™ ‘ ect x Six box $2.50 Da L. A. SMITH & CO.. Toronto. we'can seii you Dodd's Kidney Pills at he following prices, viz.:—60c. per box six boxes for $2 40. Tothe trade—$4.00 vor dozen, or three dozen at $3.75 per dozen. Sent by mail to any address por aid. GEORGE E. HUGHES, may 29 Charlottetown. TO LET AR’ Ee Tha ge Shop, part of the “London He , \ bw J T. M i with good room aj Bialls ‘ ors e room Apt HON. DANIEL DAVIES, L. H. DAVIES, Q. ‘ Ex rs Estate late Geo, Davies, Or to F. W. L. Moore, Solicitor, in the B : r octll Baas 8 - A Wide Range. \ preparation? which iches and purifies the nature pairing wasted tissue — ~ . ye a wide range & ; + i and assists ) of useiuiness. Such a preparation is ts Emulsion of Cod- liver Oil with Hypophos- phites of Lime and Soda. Che uses of Scott's Emul- sion are not confined to wasting diseases, like con- sumption, scrofula or anemia. They embrace nearly all those minor ail- ments® associated with loss of flesh. Scott & Bown, Belleville, 50c. and $f. COC nad Ct i A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE | MADE INA edt Lt BS SY NO COFFEE sad NOCRouNDS ||} NOTROUBLE / <i LYMANS FRWID COFFEE. Lyman’s Coffee is delici free samy] Dominion Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appo inte Agents in the Province o Prince Edward Island for the above Com pauy,are now prepared to issue orders for Reand, Slack and Run of Mines, and will keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coal on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents. Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—tf aS ' Boilie selling PUTINER'S — RMULSION WILL RESTORE Pale, Weak and Emaciated CHILDREN toa normal condition of HEALTH and STRENGH, and bring back the BLOOM OF YOUTH more quickly than any other medicine, As a Flesh Restorer. Puttner’s Emulsion has no equal, giving substance and tone to the wasted muscles, All Druggists per bottle. Price 50 cents june keep it. STIPATION, | USNESS, i DYSPEPSIA,2 SiCK HEADAGHE, EGULATE THE LIVER | ONE PILL AFTER EATING INSURES GOOD CIGESTION. [PRICE 25 crs. Tue DJODOS Medea a —IF You— | Want awife, Want a cook, Want a partner, Want a situation, ee Waut @ servant girl, Want to sell a farm, Want' to sell a Want to a house, Want to exchange anything, Wat to sell plants or grain Want to sell groceries or drugs, Want to sell or trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or catt’e ADVERTISE IN house, rent THEY MAY BE UTILIZED INA VARIETY OF WAYS. Food For Poultry and Cattle—The O11 Is Useful and May Be Used by Painters— Honey and Wax Among the By-Pro- ducts of the Sunflower— The Canadian Farmers Might Proflitably Grow Bls Crops of the Plant. The plant is so easily grown that surely its uses ! ad only to be more widely known to insure largely !n- ‘reased cultivation. In China and Rus- sia the sunfiower is considered a val- uable pl and it is raised for tits $s S at rate of nearly half a miti- lion pounds annually The poor Iar- mers of Italy and India likewise at- tach great importance to the plant, and the seeds are harvested for animal fc and for poultry. The sunflower has long been raised in this country for yrnamental pury but with the ex- Ses, ception of a few poultry raisers who fatten their fowis on the seeds no one takes the trouble to utilize either stalks seeds Nevertheless, there are few plants that yield more useful articles commerce than the sunflowers. Their lue is already being appreciated by scientists, and a more general cultiva- tion of the plants is recommended, In their wild state the sunflowers are smalier than when properly cultivated, but very little attention is required to give them a splendid growti. Soil that will produce any other farm crop will yield a heavy supply of sunflowers. une of the most Important uses for the sunflower seeds is as food for poultry and cattle It has long been valued by progressive farmeys as an ex- cellent and cheap food for fowls. No- thing makes them fatten quicker, and they will frequently leave all other food them The seeGds make the hens lay better, and greatly increase their weight They can be raised heaper than corn, and give better re- ults. As a food for cattle experiments are 1 in progress at several of the iment stations, and the results so far obtained are very satisfactory. In Canada sunflower seeds have been fed more generally to cattle than in the United States, and prové to be cheap- er and just as effective as more expen- Sive grains. In Denmark remarkable has been obtained in mixing sunflower seeds with barley and oats for cattle. Nearly all farm animals enjoy the seeds and eat them freely, especially when mixed with grains. The food has no deleterious effect upon xper success the flavor or quality of the milk, bae rather increases its flow. Sunflower oil made from the seeds is in great