Ore % ’ A400 six Wanitti« a Taree . tw eu . Cail eporn us M4 i vend by tine © wspaper & we TS RE ABR FOR OCTOBER, isa; 6th day, 6h. 4.®m. a. New Moon, day, 10h. 34.9m. a. m Last quarter, 29th av, ith be be W . , Sun | High j bee water | ' { aft i Tharsday {}5 35] 5 43 § | Friday i 41. 4s $ | Satuccay | vi 31 | 8 7 e . Ply. Sh ee ee gf i 25/ 18 22 7) Weds ay 2 ” 8 a+¥ at | il 9 | Friday , a8 19 | morn {3} Saiuraay . eho 0 23 * ou av | 17 | it J §2) Monday we ts} 2 Yo] Bb 7 ues lay | at 12 » ii 4) Wednesday 21 | 10 4 23 3} Thureday 23 8 5 42 oor) a; a 7 6 32 17 | Saturday | 26 | 5} ~ a9 18; Su Pm.) oa ¢ | Monda | 28 li 9 wn | Tues lay | rT 0 9 40 Qi | Weloesday L;4 10 13 9) | Thursday | i , 10 44 23 | Prive, | 344 5a] 11 17] 94 | Satarcdey i sf lt 48] 95 | Sunday 37] Sljaft 30 $5 | Monday ) 38) 50 | .. £2 $7 Tuerday ee i8 l 56 a Wel j 4 t6 | 2 Ai | hv urslay $5 i5 | 3 49 } 20 | Friday +i 45 | S & $1 | Saturday | 6 46 | $41); 6 20 ee- — ~ —_ — s PE. Island Railway Opand after FRIDAY, 3rd July, 1586, Qe trains of this Railway will rum daily @undays excerpted) as foliows .— i ‘ | r Trains Out-| Irains ln ward. Kead STATIONS. ward. Read down. Up. Pp’ A. M + MiP. M. $3) 6 30 . Charlottetown . 9 15/12 10 $& 6 44 .. Royalty Junction.’ 9 01/11 48 44 7 18 ..North Wiltshire S 28/10 58 458 7 2S .. Hunter River s 18}10 43 S34 7 & M410 OF § 44 7 SS... Emer 7 bs} 9 57 65D 8 OS ..Fr wD. | (anv 62) 8§2..K ston 7 2319 2 G So!) S 45 Ar. \ 7 7 ao ; 7 3 (x v i \ 6 S$ 16] 7a M 121 7 36! Ri ' 16; 7 ; 83 7 9 2 - rr _——- _—~ Trains are run by Eastern Standard Time A McDONALD, D. POTTINGER, Superintendent, Gen Mgr Go oo Charlottetown. oncton, N B. Railway Office, June30 . 1896. TIME TABLE FOR FERRY SETAMERS The steamer Southport will ply on the Ba+t and West Rivera until further notice | follows — EAST RIVER. W || leave Prince Street Wharf on every Monday for East River at 3 o'clock, p. m. retarning Tuesday for Charlottetown, leaving Hayden's Wharf at 7.30 a. m, gajling at Haggarty’s avd Hickey’s| Wharves; leaving Charlotietown for East River at 3 p.m., and making return trip. The steamer will also leave Prince Street Wharf for East River on Saturday at 5, &.m.. leaving Hayden’s Wharf tor Cuar lottetown at 7.30 a. ro., calling at Haggar ty’sand Hickey’s Wharves—making re turn trip at 3 p. m. from Prince Street. The steamer wii! run to Mount Stewar every alternate week as the tides may sui WEST RIVER. Will leave Charlottetown for Weet River Bridge, TI at 4p.m., calling at Weetyi when Friday morn- ing leaving West River Bridge for Char- lotietown at 7.30,. calling at Westville making retura trip from Charlottetown to West River Bridge at 4 o'clock, p. m. ROCKY POINT. The steamer Elfin will leave Prince St. Wharf daily (Sundays excepted), as fol lowe :—At 6.30 a m., 8.00 a m., 9.30 8. m., lla. m., dp. m,4 p. m., and 6.00 pm. Will leave Rocky Point as follows :—At 700 8. m., 5.dV &. Me, 10.00 a. m., 12.00 Bvon, 3.00 p m., 6.00 p. m., 7.00 p. m. Suodave—From Charlottetown at 9.00 &m., 12.45 p. m., 2.00 p.m. aud 4.00 p. m. From Rocky Point—-10.00 a. m., reday, req tired. 1.30 p. m., 3.00 p. m. and 5.30 p. m. SOUTHPORT FERRY. The steamer Hilisborough will ply on the So j y till further notice as follow. Sundays excepted, leaving Charlotte- two daily at 6.20 a. m., and every half hour uj; )p.m. Leaving Southport at 6.45 a. m.,. making half hour\v trips up 10.05 | n. Sunday tripe :—Boat leaves Charlottetown at 7 a. m., making half ipto 8 35 p.: Steamer laid off from 11.15 to 12 o’clock, noon, On Tuceday and Friday of each week the f time to accommodate Seamer w run « tren ' sf the travelling pu How sour Watch Keeping Time A Watch is a delicate piece of machinery, and to give se@tiefaction should not be kept going year after year without cleanining If yours needs attention. bring it at once to us and we will put it it im good ete Tramiens! Lae The ! Publis ug pany EB | i 4 ON Ee ORES eS Fy + not Oy sols .