=> LL ee i * oe ca Lge THE 4 WALTER BAKER & 69, ea . “ ‘Pune, HICH CRADE zc% COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES JP-Z speciAL AND HIGHEST AWARDS CALIFORNIA RIDWINTER EXPOSITION BREAKFAST COGOA - ooggesee Find A . ww { THE DAILY EXAMINER Wwse-The Best Paper FOR ADVERTISERS ASK YOUR DRUCCIST FOR “e eeut UU Palatab ‘No oils others os ‘bi 81.00 taste .ike g bottles 6O0c. and J. A. MATHIESON, Attorney-at-Law. Grateful —Comilorting. Epps’s BREAKFAST—SUPPER.” “By athorough knowledge of the nat- ural laws which govern e operations of d gestion and itrit And ‘ application of the pr ed Cacoa, Mr. Epps has | r bever : may save I LY doctors’ bills. It is by the jud of sack © a . : may t } i enou 8 € is ¢£ ax point vv i fatal shatt DY ke ping fied by pure blood and a d frame.”—Civil Ser G Made simply with boiling wat ‘ Seld only in packets, by Grocers, la d thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Homece Londs n, Nyland Chemists. DONT mL ct Lr i dt i r f ' DR. L.A. SMITH & CO., Tor 0 we can sell vy Dodd Ald r theft Wiag pr } | DOXx six boxes for $2.50. Tothe trade—$4.00 per dozen, or three dozen at bdo dozen Sent by mail toa ad naid _may 29 E., REGULATE. THE LIVER. | ONE PILL AFTER EATIN | INSURES GOOD CIaESTION |PRIGE 25 CTS. Te PODUS 40 C2. \19, JOHNSE ANopYN= LINIMERT ynErke ANY OTH As much Yor INTERNAL as EXTERMAL cm 2’ im 1810 by an Qid Family Prysician. Th nk Of It. In use for ily Paysi Eignty Years, and still lead € ration after Generation have used ‘and bison at Every Traveler should have a@ bottle in his satchel. ro Every Sufferer fiom | Rheumatism. tica, Neuralgia, Nervous Headache, Diphtheria,( ‘oughe,Catarrh, Bron chitis, Asthma, Cholera Morbus, Diarrhoea, Lameness, news in Bodyor Limbs, Stiff Joints or Straina witl find in this eld Anedyne reiief and speedy cure Every Mother Amine iiinimentin the Sore Throat, Tonsilitia, Cotte, Cute, ae = avi Pains |abie to oceur in any fami! without netice. Delays may Cost a —. Relieves afl Summer Com, nts ifke m: 3S cts. pont 3 eat Lap Express vaic L& Joba a ne Bhston Mane Trade enpplied by W. R. Watson Char- lottetown. 2 | Cocoa. the sailing | Island Railway free ene ceeeeeeeerenen DAILY Govi NOR ARITIME PROVINCES \ ed , his man! but honor y face; there, at 1 might trace fort N : sound came roclaime d, return i rless sons WV e time is time, will ever stand h far and near, band, rd together hold isehold word, +} | ill thev be told to share, crease wish, *@ artfelt ts that God may grant the y bestow tarnished vour good name ave, welcome here, > you, true British iil chime } us ring, England’s flag float pure and nthem sing, 1 Abe rdeen Aug. 14th, 1894 a CURED TO STAY. | E. A. Rese pisaeroimnts tHe Dovest- ] HAD DIABETES BUT MORE—A1 , Ont., Aug. 20.—The account 1 app 1 many Canadian papers ‘ is ago of Dr. FE. A. Rose hay- i of diabetds by Dodd’s Kid- le sp read attention bters, though, pro- permanent doubters a year back nding to his prac- a Isrge One, in this unding country, and vy return of the disease. nd the doetor is Oo take any of the precau- that are al- ned or trou- attracted w Mar y lou the ire was not a I est proof that ne +} ‘ t that % Ww vis the fact that ior these se has been atte which was always and the surro npeiied t is todiet or otherwise, threate f Austria LU,U szVI } papyrus ng back from "B 20 ns commercia rds, wills, tailors’ na ¢ n love letters. t10w to Get a Sunlight Picture, Ser 25 “Sunlight soap Wrappers (w rap ie words “why does a woman isooner than a to Levev Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, and you post a pretty picture free rtising, and well worth framing. asy way todecorate your home. Phe soap is the best in the market and it *. postage to send in the f you leave the epds open. Write » +} earing the man”) vill receive by W mnily cost 1 wrappers, you address carefully. T iw } { J What's that lady got , funny, baggy breeches C ty Jake—She’s going to ride a vi the Indisputable,. W spend SL for a bottle of medicine Beech will cure ases ? This is because of nearly all ail- lls cure cons ipa ik of knowled; ge mat il- iest, bv B. F. Allen & Co., New York wher ne box of 25 cents, Lise Luse R ’ ‘ t pi in their months weather, because of litary instinct. Wild hogs always bed when ; straws on ach of bad rain is make a ym fortable .