de- mand in this country. In Russia, mil- lions of pounds of the seeds are raised annualiy for the oil, and large quan- tities of this oil are exported from that country. In the crude state it Is used by painters for inside work, but it does not quite equal linseed oil for varnish purposes It mixed with most of our cheap paints and also with many prepared stains. In Russia it is used to some extent for burning, but not where there is any market for it. It takes about one bushel of seed to make a gallon of oil, and about fifty bushels of seed are produced on one acre of land. When the oil is selling at $1 per gallon, the profits are large. Of late years efforts have been made to refine the oil so as to sell in compe- tition with olive oil. In fact, purified sunflower oil is used quite extensively to adulterate salad oils. Many consid- er it equal to the ordinary grades of olive and almond oil for table uses. It is of a pale yellow colér, favorless and palatable In Maryland considerable of this oil is made to supply the Balt more trade, and at a recent experiment with it the hotel men of that city said they preferred it to all others for sal- ads. France, Germany and Italy are enlarging their plants for making al kinds of seed and among these sunflower seed oil is conspicuous. Ttie present outlook seems to indicate a time when the sunflower will become an important factor in tne production of the best seed oil After the oil is extracted from the seeds the residue is made into cakes for cattle food, and while not so nutri- tious as the food made from the fresh seeds, it is of considerable value. The factories that the oll sell the seed cakes at a mérely nominal sum. In the poorer districts of India and Europe a fair kind bread is niade from sunflower seed, and the natives depend upon it for a steady article of diet. Their cattle are fed with the same diet, only the seeds and heads are chopy ed up together, and even the leaves are ‘fed to the animals. The stalks, when stripped of their leaves and heads, are dried and used for fuel. is oils, express of One acre of sunflowers will yield a great many cords of good fuel. The stalks are large, tough, brittle and good burners. A few acres of such fuel will last one al! winter. Tim stalks find other uses than that for fuel. In China the fibre is treated like flax, aid woven to a great ex- tent In silk fabrics. The stalks have to be gathered at the right time for this use, and then shredded either by hand or machinery. The fibre fine and silky, very strong and endurable. The Chinese use it to give strength to their silk fabrics, but their methods of ob- taining curing it crude and slow. With improved modern ma- chinery the fibre of the sunflower stalks Is and are very could be made of great value in this country. Several minor articles are made from the sunflowers. From the bright yel- low blossoms a yellow dye is made that stands use very well. Moreover, the flower produces very fine honey and wax when properly treated. In Engiand the honey and wax are made more successfuly than eisewhere, and as a side issue the maaufacture of these two products is very profitable. Finally, potash can be made from the stalks. This proves that the plant possesses a good percentage of one of the most important of soll elerents, and that the crop would prove valudé- ble as a fertilizer, if it could be re- duced to an available form. Cattle fed upon the heads of the sunflowers con- tribute potash to the soil. With dll of these commercial uses, the sunflowers should prove a profitable crop in a country where they naturally grow wild in the fields and gardens. Al- though a native of tropical America the plant has a wide limit ef growth, including Russia, India, China, North \merica and all of Europe. When the eeds are sown in cultivated flelds for BE SURE! 1's YOU GET! oop ONE! tue..... ML ALMANAC FOR 1896 _——_—_ *& SPLENDID BOOK OF REFERENCE, 480 PACES ‘ Given Free Sunlight’ HOW TO GET iT Commencing November, 1895, and until all are = away, a of : es or Suniicut Soap will receive trom thele grocers, 1 SuNtiGHT ALManac FREE. - sana compiete Almanac, Home Fi Gardening, Fashions and Patterns, =e Dreamsand their si Recipes, Seeton & Mitchell, Halifax, Nova Scotia and P. E. Island. fie interline ci Lock out for colds at this season. Keep vourself well and strong by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, the great ; naviiee, ? gr tonic and blood Agents for ee a commercial crop from 11,000 to 25,000 stalks are raised to the acre Froiw four to five pounds of seed are sown in the acre, either drilled in as wheat, or sown in rows nearly the same as Southern corn. When the heads ripen they are removed by the sickle andj laid aside to dry in some warm place. The stalks can then be cut separately according to the best methods. If