| Musical Siudie Front Miss Katie McLean, Graduate of the Hali- | [ fax Conservatory of Masic. and Pupil of Mr. Porter, the Celebrated Musician and Director \ / he Orpheus Ciub, will open a class for v o Instruction, ani tt Theory of Musie, ~ { 1¢ Parlor otthe Y, M. C, A. Rooms, on Monday,t he 28th inst, { se plsi— \ & (AN New Prices in Watches Silver Watches for Ladie’s Kot? “| Great George Street, 3erate Read, Room. fERMS : Four Dollars a Year VOL 86. Encouraged by the extensive patronage the music loving public of this province ng many years, Mr. S. N. Earle wil me his ir in Organ, Piano Culture and the i his Studio,on Monday ’ r structions Vocal, Music, V rheory of Music, j ane l4ih, inst. vice lntendiog pupils will Odie by leaving their names at Messrs : : : s M er 2 1c S ,; Orati the si ud ; oa ae ae where terms and full particulars may be Beginners will receive as thorough at s more advauced students. SAMUEL N. EARLE. Uy dW ky. > °.s% 85> OF In Weat Royalty, two and a half miles } rom the city, a farm containing 50 acres lear, and in a high state of cultivation ng on the shore. A rare chance anyone wanting to secure a farm near town. Apply to ARTHUR NEWMAN, City A i , & ALE. New Musical Studio, | | We have lately received a nice assortment of and Gentlemen, which were bought right, and caa- Call and inspect them. TANTON'S not fail to plea NEAR QUEEN SQUARE, CHARLOTTETOWN. Pe he i /\ Won for Wellington at Waterloo. ingly at it’ has won for us the largest clothing trade of any store on A. EK. Island. HE DAILY EXAMIN ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7 Our importation of Fall Clothing exceeds by far thing ever before imported for one season's needs. Ulsters are going to be largely worn thts fail, and our ) | aris stock of these is at once a terrible and a beautiful one. /\ Reefers and Overcoats Have also been imported in immense quantities, and beautiful qualities. You can see these goods without buying,but it is safe to buy here almost without seeing Try the Bargain Corner anyway, when next you want Readymade Clothing. cKay Woolen © THE BARGAIN CORNER. “Keeping everlast- ompany, ~~ ao & 9 LORD NELSON'S ROMANGE. Marvied to a Widow in India, but Separat- ed by Latcigues. The recent sale in London of some selics of Lord Nelson, the great sea cap tain, hero of the battle of the Nile, Tra and scores of cther avai Victories ialgatr has drawn attention to the fact that on of the most eventf<l episodes of his lif occurred in one of the obscure islands of the West Iniies. Ic 1782 Horatio Neéson, then bust 24 years old, was appointed to the com- mand of ons of his Majes*y*s ships, and sent to New York. The Commander-in- chief, Admiral Digby, corgratulated bim upon this appointment to a station where large sums of prize money were tc he obtained, but the young captain re- plied :— ‘*Yes, sir; but I prefer as the station of honor.”’ the West Indies He was, though unwittingiy, taken at his word, and sent to the West Indies, where he thx ne equainted with the best people of those hospitable islands Two years later, having made voyages and arguired the confidence ol his sovereign, Neison wa again appoint ed to the West Indies as commander oi the twenty-cight-gun frigate, the Boreas, sailiog from Spithead the of May tie carried with him the Rear A! Richard Hughes, family, and after charge of the severai any- 17 : 1G 4. miral of the fleet, Sir their 3 asauned SQUACrON AS8SCIne bled at Nevis. This island was then a prosperous sugar producing celony of Great Britain, and lies