HEART-BEATS. The Reason Why the Heart Fintters, Pal- | pitates, and is Oppressed, and How to) Relleve it The heart hasa hard old time of it and within itself « $ not excite much dis- | ease, but it is very often called upon todis- | piay the tro bling symptoms of palpita- tio! tterin labor breath op press > ased Kia i east istance te the | | through their de s ve s ires sing a mor e in the 1 i unsuited to n¢ sh t tissue xious to them. Phe art he passage of this f resulti : the muscular walls ind the ventricle of the | 1 partially paraly zed, i and n this cause results much of so-called heart disease, which is owing to wasting Kidneys not being able to pet form their functions. In order to releve ’ e remove the cause in the hase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. blood of poisonous de- stream d imparting t tisste body, r heart is in trouble Chase's ckly remove the causing condi- wav a oO £ the of the tion, n« ter whether it exists on ac count of disorder of the kidneys, liver, stomach, er of nervous affection. Sold by 1 dealers. Price 25c. Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. DONT \ c xes $2.50. ‘ : . recess Ax Dc. 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 1 -r dozen, or three dozen at $3.75 per dozen. Sent by mail toany address po- aid. GEORGE E. HUGHES, may29 Charlottetown. Dommion Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appo inte sole selling Agents in the Province o Prince Edward Island for the above Com any, are now prepared to issue orders for Pow d, Slack and Run of Mines, and will k -ep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coal on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agenta. Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—+tf Strange, but True The child that cannot digest milk can digest Cod-liver Oil as it is pre- pared in Scott's Emul- sion. Careful scientific tests have proven it to be more easily digested than milk, butter, or any other fat. That is the reason why puny, sickly chil- dren, and thin, emaciated and anzmic persons grow fleshy sorapidly onScott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil and Hypophosphites when their ordinary food does not nourish them. Don’t be persuaded to accept a substitute! Scott & Bowne, Belleville, 50c. and $1. PHOTOGRAPHY Superior workmanship, re fined finish and moderate prices combine to make these Photos the most satisfactory in Charlottetown to-day. GEO. H. COOK __ Corner Queen & Grafton Sts. PYNY - PECTORAL Positively Cures COUGHS and COLDS in a surprisingly short time. It’s a sel- entific cert ied and true, soothing and ffects, W.C. McComper & Son, Bouchetie, Que., report In a letter that Pyny of ect 2 chest and bronchial G. MeComber of a 1. Hutry, Chemist, 528 Yonge St., Toronto, writes: “ As a general cough and lung syrup Pyny- Pectoral is a most invaluable preparation, ts has given the utmost satisfaction to all who have tried it, many having spoken to me of the lerived from its use fn their families. old or young, being pleasant to \ ky with me has been wonderful, am always re« mend it as a safe and m gh tued 2. Large Bottle, 235 Cis. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Lrp. Sole Proprietors AGHE, LATE THE LIVER | ONE PILL AFTER EATING INSURES GOOD GIGESTION. (PRICE 25 CTs Tee ODDS MED 8 TORONTO. —IF 3Ou~— Want a wife, Want a cook, Want a partner, Want a situation, Waut a servant girl, Want to sell a farm, Want to sell a house, Want to a house, Want to exchange anything, Wat to sell plants or grain Want to sell groceries or drugs, Want to sell or trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, Want to eell or buy horses, pigs or catt's ADVERTISE IN THE ZZAMINER rent | songs, bawling DAILY EXAMINER Sine aed MA x a A ath, Fy (Cort rie was Wrapped up as we were, a heavy military coat covering nearly the whole of his uniform. I could see that he bad been priming himself up with drink, and he spoke like a man acting a wild part. Indeed, to hoar him you might have thought that there was no such dare-devil in all Europe; while what he said about the general wasn't fit for the ears of adog. When we were sick of boasting--and that was soon —he fell to singing of French ‘*‘Nous, nous, marierons which I took it that he really meant seriousty by the girl who had brought on all the trouble. And was precious glad at last when