——— aoa” ~ ace NN ete wanes See i Waller | & Oo, Lined, | E, HIGH CRADF AS and CHOCOLATES On this Continent, have received HIGHEST AWARDS from the great ustrial and Foed | EXPOSITIONS EUROPE AND AMERICA. gution: 2 La = t labels and wra ronsumers & t e sure 9 hoster. Mass. n each package CERS EVERYWHERE WALTER BA* LTD, DORCHESTER, MASS. Woow's PHOSP IODINE. The Great English Remedy. Siz Packages Guaranteed to promptly and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Sperm- Impotency and all or Excesses, il Worry, eXcessive use sa »f Tobacco, Opiumor Stimwe Beforeand After. >. oni, CJ UTC GME AAS * tants, which soon lead to In firmity, Insanity n and an early grave. Has been pres ed over 35 years in thousands of cases; is the only Feliadle and Honest M Gack known. Ask druggistfor Wood's Phosphodine; if hax e worthless medicine in place of this, ffers son inclose price in letter, and we will ser ad by retura | mail. Price, one packag®, ¢1; six, $5, One will pleas., siz wil] cure. Pamphlets free to any & idress, The Wo Company, at.. Canada, Sold in Charlottetown by Geo EK Hughes Druggis Orders are promptly filled. DONT DESPAR, WILL é guarant¢ case l“ropsy n S tealcrs in mecicine, or Dy ma on rece,pt of price, § per box, or Six boxes $2.50, DA. L. 4. SMITH & CO., Toronto. we'can sell you Dodd's Kidney Pills at he following prices, viz.:—50c. per box six boxes for $2.50. Tothe trade—$4.00 ur dozen, or three dozen at $3.75 per dozen. Sent by mail to any address pos‘ aid GEORGE E. HUGHES, may 29 Charlottetown. A Pointer for Agents ! he subscriber has fitted up tenZof the finest SAMPLE ROOMS Brick ; } ibstantial in the Province structure, In tiict Corner of Queen & Sydney &ts. These rooms are all large and well lighted. They ave heated by hot water, lighted by electricity, connected by t2le phone, and are fitted with sanitary at rangements. Elevator and office in con nection. P. P. GILLIS. Charlottetown, Ang. 6, 1825—3m HIGKEY & NICHOLSON Tobacco Manufacturers, NO. 1 QUEEN STREET. , ae 5 - Try their New Brands of BRIGHT CHEWING and BRIGHT SMOKING 8's to the pound. ALSO Their Old Reliable Brands of BLA'UA CHEWING and BRIGHT SMOKING TWIST. Prices Lower Than imported Tobaccos, Ch’town, April 1, 195—6m135wy G & ' egg STIPATION. LIOUSNESS, “~DYSPEPSIA,O pick HEADAGHE, REGULATE. THE LIVER! ONE PILL AFTER EATING INSURE? GOOD CIGESTION. [PRIGE 25 CTS. Tae ODDS MER ca cro, ——_—___ CHARLOTTETOWN BUSINESS — COLLEGE. Established 1873. Intending Students should enter at once if po-sible. ; Remember, can be accommodated. Lecture Course begins on the 16th inet. Termes, course of study, etc., furnished on applicatio 1 to only 70 students L. B. MILLER, Principal. Charlottetcwn, Sept. 5, 1895—d&w » Sep PUTTNER'S RMULSION WILL RESTORE Pale, Weak and Kmaciated 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 keep it. Price 50 ser out ep rice 5 aa cinanrenenrscmncariesieasiiiiill THE DAILY EXAMINER . ea (Continued fromfl irst Page.) Gregor from the office of sheriff, and appoint his late deputy in his stead, He also caused the name of John Stewart, of Mount Stewart, to be struck from the panel of the Grand Jury at the Hilary term of the Supreme ¢ yurt in February of that year, for the part he took in the proceedings. The meetings appointed by the sheriff | were duly held. The first was at Char lottetown on the 6th of March; the attendance was good and the proceed- ings orderly. A number of resolutions were passed and embodied in an address containing grave charges governor, but few of are herein specified. The ad- concluded with a humble ex- mn of trust on the part of the petitioners that llis Majesty, on a full , king the to the against which dress ressi i review thereof would be satistied that a further continuance of Lieut. Governor Smith in command of the Island must be distressing to rts inhabitants, Kc., Xe. The petition was entrusted to Mr. Ste wart. The Governor was enraged, he tried to get hold of Stewart to prevent his going to England, and for this pur pose sent officers of the law to arrest hia, Stewart got notice of the Gover nor’s intentions, but two hours before the officers arrived at his house, and in this brief interval he made his prepara tions, escaped to Nova Scotia with the skin of his teeth, and proceede { thence | to England with the petition. subse queat proceedings of the it is not necessary to tire the | His rule was cut short. Capt | mission to London was entirely success nudience, Stewarts ful, for on Thursday 2Ist October, 1824, | | His Ex-Col. John Ready, accompanied | by him, arrived in a brig. from Bristol, jafter