near the more famous island of St. Kites two islands the Boreas ally, with occasional tripra along the lesser Antilles, constantly on the watch against the aggressions of Britain's arch enemies, the French. It was during this West Indian voyage that he met and won the fair widow Nis bit, relict of a resident pbysician who had practiced in Nevis. They were mar- ried, as the register of Figtree Church aflirms, on the lith of March, 1787. The marriage ieg ster is still in evidence, thengh the leaves of the old book are tattered and worn, and can be seen by visitors to the Island of Nevis, The entry ig as follows:— “1787, March 11, Horatio Nelson, Esq., Captain of her Majesty’s ship, the Boreas, to Frances Herbert Nisbit, widow."’ That is all. The unknown recorder of this affair could not peer into the future and perceive that he was then in the presence of England’s greatest captain, for the young man had not then won his successive titles of Baron Nelson of the Nile, Duke of Bronte, ete. He was plain Horatio Nelson, Esq., but doubtless ccen- sidered a good catch by a West India widow of little means and witha family. Prince Willam Heavy, then captain of the later the sailor Hing of England—Willlam IV.—graced the oc- casion of the marriage with his presence, and gavs away the brie. hat Nelson was for a time attached to his wife and was kind to her son is shown by his future acts, for ten years Between the cruised continu Pegasus, f even tho” yor"re cut <li diag, whem von hive your dlotthing fnteniimed wah Fibre Chmammeits. Berause fit icc complete mow-comductor ef heat cmd. cold, andi preserves the natunal wannth of the bodjy, @ut. cxery breath of raw air and wind. What’smore,,thewaterproof Sves Rigby process makes ft fmpeme- turhle t» the driving disst a am all Coy"s rum. Prepare to ono thoxongh anw- fort cutdoors im <i wentier by seeing that this popular interGnimg is pat in all your cxiened cdoth- « ing, and only buy the ready-made garments winda Ihove: the Filaee 9 Chamois Label. It onfy custs 25 cents o yaad, and will provide a healthful warmth of which mothing cm nab you. PPS P@OADLEAIAOL TSS LPLOST LH LSLILOL LSE GLALR LE LOE aa > at o> cf is tion to look at our stock of Furniture. 2 We'll be really glad to have you look, = i Aha ¢ t sf] Jaf o> ttf focal o> af a | Apa pc a o> a >a go oa pm > ago hRaeaaxasea ee esses sh BEL AKA KAAL AD a £4 2 Because you'll see it. This is an invita- . ; ‘ bebause the looker of to-day is to-morrows buyer. JOHN NEWSON FURNITURE 7 ehh hhhhtibhhhbhhhhhhid vv RIPANS (N3 GIVES RELIEF. The St, Lawrence Sugar Refining Co.,Ltd Montreal EE EE ee Laboratory of Inlard Reveaue, “* Office of Official Analyst, Montreal, Apri! my aoe “T hereb tty that 1 have drawn, by my own hand, ten samples of the 5 ; LAW RENCE SUGAR REFINING Cos, EXTRA STANDARD GRANULATED SUGAR, indiseriminately taken from ten lots of about 150 barrelseach. I have analysed same, aad find them uniformly to contain: 99 ¥) to 100 per cent. of Pure Cane Sugar. unnivug order at a moderate charge G.H. TAYLOR, . , 4 ” with no impurities whatever. JOHN BAKER EDWARD3, Ph D., C. L. (Signed : — Prof. of Chemistery and Pub. Analyst, Montrea + A REAL CURE FOR KLEPTOMANIA. Ir. “FOUND AT LAST. — | Nertilion, the Famous French Savant, Finds a Genuine Remedy for the Dread- ful Disease of Theft. A cure for kleptomania has just been announced by Dr. Bertillon, the eminent French physician and scientist, who in- yented the system of measurements re- cently adopted at Sing Sing Prison. Dr. Bertillon, in the course of his ex- periments, has discovered that by hyp- . notic suggestion the incipient or chronic thief may be alienated from his tendency. The doctor holds that crime is a disease, to be treated