the car- riage turned from the highroad into’ the woods and it was time for us to get out. The duel, as 1 have stated above was to be fought under conditions common years in the Russian army, but rarely heard of to-day outside Muscovy. As the right understanding of these con- ditions necessary to my story, I will say a word here about them. You place your men 1) paces apart, and you draw a center line 7's paces from each man. At the word ‘‘fire’’ it is open to either party to shoot or to keep his charge and ad- vance towards the center line But when he advances his opponent must ad- vance; so that, given a couple who really you might find them shooting other at arm's length. There is nothing in the code to prevent this; nothing but a man's natural sense of right and fair play. It his been done times without number; it will be done again so long as men leap at each other’s throats for a word, or cross swords fora look from a woman's eyes 1 have given this explanstion that you may follow me rightly in what I have to say about this particular meoting—the only duel I ever saw fought out, and the only one I want to see. When we arrived his snatches dimanche,’’ by ago is meant business, each ou the ground our other second, whi had driven over from Novgorod, was already measuring the 15 paces. They had driven a stake into the turf to mark the center line; and, as for the place chosen, it could not have been better. It was just # natural bit of lawn in the midst of the pine thickets; a little clearing so thick set around with woods that an army might have tramped the high roads and have known nothing of what we wera doing. The general himself was already there when we arrived, looking spick and span in his tight-fitting uniform and having a bow and a smile for everyone— even forthe count. The surgeon, one from the barracks in the town, was busy chattering like a barber and offering his brandy flask to all who would take a nip out of it. As for the others, the general's seconds and our own, they were as busy as bees, and a thundering sight nore im- portant. You might have thought they were surveying the ground for a new railway, so carefully did they go over it with their tapes and their rules; and it Was hot until a good twenty minutes had passed, that one of them cried: ‘‘Gentle- men, we are ready !' And | knew that the great play was about to begin. T call it a great play; but, God knows, my heart was in my mouth—then and until the end of it. It’s an awful thing to look upon two men, full of life and health and strength, and to think that one of them may lie in his blood to die, where he falls, before another minute has pussed away. I can remember to this hour how my hands shook as I took the pistols out of the case and handed them to my master; I can remember what a strange stiliness fell upon us all as the men took un their positions in the silence and the darkness of that gloomy morning. Even the doctor ceased his chatter and his jokes and shut with a snap the case of instruments he had opened so briskly a moment before. It Was as though we were already in the presence of death, and that the awe of death had come upon us *‘Gentlemen, are you quite readyY’’ My master put the question in French, and hearing it, I glanced quickly at the two who faced each other. The count, I thought, had a look of bitter hate upon his face; the general was still smiling as blandly as a child, Lcould hear my heart beating like a pump as I watched them and waited for the word which seemed a year in coming. “‘Gentlemen,’’ my master went on presently, ‘‘if you are quite ready’’—here he paused—‘‘if you are quite ready, then fire.’’ At this word, he stepped back a pave and I saw him bite his lip in his anxiety. One of the pistols sent a thundering report through the woods al- most as the word was given, but no man fell. The general had fired deliberately at the skv, and stood now with folded arms to wait the count’s pleasure. Good God, I have lived that moment a hundred times since that day. An unarm- ed*man, waiting for the deliberate aim of @ murderer who would have torn him HE SHOT LIKE HE WOULD HAVE SHOT A HOUND. limb from limb if he could! For that was the position, the old man still with that sweet smile upon his face; the young man toying with his pistol and looking like a madman or a devil. So awful was the suspense that I even heard one of the sec- onds cry; *‘ For God’s sake fire!’ And to horror was added a minute later, when every man saw that, instead of firing, the count had taken one deliberate step to the tated him, a “God of Heaven,’’ roared ths doctor at then?’ The words were still upon his lips wnen the count took another stride forward. I thought fora moment that the seconds would intervene. I believe to this day that they would have done so if Sir Nicholas had not cried out suddenly: ‘We can do nothing; he is within his right.’’ Once this was said, the old silence fell upon us, upon all but the do-tor, who turned his back upon the scene and burst out crying like a woman. And step by step, slowly, deliberately, with all the malice of a devil’s heart, the murderer advanced to his wor. $10 per Set.Partial Set $2 and upwards. Gold and Porcelain Crowning. Beat! material, best workmansa. best satisfaction. TEETH DR. J. P. MURRAY, u2s Queen Street, Charlowetow MY MASTER) ALR SS ‘Tre [npn emantt | BY PEmMBER } nuee'e) They were within two yards 07 each other at last; yet then I could not bring myself to think that those about me would stand by and see such acruel thing. “The count is just torturing the old man,’’ I thought: ‘the will bring him to the center and then fire up in the air.’" This opinion was shared by the others, I make sure. Kither that, or they were paralyzed, fascinated, like a dumb thing by a tiger. Once they had cried out, not 4 man spoke. Silently, with faces flushed, their heads bent forward, they watched the mecting as the two came togethor az last, face to | face, almost heart to heart. ‘'My God, it cannot be; he does not mean it; it’sa play—he does not want his life!’’ I could not keep the words back as the two men met. The general’s face was still a beautiful thing to see; the count con- tinued to bend forward, holding his pistol at his side. Nota word was spoken on efther side, not a gesture made ;they stood there like two statues until, suddenly and horribly, the end came. Whether the count meant to do as he did; whether it was a devilish impulse, I do not know to this day. Be that as it may, the two were atanding as I have described them when, al at once there was a shrill scream, a | woman's scream from the little thicket near by us Oneshert suppressed exclama- tion it was; yet enough to cause the gen- eral to turn quickly upon his heel; and in the same moment the coun® raised his | pistol and fired. He had pressed the muzzle hard against the other's breast; he shot him like he would have shot a hound. | With one awful ringing cry of Marya, a | ery that sent the birds screaming from the trees, and echoed again and again in the woods, the noble old man fell his length ;} upon the grass; and smoke and blood poured together from the gaping wound. That he was stone dead, that he died as he fell, I did not want any doctor to tell ine. As the thing went, I don’t believe 6 man of the party moved for more than a nanute after that dreadful deed. We were rooted to the ground, held stiff as much with shame as with sorrow. Even the count made no attempt to leave the clear- ing; he simply stood there with a sneer on his livid face and the smoking pistol swinging in his hand. If Sir Nicolas—who was the first to throw off the spell—had not pulled him away into the wood he would have held his ground until one of the others had shot him where he stood, as I am sure they would bave done if shame had not held their hands. But my master grasped the situation before they had moved from their places, and, beck- oning me to follow him, he entered the nearest thicket and disappeared from our view. When I found him, two minutes later, he was returning to the clearing with a fainting woman in his arms. It was Marya Pouzatov, who had witnessed the whole scene from the wood. ‘*For God’s sake, look after the count!’’ anid he. ‘‘They will cut him in pieces. Get him back to the village and run all the way. Ye’ve nota minute to lose if ye'd save more b!oodshed.”’ With this he ran on, carrying the faint- ing girl to the doctor, who was still stand- ing beside the dead body of the old soldier. You may imagine that I didn’t lose much time in doing as he had told me, and I was out on the road with Count Fedor while you could add up ten. I found him dazed and muttering,and more like a luna- ticthan aman. ‘He laughed in my face!"’ was all he could say; ‘‘he laughed in my face and struck me, the dog!’’ “That's all very well,’’ said I; and I could hit him willingly myself. ‘‘I hope your pleased with yourself. If you want to save your dirty life, now keep your mouth shut and come along with mc."’ ‘*They cannot touch me,”’ said he, fierce- ly, between his teeth; ‘‘l was within my right. There is nothing against my honor.’’ **Your honor be—,”’ said, I ‘and you, too, for that matter. Run, you pig ofa Russian, run!’’ They say we do queer things on the im- pulse; and Iam certain that it was 1m- pulse alone which made Sir Nicolas lift a finger to save such a bad one as the sount proved himself on that day. Possibly, he had other plans at the moment; possibly, he didn’t see his way clear with two men dead on the field. And what he thought I thought, too, in my own way. There had been trouble enough for one morning, and no good could fcllow a second dose of it. The dirty murderer I was running with wasin one way our man. It lay upon me to stand by him—until he was clear of the ground, any way. And stand by him I did, never halting a minute the whole three miles back to the village and to the priest’s house. When I left him at last he was splashed from head to foot with mud, and his face was as white as the paper I am writing on. **You’ll stand by me,’’ said he, as I left him; ‘‘by Heaven, I’1] want all the friends I can get this time to-morrow. They’!l tear me in pieces—they’ll hunt me likea dog—”’ “You should have thought of that be- fore,’’ said IL. “I never meant to shoot him, I swear it,” cried he, staggering into the house; “it was the girl’s voice that made me— the she devil that has played with me for five years and brought me to this at last. Oh, my God! I’m a doomed man.”’ He went in with this on his lips, and I turned back to meet Sir Nicolas. The bells of the horses in his carriage were al- ready jangling in the village street; and presently I saw my master with Miss Marya coming along at full gallop. He did not stop even when he caught sight of me, but drove on straight tothe great house, where I followed him as fast as my legs would carry me. I found him doing his best to make things look well to Mme. Pouzatoy, and already taking almost a master’s place in the house. But he came to me at once when I arrived; and the first name that passed his lips was the name of the count. ‘Tis a paltry murdering villain ho is, and nothing else,’’ said he, drawing me aside in the garden, ‘‘but we must stand by him or there’ll be bad talk.’’ ‘You don’t mean to say that you'll keep him in the village there?’ cried L He looked at me cunningly, and there was the old, sly twinkle in his eyes. ‘*Not exactly that,’’ said he; ‘‘not inthe village nor in the town—nor in Russia. this cry another of rage and loathing and center line, and that the general had imi- | this, ‘tis he going to shoot him like a dog, | I began to see his drift, and could have laughed myself. He knew well that dead men are forgiven quickly. But with the | count hounded out of the country, the coast would be clear for him. ‘**You think,then, that he will go, sir?’’ I asked. “*He will goin half an hour,"’ he an- swered, quietly, ‘‘unless he has a fancy for the bullets of the general's men. They will tear him limb from limb,and not lose much in the employment. Ye may look for some of them from Novgorod before the sun sets. And that brings me to the point of it. Itis yourself that will see him through to Paris. I’ve ordered the , carriage to be at the priest’s house in ten | minutes from this time. You will hide him in the bottom of it, and drive to Malo, which is a station on the great Moscow railway. Once you have him in the train, he is safe. But anyway, don’t return here, for I’d keep what happens from Miss Marya’s ears at all costs.’’ ‘Then I’m to go back to our hotel, sir, whatever happens?’ ‘*Whatever happens,’’ said he, “though I have no doubt that ye'll get through eo (To be Continued.) — ears Horace Manvile, who was 100 old on March 19th last, died at Woodbury, Conn., recently. Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has led to the placing on the market @ many misleading and unscrupulous imitations of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu- \ facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and uli) Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are used in their manufactures. Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.’s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. SSCL OG IEA VRQ UGE | for Infants and Children. OTHERS, Do You Know tu: pargoric Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine ? Do You K.aow that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons ? Do You Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics without labeling them poisons ? Do You Know that you should not permit any medicine to be given your child unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ? A! 4 4 \ SSSsans asad! A Do You Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a Ust of its ingredients is published wit every bottle ? Do You Know that Castoria 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 other remedies for children combined ? Do You Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of other countries, have issued erclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word “ Castoria” and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state pi ison 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 You Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35 oents, or one cent a dose? Do You Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may be kunt well, and that you may have unbroken rest s Well, these things are worth knowing. They are facts. The fac-simile signature of Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. is on every wrapper. Creme de la Creme sx» 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. sept24d—dy & wky tf Still at tie Front! Do not Iese sight of the fact that we have a tul! and complete stock of all kinds of Footwear in Boots. Shoes, Rubbers. ete. Mien’s, Boys’, Youths. Ladies’ Nhiss;’ 111 Children’s. Unequalled for style, fit and wear. ' Ze place to buy your footwear is Oo WEERS & VWWARREN, North Side Market Square. Charlottetown, Nov, 15—135 wy. |FEATHERBONE SKIRT BONE FOX GIVING STYLE and SHAPR TO Ladies Drasses. A light, pliable, elastic bone made from ills. It is soft and yielding, conformed readily to folds, yet giving proper shape to Skirt or Dress. The only Skirt without injury. the Celebrated FEATHERBONE ©ORS*TS are corded with this material. Bone that may be wet For sale ty les ding Dry Goods Dealers, HAPPY WEDDING. LOW PRICES and HIGH GRADE GOODS were joined tugether at the “City Hardware Store,” especially “Jewel” Stoves and Ranges. ! R. B. NORTON & CO., Charlotteown, October 22, 1895—25 ad City Hardware:Store. . TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, - KEKP ENEMIES OUT, All diseases that linger and finally kill are the effects of bad blood: The blood must be kept perfectly That is what the kidneys are fur. They have everything to do in filtering out the poisons. This process of filtration may be inter fered with by a cold. Usually if there is any lack of good kid ney work, it isa cold, or perhaps over eating and over-drinking. Nearly every acute ailment starts with a cold. So do the diseases that finally kill. The thing is to arrest the cold. This brings us to the question :—What is the best treatment for a cold. Experience teiches us, from the universal success of Dodd’s Kidney Piils in all the forms in which derangements of the kidneys show themselves that there vo treatment known to man anywhere equa! to Dodd’s Kidney Pills. “4 pure. is While hunting a few days ago, Oat Darby, of Adams, Ind., lost the sight of his left eve by a peculiar accident. He fired at a rabbit,and one of the shot struck reme hard eubstance, rebounded and struck him in the eye, instantly destroying the sight. Bad Blood Between Them. The ever slaving farmer’s wife, her delicate sister in the city, suffer more than they care to tell. The dark rings round the eyes, headaches, dizziness, palpitation or rheumatic twinges, betoken a run-down system. The blood is poor, and isa bar to enjoyment of life. Scott’s Sarsap.rilla purities the blood, strengthens and vitalizes the system, and speedily restores the b!oom of health to the cheeks. It cures when all others fail. A well on the Bannack reservation at B ise, Idaho, has been sunk to a depth of 110 feet, and the water in it ie of a tem- perature of 90 2-5 degrees. —ecceoe— it's All Nonsense. For people to say there is no cure for con- sumption. Sufferers from that