a passage 23 days. I quote jfrom ( History, page 69. On landing the new Governor was received of ‘ampeli’s satisfaction by the crowd who thronged | the wharf on that He was received by a guard of the Sist. Reg't. then stationed in town, and the auspicious Occ ‘sion, best talent there was secured to pre- pare an address of welcome. The ov odd = years that intervened be tween Governors s’atterson and Ready's administrations may be characterized as the dark ages of Island history, although considerable progress had been made io clearing the land and some schools and churches had been established. ‘The agriculture of the settlers, beyond the limits of the town and Royaity of Char- lottetown, was in the rudest state; im- plements of labor were of the most pri- mitive construction, and the condition of the people in regard to food and clothing was, for the most part, destitute of comfort. Ship-building was carried on to a considerable extent at the out- ports, and the exports, besides some emall cargoes of native produce and live stock sent to the mainland, consisted chiefly of ships, pine, timber, and deals. The imports always included a generous other articles of British manufacture. The roads from one settlement to another were mere bridle tracks throngh the woods, and the bridges that spanned even the largest brooks were construct- ed on the corduroy principle. Where a school was establisbed, the master boarded around among the set- tlers. The school-house was a log hut, frequently warmed in winter by a fire of logs built in the chimney at one end. The seats were rough slabs from the nearest saw pit, with auger holes bored throvgh the ends and stakes inserted to the floor. The course of instruction seldom extended beyond the three R’s, and books, paper, slates and pen- cils were hard to procure. It was long before the era of steel pens, and it was part of the master’s daily task to point the nebs of the “grey goose quills’ aud adapt them to the various stages in writing to which the pupils had attained, from straight lines, pot looks and hangers, to half text and swall hand. The tailor and shoemaker went round like the school:naster and fashionea the shoes and garments cf the household. There were few books and no newspapers in the colony, and all the public documents had to be written and engrossed word for word, a'd letter by letter with the qui. ‘There were no threshing mills, tut here and there a plough with a wooden mouldboard which the owner frequently lent toa neighbor who had none. The farmer who had a cart with a wooden axle was considered well advanced. assert that cf light wheeled carriages not more than two or three gigs were to found in all King’s County at the time under review. Some saddles were imported from England and when busi- ness or professional men had occasiou to go a distance from home they rode on horseback. he Wild vague theories were promulgated among the settlers by a class of men named escheators. They went about atelection times and might be heard haranguing the people from stumps, barrei heads and hustings about free land, the forfeiture of the original grants, the fishery reserves, the tyranny of landlords and the delays of settle- ment. They counselled the non-pay- ment of rent, diverted the minds of the settlers from their lawful industrial pur- suits,and did untold mischief in various ways. Hugh Brodie,a schoolmarter at Lower Montague, who came to the }s- land from Nova Scotia, drank hard and committed suicide by hanging himself to one of the branches ot a beech tree on the schoo grounds, had a turn for poetrv. He favored the popular ery for Escheat and wrote a piece in dialogue verses, in which he assumed the doctrine of transmigra ion to be true and repre- sented the souls of the non resident proprietors and their agents here as be- ing condemed after their death to an’ mate the bodies of the bears, the foxes and owls of the forest till the tinal jucigment, as a punishment for their de lay in settling the wilderness lands of the Island. The immigrant mothers of the Colony brought their spinning wheels and check reels from the old country, whereon they spun their flax and woollen yarn by the light of a blazing pine torch or smoky fish oil lamp,before the blazing fice that roar- ed up the throat of the cat and clay ciuim- ney, while the men were employed with ‘brog and hammer’ in mending the shoes -cott’s a illa S A BLOOD PURIFIER and spring medicine A it surpasses ail other compousds. It isa new medicine and contains newly discovered ingredients unknown to any other preparation iT ACTS WITH