scientifically and accord ng to its progress in the patient. Microbes of crime, he insists, may per- meate a man’s system in the same man- ner as those of consumption, malaria or erysipelas. His first experiment was upon a little girl five years of age, whose mania con- sisted in the stealing of spools of em- broidery silks from her mother. Correct- ed for her behavior, the child would in- - variably promise not to repeat the offence, yet in spite of frequent punish- ment she would take the spools at every opportunity. Curiously enough, her mania did not extend to the taking of other articles, such as would be appropriated by the ordinary kleptomaniac. Being a friend of the family, Dr. Bertillon became inter- ested in the unique case, and frequently | remonstrated with the child. He sug- gested to her mother the possible effect | of hypnotism. The mother consented,and | the child was subjected to theexperiment. | “‘Why do you take the silk spools?"’ asked the doctor when he had her under control. The child replied that she could not help doing so, although conscious that she was doing wrong. When the child's arms had become rigid through hypnotism he placed sev- eral of the gayly colored spools on a table and commanded her to take them. The child made a futile effort to do so. “Now you may take them!”’ exclaimed the dector, and the child immediately | did so, ‘“‘Now you are to order in which you manded the doctor, This the little one did wecshanically. ‘‘And you are to re- member,’’ continued the doctor, “that whenever you feel that you must tale the spools you must return them, every one. So you will always return what you take in the future,”’ A few days following this experiment, when the spools were again missing, the cbild’s mother said nothing, awaiting results. The next day the spools were found in the work-basket, from which they had been taken. After this the mother had no further trouble with the child. Another interesting patient was a youth afflicted with nervous prostration, the result of excessive smoking. It was this youth's habit to smoke from fifteen to twenty cigars a day. Placed under hypnotic innflence, a cigar made of chopped hay and saturated with chemicals was given to him. The return them in the took them,’’ com- Highest of all in Leavening Powe oval ” fe later, 1.— Latest U.S. Gov’t Report tifter he had been created a Rear Adimra}, and when he thought his end was nigh, he wrote in a letter to Lord Vincent, his superior commander: “I have only to recommend Josiah Nisbit to you and my country.’’ It was when Nel- son had been Shot in the elbow, receiv- ing a wound that Jost to him his arm, and placed him in imminent danger of dying, that Lieut. Nisbit, his stepson, who was by his father’s side when he fell, placed him tenderly in the bottom Baking Powder OS sw ABSOLUTELY PURE kleptomania, Which almiction has been a source of much chagrin as well as ex- pense to their families. The one is a young girl of high social standing, who stole from the various shops articles for which she had no pos- | sible use, such as clothes wringers, a rolling pin and several flat irons. “Another case is that of a highly re- spectable woman who stole expensive mechanical toys, although she had no children upon whom to bestow her plun- der. Cases of kleptomania are much more numerous than generally supposed. In this city there are a score or more women of means who surreptitiously take from the large shops whatever seizes their fancy. : DISTURBED HER NAP. How a Scotch Minister Rudely Called Bis Wife to an Accounting, A minister named Pettigrew who, on asking why his flock were so reyard- jess of his exhortation to them to remain awake during the sermons, was - told that