il the re. Cea ted a i FETs Ree & <6 “fS 35782 eA se OAV PR REARS 14274 KPA S GALENPAR FOR WN ‘TEMAER, isos Firett Qua im, a. m., N t " . Last Qua . ’ New M 3 a \ I W > S | High : ? ti 440] . = I ty Ll 44 ” i 2,8 i 2 32 sis > 2a ’ } ‘ 28 i ; ; i 5 34 W ‘ ®& 3N aly 7 ' 5 oo oO u ‘ nis % 4) ” d 10 24 i ' 1] : ' \ 1} I4 Li Si (5; 1 ate’e 16) F | i ‘ 71 3a ‘ 22 g.a ’ =| i M - | et ‘ +1 as 5 4 7} 6 Sy ’ j e . | ' ' ; ,) s 4 : < ‘ | | } u 2 ~ ay ; 2 10 2 } 47 ; 2 j 18 45 Ht 25 fhiorn a t ) 44 +. | "nh AA BAB | 4 t > DatLy Newsrarer ‘ . EK. ISLAND, on, from the office nf iin@ CoMPpany, in te ‘hueen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCE) # iasuied . the Ex amMiNen P Loaden House Bai owe Y¥: : ax M NTHeS Tunas Me THs ‘ oa One Monte - wi Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the Uaitet Stales LDV ERTISING RATES Se LA water TERMS : Four Dollars a Year DAILY EXAMINER. true “This is Liberty, NEW SERIES TGR COLD WEATHER Wiil Be Here Soon, | and every Man will want a Heavy Coat, Cap & Gloves, “eland the right spot to get hey - ” ithem is at OUR SHOP. } Come and see the Bar-j j } eer Sa (gains for yourselves 'NcKay Woolen Co. Por «m ivertisementes which are ordered ihr ouly one Or two weeks the charge }: cents p h for the @rst insertion, and ¢ | cents for en mtinuaiion. Rate cards are farnisin« mi application at the office. Specia! goatract it @ reduced rate are quoted fer mivert ucuis muir inenhes in size or larger, Which are to ran for three months or ionger. No special cotices inserted unless paid for @the rat circumstances will sach paid notices appear jo the local column @cxcial dix meals connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Plenics, etc. ‘o notices will be iuserted with the same Un’ess Lhe regular rate of 10 cents per tioe is paid. That Tux Examiner unte is considered by our Merchanis and Manufacturers te be the lead- lug newspaper in P. E. Isiand, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through whica to make their announcements public, is “bandantly proved by the ‘act that inorde’ o@ accommodate ou. suvertisers we havy «2m compelled to enlarge the paper to its pr-<ent size. Tue Ditty Examines ts for sale by the fol- lowing agents M. & T. J. Waish, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- merside. D. Sutherland, Seuria, Hon. Db. Gordon, eorgetow an. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge ES ES ee r , . The Weekly Examiner Friday morning from the peblishers’ office. {t is made up of matter which bas appeared in the Daily editions, and ls a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting snd full of the latest news. The subscription for Taz Weexity Exam. INER, post paid to any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for Taz DatLy EXAMINER. JOHN CALDWELL JOHN MAIR ESTABLISHED 1883 JOHN CALDWELL & C0, Frat and Produce Commis- sion Merchants, 187 McGILL and 131 ST. PETER STS. MONTREAL. Mal pequ Oy-tera a spec alty. pondence eolicited. eagl4—Sii pat § isaued every . Corres- Telephone L876. Tickets to Boston. Buy Your Tickets for Boston by s. 5. “FLORIDA,” (Canada Atlantic and Plant Line}, —— W. W. CLARKE, Ticket Agent, Corner Queen and Water Streets, TINWARE Creameries and Cheese Factories. The very best work guaranteed on all jobe for Creameries and Cheese Factories. /E MAKE A SPECIALTY OF THIS KIND OF WORK. M. STEVENSOV, MANUFACTURER OF Tinware, Stove Pipe, &e., 33 QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. All orders promptly attended to. apo—rf ND Ped iagial Loan. Po. uscran Treasvey, Prince Edward Island, 25th June, 1894, Under anthor ty of the Act of last Ses Sion, 57 Vic., Cap. 6, the Government of Prince Kiward Island is now prepared to Feceive, from any person or persona, Tem- porary Loans, at 4 per cent. interest, On Cal) or on such termsas may be agreed Upor.. This wil! afford a good opportunity fe the inve~tmen of @ large or smadl sums for Short ur jung per ols ANGU MoMIL LAN, cents per line, and ander ue } Charlottetown, Nov. 6, 1894—dy made on all