used for fuel it matter littl how rough they are cut, but when gathered for their fibre, a regular system must be followed. The plants need plenty cf sun, and should be given the most pen fleld on the farm. In about four months the seeds will be ready for gatheving The plants vitistand droughts better than most of our cul- tivated crops, and farmers might do well to plant more of them and less corn They would be sure then to have cattle food for wintetr, for it is rarely that a sunflower crop fails. is rarely that a sunflower crop fails. - New York Post “INDIAN. SUMMER. It Does Net Come Until the Bright Days of Mid-November. Many persons, if they were aske4 #bout it, would say without hesite- tion that the last days of October are the real Indian summer. The term is vaguely employed, and at one time or another has been stretched to include &-most ali the attractive weather with which we are blessed between the clos: ot August and the Ist of December Thanks to the almanac, we have got- ten the idea very thoroughly into our heads that summer ends on the 31st of August, and when we fir he skies still warm and grateful after that date, and the woods and fields still calling t'* us with persuasive voices, we are a little perplexed as to what we eught te think about it, and whether it is really autumn or summer come again. Thus we fall back upon the familiar term “Indian summer,” which seems a sufficiently appropriate compromise, aithough there is no special justifica- tien for our selection of this uncertain phraseoloey. It would be much more satisfactory if we should disabuse ourselves at once of the notion that summer prcp- e. ends with the month of August. There is nothing in the atmosphere cr lx, the appearance of the natural world to indicate any radical change in the season at or about that date, and the increasing custom of lengthening the vacation outing at the seashore or In the mountains is proof sufficient that Wc are gradually coming to appreciate the fact that summer really extends through September, to say the lea2t. Let us say, for example, that summer ends only when the frosts of October have put a change upon the face of trings, and this will not only be near- ex the truth than the established cor.- cc ption of the season, but will enable u2 also to get a@ fairer conception cf when Indian summer makes its ap- pcarance. The lexicographer Worces- ter quotes Dr. Freeman as saying that the term Indian summer is used in North America to define a season of pleasant weather in the late autumn, and this notion of its date is brought out in various ways by most of the poets and versifiers who have dis- coursed upon this subject. And a very piolific source of verse it has been. Here is one rhymer, for instance, who tells us that Indian summer comes in “the autumn's dotage, mid-Novem- ber, when skies seductive woo the earth,” and another who places it with- in the period when “the woodland fol- iege ig gathered by the wild November blast,"* when “even the thick leaves up- en the oaken bough are fallen, to the last.” Bamuel Longfellow says: “Sum- mer is gone; but summer days return; the winds and frosts have stripped the woodlands bare,’ and a fourth poet tells us that the season comes “after October’s biting frosts."" From ail of these quotations and many more like them, it is apparent that the pleas- ant October days are not the Indian summer after all. We shall have to wait until November before the real redman’s summer warms the atmos- phere and the sou! of the reminiscert s< ntamentalist.—Providence Journal. CHRIST WAS HUMAN. That Is the Position of the Unitar‘an Chureh. “The position of the Unitarian Church in regard to Jesus Christ and Hic doctrines may now be considered ay definitely settled,” said Judge John Hi. Terry last night. The Judge had just returned from Washington, where he sat as a delegate in the National Unitarian Conference. “At the last yearly meeting of the conference, held at Saratoga, a for- mal declaration was made on the sub- ject. During the year which has el- apsed, Unitarian divines and the mem- ters of congregations have had time to reflect upon the new dogma, and at the meeting which just closed, the doctrine was affirmed. “Our position of the subject,” con- tinued Judge Terry, “was forcibly set forth in a paper read before the con- ference by the Rev. Mr. Savage of Ecston. In brief, it begins with a re- iteration of the old doctrine implied by the very name of Unttarian—that Christ was a man, born as other men are born, without divine intervention and without the miracle usually affirm- ed by Christians. He lived and taught as other men have lived and taught; and, at last, he died as other men die. “Then follows a declaration that the teachings of Christ are good and that they constitute a perfect code of mor- als: and that the religion of Christ, as irdicated in His life and teachings, is pure and noble. “The Unitarians, while denying the divinity of Christ, accept and adoy't his teachings and his religion.”’ Judge Terry thinks that the Unitar- far. faith is the only one which is fcunded upon pure reasoning and that it is the only religion which is not based upon an appeal to the emotions or to the fears of mankind. “We affirm that there is a Creator,” he said, “but we stop there. We do not concern ourselves with theories which cannot be explained nor with at.ything which man cannot under- stand. We have n» plan of salvation end do not feel compelled to account tor the existence of sin upon the earth. “It is our belief that if a man’s con- science is clear he will have a heaven on earth, while, if it is tainted, his life here will be a hell. As to the future life we believe that the spir't lives after death, but do not pretend to say {in what shape.” ——_———P> +> <a WEAK LINKS, When the kidneys are weak, or over- worked, poisons of various kinds are sure to slip past them. Sickness of some kinl sult. The kidneys are filters and their work ig to keep poisons out of the circulation. Tho sickness will depend on the nature of the poison—it may be malaria or ty- phoid poison—or romething else. Peope with weak kidneys can escape these effects by aiding these organs by kid- ney treatment. People are coming to understand this truth. Itexplains why Dodd’s Kidney Pills, thongh only a kidney medicine, set people right, and they g«t well. It is al] because they go straight to the aoe which shows itself in the weak ink. When you are sick use Dodd’s Kidney Pills, for they alwrys cure. is sure to re- The Duke of Westmi: s‘er himself has not anything like an exact idea of what his London property, if it were realized, would be worth. He does know, however, that the amount would be considerably in excess of $69,0 0,00. Books, stst onery and fanc ©, best and cheapest at McMillan & Hotely's - - - : WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1895. COME AND SEE US when or Ulster. come you want that new Suit or Overcoat After you have looked all around and see us; we will make prices so that it will be easy for you to buy, Don't forget we don’t charge anything extra for the style, other 25 pieces of Bannockburn Tweeds, double and twisted yarn. wear, $16. We give that you can’t get in all Elegant goods to Made up to order in any style for These goods are new and _ fresh-- places, not old stock, McK AY WOOLEN CO., The Swell Tailors. Ch arlottetown, October 30, 1895 — 135 CIGARS and CIGARETTES reme de la Creme AND la Fayette Are for sale in every store in the city. Give them a trial and convince yourself that” you areSsmoking the finest. Manufactured by J. M. FORTIER, Montreal. sept24—dy & wky tf Feed ! SS ——————— Now landing fresh from the Mills: Ground Oil Cake, Blatchford’ CalfMeal, Bran and Shorts, Selling at owest prices, AULD BROS. EVENING SESSION cht unmet CHARLOTTETOWN BUSINESS COLLEGE And Writing Academy Opens on MONDAY NEXT, at 7.30 p. m. Those who wish to learn the science of Accounts should attend this Session. oct8—dy L. B. MILLER. & wy tf PRINCIPAL. ——— Well Dressed Ladies Now-a-days have their Skirts bound with Women are usually anxious to make their money go as far as they can, hence the great popularity of the Co: ticelli Skirt Protector. It is economical and adds to the beauty of & garment as well. Sold in 4 and 6 yard lengths. The Mohair isin 5 yard lengths. Can be had in same shades as Corticelli Sewing Silk. Corticelli Silkk (Co, Manufacturers, St. Johns, Que. octll—dy 36 & wky tf —ae —— Advertisers! Lhe home circulation is the most valuable for advertisers. Tus EXAMINER reaches the homes of our citizens every evening. That accounts for our large advertising patronage. THE EXAMINER PUB. COMPANY Kind Words from the Fred Victor Mission Bible Class, On behalf of the Fred Victor Mission. Bible Class, I wish to express our grati- titude to you for the box of Chase’s Oint- ment which you snpplied in aid of our charitable work to the infant child of Mrs. Broworig, 162 River street. Ten days ago the child was awfully afflicted with scald head, the face being literally one scab from forehead to chin, and in that brief time a complete cure has been effect- ed. Surely your gift was worth more than its weight in gold. Epwunp Yeicu, 264 Shelburne St., Toronto Arctic whaling is reported a failure this year. The Weather for Colds, This is the time when colds are in the fashion—every body who is anybody has one, if not himself there’s one in the family. For no complaint under the sun are there mors remedies than for a cold in the head, but of the thousands Chase’s Catarrh Cure is the best. “In twelve hours I was cured af a bad cold in the head by Chase’s Cure.” writes