ana A nut 84.00 @ac Year ye sis Wort! is on Ob a Ree OO ROT CusNDAR FORK VCTOLES 1806 Kew Moon, 6:h day, h itm. &. mm First Quar, 13th day, 10h, 34.9m. &. m ( . s Fail Moo 2iet Gay, . tm., nov Last qui 4 . ‘ ii ' S Sn i Day 0 W ' ! ' ————————v_—_— i s it i ih ti | i * ij T ur av ; , »4 2 tt, lav >. i g | Sauriay . Jee 4} Sand n y 5 8 « ; 6i Me } ; é é| Tuerds i é 10 2 | ay ay j ; : 2 6} Therds . ! 9} Frid i Io | j ig | Saturuay i i - *} ] suaadey ' fey ' L Li Vv Monda : 4 _? 13 | Tuesday 3) 29h 2S t4| Wednesday | 21 | 18 | 4 93 5j Tha 1a 24 S| o 42 ig | Prila i ae An Lj Sat i ' ; ° 13; Sand . et 7s. 68 v }i | Monday | 28 ‘| v Tues ' hi | Wed y j 5 t 22 | Thareda ae | 56 | i k 3 | Friday th; S47 1 : > ! ‘y 4 ; : 95 | Suaday | ott , ait o 46 | Moo iss $j ‘* 37 Turia j io | 13 | 1 5 q3' V i aty 24 99) Tharsdts ; 43 i > 4 30 E is | > t t | Satard« 6 46 4 4i 6 2f Sj —— —-- — Pf, Island allway On and after SATU RDAY, lth October 1396 the trains of this Matiwaey win ran daily @andays erce,s ted) as fuliows .— Trains ( ira Ia ward. Kead STATIONS. ward. Kead ,20Wwnt. i up. Pp MIA. 3 M.JA, M, $e 61 Charlottetow1 6 30) 9 5S 3 35 6 2). Royalty Junction.) 6 16) 9 3t 42 7 0...Nerth Wiltshire 5 f2) 8 45 440 7 13... Hunter River 5 82) 8 30 § 2 7 37. . Bradalbatr 4 17 & 6 Si 7 43|.. Emerald... & 02) 7 + 645 7 3 Fre wn. i G2) 7 24 606 8 07'.. Kensington ... 4 SS 7 O4 640 3 Ar. | | Ly. 4 15) 6 2 Pp. M S's 1A. 140 8 45 Lv | } Ar.’ 4 OO}1L Of 2 | ~ } M —o 3 45110 37 223 9 17|..W 2» QO ] $15 9 4 | I 3 06] 9 21 4 3610 3 ..O'Lear : > 1 8 03 5 OV10 SL. .} ] 55) 7 38 5H 41911 15 Alberton 1 3 7 02 + li ho Tig olka ww) 5 dS 645 3 00,..Charlottetown 915 5 40 7 0 14|..Royalty J 9 Ol; 5 @ 13 j o {47 Flo tf Fe lar | is} 4 15 8H) 4 MHiLv.f/™ ~* ft Ae.) $10) 4 00 gm 45 Morell 7 433 @ OO 4 54)..St. Peters .ccece 7 2H 2 J9 16 5 28). . Bear River 6 48) 2 08 li & 6 Ub .Sor 6 155 1 DW A MiP. . ae 8% 4 (5) .Mt. Stewart § 19' 3 58 9 37; 4 5S). .Cardigan........ 712% Ww 00 5 15!..Georgetown 7 OO 210 - MIP. M A. M.|/P. M ' ‘4 ' ) oh r TAM ste eee 7 > 6 2d). . > Traverse 6 45 P.M | {i. M Trains are ran by Eastern Standard Time D. POTTINGER, A McDONALD, Gen Mgr Govt. Rys, Superintendent, Unarlottelown. Ralway Office, June30 , 1806. Kew Prices in Watches We have lately received a nice assortment of Silver Watches for Ladie’s and Gentlemen, which were boug ‘it, and Can~ now fail wo } le ase in price. Cali an! inspect tiem. a, N. NEAR QUEEN SQUARE, FOR SALE ren 7 ; * , i oul t ur Barre 2a? od as new. Also war tt & pumber >’ Potato Baskets. Vill be ; sold cheap. Apply to JONES & McRAE., oct8—462 wky Howis) |¢ Watch Keeping Time delicate piece of ha ' ind to give Satisfaction should not be kept going year after year without cleanining If yours ; : . . ' needs aitentiou. bring it at once to} : } us aod we will pat it it in good niuy order at a moderate charge CH. TAYLOR, Graduate Optician. Nor h Side Queene Ss juare, Cli’town. Ce ————— — Musical Studio E comraged by the extensive palronnge Of the muerte loving pabiic of tt prewir Guring many years, Mr. 8. N. Earle wil | Tesume |} Vocal, Muxic, Vuice Culture aod the Theory of Music > wi his Stadio,on Monday Sept. 14th, inst. Intendiog pupiis will oblige by leaving their names et Mesers. Miller licos. Music Store, or at the Stadio, where terms and full particulars may be had. ! Bezinnere will receive as thorough at | | tention as more advanced students. SAMUEL N. EARLE. eepil—dy &wky. fhe Daly Examiner ’ Ty ' hy] ti) i } al ‘ The bxau i J UviOA Usk pba a ee ee i Serate Read. fERMS & Xcar = SPIRES Hbayve 1iOW In Stock the largest and best line of | -— | Breech & Muzzle Loading fe ae, 2O. ae Be TE ee. (Prices from $4.00 to $60.00; | \from which [ give special | 12 Cs 1G RIFLES both for long range and gallery shooting, hich inclu , ; ‘ the thing for goose shooting. 