| JOT WHAT WE Say, but what Hood's Sarsaparilla Does, that tells the story of its merit and success Remember HOOD’S CURES. Walte Besar t, the English ntended by his parents for a noveliat, career rch, but he drifted naturaily into yireaecis ( st are instanily re- : twe or thirty drops of D AT ; : . lv : iI y erman remedy in warm tened water. Sold by all druggists. i : ee 7 rhe earliest Greek inscription to which . date can be given is that at Abu Sneihel, ut in astatne guarding the Greek temple. r) la = about 600 B I Pond’s Extract for every pain or ne bleeding from the lungs, f Vero cheap a “I’m going to write a book on ‘How to ive nothing a year.” “It can’t be lone “Tt can. I haxe a recipe.” What is it? ‘Marry arich girl,”’ ss. “ELLIOT.” DATES OF SAILING. FROM BOSTON—5Sth, each month. FROM CHARLOTT and 15th and 25th of STOWN—10th, 20th 30th of each memnth. When any of these dates fall on Sunday, will take place on the pre ceding Saturday. Cargo taken to and from of cartage. Through bills of lading from all stations on Island Railway to principal cities in United States and Europe. R. McMILLAN, Charlottetown. ex fri tu; pat sat Boston Agents: Alfred Winsor & Son, ( 89 State Street. § wed; gu mon th; | June 29, 1894. and wky _ jour pio wat her USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the great blood and Nerve Remedy. eet as ees Se EXAMINER ; ENERAL'S VISIT TO | re LESS LABOUR SREATER COMFORT |! DOES YOUR Wire Do HER OWN WASHING? Seeton and Mitche!!, Halifax, agents for F she does, see that 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. 1 and P, Nova Scot: K. Island, SUNDAY SERVICES. St. Paul’s Chur Morning tll o’clock Sunday Sel C lasses at 2.30 p.m ve . 7 o'clock Sathedra Holy ¢ Matins wna I St. Peter’s ¢ at Ss 8. i’. Evensong and 8 o’cloc St. Dunstan’s Cathedral.—F 7.30 a.m. Children’s Mass at 8.5 High Mass and Sermon at 10 a Vespers and Benediction of the ieieae l Sacrament at 7 o’clock St. James’ Chureh—Morning pri at 10.15. Preaching at ll a meeting | bv Mr. T.C. James and at 7p. m. by tev. T. F. Fullerton. Sunday School and sible classes meet at 2.30 Zion Churech.—Morning prayer 1 y at 10.15 Preaching at lI 1p. 3 Sabbath Sch ind B ( at 2.30 First Methodist Churel - M prayer ! eeting at 10.15 Prea a. m.and 7 p.m. by Rev. G.M bel] Sunday School and B a 2.30. Second Methodist Chu P meeting at LO a.m. Pre ‘ ond a= IT pb " \ \ J Howard, B. A Sunday S \ and Bible meet at 2.1 } Cciasses People’s Union at 3.15 Baptist Church.—Preaching at 1] a.1 and 7 p. m.’by Rev. A. Hooper Sunday School and Strangers welcome. pastor's Meeting House, Upper Great Georg Street—Services at ll a.m. and 7 p.m Bible Class and Sunday School at 2.50 Kensington Hall—Sabbath School at 2.30. Regular service at 7 p.m. by R R. Sutcliffe Gos pei ] Meeti ng.—Re member the G | Meeting in the Athenaeum sur \ afternoon at 4 o’clock, conducted Railway Men. Strangers always wi Lesson, Luke 15-3—“The para lost sheep > <a — BABIES GROW AND REMAIN HEALTHY WHEN FED ON LACTATED FOOD. Physicians Everywhere Recommend it. The majority of the mothers of Canada are now thoroughly need that La tated Food is the best, safes ! nourishing of al] infant food | the market. Physicians strongly recommend | Foo. at every opportunity ,and mar our ablest medical writers urge its use as @ perfect substitute for mother’s n Mrs. L.. P. Smith, of about Lactated Food as follows : ig Lactated Food the past seven months for my baby with great success. When he was three months 1 old, I stopped the use of other foods, as he Truro, N. 8., “T have been usi: was then seriously ill and we:ghed only t pounds. I gave him Lactated Food and now, at the age of ten inonths, he is well and hearty, and weigh ‘ pounds.” —_— o~-_-- Qvenec,, Aug. 22.