f Wr. See Re ene A A lo a RS RS SET REY IAA eA Te, OT en THE DAILY EXAMINER, - -. - Local and Other ems, TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. n — tales [Sprctat Despatonxs To Tus ini aies immonses have ean PRRILS OF THE DERE, arrived from \ | - = ee ee wee St street railway wil be opened ° fie « next month. B (+ , : ig Gale on the Banks. > \\ aM ( oN has been appointed First | a eS eutena ruiser Vigilant. “ynartua teense oie aowess FISHING FLERE SUFFERS. parlo of the Y. M. C. A. at 8 o'clock | S°HOONER MIEI‘SING. 4 S ary woOoUs stlore and | until 8| A ok septlO 3i | tstore 18 now open every evening - Youne men remember the prayer meeting | to-morrow afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Y. M. HALIFAX, Sept. Y, A. pa All the fishing vessels arriving from the ee }Grand Banks report a terrific gale on the luk remainder of our victorious Artillery|Srd inst. Hardly a vessel of the whole Team return home thisevening. Give them a| fleet escaped disaster to a greater or less ui malice AUTRE. lextent. - - TT . i western train was upwards of an ad een e aanenaee, Oh. hae } rence, Capt. Cohoon, at Canso, reports that } after the gale he spoke the schooner Mabel | Kerrison, whose captain (Nelson) reported A TRUCKMAN named FitzSimmons, belong | that the day previously he had boarded the ing to this city, fell over the Southport ferry ™ reck of the schooner Ocean Pride, and t night and narrowly escaped being that the body of one of her crew, tied by a rope, was floating late last evening owing toa slight accident to f the machinery of the engine. some Gi - o o |with the wreckage. The dead bodies of Mx. Cxas. P. Kwtowr, son of the late John | *2e rest of the crew were lying in the cabin. Knight, Esq., Souris, arrived in the city from The schooner Atlantic broke adrifton the Winnipeg last evening. He is registered at| banks, losing her cable and anchor. Ed- the Us , ward Fenton was thrown from the halyards — tu the deck and instantly killed. The Mr. M. P. Lavie, a well-known and popu- | Captain was landed at Canso sick. lar salesman in the British Warehouse, left The Nellie Woodbury lost six dories this morning on & pleasure trip to Boston and} with six men in the gale. They drowned in New \ . ¢ ‘ sight of their vessel. \ anata Mr. Ed A Provincetown vessel whose name could A CORKESPONDENT reports that - Edw : oe tetrad me ae ard | not be ascertained was seen with bulwarks Hemy | caught in a herring net off Burnt ania met. 4 gone and two men drowned. Pointatew days ago, a shark measuring| sixteen feet five inches , DuLvuTH, Sept. 9. amma oo apes The steamer spoken which arrived at THE steamer Miran ichi called here at nine | Two H arbors, reports that the big schooner mck last evening : She had a general cargo | David Dows was adrift in the gale of and @ large number of passengers. She sailed | Tyo sy, and not having been heard of, it is feared she foundered with all hands. The Dows was the largest schooner on the lakes, and was valued at $60,000. again at three this morning. isicemaie Tue regular monthly meeting of the Benevolent Irish Society will be held in their Hall, Prince Street, this ev ening at 8 o'clock. ee un Connolly, Secretary. 7 e il . hidtiog at Mitehelistown (rie regular annual meeting of the Queen's “ v »=* = x ‘ ymunty Ritle Association will be held in the City Court room this evening at eight o'clock. W. A. Weeks, Capt., Secretary. —-—~> WEN KELLED. W oOUNDED. TWO Kermess is postponed until some day tweek. It always takes two postpone- so all who attead nts to make a success, + next week may | certain of an enjoyable ~ — time. SEVERAL peaiiliinctiat Jcupex Henstey and Prothonatory Long- wre. worth, accompanied by Messrs. E. J. Hodg- . : tn 2 son and F. Peters the counsel in the DuBLIN, Sept. 9. Hackett-Perry case, returned to the city A conflict took place to-day at the meet- from Summerside last evening. ing in market square, Mitchellstown. : a ; one There were about 7000 people present. The Mn. James E. 1} — 2 + ain police were trying to protect the Govern- SUD nte tent ‘ e ntercolk a 2 ray : nd = eee ee Mire Pris prea icsc Sessa _ ment stenographers when a fight took Sempees Sy ae. Fre, Cee ee place. The crowd repulsed the police, passengers arriving on last night’s train. . 