7) MECCYS at W. £. Bawson's pilorter Days And longerevenings make a pair of good glasses de- sirable Can we help you in this respect? New gold and white frames, Also large stock of lenses just received. E. W. TAYLOR. Cameron Block. Mosctoa, N 5. | * thaw as Jon t DbUY any I ” en ” berty, when Free Born Men, having to E DAILY EXAMINER. | ean, Single Gopies Two Cents aia ed Ever shown on P. E. Island. i —————, ~ I have also a complete line | semen LI nn < a . } ’ e the celebrated ; WINCHESTER REPEATER, just | See the Duck and PLOVER |} ee” ‘Trade men’s Ulsters, teguirements ) Oi the Readymade Clothing trade of P.E Island, have always been our study. We have given the matter such close attention aud have brought it to bear so directly upon our buying, that our stock for " Fali Shows such an assortment of seasonable goods that we feel ourselves in a better position than ever before to merit the patronage and sup- port of trade of the Island, | Youths’ and Boys’ Clothing in proportion to size. APE > Zt i AG > FES A. 4 Ah SSS SS BO) “a . - NPE 4 + a y\ | NOS ~ Sew a ade - art Na SOSOSOG OSV SO OSOTSS think if I married you your father would ever forgive us?” ea serted softly. rdiy require an overcoat ~~“ n—just by seeing that it aed with Fibre Chamuis. icht or bulk will be added, ia : natural stiffness and spring Nie jp2 of this interlining will keep the ly ‘* garments in their proper shape, and if its perfect non-conducting proper- 4 ties will keep out every breath of { r or damp winds, © c ainst an all day’s rain or Only 25c. a yard. eady ts which haven’t the Fibre hamois Labei—you'll thoroughly enjoy the comfort it give SOPOCPRSPTSS OT SO SOS HDS GOSS VGOOSS IG OGO CSEH SOOO sleetstorm. Wonderful value at slight DOSES SOF SOOO OOE OSHS 69 0004) 0000 2dy-made garme 3° DEO S OOS SOS G58 SOSSO SG SO SHE | oy a : You need a Fat ? 4 o, al e | $} = on ; a - 2, '? : 4 M t Ay fee : % ; . a" a - 2 oN f ser) } sp : 3 iar ly i iy “Ky j In but ii > Gia AFF cise u) 4 4 2 i yy A ° la e ¢ bed 1.4 a 4 3 2 fas 4 “4 i “t+ $ fros $ ‘ water} + $ proo e ? yy : e < $0 eo oa oe oe Toreplace that old ‘ 7 TANTON’S | Groat Cicorgo Street, | le 6 Pome JOHN Y FURNITURE =x il} af of +. -afp>t Ne > att ss ing table with one o : up $85,000 in one day. Nw ur OV lish Extension T": > a a ip. aff i atl] cd] i] It is no wonder that rub- vers, whicch are not the ‘same astructions in Organ, Piano} ID<v? ECU PO AF new patterns are added, to fit Rubbers are always ‘‘ \p-to-dat< They are honestly made of }01 extra thick at ball and heel. Once used, always preferred to any other grades. have more than doubled during the past twelve months. For sale in boxes, half chests and chests. FORACE Ch’town, next ta, Messrs. Reddig Bros. shape as ithe boot, should be uncomfortable. ney toen ploy skilled pattern makers bet the result is a satisfactory fit. all the latest shoe-snapes,.and'Granby Don’t Diraw the Feet ‘They Fit the Boot Granby vv we RD TOS rs | whio attendel a2, and they told ime that ” : ’ } | ’ e . “ ) : rubber, thin, lis bt, elastic, dutravie, | the medicine being put up by Mr.3. 8. RAEI NO Le SEE <TC ARAL OU ER A CAN LT noticed a great improvement im my cond.