—It_ is calculated, ac cording to different custom house returns, | thronghout Qnebec prov ince, that no lese than 8,400 French-Canadian families hav returned home from the Stat | last year, which, if mut tipli it live a} very moderate figure for French-Canadian families, gives a total of 42.000 souls added to our population by repati Wasniscros, D. C., Aug. 22.—Th Japanese legation has received no 1 the engagement between the Japanes Chinese reported from Shang i «patches published this morning Th officials of the legat eat confidence in the ac v of the t gram received by the legation announcing the finding of the British Naval Court of Enquiry at Shanghai, in the Kow Shing which was favorable to Japan. The legation characterizes as anqualifiedly in correct the assertion that the commander of the Naniwa ordered his men to the survivors of the Kow Shing struggling in the water. STEUBENVILLE, Ohio, Aug. 22 state of affairs is the result of y revival reported from Hammondsville, this case, fire on who were —A queer areil county, where “Holiness Meetings” have been conducted for some time. The peopl are worked uptoa high pitch of excite- ment, and seven women have left their husbands because they would not join the church. The husband of one of these women waylaid the evangelist and would have thrashed him had not others inter fered. One young woman come mentally unbalanced, singing and praying on the streets urti stopped. There is talk of cailing a public meeting to have the revival stopped. persists in- ore China’s regular army consists of 323,- 000 men. SCHOOL & COLLEGE BOOKS. ‘A Wonderful Cure rious ! who has be- | oA MIGHTY WORK. » Familie Made Happy. "| HOMES ARE on ERED AND BALGITENED, = | Pal : _Selory Compound 3 Blessings to “Old ‘a Young. C oldbrook, N.S. A Case That Was Pro- nownced Incurable. DEATH WAS EXPECTED The Suffierer Saved trom the Dark Grave. The Cured Man Praises Paine’s | Celery Compound Every Day. | ence. motner, Father and sisters and brothers | feel an interest in making home should a happy, bright and joyous. Home cannot be a bright and happy | spot while some loved one is laid low with | lisea ind su ng. | Phere wiiy pity uuch anxiety, | bt and fear, for the fety of the sufter- é ri 1 family phy ysician may be doing h itmost to banish pain and dis- ease, but his efforts are too often vain and Into all aftliete iomes Paine’s Celery Compound comes hke a bright angel of mercy. As soon as the greet healing mie Lic ne is used h ype 1s revived, faith strengthened, faces look brighter, and every interested feels that heaven has sent an angel of life that cannot fail. N ving mortal can estimate the bles- sings that Paine’s Celery Compound has bestowed ‘anadian homes. The vork of life-saving wrought by the great and astuunding ; s will endure forever. and telling testimony 3 sent in from all sections of our Domin- ion declaring that Paine’s Celery Com- pound saved and cured after other means had utterly failed. One of the very latest cures reported is that of Mr. John A. Church, of Cold- upon ( medicine is marvellous rd of cur Every day bright brook, N.S Here we have an array of solid facts that speak in thunder tones of warning, aud at the same tim they are calculated to inspire every despairing heart with true with it may be “ees 4 hope snd Col Here we h aman who suffered in pain and agony for long months, spent all his money for medicines