his own wife set the example, but as she sat below the pulpit she was out.of the minister's sight. On this it was arranged that on the following Sunday the informant should hold up his finger when Mrs. Pettigrew suc- / eumbed to Morpheus. In most of these instances nothing in — said about the matter, the articles taken : being charged on the bills of the delin- © quents, and invariably paid without pro- — test by the relatives, who thus avoid publicity. Now that Dr. Bertillon’s discovery has proven successful in the treatment of kleptomania, it is not improbable that these well bred offenders will be sub jected to a similar treatment at the hands of their respective’ family physi- cians.—N. Y. World. A Hundred Miles an Hour by Electric Car. An electrical engineer has been exhib- iting in London the model of his pro posed single rail electric line for speeds of 150. miles an hour. The rail is fixed on a Y-shaped trestle, and runs up into the body of the car, which as it were, runs astride on itt. The car runs on twelve bearing wheels and seats 135 pas- sengers, with space for their bagzage. One vf the difficulties met with in schemes for excessively high-speed travel is the tendency of the car to run off the track. By ruaning the rail within the car the lateral tendency of the train is overcome, But in this late scheme the great difficn!:y seems to be the passenger. ‘What would happen to the passenger while the train took a sharp curve while going at 150 miles an hour is not ex- t-te lf You — disagreeable flavor produced nausea, and disgust. “Cigars do not agree with you,’’ ex- claimed the doctor. ‘You will be made {il every time you smoke them in future.’’ Several nights later, at a dinner party, the subject was given a cigar. He lit it and began smoking. Presently he became deathly pale, and was seized with nau- sea, although his cigar was of the finest tobacco Following this incident, he was cured of the habit and in a few weeks restored to health. * A young girl suffering from a dys- peptic ailmevt was the next to undergo this treatment. Her habit was the in- cessant biting of her finger-nuils, & prac- tice productive of blood-polsoning. Ap- parently she had no control over this desire that had gradually induced a gen- eral debilitation of the nervous system. While under hypnotic tufiuence she was told that her nails had been steeped in alum, that it would irritate her mouth and cause it to water. Although nothing was placed upon her nails to produce this effect, the moment she began to bite them her mouth watered, her lips con- tracted and she exhibited all the symp- toms described. the young man threw aside the cigar in | CANT AFFORD to smoke 10¢c CIGARS and can enjoy a good one, take our ad- vice and try the celebrated VARSITY CIGAR ae | 106 Smoke for 5¢ eeee VARSITY... is for sale by all first-class Druggists and Cigar Dealers. \ The doctor has under treatment at Graduate Optician. North Side Queea Sjuere, Ch’towa. N RATTENBURY, AGENT oresent two wealthy women, victimes of . - QOVS6DSSVSSSS4SEHSTOVSG S. DAVIS & SONS ; | : ‘i The préacher bent forward and saw his consort enjoying a snug nap. With a tremendous blow on the pulpit he aroused her from her slumber, and as the lady, who, according to the legend, was destitute of both fortune and beauty, looked up, he addressed her in accents of wrath: “Sit ye up there, Jean Pettigrew! Ye are na bonnie; I gat nae tocher wi’ ye, and gin ye hae na heavenly grace about ye I hae got- ten an unca bad bargain o’ ye!”