- | has completely disappeared, and my o SZARD,| se". Be i Cs 3 - Overdoing It. ; “Dear onc,” he whispered, ‘do you “I’m sure he would, dear,” she as- '*And would he give usa house of our ‘I know he would, dearest.” **And would he give us enough to live beautiful on?” “T am sure of it, Harry.” ‘And would he take me into the firm ?” ‘Certainly he would.” ‘‘And let me run the business to suit myself?” “Of course he would, darling.” She snuggled to his bosom, but he put her aside, coldly. “I cannot marry you,” he said, hoarsely. ‘‘Your father is too willing co get you off his hands.” A Woman Diver. There is a professional woman diver aow living at Gravesend, Eng. She first went down instead of her husband, who was ill, some years ago, and this she did with such success and intrepid- ity that she afterwards fulfilled many engagements jointly with him, assist- ing latgely in the construction of a pier at a shipping port. She is not a woman of great height, but of considerable physique, and is not yet forty. She has made as much as $35 in one day, and has chiefly worked near the mouth of the Thames. She confesses to no unusual fatigue. and one of her boasts is that near the Medway she brought KOOTENAY. MRS. MARGARET PATTERSON CURED OF RHEUMATISM OF SEVEN YEARS’ STAND- ING AND PARALYSIS. (Testimony Under .Oath.) The following testimony of Mrs. Mar- garet Patterson, given under oath before W. F. Walker, Notary Publie, marks the most wenderfu’ cure in the history of any medicine :— “Borsix or seven years I was badly afilicted with rheumatism and severe neu raigia in the head. At times I euffered very much pain from violent headaches, and in order to stop same, aad upon the advice of a physician, T had» nnmber of my teeth extracted, without deriving any advanta “Tu May, 1894, 1 hada pa alytc stroke in the ieft sid of my body; bis was fol- lowed by the total joss of right of my left eve, bes!.og of both ears, violent neadache, severe fics, aud great weaknese. I became totally unable tu do any work about the house, and was not safe to be left alone on account of my dizziness and yveneral weak- ness. “T consulted four different physicians, they wonld do what they could, but that I would never become well azain. “ About two months ago i began using Ryckinan, M P., of this city, and now known as Kovieuay Cure, and am now taking the teurth Lottle of such medicine. “Before I finished the first boitle I tiou. Ihave now received the use of my everight, the use of my hearing, and the use of my limbs and body, the headache sirenzih bas come back almost completely, and, in fact, though 62 years old, I feel Imost a new woman. Mre. Margaret atterzon, 9L Vine Street, Hamiltan, Unt.” And I make this solemn declaration coasciéntiously believing it to be true, ete. MarGareT Pavrerson. Declared before me at the City of Ham- iTton, in the County of Wentworth, this 20th day of Augesi, A. D. 1895. (Signed) W. PF. Wanker, A Notary Public in and for the Proviuce of Ontaro. a i Headquarters for rubbers a McErg he’s Ova LEI Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Laiest U.S. Gov’t Report ABSOLUTELY PURE Baking Powder NEW IDEA IN POSTAGE, A Substitute for Stamps by Which Business Firms Will Pay Their Malling Bilis at Intervals. The postage stamp has a rival. A new device has recently been adopted by the German postal authorities, which does entirely away with the traditional postage stamp. For it is substituted a machine which registers by dies the time and date of preparing each letter for the mail. and marks on the letter the number of the person or firm who is using the machine, and also the rate of postage the letter should pay. Each commercial house or indi- vidual whe makes use of the system has a machine and with it stamps letters as fast as they are sent. At the end of the week or month the loca] postoftice authorities will figure up each customer’s account and send him a bill, having provided, in all proba- bility, for the payment of it by getting a substantial deposit ahead. The apparatus is in the shape of a box. In the front of it are several dials, looking very much like the dials ofa gas meter, these showing units, tens, hundreds and thousands. Under- neath the dials are six push-buttons, each bearing a figure