advertise- | NOTICE. SHIPPERS to BOSTON THE steamer “FLORIDA” will make I for this season, on FRIDAY. THE a 16th INST. Fr. W. HALES. | i } 2 +] dt nov2 tl dte A first-class Horse and Buggy, also a | Double-seated Phieton. Enquire at G. G. JURY'S Jewelry Store, north side Queen | Square, opposite Post Office, Charlotte. town. Zaw (w f) 3m—may25 (Formerly Rocklin Heusc ) within five minutes’ walk of Railway | Depot, has been thoroughly cleaned, painted and renovated. Js fitted with bot water, and possesses the finest bath rooms in any Hotel in the city. Terms moder- ate. Coach meets ai!) trains. P. S. BROWN, Proprietor. septlI—dv fim wv 1 yr What's the time? If you have a Congh it is time you were taking GRAY’S RED SYRUP SPRUCE GUM THE OLD STANDARD CURE i FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and «Jl LUNG AFFECTIONS, | Gray's Syrup has been on trial for more than | & years and the verdict of the people is thar it is the best remedy known. Me. and We per bottle. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON G CO. Prepnisrone MON Te GAL. $10 per eet. Parvin! sets $2.00 and ap. wards, Painless ¢x traction of teeth. DR.J. P. MURRAY, Office, 145 Queen St., oct6 Charlottetown, P. KF, P. SH RIFFS SAL. Alexander McLeod, Plaintiff, and Joseph D. Seaman, Defen laze. By virtne of a writ of Fieri Fascias, to me directed, issued out of Her Maje-ty’s: Supreme Court of Judicature, at the suit. of Alexander McLeod against Joseph D. Seaman, I have taken and eeized as thee property, goods and chattels of the above named defendant, Josep. D. Seaman, the: fullowing articles, viz.:—3 tons Anthra cite Hard Coal, 6 tous Nut Coal, 1} tonse Round Coal, in Queen’s County, and I do- hereby give Public Notice that I will, on TUESDAY, the Thirteenth day of Nov forenoon, at the residence of Bernard Ki p- gins, near Philharmonic Hall, in Chuy- lottetown, in the said County, set up a al sell by Public Auction the said goods a:ad chattels, or a4 much thereof as will satir ify the levy marked on said Writ, be! ng $249.76, besides Sheriff's fees and al] jp- cidental expenses. FREDERICK H. HORNE, Sheriff. Sheriff’s Office, Queen’s County, November 6th, A. D. 1894. W.S. Stewart, Plaintifi’s Attorney. | nové-—tf | IF YOU- ~— Want a wife, Want a cook, Want a@ partner, Want a situation, Want a servant girl. Want to sell a farm, Want to sell a house, Want to rent a house, Want to exchange anything, Want to sell plants or grain,. Want to sell groceries on drugs,. Want to sell or trade anything,- Want to find customers for anything,. Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or cattle ADVERTISE IN i ‘ S Prav Treasurer. une225—~ pat THE EZEZAMINER we last trip from Charlottetown to Buston | TO HIRE. O H REVERE HOTEL, {\ ember, A. D. 1394, at Eleven o’cloc] ;,§ CHARLOTTETOWN, IN SHEDS, LANDING MIN, Winter and a fall trade. es eR Rbcce The following name] \ Lady Speedwell, Springbird, Hilda, Maggie Blanche, George P. Trigg, a PEAKE Nove mber z ul jRYt - Char lottetovw: d | | | IT BRINGS COMFORT ON WASH | DAY mS; ae foes: om suppiy oF Schooners discharging . a ; 9 Seeton and Mitche!!, Halifax, agents for Nova Scotia and P. E. Island. , AND TO ARRIVE FROM Dominion Goal Go's. Mines in 6. B.. We have now our Sheds full of SCREENED RUN OF | BLACK. COAL, for — and to } Lady Franklin, Kate McKinnon, Hope, Advance, Veleplone. We have sold a large quantity of Coal from the above | Compuny’s Mines this season, which has given entire satis-| faction, and are now prepared to sell at very lowest prices. BhOs. & CO., Seliisg Agents for Dominion Coal Co., Ltd. ti our: arrive, | This centrally located Hotel, which is § I must not forget to have some SAB Y’S OA FY b ON WHICH TKEGOO0BS AWE Wrapped .