that could not cure, and who was given up to die. Mr. Church accidentally heard of Paine’s Celery Compound, and made use of it; the m licine restore 1 and renewed his |.fe. Mr. Church tells his story as follows :— | ‘It is with pleasure that I give testi- | " if t vour marvellous medi- i Paine’s Cel ry Compound. In the spring of 1892 I had an attack of la grippe, vhich put me into such a condition that I could not slee p or eat. I was completely run down, had extreme nervous prostra- tion, and lay for days in a_ half siupified * After spendin cine which did my money for medi- | I gave up to g all little good, die, when one day a paper on Paine’s Cel- ery Compound was brought to me. I at once procured the medicine, and derived great relief from jthe first bottle; I slept better, ate better, and digestion improved. After using nine bottles [ feel like a new man. I can truly say that Paine’s Celery ched from the Compound 3 mie grave, and gave me a new Jease of life. ‘I earnestly urge all sufferers to use Paine’s Celery Compound, feeling sure it will cure them. Do not spend ycur money for medicines that cannot eure you ” No one need pity you, if you die of con- sumption, without having tried Miller’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil, “the kind that cures” coughs, , bronchitis and pulmonary diseases, Every bottle No oily taste like others. In 50c. and $1.00 at all druggisis. colds all warranted. big bottles, _———.en-2 Horses should be taught to until it becomes a habit. There isa report that C.J. Hamlin offered $42,000 for the great Baron Wilkes acer Rubenstein. The owners asked $50,000 for him. walk fast \ We are receiving BOOKS, which will be sold at the LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. will be glad to give quotations. FOOLSCAP The best of selling prices. We want your trade daily We will have in a few days the full list, and our stock of COLLEGE and and other STATIONERY are bound to please you, BAZAAR QUEEN STREET, Chappelle’s Old Stand, Opposite the Market House. Charlottetown, August 18, 1894--t t s COMPANY, THE MICROPHONE, The Wonders of a Curious Modern Electri- cal Instrument. One of the most eurious instruments which the development of electr cal science has brought iuto Leing is the microphore. It embraces within itself almost the whole the modern telephone, and of ex periments which aside frow being inter are wonderfully significant of what ntnue p! nelp.e of teres esting, we may expect from i edeve! 0 near fanare. By its aid the inh eps ot a fly walking on the stand on which it is placed are clearly heard, and give the sen- xation of a horse's tread, and even a fly's scream, especially at the moment of death, is easily audible. The rastling of a feather or a piece of dress goods on the board of the instrument, and completely inaudibie under ordinary circumstat ices, are dis- tinctly heard in she microphone. The ticking of a watch is rendered very loud at quite a distance from the receiver, A musical box placed in connection with the jnsirument transmits so much sound as to uel render it impossible to distinguish indi- vidual notes. A current of air blown sharply on the instrument sounds like a distavt trickle of water. And the rumbl- ing of aw carriage outside the honse is transformed into # very intense crackling no.se, not uulike the soand of the burning of pine lO 58. he i strumenut in appearance assumes various shapes, Inasmuch as the very 6im p.icit of its principle admits of its being made of various substances and in almost any form. All that is necessary for its simple working isin having what is known, teclinically, as *‘loose contact’ —that is, an electric circu.t whose continuity at some point is capable of being varied. As an insta:ce, then, three naijs make one of the best of microphones. Two of