th September, MWth =* 2ist $s l+t October, 5th October, 15th ‘“ 19th ” —_— 2d November galling at Father Point, Bay, Perce and Summerside. Freight handled carefully and carried at reasonable ratex. Passengers will tind this a delightful route. Full particulars from Gaspe, Mal CARVELL BROS., Agents ™aug?—wed thu TO LET. Hillsborough h Skating Rink. Tenders for Lease of the Hillsborough Skating Rink for six or twelve months frem first of November next, will be re- ceived by me up to Fifteenth of November next, at noon. Will not be bound to ac- cept the highest or any tender. Particulars as to rights under lease can be obtained on application to D. C. MeLEOD, Secretary-Treasurer. octl6—2w eod pat WHAT A DRUGGLS ME | Gain and Elizabeth Gain (his wife) of the ;one part, and the undersizned, James Burclay, of the other part :— All that tract of land situate in Lot | Eleven, Prince County, adjoining land on . | ARE YOU IN NEED t ability. we repair them. 4: ‘lowest prices in the city. from entirely, “This is true Liberty, when Free Born CHARLOTTETOWN, {x) SSRS. FEN Dear Sirs.-— you is a Gem. and find the re = =< >. .K. YS. Le NELL & CHANDLER, -‘The Highland Range bought Range economical in fuel and perfect in every re A Charlottetown, October 26, 1894—m w t JOHNSON, RUN DOWN WATCHES ee DS SD Patronize We make a Watchmakers of recognized specialty of bringing | Fine ‘Watches to keep close time. Special attention Men’s Waiches. Correct time _ watches will keep if Charlootteiowu, &. G. giv eu uches to Lailroad aud Jewelry at eae, ‘orth Side Queen Sunare, Opposite Poet Office. August 1, 1894 sell inate AFall Overcoat for the chilly evenings, and the cold weather coming ? We Have a Fine Range of Fall Overcoatings all the Fashionable Fawn, in Anyone in n2e21 of a nic? Overs JOHN Charlottetown, September 12, 1894—m w f Shades —Blue, Brown and Grey. Oxford, »tt should see thes McLEOD & CO. ——- RIGBY ! This is the season when we properly ap- preciate a warm, comfortable, Porous Waterproof Coat. Everybody is asking for “ Rigby.” DOES YOUR Wire Do HER OWN WaAsHING? Seeton and Mitchell, Halifax, agents for Nova Scotia and P. the wash is made Easy anc 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. E. Island. WEEKS & WARREN’S Boots & Shoes. (x) We are greatly encouraged in the practice of three- great requisites for a well-run business :— “ Knowledge of Markets,” “ Buying for Cash,” and *“ Willingness to take Small Profits.” PLEASE TRY US for a real good, easy fit. All our stock is nice, new, neat and fresh. No WEEKS spots and every pair WARRENted. Charlottetown, October 26, 1894 —m wf & wky ISLAND, i | AAI MONDAY, HE WAS PRETTY TOUGH. A FOLD OUTLAW..wH« WHO WAS NEVER CAPTURED. sae of Our Neighbors® Bad Citizens and His Life of Crime—His Mother Taught Him the First Lessons—He Was an Apt Pupil—Some of His Deeds. Never in the history of outlawry was there a more notorious bandit than John A. Murrell, who operated during the decade preceding 1842 along the Georgia and Florida boundary line and in portions of Alabama and Mississippi. For years his | crimes formed the darkest unwritten page I burn soft Coa in the history of the country. Murrell was taught by maternal example to be a thief and robber. Young Murrell asked a notorious set of gamblers to join his band, They laughed athim. He left the room and in the dark- ness of the night secured a dozen horses belonging to the gamblers and fled. Murrel made a successful raid one night in Alabama ata country church where he had just preached a sermon. He rode off in the darkness, leading a drove of the finest horsesinthscommunity. He crossed the Chatahoochee river and never halted until he reached Georgia. He was walking along the road near Thomasville shortly afterward and saw a young man coming toward him. “Where are you going, my friend ?” ask- ed Murreil. “Iam nes going your way,’ was the reply. “Well,” said Murrell, “if I can’t have the pleasure of your company, won’t you turh over your money to me ?” The youngster was covered with a pis- tol and came to a halt. His hands went up, but by some means he made a brave reach for his pistol. Murrell saw the movement and sent a bullet through the young man’s heart. The dead body was buried in a lime sink. Murrell organized a band of highwaymen and he was chief. His word was law, and perfect obedience was required or death was the penalty. So perfect was the organization and