Miss Dwyer, Alliston, Oot. 25c. of all drug- gists, with blower free. Three French ironclads ran agrcund re- cently in the Mediterranean, but one of them, the Formidable, was fioated. Bad Blood Betwecn Them, The ever slaving farmer’s wife, her delicate sister in the city, suffer more than they care totell. The dark rings round the eyes, headaches, dizziness, palpitation or rhenmatic twinges, betoken a run-down system. The blood is poor, and isa bar to eujoyment of life. Scott’s Sarsap.rilla purifies the blood, strengthens and vitalizes the system, and speedily restores the bloom of health to the cheeks. It cures when all others fail, The new census statistics of Rode Is— land show that women predominate over the men in the state to the number of 10,- 000. In Providence alone, with a popula- tion of 145,472, women outnumber the men by 5,000. The entire population of the state is 384,758, an increase of 80,000 over 1885. A Good Deal in a Few Words, “T paid a Toronto specialist on catarrh a large sum of money, but I got no bene- fit. tried them all, bunt finally, almost in despair, and assuredly without any faith, I tried Chase’s Catarrh Cure. It is all that it is recommended, which is say- ing a good deal in a few words.” Joel Rogers, clerk, Division Court, Beeton. Improved blower in each 25c. box. Postmaster James A. Scott, of Tomp- kinsville, Monroe County, Ky., bas been placed under arrest charged with em- bezzlement, false swearing and burning the post office in order to cover up his crookedness. Tie charge created a sene- ation in Monroe County since Scott was considered an exemplary citizen, being a deacon in the Presbyterian church aud a Sunday schoo! superintendent. ——_--- - That Pale race, For Nervous Prostration and Anzmia there is no medicine that will so promptly and infallibly restore vigor and strength as Scotts Emulsion. A French Prince with a titular record back to the Crusaders, and further if nc— cessary, is willing to share his title with any young American lady for and in con- sideration of the sum of $2,000,000. A New York lawyer is carrying on the nego- tiations, for which he is to receive a com- mission of $10,000, with an extra gratuity for speedy success. The negotiator is sending out application blanks to all un- married ladies of known ability to comply with the financial requirements. This will, doubtless, make a demand for $2,- 000,000 additional American gold for ex- port. eaginaiedipianaaneioat The possibilities of Canada as a market for industrial securities are to be tested on a somewhat large scale by the issue of $1,500,000 of Dominion Cotton Company’s bonds, for which tenders are asked simul- taneously in Montreal and London. The new bonds bear 44 per cent. intereet and run fortwenty years. Their proceeds are te be used to retire an equal amourt of 6 per cent. securities. They are guaranteed by a first mortgage on the ten mills of the company, which, with their plant, etc., have recently been valued at $4,615,000, and which are earning fair dividends for their proprietors. There has been of late a large accumulation of money in Canad- ian financial institutions, for which bank- ers have found difficulty in securing profit- able employment. This suggests that the putting on the money market of a_ safe, permanent security, bearing a fair interest rate, should meet with a good response. NOTHING IS MORE PITIFUL, Than the condition of the consumptive, when the life is slowly ebbing away. But science has come to the rescue, and al! atHicted that way may be restored if they will only take Miller’s Emulsion of Nor wegian Cod Liver Oil. It is as sweet as cream, 8o that the most fastidious can take it. After a few doses new bLlood comes to the rescue, and in a short time the patient Is about again, hopeful and hungry, with a new lense of life It will almost raise the dead. Miller’s Emulsion is the great nerve strengthner and blood maker, and cures Coughs, Colde, Bronchitis, Scrofula, and al! Lung affections. In Big Bottles, 5€c. and $i, at all Drug Stores. > The New England States papers com ment variously upon the facet that a color ed gentleman has been elected to the im portant and responsible office of recorder of Albany. The Albany Argus merely remarks that the election is notable be- cause it fills the most important executive office to which a colored man has ever been chosen by the votes of his fellow- citizene. Generally, however, there is an undertone in the comments which seems to indicate that in Republizan and Demo- cratic circles alike the ancient antipathy tothe man of African descent is not wholly eradicated even in the very States which were foremost in tue clamor for mancediation. “The Railroad Kidney.” Railroad employee, bicyclists, teamsters and other men who are subjected to n.uch jolting, are often troubled with pain a ross the small of the back. This indicates the “Railroad Kidney,” an insidious precursor of serious i!Iness. On the slightest symp- toms of backache take one Chase’s Kidney Liver Pill—one is a dose—and thus obtain nstand relief. For all kidney troubles hey have no equal. 