dread dis- ease and kindred ailments are being saved every day by Miller’s Emulsion of Coil Liver Oil. Do not die without giving it a fair trial. If it will cure others it will eure you. The secret of its success lies in the fact that it creates uew blood in the system, thus enabling sufferers from Jung troubles to overcome the destructive forces at work to waste the tissues of the body. Miller’s Emulsion is the great nerve strengthener and blood maker, and cures coughs, colds, bronchitis, scrofula and al! lung affections. In big bottles, 50c. and $1, at all drug stores. Archbishop Cieary Las purchased a building in Kingston for $17,000, and will convert it into a classical college in which Roman Catholic young men can qualify for any profession. The college will be opened in September, 1896. Degrees will be conferred. Commercial Travellers, Wm. Golding, commercial traveller, 136 E-ther St., Toronto, says:—For 15 years I suffered untold misery from Itching Piles, sometimes called pin worms. Many and many weeks have I had to lay off the road from this troubie. I tried eight other pile ointments and socalled remedies with no permanent relief to the intense itching and stinging, which irritated by scratching would bieed and ulcerate. One box of Chase’s Ointment cared me com- pletely. Grain prices are higher in Manitoba than in Dakota,oats alone bringing seven cents, more at Crystal City than in the town across the line. They say the western farmers are attending singing school now and that the madrigal! they are practising is campaign song No. 2: Joined together heart and hand. Lib’ra!s for free trade shal! stand. 400,000 Free Samples given away in Eigit Months, Chace’s Kidney-Liver Pills are the only kidney pills known with suflicient merit to guarantee the proprietors in giving away hundreds of thousands of sample packages free. Ask your drugyist for a sample if your kidneys or liver is deranzed It is a common lelief in the rural dis- tricts of all countries that when hogs carry etraw or sticks in their mouths rain will soon follow. Chase’s K, & L. Pills Cure Dyspepsia. For the last eight years I have been a sufferer from constipation and dyspep-ia— I tried dozens of different medicines, but nothing gave me relief until I used Dr Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pilis which cured me. James Hearp. Woodville, Ont. That Pale race For Nervous Prostration and Anemia there is no medicine that will so promptly and infaliibly restore vigor and strength a- Scotts "Emulsion. William Morris, whom the werld usual- ly thinks of a+ an artiet and poet, is a practical printer,and the inventor of a printing press which has turned out the most beautiful work, technically, of the day. ~—_- ~--— A Prominent Lon‘Joner, Chase’s Ointment is an invaluable medy for itching Piles and in my case I would pay $50 it if it could not be otherwise hard. ‘ Jounx Peppicoms. 160 Svedent am S: MORTGAGE SALE. To besold by public auction, at the Court Houre wu: Summerside, on FRIDAY, the twentieth day of December, A. D. 1895, at the hour of twelve o’clock, noon, under a power of sale contained in a mort- gage, dated the twentieth day of March, A. D. 1890, and made between Dominique Peters and Lucy Peters, his wife, of the one part, and Albert L. Anderson and George Compton, trustees, of the other part, and duly assigned to the undersigned. All that piece of land in Lot Five, Prince County, bounded as foliows : Com- mencing on the north side of the Howlan Road, in the southwest angle of land now or formerly in possesston of the heirs of the late Ronald McDonald, thence north te the. Duvar Road, thence west ten chains to land scld by raid Dominique Peters to Lamob Gal ant,thence south eighteen and one- half chains to the north boundary of twenty-five acres of land also sold by him t» said Gallant; thence east along the same three and one-half chains, or to the east’ boundary thereof; thence south to the Howlan Road, and thence easterly along the same six aud one-half chains to the place of commencement, containing sixty-five acres of land, more or less. For further particulars apply at the re owl Law, Summerside. Dated this 16th day of November, A. D. 1895, GEORGE COMPTON, HOLDEN C. MILLS, Assignees of Mortgage. nov19—4i law (2) NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, &c The subseriber is now Surveys of