the nails are laid on a voard parallel to each other, aud say one-half inch apart, The other nail is laid across the first two, the latter being meantime connected toa battery cell and a telephone receiver. If a fly, for in- stance, be coufined in a small box, and the latter placed on the board on which the the slightest vibration cans its feet will sen- nails are laid, ed by the movements of der the unstatie contact of the naiis still more unste.dy, and by thus altering the force or amount of the electricity which passes, will reproduce in the telephone re ceiver an exact but much magnified fac- simile of what is taking z lace in in the box. A Smabinapens Dinner. We had been studying Shakespeare all winter, meeting one evening in the week, aud securing all the bright and shining literary lizhts that conld be coaxed, bribed, or driven to let us read the great master by the aid of their superior ‘Illumination, Each lady member was alternately host- but by the time that the houor feli to among the “roar you as ess, my lot there was no one left literary lions who could even gently as any sucking dove.” All such resources for supplementing my deficiencies in the charming art of enter- taining were exhausted. Reealling the re- mark of a noted caterer that ‘if you invite people to eat, they always accept with pleasuve,” I determined to ask all our little club to a dinner, and requeat them to come in costume—Shakespearlan, of course. Women likes to “dress up,” and enjoy taxing their ingenuity, so I knew that | | could connt upon them; and as all the men | were married except one—who was a na tural dandy—I relied upon wifely influ Besides which, we had all come to know one another well enough to dare to wear whatever we pleased, aud depen? | upon home talent for our effects of cos tume. Ou the evening named our guests all ap peared in gala attire and in high humor. Our worthy doctor's rotund proportions were little ¢xaggerated t repres-nt Falstaff; Lady Macbeth was magnificent in a trailing robs of black and a diadem of gilt paper. a toy dagyer at her Malvolio came in “‘eross-yartere hose,” Katherine the Shrew looked vy ry tierce—when she conld remember not t sinile— aud Ophelia appeared bewitehinzly mad with straw and poppies in her hair, which she insisted in wearing in a P-yche knot, Our dandy, as Hamlet, looked like undertaker or a hir d **mute” atan E funeral, and Othelio | ke a plain unh rou mulatto, his face stained with walnut juice ood vro belt. an lis aud wearing a wiz of tightly curled horse hair. My husbind was gorgeous as Car linal Wolsev, in a ec swe k of the material know as “b.Faey Hos tonsure had the work of Time, Lastly, I appeared as as Portia in my husband's old college gowu and mortar board,” rei,’ then Growth of “Christian i ndeavor."* Christian Endeavor his had a marv-lous growth in its fourteen years. It bas passed the ‘‘big boy” period, aud is far ou the way to matured minhood. I's progr ss is indicated in the following statistics: MEMBERSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR, Soc —_— Members ee cies eeewns 44 In lss2 481 In 1883 2,870 In 1854.... 5.9083 In 1885 10,904 In 1886 5U,QU0 Dk BEE si bacndecdanss i 140,000 In 1838 87 81-),000 Se ee a 7.674 4d0.0W) Bh Bs onivcscviccsgesnineese il ls 660,000 Ec isccnes. cae’ 16,274 1,028,980 In 1892 21,080 1.350.200 a ee 26 254 1.5.7.440 la 1894 (on record Jan. 1) 28,741 1,7:24,460 To this may be justly added kindred de pominational organi tions of youuy people that have sprang froin the Christian En deavor idea, The most notable of these is the Epworth Leagues «f the Methodist churches, with neariy a million menibers The Christian Eadeavor movement las reached mostof the Protestan: chu cies The pastor's study has widened, ani the world is welcoming the Christian Envieavor Society. President