corresponding to the value of the German postage stamps now in use, that is, 3, 10, 20, 25 and 50 pfennigs. The letters to be stamped are slipped in a long, narrow slot. Upon each letter put within this slot there falls a steel die representing a symbol, such asthe arms of Ger- many, with the inscription, ‘Deutsche Reichspost,” and an unchangeable number, the latter being the number of the machine, and that which, trans- mitted upon the letter, tells the postal clerk who has sent it out, and upon whose account it should go, There is also a stamp giving the date and the hour, controlled by clock-work, which is only accessible to the postal clerk who comes weekly to inspect the machine. The six push-buttons control a wheel containing dies for the various values. A letter to be stamped is pushed within the slot, and a pressvre of one of the push-buttons marks the envelope with the amount of postage required, at the same time imprinting the symbol and the hour, all with indelible ink. The apparatus is so finely adjusted that letter after letter may be pushed in and rapidly marked ata rate of speed that could not be reached except by a small force of clerks using the ordin- ary stamp. Automatically the machine registers the entire amount of postage used by a firm, and the clerk inspecting it once a month can thus readily check off the accounts of the postoffice. The system is being looked upon with much inter- est in Germany, and has met with thorough approbation. It is known as a “postage adder,” andithe postal au- thorities sec in it a great simplification of their duties. TIRES MOTHERS find help in Hood’s Sursaparilla, which gives them pure blood, a good appetite and new and needed STRENCTH. Now is the time to get supplied with glass and crockeryware as we will sel] oi cheaper ihan ever before removing. Shoe Store. _ 1 W. P. Colwill, Henri Rochefort, in an article in ihe Intransigeant, asserts that it was the desire of the Czar in bis speech at Chalons t» nm ike vse of the expression “Franco- Russian Alliance,” but that M. Hanotaux Miuister of Foreign Aifsirs, objected to the utterance, fearing that if the words were once spoken by the Czar, crowds would parade the streets of Paris shouting “To Ber.in.” , — moe Despatches from British Guiana say that riots have occurred among the coolie~ in Demerara. The police were attacked while arresting the ringleaders and were obliged to shoot, three of the rioters bi ing killed and many wounded. The rivts were the outcome of a labor strike. TT aie i a I tae A KINK IN YOUR BACK Mave it straightened out by MACKS RHEUMATIC PILLS Pain in the back is sometimes rheuma- tie, sometimes indicates didney disorde; Whichever it may be Mack’s Pills are sure to eure. They are arbe matic piilact™ ing on the liver vnd kidneys, sweeping out all rheumatic acids by way of the biadd-) and bowels. No other reniedy £0 effectual as Mack’s Pills. Pains and aches vanish when they are used. Price 46¢, feough Chaser” cures a Cough quick. 10¢, For sale by Geo. K. Hughes and Jvhnson | «Jc anson Charlottetown and Souris. The U.S. Agricultural Department has approved of arrangements for the shipping of Canadian catile via Richford and Bos- tov. Syecial arrangements are made tc ren.ove the porsibility of infection being communicated to U.S. animals while the Canadian beasts are en route throngh U. $. territory, and ihe cars will be disinfect ed afier each trip. In making believe that contact with Canadian herds can bring to U.S. cattle any disease not already ex- istent among them. our neighbors are do- ing the thing thoroughly. Racked with Rheumatism Unabie to Walk, owing to excruciat- ing pain. After ten years’ terrible torture, Cured by Scott's Sarsapariiia. A. H. Christiansen, writing from