7 saaier'- taleaidl. Tien ate ott tha Mail several of whom were severely injured. They are at the Rankin House. pote : ° : " ; Debic rhe police obtained reinforcements and re- turning fired ¥six shots by which two mn ‘az many friends of Messrs. C. D. Ranki . ug many ’ D.R 5, were killed and several others wounded. A. A. Bartlett and F. P. Carvell will be], ; ve ad + ; The rioters dispersed, but threaten to pieased to learn that they have arrived safely } ° at Liverpool, after a pleasant run from New | 84*her again. York of six days and seven hours. : e Zara arrived at Liverpool on the 9th inst., : “ols wn aco,sne wie (NEWS FROM QUEBEC. making the run in 21 days. This vessel will sail again from Liverppol for Charlottetewn Th A ill (| titi ont the 25th inst, as nivertised e Artillery bompetition. We begin to-day 12 publication of a story oe written by Sir W r Scott. The story is a s : , thrilling one, | will, we are sure, be read QUEBEC, Sept. 9. rest as the plot develops} The ball given last evening at the citadel water the masterly treatment of the great| was Ja very brilliant affair. To-day the New Brunswick and Yarmouth teams are at the guns, and are making good steady re + | . r : , + With lmeresasing lat 7. fue I Mail says the Prince Edward] shooting. The following are the scores Island submarine tunnel would require to be| made :—No. 1, P. E. Island, 64 pounder, ee t miles long. Since the Mail) 141; 40 pounder, 138. No. 2, P. E. Island, has gone into opposition it has began to hazard 60 pounder, 158; 40 pounder, 119. No.3 wide guesses where the facts are easily obtain- Halifax Brigade, G. A., = ey ? fhe 40 pounder, 111. No. 5 Halifax, 60 pounder, 139; 40 pounder, 128. No. 6 Halifax, 64 pounder, 147. The Lower Province men expect to leave to-morrow 60 pounder 162; A WoMA who gave her name as Mrs. Thompson, and said she was a native of Prince Edward Island, was arrested for drunk- | ; enness and disorderly conduct at the I. C. R. for home. depot, St. John, N. B., on Thursday night. She said she, with her husband and son, were m their way from Yarmouth to the Island. snineictaiamei Tho Death Penalty. Batrmorg, Sept. 9. Tue Silsby engine was again tested at/ John Ross, of Culdred, was executed to- Quirk's pump this afternoon. Chief Engi-| day for the murder of Emily Brown, for neer Large informs us that she didas good/ the purpose of selling her body to a medi- — “sat anytime since shecame to the |.) college for $15. ‘Ross made a full con- ae, lifting water twenty Swe feet aad fession, implicating two other men. throwing it twenty feet higher than the spire of St. Paul's Church. This will be reassuring hews to those citizens who have been alarmed st the unprotected state of thecity. At the same time it would be well to make no further experiments in the working of the engine. - A Strike Threatrned. WILKESBARRE, Pa., Sept. 9. A hundred thousand miners will strike to-morrow night if the coal and iron com- pany stick to their decision not to arbitrate the question involved inthe two weeks’ pay jaw. ‘ We are pleased to note that Messrs. T. C. Conner and R. C. Donald —who erected the ninion Building at Charlottetown to the entire satisfaction of the Government and the public—have been awarded the contract for rebuilding the railway wharf at Richmond, Halifax. The contract price is understood to be in the vicinity of $50,000. Nodoubt they Will energetically carry on the work and satis- - : : fac a Oe Sire , ' . > Departme sheries has ordered tactorily fulfil theircontract. Work isto be The Department of Fisher begun at once an investigation into the charges made against officer Hall, of the Vigilant, and on which he was dismissed from the service. An Investigation Ordered. Ortawa, Sept. 9 > Tie master of the sealing schooner Alfred Adams, which has just arrived at Vancouver, reports that when in Behring’s Sea his schooner Was captured by the American steamer Rush &hd stripped of about two thousand seal skins Which he had caught. The schooner was then Placed in charge of an American prize crew, and ordered to proceed to Sitka for trial. After the Rush had departed the schooner’s crew resumed charge and landed their schoon-| A Rane Cuance.—Mr. M. Bruce will sell *t, prize crew and all, safely in a British port. | all his Household Furniture, including 1 par- lor set (walnut), 2 bedroom sets, dining room set, carpets, oil cloths, kitchen range and utensils complete—everything new. Also, | winter coal in cellar. The house, which is convenient and comfortable, will be let at a reasonable rent. Everything will be sold as Weather Bulletin. Toronto, Sept. 10—10 a.m. South-east and south-west winds; fair weather; not much change in temperature. —_—_——— clink 9ALVATION Army News.