ENERGY ON THE LIVER, KIDNEYS AND PORES OF THE SKIN expelling, by means of these organs, disease germs of scrofulous, inherited, or contagious humours which float in the blood, perspira- tion and urine. THE NEW MEDICINE Its most pronounced feature is its remarkable efficacy in eradicating poison and impurities from the blood, and building up the worn and debilitated parts of the system. Thus, in stubborn cases of scrofula and other dis- eases depending upon impure blood, quick results are obtained from its purifying and tissuc-building properties. “THE KIND THAT CURES.” SCOTT'S SKIN SOAP Beautifies the - <i « With the | (rovernor } with every demonstration of loyalty and | allowance ot rum, brandy, Geneva spitits, wine, molasses, salt and ship findings—-together with sundry raise them to a convenient height from | It is safe to | ; . | of the family or making birch brooms or There were no kerosene dark period of Island | axe handles. lamps in this history. rhe churn and its dasher,the sieve and | the ridd'e, were manufactured by the roving Indian who, although generally | harmless was somestimes a source of | uneasiness to the early settler. The grain after threshing by the flail was separated from the chaft by the free wind of heaven as it rushed from side to side of the barn through its op posite opened door». The whole Island at that tine was |under the jurisdic’ion of the Chief | Justice of Nova Scotia, who came over to | Ch’town in term time to attend sittings lof the local court. Jurors were sul limoned from all parts, and a single | Sheriff executed the decrees. No Catho- | lic could vote at an election, hold any i civil office, or sit asa member of the Legislature without subscribing to an oath which his church and clergy alike condenined. Matters were in this condition at the close of Gov. Smith’s turbulent admin- istration, The Island was fast drifting jinto anarchy and open disregard ol auctbority. and iequlre d &® pra lent hind at the helm of affairs to check the tndeney to revolt that was everywhere becou ing more and {mere apparent. This she happi'y found in the person of the new gover- nor, who, while he placed himself in touch wth the common industrial pur- suits of the people, ruled the execulive adininistration with afirm hand. He was not long at his post till he suaimon- ed anew tiouse which met early in 1825, with John Stewirt as speaker and Chas Worrel as president of the council. ‘hey passed several! acts in the interest of the colony, and in October of the same year another session was held. Toward the close of the year the gover- | nor went to England on private busi- | ness, and while there he purchased the | horse Roncesvalles and the mare Rou- | lette, bot therough-bred and of the | best biood in Eng'and at very great ex- | pense to himself, in order to improve | the breed of horses on the Isiand. These | were safely landed at Ch’town, !n May, | 1826; he also imported ata later date in the same year the following stock: -- | A Normandy bull and cow of su- | perior breed, 2 years old; a Teeswater cow without horns; a Southdown ram of the old breed; | do. of new breed crossed with Leicester to improve the wool; a Leicester ram, several ewes of the SouthJowa breed and a Berkshire sow. A Suffolk bull calf was unforta- nately strangled and two Berkshire pigs diowned on the passage. ‘These were all purchased at the Governors ex- pense. This stock arrived in the ship Mary, which brought the Governor out from England in December, after a tedious passage from the Downs of 68 days, and |} an absence from the Island of one year, | about the same hour of the sume day, of on which he sailed } ;} the same month, from hence. | In February 1827, several gentlemen | met at the Wellington Hotel for the purpose of forming en Agricultural So- cie ty. When, having chosen William Johnston, | Esq, for the Chairman, they proceeded | to pass Resolutions embracing that ob- | ject. The design of the Society will be | coll-cted from the second Resolution | which is as tollows:—“Tnat the object | of this Society shall be, to ditfuse and } extend the knowledge and promote the | practice of the best and most approved |}modes of Agriculture. To encourage | the breed of horses, cattle, sheep, an: | swine, by importation of new stock, and ' by judicious crossing of the old. To promvoie the makingand the use of the most improved implements of husbaud- try. Jo encourage both the growth and importation of seed grain, of ail sorts of grass seed, and the seed of roots. To encourage the clearance of the forest land, and to promote a bet- ter mode