sys- tem of operations under Murrell that not until near the end of the Murrellites’ ex- istence was it known that there was a lawless band of whites in that section. The Murrellites used secret signs and held their meetings in caves and swamps. A few Indians of the Seminole tribe were scattered here and there throughout south- ern Georgia, and the crimes committed by the Murrellites were charged to them. Companies of whites were formed to war against the Indians. Finally the Semi- noles were driven into Florida, where they sought refuge in the Everglades. After the Indians left the country horri- ble crimes were perpetrated throughout that section. Whole families were brutally butchered. Men were shot down at work and helpless women and children were beaten to death with clubs. Houses and barns were plun- dered and then birned. Lives and pro- perty were hoarly in danger of destruc- tion. Victims cried for mercy in vain— there was none shown. The crimes were not laid at the door of John A. Murrill or his band. The assassins wore moccasins, feathers on their heads, and red paint on their faces and hands, and indulged in great war whoops. Tremendous excitement filled the whole section. Doors were barred at night, and in the day men stood guard at their homes. Work on the farms and in the shops and stores was abandoned. Many residents fled tothe North and left their homes to the mercy of the bandits. It was at this time, early in 1842, that Gen. William Bailey, a wealthy citizen of Monticello, Fla., began the organization of a band for the suppres- sion of crime in that section. He had studied the situation carefully and cametothe conclusion that, as since the Indians had fied to the Evergiades the crimes in his section had not decreased, but instead had increased to an alarming ex- tent, the red man was not the guilty one, He organized a band of spies known as the “regulators.” James Ellenwood of that place was a regulator. He is now in his eightieth year and is thoroughly familiar with the times in which the Murrellites operated. In speaking of the regulators and the final history of the Murrellites, Mr. Ellen- wood says: “After the ‘regulators’ were thoroughly organized there was a horrible murder near St. Marks, Fla. A well-known young man left Monticello, Fla., for St. Marks. He had on his person a large sum of gold and bills. Before reaching St. Marks the Murrellites fell upon him and murdered him. A man named Youmans, who was a notorious character, was suspected of the murder. “He was captured by the regulators and finally confessed that he knew all about the murder. “He said John A. Murrell and a large band of robbers had committed the mur- der, Youmans was made to stand on the rear end of a wagon and a rope was fasten- ed to an oak limb over his head and then adjusted to his neck. “He confessed that the Murrellites were guilty of many crimes charged to the In- dians. He said Jack Jewell was a Mur- rellite and was the meanest man under Murrell. “When he was told to make his peace with God, Youmans asked for a Bible. One was handed him. “With a bible in his hand and a song in his mouth, Youmans met bis death. “Jack Jewell was next caught and hanged near the place of Youmans’ death. No confession could be obtained from him. “He was taken to a place near where Youmans was hanged and there swung to a limb until death came. “John A. Murrell, the chief of the Mur- rellites, was never captured, but died a natural death among strangers. He made no confessions and never made any disposi- tion of his property. It was supposed that Murrell was immensely rich, and several attempts have been made to discover the whereabouts of the hidden wealth.” Prospects Good, “What's the outlook for a newspaper in this town?” “First-class. We've got a map ofa rail- road, six candidates for postmaster, an’ it ain't ten miles to where the circus shows!” —Atlanta Constitution. Another Pole Hunter. To reach the north pole an architect, M. Hauin, has proposed to the Geographical Society of Paris the construction of wooden huts one or two days’ journey apart. He considers Greenland the most favorable locality for an experiment of this kind. Each of the huts would become in its turn a base of supplies for the construction of the next. As the distance to be covered is abou, 800 miles, ascore of huts would be nhecemmezy to estadlish a4 route to the pule. Tne STRONG POINT about the cures by Hood's Sarsaparilla is that they are permanent. They start from the solid foundation —Pure Blood. wards. Painless ex- CET H i: DR. J, P. MURRAY, Office, 145 Queen Si., Caharlottetown, P. E. |. $16 per set. Partial sets $2.00 and up- oct OCTOBER Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”-—Euripides. 