Clark, in a recent tour of the world, foeand a Ciri tian Eudeavor welcome and a Mizpah benediction in every laud. A Great Feat at Billiards. John Roberts, the great billiard player of all time, has added another to his long list of wondertul achievements, scoring an all-round break of 1,017 in an exhibition game against Diggle at Glasgow. A few months ayo such & performance would have caused quite a sen ation in tie billiard world, but the public have grown accus tomed to the great doings of Roberts, aud seein to think there is no lim tte his pow- ers, This is the second time in his career that he has made over a thousand off the balls, spot stroke barred, and comes next to his record break of 1,392 at Manchester, when, as in the present instance, his op- pouent w was Di zgle.—London Daily News. the British Museum. The average number of students in the reading room of the British museum is six hundred and fifty-one each d: w. = The at- tendance in the library and «ca pture yal lery has been less this year than usn. il, but the number of Visitors tu the museum shows an increase of fifty thousand over last last year. pRSON PILLS Make New. Rich Blood! were a wonderiai discovery. ke Yertem in the wo ee ld. Wii positively cure ~, fae woed Jimanner of disease, T..c information around ox is wore ¢ ant aes the cost of a box of pills F tt nefit fret ous Se them. let free. te: d everywhere, ons to in stamp- five benss Pia DR roo ota. & CO. 82 et. » House Dominion Coal Company, Ltd. The undersigned having been appointed sole selling Agents in the Province of Prince Edward Island for the above Com- pany’s Mines in Cape Breton, are now pre pared to issue orders for Round, Slack ind Run of Mines, and will keep a stock of each kind of Coal ou hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents. Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—1tf Pr tate emer epi seme AB pam renee En Ree tg ee AUGUST or amd, SATURDAY, ~ In ally Examiner ** The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. One Year,---$4/Three Months, $1 SIX Months, - $2/One Month, 35¢ Read hic Splendid Offer to Subscribers McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 m.acue a 40 cents a month. By special arrangement with the re we are | enabled to make @ most exceptional ofler to send MeCLU MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR lo everyone who fills out the fi lowing r blank form, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 40 cents a month. CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. TITTTTTTT TT VTTITTITTITTT 11-11 IAAT Idi’ = = Zz Tut Examen Publishing Co., = -e - - Charlottetown, P. E. Island. — ro -_* e You will please send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 = = _ = mouths from date, for which I agree to pay 40 cents a month, it being = e understood that you are to have sent to my address for one year, without a ww 4 - extra charge, MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current “ - | nurober. 3 - ay = ii rcicccsecsccts eveesoroeceereccvessecs: eeee Ceereseveres - . = SES ee eae ent onene RAN cs isotiisttn cittsates i demos jcpeceunians =A a | e = Hho b> Yo No So Hn i> bn Sb i> So Lb So Sl > Shp Yo Sb Lo I nln Sin i> Sin b> Sb» So» So No b> Sin Si Sim Sb Sb Sb» Lb Sb Sb Ln Sip Sb Nn b> Si Sb Sn i Sb Lo Sip McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under tl e heads The Edge of the Future,” “ Newest Knowledge,” “ Knowledge of lmmediate Value,” The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” ete. We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for oniy $4.60 a year, payable in. advance or in monthly instalments of 40c. as desired, | We make this exceptional offer in order that we mé¢ ay secure a large number ot | ~ i] themselve sof this Address : The Examiner Publishing