of cultivating it than now prevails, to encourage the growth of wool and the carding and spinning it, and the fulling, dyeing,and dressing the cloth.” The Society is to be governe+ by a President, Vice President, Treasurer, Secretary and aco umittee of five mem- bere; a Patron is to be ¢-o-en. A char ter of incorporation will be applied for, and a grant of money to aid the objects of the Society. The meeting broke up after agreeing to meet again on Tuesday the 2Uth of March to elect officers. On the 2¢th March following, the Gov- | ernor, in his opening speech to the As-em- | bly, said: “ Being strongly imy res: ed with | the awivartage the Colony would derive from the establishment of an Agricultural] Society, I feel desirous of reeommending itto your consideration.” He also re- f-rred to the benefits that would accrue from the establishment of an inland post, and to the fitness of some encouragement for the commencement of Georgetown and Princetown. During the session a violent quarrel broke out between the Council and Assembly in regard to the appropria- tien of supphes. The Assembly claimed the sole right to originate bills of aid and supply to His Majesty, and to direct, limit and oppoint in such bills the ends and purposes of such grants. The Council claimed an equal right of deliberating | Separately on every measure for which provision waa to be made, and that the several sums and services contained in al! money bills should be submitted for their approval ara receive their asscnt before they became law. The Council took ite stand on the instructions issued by the Crown in 1756 to Lord .Campbell, who was then Governor of Nova Scotia, for his direction in conducting the affairs of that province, and also on the royal instruc- tions addressed to Governor Patterson, dated 4th August, 1769, directing him to pay due attention to what had been found practicable and convenient in forming the Constitutions of Nova Scotia and Georgia, lately established. These royal) instructions to the Govern- or of Nova Scotia expressly denied the Assembly the sole right of framing money bills, and refusing to Jet the Council alter or amend them, and declared that the Council should have the like power of framing those bills as the As- sembly. The Assembly, on the other hand, argued that from the commence- ment of the Legislature in 1773, it had adopted and followed the prac ice of tle British Parliament as its model, ana as- serted that it found no such article in the FOR SALE. House in Georgetown. That Dwelling House in Geergetowr the property of Mrs. Capt. John McDon- ald, formerly known as the “ McDonald House,” together with the outbuildings. This House is in first-class repair, con- tains fourteen large rooms, and is well adapted for a Dwelling or Boarding House Any party or parties desirous of secur ing a summer residence will find this capita] opportunity. This property will be sold at a bargain For terms and particulars apply at the office of J. A. Matheson, Solicitor, George town, or to L. W. MACDONALD, Box 694, Charlottetown. Farm For Sale. At Inkerman, Lot 29, 100 acres of Jan’, 60 acres in a good state of culfivation, the balance covered with hard and soft wood ; well watered, and comfortable buildings convenien, to churches, For further par ticalars apply to JOHN McLEOD, jyld—wy Inkerman. aps : after. seat Snag fNRNIe cannepecnctnantnntepenasncenacentiliyi Royal instructions either to Gen, Pater- son or Lord William Campbell, to whom he was referred for examples and preced- ents, as the one al'uled to by the Council. This was the most serious and bitter quar- re! that ever disturbed the harmony exist- ing between the two branches of the Leg- islature. Dr. Angus MeAulay, who repre- sented the Selkirk settlers from Beltast, made himself conspicuous in this memor- able debate. He maintained that as a con- quered province we had no constitution but the Royal instructions, and if we acted contrary to the mode practised in Nova Scotia and Georgia, we would be acting unconstituitonally, and charged the Attor- ney-General, who took the other side, with intentionally deceiving him and the House in a speech delivered in a former debate,—charging him also with having uced indecorous language re-pecting an- other branch of the Legisla:ure. The At- torney-General then moved the standing order of the day, that strangers be exclud- ed, and demanded an apology from the son of Asculapius. The Doctor was a High- lander; his blood was up. He jent a deaf car to the admon ton of the Speaker, and re fu-ed flatly to ap logize to the lanb of the law. His