29, 1894. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and im provemen: < nd tends to rare enjoyment when rightly vs The many, who live bet- ser than others and enjoy ‘ife more, with less expenditure, by more promptly wlapting the world’s best products to the needs ct physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid ‘laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptab’e and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreehing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- itive ; effectually cleansing the system, lispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. it has given satisfaction 4o millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels withont weak- ening them and it is perfect!y free from every objectionable substar.ce. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug. gists in 75e. bottles, bus it is manu ‘actured by the California Fig Syrvy SE Jo. only, whose name is printed on every uackage, also the name, Svrup ef Figs, ind being well informed, you will uot recent any | substitute if ote: ed. | Gratetul — Comisrting. Epps’s Cocoa. r .TT 7 | BREAKFAST—SUPPER. | “By athorongh knowledge of the nat ural laws which govern the operations o! ligestion and nutrition, and by a carefui | application of the properties of well-select- ed Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for breakfast and supper a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy foctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution nay be gradually built up until strong 2nough to resist every tendency to disease, Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there isa weak point. We may escape many a tacal shaft by keeping ourseives well forti fied by pure blood and a properly nourish d frame.”—Civil Service Gazetie. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Yold only in packets, by Grocers, labelled thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Lid, Homecepathic Chemista, £ dines. Rn iand Farm For Sale. ‘The subscriber offers for sale his valuable Farm, containing about sixty acres. House isin good repair. There are six outbuildings. some are newly built. There are twoorchards one containing sixty trees of different vane ties of fruit. About one and a half mile from the city. Terms easy. c. BENOIT. sept23—3m dy & wky THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. CAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000. A Society established with a view to disseminate the taste for arts, to encourage and help artists. Incorporated by Letters Patent of the Government of Canada, the 27th February, 1893. GALLERY OF PAINTINGS Nos. 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame St., Montreal. The hichest Gallery of Paintings in Canada. Admission Free, All the Paintings are originals, mostly from the French school, the leading mod- ern school. Eminent Artists, such as Francais Rochegrosse, Aublet, Baron, Pezant, Petit- jean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a great many others, are members of this Society. 68 members of this Socie ty are exhibitors in the Salon in Paris Sale of Paintings at easy terins, and distribution by lot every week. Price of tickets, 25cts. Ask for our Catalogues and Circulars. _aug29—mwf tf REVER!: HOTEL, (Formerly Rocklin House.) This centrally located Hotel, which is within five minutes’ walk of Railway Depot, has been thoroughly cleaned, painted and renovated. Is titted with hot | water, and possesses the finest bath rooms | in any Hotel in the city. Terms moder- | ate. Coach meets all trains. P. 8. BROWN, Proprietor. cept }9—dy 6m wy] yr Wi:t’s the time? If you have a Cough it ia time you were (taking GRAY’S ,, RED SYRUP ° SPRUCE GUM THE OLD STANDARD CURE FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS. Gray’s Syrup has been on trial for more than 60 years and the verdict of the pesple is that it is the best remedy known. 26¢. and 666. per bottle. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Propnisvons MONT @e@aL. POTATOES. This is the yoar t to > chip Potatoes to the United States market. The duty is re- duced, and the crop throughout the West- ern and Middle States a failure. Prices must rule high. Consignments solicited and prompt returns made. Write for par- ticulars and references to ~ JOHN BULL IN AFRICA, The Crafty Old Gentleman Now Owns About 1,400,000 Square Miles, tory gives Great Britain an unbroken line | @cTross the length of Africa from th« Medi | terranean and the Nile to the extreme point of the continent. In all, this terri- tory, held in various ways, from Cape Colony up to the “occupation” of I gypt, is in extent about 1,400,000 square miles, and has a population of 30,000,000. In the Nile Valley it includes incomparably the best In Uganda it holds the Africa, nearly The new of North Africa key to the lakes of central as large as our own lake system treaty gives it the high land west of Lake Tanganyika, considerably higher and healthier than the eastern, in German hands. The new conquests of the British South Africa Company add the great table lands of the interior of subtropical Africa, in much of which white men live. Lastly, there is Cape Colony, the only vital European settlement in all Africa. As it stands, this great highway holds two- thirds of all of Africain which Europeans can live and carry on efficient administra- tion. It hasthe most fertile tract in the continent ir Egypt, its healthiest in Cape Town, its greatest gold mines and the only region from which tropical Africa can be controlled. Still more important is its re- lation to African water courses, A steam- er can start at Alexandria and run, when the mahdi’s successor is cleared away, to a point on Albert Edward Nyanza, 125 miles from Lake Tanganyika. This runs to within seventy miles of Lake Nyassa. From this lake the Shire River, broken at Murchison Falls, descends to the Zambest and the Indian Ocean. From a navigable point on the Congo it : i less than 100 miles to] e T; iyika, The Aruwini 1 23s near the Nil It is possible to star t 7. hy } t mo Nil S MM) ave 1 th } re cen gr kKny lish } | Li a Century First doors spe rie the « ™ ond t : 4 borly occupi muscles s! wld be « lop kept active. Third, avoid excesses of whether of food, drink or of w nature they may be. Be moderat« things. Fourth, never despair Be cheerful at } all times. Never give way to anger Never let the trials of one day pass over to the next. The period from fifty to seventy-five should not be passed in idleness or aband onment of all work. Here is where a great many men fail. They resign al) care and interest in worldly affairs and rest of body and mind begins. They throw up their business and retire to private life, which in too many cases proves to be a suicidal policy. During the next period—the period from seventy-five to one hundred years, while powers of life are at their lowest ebb—one cannot be too careful about catching cold. Bronchitis is a most prolific cause of death in the aged. During this last period rest should be in abundance. Anybody who can follow these direc- tions ought to live to be one hundred years old at least. There is always this comfort, however; if we cannot live up to our ideas always, we can at least, ery our best to do so, and the steady effort will be bringing us constantly nearer them. Sanitation by Sea Water. The new system of sanitation adopted in Havre—based upon the electrolysis of sea water—has proved a gratifying success, The electric current decomposes the chlo- ride of magnesium, while the chloride of sodium serves as a conductor, the result being a liquid disinfectant of great power, being almost odorless, leaving no residu- um when used for purposes of flushing, and is entirely inoffensive ; the solid mat- ter in sewage is instantaneously cons.:med in this soiution, as well as the organic matter, what is left being simply an oder- less and troubled liquid, incapable of fer- mentation, and containing only a few phosphates, the salts of ammonia and the salts of the disinfectant. Of the two classes of isnicrobes—anwrobic organisms, existing without air, and wrobic organ- isms, requiring air to live—the action of this chloride compound on the first is simple, for, as they cannot live in the presence of oxygen, their extinction is swift and sure ; the destruction of the mi- crobes which require free oxygen to sup- port life is equa ally certain. Ges One cause of dyspepsia waste of nervous force The is to the al system