—Pitts- burg Dispatch. THE STRONGEST SENSE. In Old Age It Isthe Last to Be Impaired. The sense of touch is least impaired by old age. The eye is the first sense to becora» impaired by old age, and the sense of touch to a great measure takes its place, so that it is not at all an uncommon thing for an old man whose sight has become defective te be able to recognize different coins and other small articles by the sense of touch alone, while a younger man is quite unable to do so. Rough work impairs the tactile sensibility of the hands, but with only light employ- ment they retain their sense of touch almost unimpaired to extreme old age. The sense of taste is probably the next persistent, for although it is generally blunted by age, yet it is not at all un- common for the old to have a keen relish for the most dainty flavors. The sense of smell comes third, but taste and smell are so nearly allied that it is not easy to separate, A Barber Bird. Man has o rival in the art of shaving in a Gouth American bird called the “motmot,’? which actually begins shay- ing on arriving at maturity. Naturally adorned with long blue tail feathers, it is not satisfied with them In their natural state, but with its beak “nips off the web on each side for a little oval tuft at the end of each. —— se The London Chronicle publishes a de:- a’'ch from Berlin saying that the Ruesian Black Sea fleet is cruising 45 miles north - east of the Bosrpherous, and that it is in consiant communication with the hght- house a: Killa, 30 miles east of the Bos- phorous. Build Up. When the system is run down a person becomes an easy prey to Consumption or Scrofula. Many valuable lives are saved by using Scot’s Emulsion as soon as a de cline in health is observed. Johnson’s Baking Pow 23¢ a pound. Jvhnson & Johnson, of the boat, and, notiving that the sight of blood made him faint as it spouted from the shattered arm, covered it with his hat. He then, at the peril of his life, had Nelson taken on board one of the ships in face of a desultory fire from the enemy and took some silk handkerchiefs from his neck and bound them tightly about the lacerated arm, thus saving his father’s life. This was at Teveriffe. taken home to England, still in of his stepson, where he wns the tender care of his devoted wife, who nursed him back to health. And yet, a little more than a year later, tho hero of many a fight was the devoted admirer of Lady Hamilton, with whose name his own had been coupled to their discredit. Writing to his wife at the time, Nelson says: ‘The grand seignior has ordered me a valuable diamond. If it were worth a midion my pleasure would be to see it in your possession. My pride is in being your husband, the son of my dear father, and in Sir William and Lady Hamilton for my ftriends.’’ Within two years Lord Nelson and wife were separated Nelson's fame had penetrated to the remotest regions of the earth, but in that Nelson was charge placed in ; 7} naving his lonely West Indian isle, were, in 1787, he ‘‘gave hostages to fortune,’’ we find the chronicle of une of the most import ant events of his live in tatters and the whare the ceremony was celebrated failing into rnin than its falien walls rem4iaing house scarcely more > ‘ad He was tarrel and feathered from head wo feet, But growled he pever a word, For he looked at his feathery coat com- plete And cackled, ‘‘I feel like a bird!’’ A MARTYR TO PAIN, & mother tells how her dxughter suffered and how ghe cot relief. A letter came to us the other day teliing how a daughter who evffered eo much at each period as almost to bring on convul- sions has been completely cured by Indi an Worma’s balm. The mother is de- lighted, aad while not wishing us to pub lish her name, will gladly allow us to send it toany sufferer who may desire it. Pamphlet sent to ladies by addressing The Balm Medicine Co., Ltd, Toronto, Ont. “Cough Cheser” for Coughs snd Colds, 10z. Foisaie by Geo. EK. Hughes ant Joh & Johnston, Charlottetown and Souris Wedding Rings—. “ WELL, SAM, since the eng: ring wears so well these long eigh ‘ you bought from G. G. Jury, I accept your proposal if you promise to buy the Wedding Ring from him also. My friend Nell was married a few days ago, and you ehould see the veautifal ring she bas, and oh,so cheap. She says Mr. G. G. Jury has a ine assoitment from 14k to 18k, aud he bays them from the largest estab- lishment in Canada, and they will last a lifetime; and you know one wedding ring must do these hard timer.” sto “Agreed, T will go and buy the from G. G. JURY, Watchmaker a ring and OPPOSITE P. O. sept23—-dy & wky. NO 42.) transfer ALMBwHM ADM AM RUA VL WHS j } TF OF OF CLD CM CH CL VLCMDCMCL FC LMI LM ‘Beok alid_—> | Tah Dnintin: 2 OOD PPilulig ass facilities the best qual- inting, from a Virltit rd io the largest ; ! We Bave i ~< ilor turning out ily af Job Pi | Prices low. Work premptly done Calland see us. ‘Examiner Publishing Company That Extreme tired feeling afflicts nearly every- body at this se D The hustiers cease to push, the ss gTOW weary, the ener- getic become enervated. You know just what we mean. Fome men and women r te mperarily to overcome that ired Feeling by great force of will. But this is unsafe, as it pulis powerfully upon the nervous system, which will not long stand euch strain. Too many people “ work on their ne end the result is seen in an- fortunate wrecks marked “peryous pros- tration,’ in every direction. That tired > cel- ing is a positive proof of thin, weak, im- pure blood; for, if the blood is rich, red, vitalized and vigcrous, it imparts lifeand energy to every nerve, organ and tissue of the body. The necessity of taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla for that tired feeling is, therefore, apparent to every one, and the good it will do you is equally beyond question. Remember that Mioods Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. 81 Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Masa. tirel endeavc ves,”’ . are easy to take, easy Flood’s Pills to operate. 2 cents. SISSSHSCOS*SSSOICSCesooecoeso SUN LIGHT | §OAP PICTURES / WRAPPERS ; A pretty colored picture for every @ 12 “ Sunlight” or every 6 “Life- é buoy” Soap wrappers. Tiese pictures ar getting. ial o>e.7* oe we!! worth é ADDRESS: Lever ros., Lid, 23 &eott &t.. Torento Seeton & Mitchell, Halifax, Agents for Nova Scotia and Prince Edward o Island, oss oe. oe COVSOSCHSHIOGHSOSHSHSHHAASS 1TOSSOCOHL9EHOOD ee ee e — ——— REASONS... . WHY = THE... +000 FAVORITE RANGE ($+ THE ' oat 4 4 * p . \ / \ é ‘ ~~ Ist. The castings are smooth and ay high!y finished. thoroughly and carefully made, and sufliciently or ramented to phase he most refined taste, 9» 4 Te #04. ab | has larger flues, hence vill work better iu a poor draft, and will distribute the heat around the oven mdOre even than any other rauge ird. The oven is thoroughly V tilat a It has the simplest “possible dam pes arrangement Fst : = Sth. [thas extended ash pit with large ash pan, which makes the most ¢-nvenient po eible arrange mept for the aries 6th. It uilt practically for the use of al! soft coal imported here 7th. [t is more economical in the consumption of fuel than ony other range in the market. BTASZASZASZUAMAASAMYXAAL Local testimonials and references. —_— ; Dodd & Rogers. . Wholesale & Retail. Asti csicaevrrrusa Ccllere and ‘Sehool E0cks ALL SCHOOL SUPPLIES Complete Assrotment ‘NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE. der gives fullest satisfaction | sien Ae. ‘Miciiillan & Hornsby’s QUEEN STREET. augZ9— * 7 A $ ‘ « ” € t 4 $ ‘ See o* at Gy cc i ki aD a cal Bee as Dts ot Oss, tellans 8 - Se Bs a amelie. - e--- iit ? ee eee ee ee el S z a ei OE —— a