~ are now asking for them. They wear ‘ 9 Priestley’s_ In the long run it is the quality of the cunatel that will a the Dr ess success of a lady's costume. Every lady who has at ail studied the mater Pa bprics knows this. Priestley’s Black Dress Goods are ‘he best that the market affords, ceeded on all hands, The ladies of Great Britain cerdially acknowledge i. The American ladies p-efer Priestiey's dress fabrics to French. Canadian ladies charm consists in s peculiar richness and sofiness of appearance, and a whieh enables thens to drane in the costume with that suggestion ef fow and rhythm which it fe the dream of a)! tastefa! women to realise. BALE That is om Our better than other goods; but their ASK YOUR 7 : = Corsets are now recognized to be the Standard Corset of Canada. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. DRY GOODS DEALER FOR THEM. A ee : , The undersigned represents the following first-class British Companies : FIR=Z. North British and Mercantile Insurance Company. Union Assurance Society (1714). Manchester Fire Assurance Company. - British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company. Reliance Marine Insurance Company. LIF. London and Lancashire Life Assurance Company. Fire and Marine Policies all written here. J art of the world, issued on shipments. ALSO—The Nova Scotia Guarantee Com of Canada, g@ OF FICE —Stamper’s Block, *Fillages. fell 3—-lyr Jaw sat) oe Charlottetown. FRED. W. HYNDMAN. Sterling Certificates, payable m ati } POOR MODERN TOOTH. HOW WE ABUSE OUR VERY SERVICE- ABLE MOLARS | Une Authority Says Vegetabie Naters Mave Worse Teeth Than Meat Eaters— The Teeth of Kgyptians, Anglo-Saxons i and Others Compared, \ correspondent sends this interesting s+ ter to Nature on the subject of teeth: na letter to Nature for May 17, on ‘The ceth and Civilization,’ the writer ad- ‘ances atheory to account for the creat jrevalenee of decay of the teeth at the | “resent day, and concludes that Dr. Wil berforce Smith’s investigations show that | ‘the ancients cnjoved a perfect set of teeth Tili advanced years, and modera savages | enjoy the same blessing.’ “Ihave not had the opportunicy of see ing Dr. Wilberforce Smith’s communica it on, but the number of cases examined in | icular instance (ten Sioux Indians) | would tardly be sufficient to draw any | ; ©onclusions from; and even in these ten | this part cases ail the teeth were not examined. I think, however, it has been sufficiently proved by several careful investigations that caries of the tooth is not a purely modern disease,and is not entirely confined to civitized races. My father, in a com- munication to the Odontological Society iu 1870, brought together the results of an inquiry extending over more then ten years, in which he examined over 2,000 skulls, including all the available collec tions in Great Britain, and his conclusions as to the prevalence of dental caries differ very considerably from those of the writer of this letter. “Among thirty-six skulls of ancient Egyptians he found caries in fifteen (41.66 per cent.); in seventy-six Anglo-Naxon skulls he found twelve cases (15.67 per cent, while among 44 miscellaneous ancient Britons 20.45 per cent showed carious teeth Several other col- iections gave similar results “Again, with regard to savage among the Tasmanians 27.7 per caries Ww » skulls of races-— cent, of as found, among native Austral- ins 2045 percent., among East African sculls 24.24 per cent., and among tose of West African natives 27.96. Similar re- sults were obtained on the examination of skulls of many other races, but I think I have quoted figures sufficient to prove that caries 1s not confined to civilized races or to modern times. “It is quite comprehensible that exces- sive nerve strain, especially by affecting vascujar supply, may lead to imperfect nutrition during the development of the teeth, and we know that the diseases of early childhood have a very marked effect upon tooth structure, indicated by the ridged and defective teeth so frequently seen, and it seems quite possible that too early stimulus of the brain in childhood may have a similar effect on forming teeth. It is very difficult, however, to understand how nerve strain can have any direct effect upon fully formed teeth, and we should, I think, look for the explanation of the cases referred to in some vitiated