language on the occision was tfot considered parliam-ntary by his col- leagues in the House, ani th: honorable gentleman, on the warrant of the Speaker. was taken into the custoly of the Ser geant-at-arms. ‘To prevent adealtiock, an accommodation was arrived at, under which both parties yielded a portion of their claims, Three revenue — bill: were rejected by the cor neil which crippled the fimances off the year. They also rejected a b:ll providing for the expense of taking a census of the population, tor en couraging the Agricultural Society by a grant of £250, for the appropriation ot £60 for the opening of an important new road, and an appropriation of 10s per diem to the members of the House for their attendance during the session. Although the grant in aid of the society was frustrated for the time being the men who had the movement in charge were not to be dissuaded from their purpose. A meeting was held at the Court House on the 26th of June, where rules and regula- tions for the government of the society were submitted and approved, and a list for membership opened on which 45 of the principal inhabitants of Charlottetown and its vicinity subscribed their names. In this list app ars the name of Rev. John McLennan, then Presbyterian Minister at Belfast, the late Sir Robert Hodgson, Thomas Heath Hiaviland, father of the late lamented Hon. T.H. Haviland who so long and ably represented this town, Hon. Joseph Pope, who died at Cn’town a few weeks ago atthe advanced age of 93 years. He was the last surving link in the chain of membership. The society was to embrace in its object the whole Island, and district societies were to be formed in comnection therewith, An ad- mission fee of ten shillings was requested trom each member on signing the roll,and an annual payment of 10 shillings there- A subscription list was opened un- der the auspices of the Society to pro- vide for the payment of premiums —to be awarded at an Ex- hibition of cattle, sheep, pg? and grain to be held at Charlottetown in the fall. On the 3uth Sept., 1827, this Exhi bition took place at Charlottetown. It was a very successful affair, all the most noted breeders in the Town, Royalty and surrounding settlements on both sides of the Hillsborough and West Rivers were in the lists as competitors. In sheep the com- petition was very keen and some fine ~pecimens in Leicester, South Down Cheviot ani Dartmouth were on the grounds. His Excellency the Attorney General and Mr. Braddock, Mr. Wright and Col. Stewart shared the bonors in this class, and although import-d stock was allowed to compete with those bred on the Island, the Islan’ breeders from im- ported stock were adjudged the prizes in competition with the imported. In_ pigs Messrs. Hvde and Cole carried off the honors. Mr. Hyde’s weighed cg cwt; Mr. Cole’s, 17 months old,¢¥arly 5 cwt. There was a large show of other cattle —Devons, Alderneys and Glamorgans, whose merits wou'd scarcely interest any dairyman present to disclose. They are duly recorded in the chronicles of the Register new-paper, published at Char- lottetown six days after the show, by the late James Douglas Haszard. In the same chronicle is recorded the fact of a substan- tial farmers’ dinner at the Wellington,with Mr. Wright, the President of the society, and Mr. Haviland, Vice, in the chair—the Governor and the Chief Justice fron Nova Scotia were there, and efter the cloth was removed the King. the Duke of Clarence and the royal family were toasted from the chair; then came the Army and Navy His Excellency the Lieutenant-Governor, patron of the society, “many thanks to him for his handsome donation of a fine Alderney bull.” After the applause which fullowed this t ast, His Excellency rose, and having returned thanks said among otner things: He was perfectly covinerd the Island must mainly depend on its Agricultural resoar- ces and therefore it became a matter of in- terest to us all to promote its encourage- ment to the utmost of our power. The President had been pleased to thank him for his donation of an Alierney Bull, If the animal should improve the breed of ntl the country he would feel amply repsid, In what he had done hitherto in his im- stock and grain be had follow- ideas on the subject, but on all future occasions of the kind he would take the Society for his conusel. — He then proposed as a@ toast, the Presi- dent, and prosperity to the Society, the Chiet Justice, and the Governors of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. This brought the Chief Justice to his feet, who, at the close of his remarks, proposed