what the mach In the normal condition of things itisr ed as f B , Cause. is emotional nerve force steam is tk physic j di undue ex are lik 1 er stomach is the first a | the loss. In the year } wor) t were eng nt in Prus | build ng marble tomb of | | agate ins because he becar D. P. LEONARD, Penn’s Grove, N. J. P. 0. Box 227. d&w 1m—act3 | were in Latin Here Peleg, grand ar tect f the Tows Babel. The Almig! had pity on humble.” Great Vines, While in the public mind the great vine at Hampton Court Palace is esteemed the most remarkable, even that is excelled in dimensions by the still greater vine at Cumberland Lodge, Windsor Park. Not only these giants, but probably all other vines in the kingdom, have to give place for extent and productiveness to that most remarkable vine which is just at the pres- ent moment carrying the enormous quan- tity of 852 bunches and a total weight ma terially exceeding half a ton. Queer Custom. Asia exaggerates all things, and the virtue of penance among the rest, but the virtue is still believed in, even in Western Europe. The writer has seen a gentleman of Bengal, remarkable at once for wealth and fatness, crawling, stretched at full length, along a road before the image of \J uggernaut, suffering, in fact, torture ‘such as no one would inflict upon & con- vict. A Persistent One. Briscoe—Jaysmith is a regular vocalist. Bunting—Nonsense. Briscoe—It’s so. He’s always singing bis OWS Pi ipa gage, For Over Fifty Years. Ay Op Anp Wet Trigsp Remepy.— Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Svrup has beed used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth- nig, with perfect snecess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, is the best remedy for Diarrhea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggi ists in every part of the world, went abe cents a bottle. Its value is incalonlable. Be sure and ask for Mrs, Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind—m. w. f. wkly—l y As Well as Ever | After Taking Hood’s Sarsapariila The latest acquisition of African terri- } Cured of a Serious Disease. “T was suffering from what is known as Bright's disease for five years, and for days at a time I have been unable to straighten myself up. I was in bed for three weeks; during that time I had leeches applied and derived no bens- fit. Seeing Hood’s Sarsaparilla advertised ia the papers I decided to try a bottle. I found HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES relief before I had finished taking half of a bot- tle. Igotso much help from taking the &rst pees Gat T doctens ee another, and since takin, second bo’ ttle f feet as well as ever I did iw] life.” Gro. MERRETT, Toronto, Hood's Pilis are prompt and efficient, yet easy of action. Sold by all druggists. 26," a ee “re AIDS s , pees MEST $7) PURIFIES THE ~ BREATH ‘Take my Advice and Insist on, ting / 10 deen) NOTICE. LAND SUKVEYING, &e. The subseriber is now prepared to mehe Surveys of Land, ran Boundary and Divial a Lines, furnish Plans, ete.; also Mechank a} and Architectural Drawings, Plans, Speci + eations and Estimates. J. P. } HICHOLAOS, and Surveyor, Pownal Street, Charlottetown, Aug. 5, lshi—dy & Lua—dy & wy Scrofula © is Disease Germs living in the Blood and feeding upon its Life. Overcome these germs with Scott’s Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil, and make your blood healthy, skin pure and system strong. “hysi the world over, clved by Substitutes! w. All Druggists. 0c. &6L ee CANADA ATLANTIC _———A ND—— Plant Steamship Line. TO BOSTON. Direct Line, Not Calling at Halifax. CHARLOTTETOWN SERVICE. The SS. “FLORIDA” will leave Navigation Co’s. Wharf, Charlottetown, FRIDAY, os 28 (and every Friday thereafter until further notice), at 7 p. m., Hawkesbury. Saturday, 10 a. m., arriving at Boston early Monday morning. Returning from Boston every Tuesday at 10 a. m. Fast HALIFAX SEKVICE’ The favorite steamships “ OLIVETTB” or “ HALIFAX ” will leave Plant Whar#, Halifax, every Wednesday at 8. m., for Boston direct. Returning, will leave north side Lewis’ Wharf, Boston, every at noon, Passengers arriving in Halifax evening trains can go directly on board steamer. Through Tickets for sale and checked at Prince Edward Island Railway stations and Charlottetown Navigation Co. H. L. CHIPMAN, Agent for Canada. Plaot Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents, North Side Lewis’ Wharf, Bostoa. sept8]