—In Fredericton on “londay night, the Salvation Army parade and accompaniments scared a horse, and the torse retaliated by knocking down, scaring aud hurting a boy. The Gleaner rises to re- pa Fe f C . aa ‘ mark that it would be much safer for child. | they lay, and can be seen any time between 2 en ; : ; : ;., at 71 Prince Street. si—septy | — : elderly pe yple to Re ep off the streets i and 4 p- Mi., te 4 I eT Ty I “Ting the street parade of the army, as their | . ©{Uipments for noise making are alarmingly | APPLICATIONS for admission to the National | Ob the increase. In referring to the same ac- Conservatory of America (128 E. 17th St., N. dent, the Fredericton Reporter thinks ‘* that Y.) will be received up to noon of Sept. 10th. » * little more care might be taken and a little! After that date no further applications can be more common sense exercised in the manage- | entertained before January Ist. The session Ment ofthe marches, Due care in this re- | extends to Ist of June. Tuition free, on cer spett might obviate all suth difficulties,” tain conflitivny. wuyl3 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. dijonnsuadl Has the Scott Act Been a Success? No. 2. Sitr,—In my letter yesterday I showed that the Act had been successful, first in destroying the temptations of the attractive saloon, and of the sale of liquor in grocery stores, and secondly in rendering the busi- ness of liquor selling and liquor buying illegal and therefore disreputable. This, latter is a point which should be carefully thought over and fully weighed. Every moralist feels the force of bringing up our young people, with the idea that drinking is not only hurtful to soul and body, but that the business of a man who insists on selling it contrary to all law, whose work is directly hurtfnl to his customers, himself, and society, is a disgrace. We know that the keeping of the former fact before people has wrought much good, and we believe we have now reached the morning of the day when the liquor traffic must lie under the ban of society as a disreputable business, and to this evud the Act is work- ing successfully. I now come to the question ‘‘Has drunk- enness been diminished by the Act? A great deal has been spoken and written about there being more liquor shops now than before the passage of the Act, more liquor drunk, and more drunkenness. As far asthe number of places is concerned, although men’s imaginations have had full play in this line, I do not deny the possi- bility that it may be so. I simply ask the question ‘*Under the license system were | the illicit groggeries added to the licensed shops when the total number of places where liquor was on sale was being esti- mated?” That these places flourish under the license system is beyond question, that | they actually did exist in Charlottetown, I am assured on unquestionable authority. As to the quantity or quality of the liquor sold, | know nothing of that, but the increase or decrease of drunkenness is a matter that can be dealt with, with greater accuracy. The statements now canvassed against the Act may be given as follows: (a) There are more places to-day, where you can obtain liquor than before the pass- ing of the Act. (b) There is a greater quantity of liquor consumed, and (c) that the quality of the stuff is such that one glass does more harm than five of the kind sold when we had licenses. Now, we are asked to draw our infer- ences. Well, 1 will do so. More drunk- enness, and if the assertions are true regarding the quality of the stuff sold, drunkenness of such a_ kind, that we may reasonably expect the police records to be largely extended, for drinkers vf this kind of liquor become crazy or stupetied. But supposing that it can be shown that there is less drunkenness to- day, and that the proof is of such a nature that no one can truthfully contradict it, What then are the inferences? Why, that it does not matter a jot what can be _ pro- duced from the custom house, or asserted on the streets, the act has been a success, in that it has accomplished the object for which it was framed. That drunkenness has diminished. But can this be proved ¢ 1 believe it can. Take