25c. per box. An Ovp Axp Wet Triep Rewepy. Mrs, Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty years by millione of mothers for their children while teeth nig, with perfect snccess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold y Druggiste in every part of the world. wenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mre. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no ther kind.—m. w. f. wkly—l y “To My Life's Ead.” Old age brings many aches and pains which must be looked after if health is to be maintained. This depends more than anything else on the kidneye. “I am 85 years old,” writes A. Duftin, farmer, Aults- ville, Ont., “and have had kidney trouble five yeors. My son advised Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, and I obtained im- mediate relief. I shal] use them to my life’s end.” You will find Chase’s Pills equally effective for that lame back. Fifteen cents apiece is all that the plumpiest peerage are worth, delivere| at the hotels, in many parts of Maire, in this exceptional year for game in that State. i ; Se Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has led to the placing on the market many misleading and unscrupulous imitations of their name, iabels, and wrappers. Walter Baker & Co. are the oidest and largest manu- ) facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and 1 Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are j used in their manufactures. Consumers should ask for, and be sure that ’ they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.’s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. Pkt dete eee VAAL So a ~AN Gi SASS AASSSS. IS. SO for Infants “an Children. A \\ SOO a VTALAHAAA AAI — OTHERS, Do You Know au: rarcor, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, ang most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine ? Do You Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons? Do You Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics without labeling them poisons ? Do You Know that you should not permit any medicine to be given your child wniless you or your physician know of what it is composed ? Do You Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of its ingredients is published with every bottle ? Do You Know that Cactoria is the prescription of the famous Tr. Samuel! Pitcher, That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and thet more Castoria is now sold than of all other remedies for children combined ? Do You Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of other countries, have issued eyclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word “ Castoria” and its formulk, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense ? Do You Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection was because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless? Do You Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35 eents, or one cent a dose? Do You Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest # Well, theese things sre worth knowing. They are facts. The fac-simile ie on every Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. FEATHERBONE SKIRT BONE FIK GIVING TYLE and SHAPE TO Ladies Dresses. A light, pliable, elastic bone made fro nills. Tt is soft and yielding, conformi r-alily to folds, yet giving proper shape to Skirt or Dress. The only Skirt Bone that may be wet without injury. The Celebrated FEATHERBONE CORS*TS are corded with tiis material. For sale t yJleading Dry Goods Dealers. H. STANWAY & C6. Wholesale Wine & Liquor Merchants, ITALIAN WAREHOUSE, 243 Hollis & 48 Upper Water St., HALIFAX, N. S. P. O. BOX NO, 475. ly (14) octlé A GREAT VIANY PEOPLE imagine they cannot get a stylish, up- to-date, made-to-order Suit of Clothes under $20.00 or $25.00. These people have never seen the Suits we make for $12.00, $14.00, $16.00 and $18.00. Fit, workmanship and material guaran- teed, thoroughly made and _ trimmed. Also, Rubber Coats, Fur Coats, Fur Capes, made-up Ulsters. All our stock up to date, and every- thing in the store genuine value. JOHN MACLEOD & CO.,, Charlottetown, October 9, 1895 135 w YOU MIGHT BUY A STOVE As Cheap Elsewhere, but why take Chances. THIRTY-TWO sold in one week convinces us we have the cheapest and best line of HEATING and COOK’ ING STOVES and RANGES, for Hard or Soft Coal, in the Maritime Provinces. g We are making great sales of GRANITE WARE now See the sizes advertised in Patriot and Guardian. DODD & ROGERS. Charlottetown, November 18, 1895--135