the Clifton House, Niagara Falls, says: “I ewe you more than / can ever pay. For ten years I suffered the tortures of the damned with rheumatism, Father had it before me, and | believe it is an here- ditary disease. My knee joints would ret inflamed and if I was out in any “weather” I was sure to be laid up, which toa travelling man is a calamity. In ascore cf Canadian towne local doctors treated me, some giving relief, others none, I read that Sarseparilla was a rhezmatic cure, and [ asked a druggist for ‘‘a bottle of the best Sarsaparilla on the market.” He gave me Scott’s, re- marking that it was an improvement on all others, and that ke could honestly recommend it. I have taken four botties, and am as tree from pain as aman can hepe to be. 1 was out in arainstorm two days ago and never felt a twinge. Asl said before, to Scott’s Sarsapanlla I owe more than I can ever repay.’ The best remedy for rheumatism, sciatica, and neuralgic pains—all arisin from the presence ot poison in the bloo —is Scott’s Sarsapariila, a modern con- centrated medicine, prompt in its cura- tive eects. Doses from one half to one teaspoonful. At $1 per bottle ef your druggist. [ANTARCTIC POSSIBILITIES. Explorer Borchgrevink Thinks There May be a Future for Commerce There. The recent Antarctic expedition was a commercial ono, and commercially it was a failure, because we did not find the right whale so valuable for its whale bone. The Antarctic was fitted out for the hunt of that particular kind cf whale; nevertheless I have no doubt that the commercial result of the expedition would have been much better had we worked under more favorable auspices, I do not by any means consider the fact of our not haying mef with the right whale in those seas as conciusive proof ot their non-existence in the bay at Victoria Land. The Antarctic found the right whale at Campbell Island in the winter time; the boats fastened to five of them, of which, however, only one was caught Now, to me it does not seem improbable that these whales go south to the bay of Victoria Land, where Ross saw them in the summer, and return north in the winter. It would seem incredible thata man of Sir James Ross’s standing, sup- ported as he was by ablo scientists and ex- psrisnced whalers, should have made a grave error when he said that this valu- able whale was to be found in large nhum- bers in those Southern Jatitudes, The difference ip the appearance of the blue whale, as we found it there, and the right whalo, in the metiod of spouting, is so striking that even the most casual ob- g2rver could not easily be deceived. Very possibly, had we penetrated farther into the large open bay discovered by Ross in the vicinity of the volcano peaks Erebus and Terror, we too would have found the right whale in great numbers, We saw very many blue whaloa, but had not the appliances to take them. As I remarked at the International Geographical Congress, we found few seals. They increased, however, in num- ber as we worked eastward, and seemed afraid of the land, All of the seals that wo met on the shore showed much un- easiness, and speedily made for the water, a fact which strengthened my belief in the existence of a large enemy of the seal on the continent. I do not doubt that the seals congregate together in larger numbers at some places on the bay. I consider the guano beds which we @is- covered of great commercial importance, and they ought to be well worth the at- tention of enterprising business men. The specimen which I brought back with me contains a large percentage of am- monia, Furthermore, from the analysis of the specimen of rock which I brought back with me, the possible and probable pres- ence of valuable minerals on the contin- ent is proved, although the lava and the volcanic aspect of the coastline do not speak favorably for the presence of heavy motals near the surface.