Mr. Hurde’s, the Governor’s Secretary, “man.” thanks for his noble North Devon Bully’ Upon the Attorney General’s health being drunk, he gave the old English agricul- tural toast of “ Horn, corn, wool and yarn,” " After several other toasts and speeches had been hovored, this hi-toric agricul- tural jollification was brought toa close. The Society, however, had received ap impetus that sent its name and fame obroad through all the settlements. Dis- trict societies sprang up in other parts of the Island. The Government was shamed into a recognition of its claims and u-eful- ness, and funds «ere placed at its disposa) to help to carry out the laudable pur- poses for which it was instituted, It was far reaching and long continued iu its beneticient operations. It encouraged improved stock by annual fairs and exhi- bitions; imported seed and agricultural implements and continued active as an agency in the progressive development of Island agricn)ture down to a period within the memory of many of the farmers who attend our modern exhibitions. Among the many important measures that occu pied the attention of the people and Legis- lature during this Governor’s term there are four that stand conspicuous above the rest. They are: The Agricultural Society. Establishment of lyland posts. The Charlottetown Academy. Removal of the Catholic Disabilities, the latter in session of 1830. portation of ed his own Governor Ready’s term, from 1824 to 1832, was the interval that inter- vened between the preceding hazy, nebulons, and sometimes turbulent, period of Island history and a new era wherein greater light, more compact order, agri- cultural development and social progress were the predominating features. There was also at this period a si'ent agency at work that ran conterminous with, and very materially contributed to advance the legislature of the time and to awaken and reform the hitherto dor- mant intellect of the settlements. I allude 10 the publication of the Register, which was started by James Douglas Haszard, at Charlottetown, on Saturday morning, the 26th of July, 1823, the last year of Governor Smith’s administration. This little paper was very ably and dis- creetly condneted by Mr. Haszard, who was King’s Printer for manv years, Mr. Haszard bad the instinct of a true jour- nalist, and adapted the reading matter to be found in his pages to the capacities and needs of his readers both in town and country. The service he rendered the Island during his lifetime as the steady friend of its infant agriculi:ure and every other movement undertaken for its social advancement, is deserving of the highest praise. He was the light bringer of a new era, and the father of P. E. Island jour- nalism, as Governor Ready was the Cin- cinnatus and foster fsther of its legislation. The true fathers and mothers of the colony, however, were the pioneers who left their cherished homes in the old country and crossed the stormy ocean in the steerages of the slow sailing emigrant ships to a new dependency under the British flag, at that time but little known beyond the boundary of its own shores. These were the men at whose behest with undaunted courage in their breasts and fire and steel in their brawny hands the timid forest was compelled to beat a retreat from the sandy shore, and these were the women who through summer’s heat and winters cold cheered them on and lightened their labors by ministering to their comfort, and often sharing their toile. Thev it was who changed the briery hill slopes into smiling corn fields; who planted the apple seeds in the shadow of the maple leaves, and who transformed the reeking, stagnant swamp into a level pasture, where the factory patron finds the most nutritious herbage for his dairy herd. THE MANITOBA HARVEST, The Farmers of the Northwest Wi)} Have Vileaty of Money to Spend. Wiyyivea, (Special) Oct. 7.—The pros- pects of a good year for the Manitoba farmeré are now assured, thanks to the abundant harvert. One of the cauces for the sickness prevalent last year will now be obviated, as the farmers will have more money to spare for the purchase of the ne- cessities of health. Que of the straws which shows which way the wind is blow- ing is the fact that druggists’ are ordering the well-known remedy, Dodd’s Kidney Pills, in unusually large quantities. The inhabitants of the province are well aware of the value of the medicine, and only the financial stringency has prevented its uni- versal use. Plow Repairs.--We keep a full line of r pairs for all Plows common to the Is land. All of the above implements sold low for cash or short time.