Go. HMHAKLOTTRTUOWN. P, & new subscribers, but all who are already subscribers may avai opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magazine. ISLAN?: ern nnEInneTenneIEneRen Eee Another those WOVEN WIRE TRE SES and £PRING COTS, ch beautiful Rug Drawing Room Sets and SPRING sapest Parlor MAT- Also lot of the yet. Suits, Don’t buying. We please the people every time. the piace. JOHN cee Charlottetown. Angust 18 1894—1 t e gts PERF Egy Tye ts EFFrECTUALLY Te CATAREA, COLD IN THE HEAD, CATAGRUAL NEAD- CHE AND DE SAF NESS, INFLUENZA, ETC. Sold everywhere. Price, 25 cunts. M’fd. by TULH iW TKR#RR MEDICINECO’Y., L'td., &t. John, N. Binder 1 wine, Binder W hips, Machine Oils, Harvesting Tools ——AND General Hardware, oly STORE, HARDWARE R. B. NORTON & CO. ce eX, Charlottetown, August 14, 1894—tu fri - Mowers, Reapers and Rakes. aaa cae The NEW MODEL BUCKEYE and the wide-wheeled ITHICA RAKE are the best Implements to put into the heavy hay crop of this season. We are selling them low for cash on short time. REPAIRS always on hand for Mowers of any manu- facture. ALSO—A Carload of Genuine MeLauchlin Carriages McLauchlin Gears require no puffing. If you are to purchase a Carriage inspect those. D. W. FINLAYSON, going Ch’town, July 9, 1894—eod & wy H. T. LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. season. forget | Real Esiate Agency. | established house. ' | increase, and position permanent E 1894. — - ~ MOUNT ATIISON LADIES ¢v: LEGE, a is Art ivsttatim and 'y Cf Music, The Fail Term of the 46th ¥, iegins Aus. 30th, 1894, An ‘7 UU: ¥a ( : f stu ire provided, extend. eprimary oranches through the wi curr im to the ike gree ] ine staff “ist of 18 teachers, 1 dual mw We rsity Profesor ate Piano, Pipe Organ, Violin, Vocal Harmony, Elocution, Physieg) Shorthand, Ts pewriting, Book. nd Commercial Courses are al] tanght after the latest and most approved met i The O s Art Institution, which, with 3} ent gallery, has been trang. fé 1 to the Ladies’ College, is still jg Large of Prof. Hammond, R. C. A. aa le Paris Salon, the Royal y, London, ete : j C rvatory of Music employs re, atthe head of whom ie \ wey ed teacher from the staff of ‘. Y. College of en ic, who has Berlin under Von Bulow and j After four years’ successful study i fthe greats st masters in Ger many, Mr. C. L. Chisholm returns to take charge of the Violin department. Vocal Culiure is taaght by an accom plished Swedish vocalist, who is a gradu. ate the Munich Conse rvatory. Every care is taken to maxe the school ined Christi where lady-like ners and nobility of character shall be a an home, For Cak ndar apply to REV. B. C. BORDEN, D. D, Sackville, N. B., Aug. 14, 1894. ‘CHURCH SCHOJL FOR GIRLS Edgehill, Windsor, N. 8. Estal the lished Pat ronage of by the Authority and under the Synod of ihe Diocese of Nova Scotia, and the Synod of the Diocese of Fredericton. Chairman Board of Bishop of Nova Scotia. President Board cf Leckie, Esq. Lapy Prixcieat—Miss Macuix, Trustees—The Directors—R. G, with a staff of twelve Governesses and Instructora. The Bu Idings at E lvehitll have capacity for 100 residents. The new building is he ated throu szhout with hot water, and all rooms are provided with the electric light, The oui cover eight acres, about one- half being solely for recreation, and laid out for Tennis, Croquet, Bowls and Ar chery’ Michaelmas term begins Sept. Let, wr Cale re ng full information 1 blank fort f apyl heation for admis ) apply lu DR. HIND, j 25—In vl Windsor, N = Sherwood Cemetery. Situate and Brack at Junction of Royalty | ley Point Roads, three miles from Cha THEY PLEASE ALL In Quality and Price. | town Morning trains run by local time to Ceme tery y as follows:—At 7 and 7.30, returning at if.20 and 10%), Afternoon trains leave at sa and 4 o'clock, returning at 6.35 and 7.2 Fare to go