the roads leading out of the city on the evening of any market day you choose, and is their state to be compared for one moment with what it used to be? This isa matter on which any one can satisfy himself. Take the jubilee holidays. Why any one who will take the trouble to look over the records of the police court will find, that in one month, under the old regime, there were nearly as many arrests for drunkenness (and if you add disorderlies and assaults arising from drinking) far more than are to be found this year from the first of January to the end of the celebration. Is this of no account? I care not whether you put it down to the increase of temperance sentiment or not that was the design of the act, and it was successful, if not in creating at least in sustaining and increasing it. But that we may know how the matter stands, I have examined the records from 1876. Two of these years the old law was in full blast, then Banks McKenzie’s temperance revival came, and then the Scott Act. In 1876 the arrests for drunkenness were 686 SE ibe 6 60 06604 0 Oe AS 050466 bee 137 Be. ccoc 00 ¥R ee Weebl ates 370 5 Ra ee a apy oe ee .235 Me 5 oes dbanees'sstivcks haan kee 258 hth es da lblicdWis ce che Lok Gah 6008 0oUs 197 a Ry RE SO SE nC 218 cs ss Salles Soe be tue bee ke cee 250 WS cbacc ches coke vaaueus eee ae is ai ents am alan rat 285 86 Bide cs as 300 87 up to this date about..... vean eee If these facts can be used for the purpose of proving anything detrimental to the Scott Act, I should like to know it. Let anyone in favor of the old license law take them, and they will show that itis better to have the Scott Act than any License Act, and that a Scott Act, partially en- forced, is better thana License Act. have heard so much about the Act in the country, that I have made it my business to ascertain the state of matters there, and in the face of all such tall stories about there being a rum shop every five miles from Southport to Murray Harbor, there is one emphatic declaration that there is less drunkenness to-day than before the Act, and that more come home sober than ever | before inthe history of the place. God | knows, there is too much drunkenness to | be found in the homes in the country; but, in all justice, let us look into it before we say the Scott Act has done it. So far, Ithink I have shown that the Seott Act has removed that which has ever been considered the greatest source of temptation—the saloon. It no more stands openly inviting to dissipation and drunken- ness ; the licensed grocery is gone, the respectability of the trade is gone, drunkenness has decreased. temper- ance sentiment is increasing. Has -the Act nothing to do with this? It is easy to say no, but I am of opinion that it will give aman a great deal of trouble to prove that it has not. But has the Act been as successful as we | anticipated ? and if not, can we put our finger upon the weak spot and say, ‘*There it is.” My own feeling in the matter is, that it has not been as successful as was anticipated, but, with your permission, I will take this point up in my next. Jas. CARRUTHERS. SALT! SALT! SALT! To arrive, per Bark "GEORGE PEAKE, now due, 4,000 Bags of Liverpool SALT, and will be sold low from vessel, PEAKE BROS, & CU. Ch’tewn, Aug. 13, 1887, - A Fa es ee Furniture. a Household BY AUCTION, es Wednesday, Sevtember Uth, AT 11 U’CLOCK, | At Mrs. R. Shaw’s residence, next door to the | City Hotel, corner of Great George and Dorches- | ter Streeis, all the Houschold Furniture, consist- Ing in part of Pavlor, Dining-room, Bed-room and Kitchen Furniture, comprising in part | Pailor Set (wainut and H. ©), Mantel Mirror. | Mantel Drapery, Brussels and Tapesiry Carpet, Window Fixiays, Lace Cu tains and Poles, Bric- a-Brac, Globe and Flowers, Oil Paintings, Hang- ing Lamps, sideboard (nrahogany), Woif Hearth iiuy, Coal Vase, Fire Irons, &c., 1 Hall Hat Stand, Hail and Bed-room Sto. es, | Marble-top Bed room set (wainut—cost $120), Painced Bed- room Set, Bedding. in “Feather eds, Wool and }other Mattrasses, Blankets, Counterpanes, &c., &c., Lot Kitchen Utensils, &c., &c. —ALSO Silver-plated Ware (extra fine), consisting of 1 very handsome ‘Tea Service, Cake Baskets, Salvor, Fruit Dishes, Butter Cooler, Pickle Dish, | ‘Tea, Dessert, Table, Sugar and Mustard Spoons, | Castor and Napkins Rings. —ALSO— Tea, Dessert and Dinner Knives and Forks, and sundry other articles, ouly a few months in use, A. McNEILL, Auctioneer. Sept. 5, 1887, VIOLIN MUSIC. R. M. LOWDEN would respectfully intimate ~~ ww theinhabitants of Charlottetown that he is now proparat to take pupils for instruction on the Violin, and hopes, from his thirteen years’ oer? asa ‘'l'eacher, to give every satisfac- on, N. B.