—D. W. Fin layson, Le Pages Old Stand. ee Charlottetown, October 1, 1895—246 FOK GIVING STYLE and SHAPE Ta Ladies’ Dresses. For sale by leading quills readil Skirt witho % COR SSeS WARD FLOUR If you have not yet used it ask for it and take no other. ALL RELIABLE GROCERS KFEP I?. FEATHERBONE SKIRT BONE A light, pliable, elastic bone made from . It is soft and yielding, conforming y to folds, yet giving proper shape to or Dress, The only Skirt Bone that may Le wet nt injury. he ¢elebrated FEATHFRBONE SETS are corded with this material. Dry Goods Dealers, Butter, Cb Potatoes, and (21 BARRINGTON STREET,- - * Ship Your Produce sxh a: eese, Poultry, Apples. Pork, Beans, Peas, Gats, all Country Produce —_—TO— SEETON & HUTCHESON, RECEIVERS axp EXPORTERS, HALIFAX, WN. s,, eee —_ ——— a We will pay highes Cash Prices or sell on commission to best advantage. ks-SEND FOR OUR PRICE LIST.<2@ The Publie Often Im- posed On. Proprietary Medicines and Pills that are Utterly Worthless. When You Ask for Pains’s C-lery Jompound do not Allow Your Dealer ta Recommend Something Else. Yee, there is a vast amount of double deception practised in the country. The double deception practised on a too-confil- ing people just means the making of worthless liquid n edicines and pills, and pu ting them into the stores of dealers who often recommend them, when Paine’s Celery Compound is asked for, because they pay larger and handsomer profits. This work of falsely recommending and substituting is fraught with many evils. It encourages deception aud falsehood ; it brings the public to the position of slaves to the will uf the grasping dealer; it tends to prolong sufferings and agories when the sick are furced to buy what they do not a-k for; and lastly, the vile work of sub- stituting assists the spread and circulation of preparations that shou'd be prohibited by law, This work of recommending poor an: trashy medicines when Pa:ue’s Celery Compound is asked for is meeting with its just reward in many places. The substi- tuting and deceptive dealers are being shunned, and the money for Paine’s Cel- ery Compound goes into the hands of up- right tnd hone-t biziness men, contented with moderate profi's, and who are anxious to gise men, women and children just what they ask for. The great desire of tick and diseased people is a new life, which means health, strength and bolily vigor. This condition is surely and speedily realized when Paine’s Celery Compound is used. This fact is proved every day by the number of te-timonials received from cured people. The clergy, medical men, bankers, mer- chants and the everyday people testify in favor of Paine’s Celery Compound ; such letters cannot be shown Ly the proprietors of the medicines you are askeito avoid. litical An explosion occurred in a mine at the Village of Tyldesley, near Manche-ter, last weck, by which five persons were killed. Science Triumphant at Last. Miller’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is the outcome of the latest scientific re- searches. There was always a pr judice against taking Cod Liver Vil on account 0 its disagreeable taste, bat Miller’s Eauul- sion is agreeable to the palate, and that is one reason why it las become so popular with the medical fraternity, the hospi of the country and the households wher- ever consumption or lung troubles pre- vail. Muller’s Emulsion is the great nerve strengthener and biood uaker, and cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis. Serofata and a}] Lung affections. In Big Bottles, 50c. and $1, at all Drug Stores. Two of the accused in the arson cases at Montreal have made a confession, im plicating, it is said, a number of retail merchants, and revealing a conspivacy which has existed in Montreal and many country towns for the last fifteen years. A Caution! A Warning! Tf, on blowing the nose in the morning, lumps and flakes are discharged colored with blood, especially on one sile, lose no time in applying a remedy. Cutarrh of the very woret kind has become seated, the walls are sore an I full of email ulcers, and if not soon cured will be hard to cure and eradicate. “A stitch in time saves nine.” Use Chase’s Catarrl Cure. Cornwall, Ont., was visited last week by acentenarian named Bisovette, who liver at Mille Roches, He is 106 years eld, and his wife ix only a few years younger. He is very feeble, Orilla’s Prominent Furniure Dealer Gises Facts, Oritxia, Feb. 10th, 1291. Epwansox, Bares & Co. Gentlemen,—A bont three or four weeks ago I had an attac’s of It bing Piles, tried two or three d tf-rent remedies re- commended by