and return, 15 cents. Funeral Trains may be had whenever re quired, and interments may be made by regi iar trains at paxysenger rates. Prices of Plo are as follows: Family Plots, 2.x15 feet, sold at reduced rate of sin! tev bop ee.n acelin ae sae | Plots half above size, in “good localities nv | Sing 10 Grave + eee eee e ween eens +» 20 ‘The «+ emetery is sustained by on pag | from — woh old rs ot not less than $2.00 able ist June in each year, and all pi subscribers are kept in order during ee Subscriptions may be paid to any of the Directors, or io the undersigned, and for any extra work to be done by the K must be left atthe office of the Clerk of : | County Court, Vor, | cheap. Look at our new line of CHAMBER SETS before | HENRY SMITH, Secretary Sherwood Cemetery, junel9—2m (mon eat) FOR SALE.—Several first-class Resi ‘ences within city limits. Prices ffom two to six thousand dollars, Terma easy, Also, a namber of Dwelling Houses, Building Lots, ete., different prices, ing { iocation, ete. lO LET.—* Watermere” and Park | View Cottage, fronting the harbor, close by Victoria Park Also, one-half of the ?D i Biihdis an] the “Italiaa Warehouse,” both centrally sitnated bur ness places on Queen Street, Rents low For further particulars app'y to A. MacNKILL Auctioneer & Real Estate Agent viJ—® w f Zw ‘Choice New Herring. 166 LALF BARRELS, 10 BARRELS. wed by other lots every few days. CARVELL BROS. to Le folk To be sold by iin dab lie Auction, 4 Hiouse in Georgetown, in King’s Counts, Prine Kdward Island, on FRIDAY, the thirty-first day of August, A D 1st, at the hour of twelve o’clock, nooin:— A that tract ece or parcel of Jand situ- ate, lying and’ be ng on Township Number Sixt in King’s ¢ ounty bounded wad deserit as follows, that is to say ?—-COae ine — west side of the Commercial Road, th of a small tract granted OF William x Ma ir.in and wife to John Stymie ist; thence we wees y along the soutbern boundary of said tract for the distance af aie chains, or til ean a farm of Jonn ist; thence southwardly along the boundary line of said farm for a distance af twenty-eight chains and about forty jinks; thence eastwardly at right angles thereto the distance pe, or until it® thenee nerthwardly piace ol Cony OT niin chai the Comm reial Road: a Ong said road to the ment, containing twentv- five acres of tame litthe moreor tess and also all tha tract, piece and pareel of land situate, lyiow and 1 ng o1 ownship Number sixty iforesaid, bounded and describ.d a» Souowe snae, te Sn ane ‘~All that land over whien the vest bri inch of the Sturgeon Brook Sows tl arm of Johua St ynoieist, and 88 i djoining thereto on eae +h side of a neh of the S uezeon Brook a i ary to Overfiow in case of dam- mii upt he said Brook for miil or «ther pet poses res quiring water power, where the of satd Brook is now being r he rent eae ly lngnmed pon th imde (hea A. Mar i nel aise tl i as hie fer i bortwa x ‘ ‘ ‘oa ministrators and BASIL US Al any Lime or times hereafter to raise the water in the said B Brook which runs through the farm of John ee ist by stopping the same at the said W A. Martin’s present or any future mt whenever required tor purposes of running saw or other mill, or tor any purpose whale ever. The above sale is made pursuant to Le of sale contained in a certain In enter Mortgage beariag date the third — of April, A }) SSS, made between William Maru and Ann Martin, his wife, of the A em and the undersigned, James Clow, of tue other bp For further particu‘ars apply at the office of J. A. Matheson, Solicitor, Georgetown. Dated this first day of August, A D 1. JAMES ¢ 10w. Me 4i law (thurs) auge ———— WANTED.—An honest, active genilemes to travel, with expenses pid, ssi — Saiary $65 MONTE i Come DoMINtoyN Enclose reference.—THE PANY, 317 Omaha Building, Chicago. jJulyli—law (sat) u ae