Land, run Bo repared to meke and Division Lines, furnish Plans, ete.: also hank a and Architectural Drawin i f- and Ar Drawings, Plans, Speci fi J. P. NICHOLSON, Land Pownal wisest harlotts wa, (yz. 25, N94 —dy & wy ’ _— a _ > ¥ 1895 H. STANWAYE Wholesale Wine & Liquor Merchants, ITALIAN WAREHOUSE, 243 Hollis & 48 Upper Water St, H 1LIFAX, N. S. P. O. BOX NO. 475. ly (14) oetlS a Granby Rubbers Are out again this season in new styles and in all the new Shoe shapes, right up to date, but with the same old “ wear like iron” quality that has always charac- terized them, because they are honestly made of pure Rubber. Granbys this year. nov27—135 & wky Be sure you get “ wey 'e -, kN Fee ee eee ran <a> o> ene erin een tee nnn Sn aa x “Cravenette” The ladies, true THE POPULAR daughters of Eve as they are, must WATERPROOF CLOTH have style with the FOR LADIES’ comfort ; and that is one great reason GARMENTS most tasteful costumes, wraps and cloaks. And it is something to have a porous waterproof, for most of the so called waterproofs are damp and clammy. Cravenette can be obtained in six shades—Navy, Myrile, Brown, Grey, Castor and Black. Cravenette is the costume far exce//cnce for street or country. on NA NAL A NN A AEN ANAL A AAAS ANA AL A IEA A A A RR ARIA AIRS AAAI LAL APL LEIA ELLA LEELA RIE axe ais why they insist upon Cravenette, which, while per- fectly waterproof and dust proof, makes up in the —_— ee’ RR RN A RO OCP RR NRO o lahat L A LALA LAS wx 2 wen ve'nsoe'emee'ovwwos'oatall 2 1 Oa We CARRIER IR IRI RR of delicious TEA are satisfied when supplied wthi our lines of English Breakfast Congou, India, China, Oolong and Ceylon Teas. We believe our 22c. Blend to be the best on the market for quality, strength flavor and price. The public realize a good article when they use it, and to-day our sales on this Tea are larger than ever before. We carry a full line of Canned Goods, Jams and Jellies, Fish, Boned and Skinned Dried Codfish’ Flour, Meal, etc., which we will sell at the very lowest prices. Oir ain is to biy the most reliable good and s2ll them at the lowest prices. Eggs taken in ex change for cash or goods. Goods delivered to all parts of the city. WILLIAMIIGRANT®*& CO. Charlottetowa, June 19, 1895—135 QUEEN STREET. iene aS Bea Lis 3 Ss eae ef - oe bane | ee eageme ey A a FiRE. Haszard's Sea Shooting Powder, F, F, Acadia ” Smokeless 1-22 Papers Shells, Nos. 8, 10, 12, Wire Cartridges, Loaded Cartridges,i0 and 12, Shot, all Sizes, Wads and Caps, 1 Double Barrel No. 8 Gun (Muzzle), Guns, Muzzle and Breech Loaders, 10 & 12 SIMON W. CRABBE, Ch’town, Aug. 23, 1895—135 & wy Stoves and Hordware, Walker’s Corner § ac i aia “ Soraecr ° COAL HODS frOULs sees seeeeeeeseeeeeeeceeeereee2d Cons MOV ELS -Gremevkd «i 4 6 Ato bdbca - O e HEATING STOVES from.....ccc.ccccccccscccee SOm COOKING STOVES from. .........scccccsestece Se The Largest Assortment and Lowest Prices at DODD & ROGERS. Cnarlottetown, November 25, 1895—-135 office of J. Edward Wyatt, Barrister ate | Wood's Phosphodine.—z%e creas English Remeds Is the result of over 35 years treating thousands of cases with all know® drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment-® combination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stages of Sexual Debility, Abuse or Ezcesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Mi Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of m= which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Wood's _Before Taking. | phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that almost hopeless—casesthat had been treated by the most talented physi- cians—cases that were on the verge of despair and insanity —cases that were tottering over the grave—but with the continued and persevering use of Wood's Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were restored to manly vigor and health—Reader you need not despair—no mat- ter who has given you up as incurable—the remedy is now within your) reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness and happiness. Price, one package, $1; six packages, $5; by mail free of postage. One will please, six guaranteed to cure, Pamphlet free to any address. The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont -, Canada. Weod's Phosphodine is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominios. SDSS SSS FBS SSS VPSsVseVoesesews q