druggists as the “best and only cure,” ete., but get no relief. About the time [ was beginning to despair cf tind- ing any relief, “with some slight misgiv— ings I bought a box of your pile cure, which I am pleased to say gave me almost in-tant relief and permanent cure. I con- sider your Dr. Clhase’s O'ntment a God- | send. ALF. J. DEAN. | } The Japanese official cholera report for the weck ending Sept. 14 s},ows that there were 620 new cases in the Empire and 425 deaths. The total number of cases re- ported since the plague started is 42,053, and the uumbercf deaths 28,088, HANDSOME FEATURES, Sometimes pwisightly blotches, pimples | liveness of cr rallow op: que skin, destroys the attrac- handsome features. In all such caees Sgotvs Emulsion will build up the system, and impart freshness and beauty. —- ee George L. Harwell and a girl named Batts were slaves together on a Virginia ‘ plantation thirty-five vears ago. They were engaged to be married when the war came, the plantation family was broken up, and the two were separated, neither know!ng where the other went. They never heard of each other until a few months ago, when they met by chance in Ashland, Va, A week ago they were married there, _—-e- Two Negiects and the Resujt. Neglect cold in the head and yon wi!] surely have catarrs. Neglect nasal cat- arrh and you will as surely induce pul- monary diseases or catarrh of the stomach with its disgusting ettendante, foul breath, hawking, spitting, blowing, &c. §S op it all by using Dr. Uhase’s Catarrh Cure, 25 cents a box cures, For Over Fifty Years, Ax Ovp Ann Wet Trip Rewepy. Mre, Winsloe’s Soothing Svrup has beed used for over fifty vears by millions of mothers for their children while teeth- nig, with perfect snccess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, uves the colic, and 1s the best remedy for iarrheea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold ‘Druggists iu every part of the world, wenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incaleulable. Be sure and ask for Mrs, - | Winalo2’s Soothing Syrup, and take no | | other kini—n, w. f, wkly—l y ———— ee ee = EAA SS SOE’ WN e ad ‘ a , " r ; pb: 4 dome 3 SSE ESSE MESS WU NS SSS sss SSS for Infants and Children. OTHERS, Do_ You Know tas: Parson, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and “2 most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine? Do You Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons t ee Lae Do You Know tit in most countries druggists are not permitted te sell narcoties without labeling them poisons ? Do You Know that you should not permit any medicine to be civer your child unless yor 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 Dr. Samuel Pitcher, That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than of all cther remedies for children combined ? Do You Knew that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the worg “Castoria” and its formule, 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 Yon Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35 cents, 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 rests Well, these things are worth knowing. They are facta. The faccsimile signature of LISTEN ! —_—- Oe Or OO Our sales of AMERICAN RANGES for September, 1895, were $ to I as against same month last year. October opens out with % sold the first day, and _ bids fair to break the record, Everyone satisfied Price $20 and upwards. A fail line of Heating Stoves. FENNELL& CHANDLER Charlottetown, October 3, 1895—dy & wy wo La Fayette} — CIGARS and CIGARETTES Are for sale in every store in the city. Give them a trial and convince yourself that you are smoking the finest. Manufactured by J. M. FORTIER, Montreal. sept24—dy & wky tf = ¥) Cures That , Tired Feeling ! ¥ § A good WOVEN WIRE MAT- TRESS. It is sure to give you a wen ee el Be, kf good night’s rest. We have them § all grades. Ask to see the | “ QUKEN ”—positively the bert Wire Mattress sold in Charlotte- : JOHN NEWSON. ef Newson Block, Victoria Row, % | Charlottetown, October 2, 1895, Sion aeoceoree Svea wea seed! Eee Now landing fresh from the Mills; Ground Oil Cake, Blatchford’ CalfMeal, Bran and Shorts, Selling at owest prices, AULD BROS. CLarloitctown, May 7, 1896—246 & wky 3m CAIRNS BROTHERS Successors to Cairns & McLean, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. EF. I. Monuments, Tableis and Headstones In Blue, White and Brandon Italian Marble and Freestone. We are the only dealers on P, B. Isiae SCOTCH GRANITE. keeping Scotch Granite on band. Low prizes for 30 days to reduce our extra large stock,