—‘‘The First Landing on the Antaretic Continent,” by C. BK. Borchgrevink, in the January Cen- tury. She Did Hiave Their Mouse. A summer girl came outof a city resi- dence the other morning and noticed on the pavement two men, who acted as if they were trying to catch something. She gave them very indifferent attention, but as she stepped out of the gate she heard one of the men say, excitedly: ‘*There, Miss, it ran under your dress.’’ ‘‘Ran under ray drass?’ she cried with ‘*We upset our cage of them out hero and have caught all bunt one—the one that is under your dress.’’ The summer girl seampered back inte the house and came back shertiy quite indignant. **It is not so,’’ she sald. ‘“‘ Your monse didn’t get on meatall. Iexamined my dress thoroughly, and it was not there.’’ “All right,’’ the man said. ‘I saw it go under your dress; we have lost a white mouse, and you have got it.’’ Still indignant, the summer girl walk- ed down the street, Several squares away from home she felt a queer wiggling son- gation on her person just under the clothes at the belt. She grabbed the spot and dashed into a doctor’s office, which was fortunately at hand. ‘*Oh, please,’’ she hurriedly exclaimed to the doctor, ‘‘won'’t you call your wifet I think I have a mouse on me.’* Mrs. Doctor came to her rescue and sure enough.snugly hidden in the folds of the summer girl’s fluffy gown, but quite dead from the hearty squeezing, was the poor little lost mouse. Me Walked, There is a man up on Connecticut avenue whose coachman has been in the family so long that he really feels as if the place belonged to him. He felt called upon to attend a funcral—the funeral of some personal friend of his—early in the fall, and as an especial mark of respect for the deceased he asked the head of the house to allow his carriage to be driven in the funeral procession, The head of the house good naturedly consented, and the coach- man, with a colored friend, rolled off te the cbsequics. That afternoon there was a football game somewhere inthe sub- urbs, and the head of the house, who is inordinately fond of the game went. He went on foot, but just as he trudged in through the gate a carriage passed him going in. It was his own carriage, with his man on the bex and four gnourners in- side. They had set out forthe funeral, but the procession happened to pass the football grounds, and their sporting blood couldn’t resist the temptation to see the game, They satin the carriage in luxury and watched the game, while the man who owned the carriage sat on a plebeian pine bench, and—well, you know what you’: >e likely tosay yourself.—Washing- ton i sb. The Little One Wouid Do. A gentleman of this city, wishing to take his family into the country for the summer, looked ata smalifarm with a view to renting it. Kverything was very much to his mind and the negotiation was nearly completed, when the question of hiring the farmer’s cow came up. She wus an excellent cow,the farmer said, and even after feeding her calf she would give five quarts of milk a day. ‘Five quarts a day said the city mnan; ‘that is more than our whole family could use. Then, noticing the calf following its mother about the pasture, he added, ‘‘1 tell you what, I will hire the small cow. I thiuk she’s just about our size.’’ Poison and Politics. Fox, the English statesman, was onoe approached witn the proposition, which he indignantiy declined, to poison the Emperor Napojecn, But long before the time of Fox the Romans had rejected a scheme to poison Pyrrhus, while Tiberius refused to entertain a proposition te poison the German General Arminius. We May Come to This. ‘‘T want a fine juicy steak, waiter.” ‘*Yos, sir. Cart or carriage, sir}’’— Detroit Free Press. ———E* < *E—— A fresh lot of Children’s Underwear just received. —Moore & McLeod, Physical Culture — Miss Marmillan, Prince Street, is at home to intendirg pupils in reading and physical culture. We are making the nobbiest suits and overcoats inthe city. Don’t forget that wearethe hich ciasa tail r —McKay Book and_—= ... 000 Printing We-have first-class facilities for turning wut the best qual- ity of Job Printing, from a Visiting card to the largest display work, Prices low. Work preimptly done. Call and see us. itxaminer Publishing Company Scrofula infests the blood of humanity. It appears in varied forms, but is foreed to vield to JIood’s Sarsaparilla, which purilies and vitalizes the blood and cures all such discuses. Read this: “In Septem ber, i8d4, i madea misstepand injured my ankle. Very soon afterwards, A Sore two inches across formed and in walking to favor it I sprained my ankle. The sore became worse; I could not put my boot on and [thought I should have to give up at every step. I could not get any relief and had to stop work. I read of a cure of e similar case by Hood’s Sarsapariila and conciuded to try it. Before I had taken allof two bottles the sore had healed and the swelling had gone down. My is now wel! and 1 have been greatly bene- fited otherwise. i have increased in weight and am in better health. Icannot say enough in praise of Hood’s Sarsapa- rila.” Mas. H. Bake, So. Berwick, Me. This and other similar cures prove that Foods Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists, $1. Prepared only by C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Masa. the best family cathartic Hood’s Pills ana iiver stimulant. 250. SISSSSSCSS’ OCSSSSOOCSSOCOSSSOS SUN LIGHT} SOAP } ‘PICTURES : ¢ WRAPPERS A pretty colored picture for every 12 “Sunlight” or every 6 “‘Life~ buoy” Soap wrappers. These pictures are well worth getting. ADDRESS: Lever 3Bros., Ltd. 23 Scott St.. Toronto Seeton & Mitche!!, Halifax, Agents SLISHOS SSGHOOCSCHSVEOCHEEREEOH SOHHSSSCOOHS a. livei--* ‘what ran under my for Nova Seatia and Prince Edwar/ dress’’’ isiand, “Why, a little mouse, he answered. | 4. eo.<.206 @@ ee fhe Canada Accident ASSURANCE CO, FRED. W. HYNDRAN, ACENT FOR P. E. I.. Acoepte Plate Glass Instrance also. May 23, 1896 —law (6) lf You— > GANT AFFORD to emoke 10c CIGARS and can enjoy a good one, take our ad vice and try the celebrated ; VARSITY CIGAR m4 06 Smoke for 5¢ | —s SOSSVSVSSSSSSSSSSSSSASVSSSIS SAGO VARSITY... is for sale by all first-class Druggists and Cigar Dealers, S. DAVIS & SONS SG 6464444 % 6430088 SOURIS FALL RaCES The annual Fal) Races will take place on Souris Park, ON TUESDAY, OCT. 20 When the following Classes will trotted :— Free for All, purse $100.06 3 Minute Class, purse 40.00 As the owners of the following horses bave already paid their entrance fee in the Free for Ail, viz., All Bird, Gracie Wilkes, Loafer aud Billie McKie, a grand day’s racing may be expected. Furses divided, 60 per cent., 30 per cent., 10 per cent, National rules to govern, If weather proves unfavorable races first fine day. Entries close 13th inst. Admission 25 cents. JOHN McLEAN, A. A. McLELLAN, President. Secretary, TO LET _———. That beautifully situated two story dwelling on Prince St. now occupied by Woolen Co., iailors. Get your stationery, books and reading matier at McMillan & Hornsby’s. Mr. Thos, R. Brooks. Possession given about Ist November. Apply to PEAKE BROS, & CO, sept2ot—tf . SOS Rm Perea ty ee NY A Ea Rp cca nae Ae EER Le Gk 3 EE ARN ect em Oe ABE a IE SES AON 8 TPO TELE I IT, - ca ‘ uy . ee en Cn oe PE ES OE NN gE eR RN a ae ee ~ , Pe EL LO EOF OE ere RPE er ~ Pees ER GIT ea Tae tem