—Pupils taken from f10 yearsjof age up- wards. He can be seen at Mr. Sentner’s, 282 Kent Street, near Prince. Ch’town, Sept. 8, 1887. Mortgage Sale TO be Sold by Public Auction, on THURSDAY the third day of November, A. D, 1387, at Twelve o’clock, noon. at the Court Honse, in | Charlottetown, in Queen’s County, under a | Power of Sale, contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, dated the third day of July, A. D., 1877, and made between ‘Thomas Uenry Keating, of the ove part,and Henry skeffington Poole, of the other part. ALL that piece of land. in Charlottetown, in Queen’s County, in Prince Edward Island, being part of Town Lot number forty-two (42), in the first hundrei of Town Lots, in Chariotte- town, commencing on the westward side of EPTEMBER 10. 18s7%. PPhPa rTseG ~—FOR THE—— ll Trade. bb. WEACDON AEE is Selling Off at Extraordinary Low Prices all Kinds of Dry Goods and Ready-made Clothing, to make room for Fall Stock. Please Call. J. Bo. MACDONALD. Ch’town, August 25, 87—dy wy—pat T A © CHARLOTTETOWN BOOT «& «SHOE FACTORY J. | Queen Street, at the southeast angle of the pro- | | perty of William RK. Watson, thence by a iine at right angies to said street westwardly on or about | eighty-six feet, or until it meets the division line i between Town Lot number forty-one and said |‘Town Lot forty-two in said hundred, thence along said division line southwardly seventy-two feet, or until it meets the northward edge of King Street, thence along King Street east twenty-two feet, or until it meets the west boundary of the property of the Bank of Prince Edward Island, thence following the course of the same southwardly on a ltne parallel with Queen Street forty-four feet, or to the northward boundary of said Bank property, thence follow- ing said northward boundary eastwardly for the westward edge of Queen Street, thence following Queen Street northwardly for the distance. of twenty-eight feet, more or less, to the place of commencement. For further particulars apply to Edward J. Hodgson, Solicitor, Charlottetown. Dated this 3lst August, 1887. EDWARD J. HODGSON, Assignee of Mortgage. Sept. 1, 1887—eod tl sale MORTGAGE SALE. TO be sold by Public Auction, on Monday, the Third day of October, A. D. 1887, at the hour of Power of Sale, contained in an Indenture of Mortgage dated the Third day of June, A. D. 1878, and made between John Quirk and Sarah Elizabeth Quirk, his wife, of the one part, and Edward Jarvis Hodgsen and John Ball, Trustees under the last will and testa- ment of David Stewart Rennie, deceased, of the other part: A LL that tract, piece, and parcel of land, situ- ** ate, lying and being in Charlottetown, in Queen's County, in Prince Edward I-land, bound- ed and described as follows, that is to say: Com- mencing on the east side of Prince Street, at the southern bouadary of the Widow Vicker- son's pessession, at the division of forty feet southwardly from Grafton Street, thence by a right angle line with Prince Street eastwardly one hundred and sixty-eight feet, thence by a right angle line southwardly sixty-nine feet, thencs by a right angle line westwardly one hundred and sixty-eight feet to said Prince Street, thence following the course Of the same northwardly sixty-nine feet tothe place of com- mencement, being part and parcels of Town Lots numbers ninely-three and ninety four, in the second hundred of Town Lots in the City of Charlottetown aforesaid. Fer further particulars apply at the office of Mr. Edward J. Hodgson, solicitor, Char- lottetown. Dated the lat day of September, A. D..j1887. EDWARD J. HODGSON, JOHN BALL, Trustees under the last will and testament of D. 8S. Rennie, deceared. Sept Ist, 1887, eod tl sale—wkly Schooner, Seine & Seine Boat AT AUCTION, I WILL Sell by Auction, on WEDNESDAY, the 14th inst., at Alberton Wharf, the schooner Mardaret Jane, 42 tons register, Seine and Seine Boat; also a lot of Salt and Barrels. JOHN AGNEW. Alberton, Sept. 2, 1887. WANTS, LOST, FOUND de. , § ——— ‘THE man who wasseen picking up a purse on the street a fortnizht ago had - better send it | to THE EXAMINER office if he wishes to escape prosecution. septl0 li pd To LET—That desirable Dwelling House on Bayfield Street, with stable and coach house attached, lately occupied by J. F. Power, Esq. : Enquire of D. RK. M. Hooper, Euston Street. - sept WANTED- For a simall family in town, where the washing is given out, a good plain Ceok; references required, Apply at this office. sept 10 PO LET—A Dwelling with four rooms and : porch, situated on Sidney Street; possession , given 13th Sept.—R, K. Brace, sept 10 | FoR SALE AT A BARGAIN—A Gold Watch j almost new. Apply at EXAMINER er . sep LoOst—A sum of money. The finder will be rewarded on leaving it at THE EXAMINER | Office. sept9 3i WANTED TO PURCHASE.—One P. E. Island Bank Note of each denomination. Apply at this office. septg 3i ' Vy ANTED--A Girl for general houwseword; re ferences required. Apply at this office. ' tsept9 6i For SALE—At a very great baryain, the house and premises formerly owned by W. H. Far- quharson, atSouthport. Apply in Charlottetown to John Ings. septs 4ipd WANTED— A Girl for general housework. Ap- ply to Mrs. J. B. Macdonald. sep7 3i &wy <7 O.LET—The House on Dorchester Street East, occupied by F. W. Hales. Esq., Possession given Octwher Zist,> Apyty to rotate te ob . distance of sixty-four feet, or until it strikes the , twelve o'clock, noon, at the Court House in | Charlottetown, in Queen’s County, under a HAS BEEN REMOVED TO Twn Duns Below Beer & Gals Ch'town, Sept. 3, 1887.—eod & wky Bankrupt | vlothing. Era Bargains lor All| A4()? SUITS, bought at a sacrifice, will be cleared out at Oo----—_ prices that will astonish all. The natives have got to be surprised, and the only way to do it is to show them our Ciothing and tell the price. | All-wool Suits, worth $10.00 (just think of it) now only $6.50. Extra good Worsted Suits, worth $14.00, now $10.00, Coat, Pants and Vest, separate, at tremendous low prices. Try us, we can do it, and the goods must go. L E PROWSE., SIGN OF THE GREAT BIG HAT, 74 QUEEN STREET. Ch'town, August 8, 1887-—-eod & wky HOT WATER. ———— -— 0 ——— THIS IS THE’ DAIS=z: ’¥ HE Cheapest and Best Hot Water Boiler in the market. Only one year since it was patented, and one hundred (100) already in use, giving perfect satisfaction. It can't help it, because the principle upon which it is constructed is as nearly perfect as possible. Since taking up this branch of business, we have completed several very important contracts, notably our new Dominion Building here, and also the one at Summerside, as well as a number of private residences. As it is inconvenient to publish many Testimonials in a Anewspaper advertisement, we have selected two, which we feel "will convince our friends that we are the right parties to do this kind of work. Ina very short time we will again be visited by Jack Frost, and those who contemplate making their hemes comfortable, with less labor and less cost than by any other means, would do well to send for us to give them estimates at once. McKINNON & McLEAN. :0:--———— a THSTIMONITALS. MESSRS. McKINNON & McLEAN,~ GrnTLemeN, —With reference to the Heating Apparatus put into my house by you last fall, I would respectfully gtate that it has given very great satisfaction. _ . oe My house, as you ar aware, stands in an isolated and exposed situation, yet during the coldest weather the heat could be regulated to any desirable temperature My experi- ence leads me to believe that the hot water system of heating, as put in by you, ls superior to all other forms of heating I have seen, in its saving of fuel and labor, simplicity of working, cleanliness, and safety from fire, and I hereby recommend it as being the most healthful, comfortable, safe and economical in use. I further wish to express my satisfaction with the manner in which the work was done by you. Yours truly, House of Assembly, P. E. I., April 21st, 1887. SAMUEL PROWSKE. ee Charlottetown, P. E, 1., 21st April, 1887. MESSRS. McKINNON & McLEAN,— Dear Srrs,—The Hot Water Apparatus which you put into our store and offices last fall has given perfect satisfaction. Yours truly, Ch’town, July 23, 1887—2 m Saw CARVELL BROS. Se Peo ek wap ela , ae aes tele ri = eens heey i a cae ae a a ie Oe ene a ne neon a a hath ek ag es se GY Aine a nf ri i . ; . . 5 “ aaa Uy a eg a pete Set en ro ne eae wo =e i nage ge age ay teens Ra oe ar 7 ee oe em ae emer orton: er : ms |