condition of the fluids of the mouth, cans- ed by the depressed condition of health so common among hospital nurses. - “There is little doubt that an open-air life and healthy surroundings encourage the formation of sound teeth in a sound | body; but I cannot but think that the prin- cipal cause of caries must be looked for in the food. It is plainly shown by many in- vestigators, and in the paper above refer- ; red to, that caries is rare among peoples } who subsist principally upon animal food; the Esquimaux showed, among sixty-nine | skulls, only two cases of caries, and the largest amount of disease was found among those races who lived upon a mixed or ex | clusively vegetable diet. These results are, | of course, easily understood under the | more accurate knowledge which we now | possess of the immediate cause of dental caries. “As to the relative frequency with which | different teeth are effected, I think statis- | tics plainly show that itis the first molar ; tooth of the lower jaw which is most prone todecay of any tooth in the series, and niost authorities consider the second lower molar as the next in order; with these two excestions, the upper are more frequently | diseased than the lower teeth. This would, however, not affect the argument, as the lower molars are of course also supplied by the fifti nerve. “Structural defects, due to inherited weakness or imperfect nutrition during the development of the teeth, combined with the use of soft cooked food, which is jong retained in contact with them, and is of a nature eminently suitable for ferment- ation, give us, I think, the principal factors of decay among civilized races. “While allowing the influence of nerve strain in early childhood, and as a factor i in hereditary transmission of defective structure, I fail to see how it can influence teeth already formed.” Gay Waltz Masie. Johann Strauss, king of the realms of waltz music, celebrated, in Vienna, the other day, his jubilee or his fiftieth year as the most popular orchestra leader orcomposer. The celebration was a pub- lic function and all Vienna was in festive garb, while the strains of Strauss wa}tzes sounded from every concert room,.cafe and dance hall. The waltz king, who is in his 69th year, began—life with a name that sounded wellin the ears of inusic-loving people. Johann Strauss, the father, had borne the title of “waltz king’ for many years when his son’s great talent asserted itself. He looked upon it with ill-favor. He waa not to be deposed by his own flesh and blood if he could help it. So he put the hoy into a mercantile business and ad- monished him not to regard himself in any way asa budding genius. But Johann, junior, feared his parent only as long as he | Was in his immediate presence. He gath- ered a number of talented fiddlers around him with whom to study and practice, and before he knew it was leader of a full- fledged orchestra, That was in the year 1844. Strauss took his orchestra on a journey through the east, Hungary, Ser. via, and Roumania. From that time for- ward the musical world knows his life history. Fortune gave early to him the laurel wreath of success, and well has he worn it, Girl Cricketers. : Philadelphia girls play cricket, and play INSURANCE---FIRE, MARINE, LIFE. it well, too. Just at present the Tioga C. C. of that city has an eleven of sturdy, sun-browned maids hard at work practis- ing for a game with the masculine eleven, in which the latter are to be handicapped by being restricted to left hand batting and single stump bowling. The girls, who are confident of victory, even wear leg pads—underneath their skirts. It’s a Fac “If all the devils were cast ont of some | folks there wouldn’t be hardly enough lefts to look at. Cholly—What did she mean by saying 1 could’t be any bigger donkey than I } was ? She —I suppose she meant that you had 1 your growth, 4 §§OOD’S Sarsapaniia wins its way into the confidence of the people | by the good it is doing. Fair trials , os elar | arine Insurane Company and the Dominion Burg | quarantee permanent CURES. Agencies in all Towns and A bibical student has figured out that | £.e@lomon’s temple was only 107 feet long, 16 fleet wide and 54 feet high. COME THOU WEARY. At Invicatlon to all Sickly and. __- Broken-Down Women. Paire's “e'ery Comprund Gaaran- te.s Hadsh, Strength and Bunzwed Life, Miossop, of Mimico, Ont. | Mrs Speaks for Your Bence fit. i MRS. MOSSOP, Muico, Onr. A modern professionai writer *“ A life of extreme labor, or, indeed, ex~ treme exercise of any kind, of extreme anxiety about worldly concerns, of extreme faye ;— able to long life.” A large proportion of the wives and nothers of Canada shorten their lives, owing to the fact that they become too devoted slaves to home and children ; they shoulder greater burdens than nature can bear, and as a result health is undermined and shattered ; they become wrecks phy- sically, and husband and little ones lose their best earthly friend. To all broken-down, overworked, and sickly women we would say, that while there is life there is hope, ves more than hope; a certainty of a renewed life—a freedom from all sickness and physical infirmities. In order to secure this de- sired change—a happy change that has been experienced by thousands of women, old end young—it is necessary to ure a true health builder and strengthener, an agent that purifies the blood, and that braces the weak and shattered nerves, The experience of cured and saved women points at once to Paine’s Celery Compound, nature’s true and never-failing medicine. In this, our dear Canada, thourands of sincere hearts thank Heaven for life and health through Paine’s Celery Compound. Mrs. Mossop, of Mimico, Ont., has a message for all women who suffer as she once suffered. She says :— “Thave mach pleasure in giving my testimony in favor of Paine’s Celery Com- pound. [ was entirely broken down by hard w ork, anxiety and sleeplessness, and had pains all through my body. Doctor’s remedies had no effect, and nothing met my case until | used Paine’s Celery Com- pound. This medicine has done wonders for me, and I would strongly urge all suffering women to use it, as it is the best in the world.” —_———-_- Geaee — PROFESSOR CHARLES FAUVEL, 1.0. ONE OF THE MOST DISTINGUISHED SPECIALISTS IN DISASES OF THE THROAT AND NOSE.—FOUNDER OF A LARGE FREE DISPBN- SARY IN PARIS. Professor Fauvcel was Lorn in 1830, at Amiens, and now resides in Paris, For his high attainments in his pro- fession he has received almost every mark of distinction that could be conferred upon him by his country or his confreres in medicine. These are his words, ‘Of cll the tonics, none equal “Vin Mariani.’ I use it person- ally and for my family. and have prescribed it for more than twenty years with unvarying satisfaction to myself and patients.” Vin Mariani is the only tonic-stimulant without any unpleasant reaction and which may be taken indefinitely. If you are tired, weak, nervous, irritable, if you fecl a want of energy and have not a good anpetite, just try ‘Vin Mari- ani.’ Surely a remedy recommended by thousands of eminent people the world over is worth a single trial. Send stamp to Lewrence ASWilson & Co., Montreal, the Canadian agents, and receive, gratis, a beautiful little album containing the photographs of many ceclebrities who have testified to the excellence of ‘Vin Mariani.’ Checkcrly—TI wonder where yourg Dad- ley acquire! his sublime repose of man- ner ? Stripes—Weil, his father had to work like the deuce to leaye him all that money, eo [ suppose he’s doing the sleeping for both. Scott’ mulsi the cream of Cod liver Oii, with Hypophosphites, is for Cough Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consu ’ Loss of Fiesh, Emaciation, Weak Babies, Crowing Children, Poor Mothers’ Miik, Scrofula, Anzemia; in fact, for all conditions call- E for a quick and effective nourishment, S-nd for Pamphlet. FREE, Scott & Bowne, Belleville. Ali Druggists. 60c. & 6t. mora)-excitement of any kind, is unfavor- | ™ | BEHIND THE SCENES, Annie Abbott, the “magnet.” has reach ed Montreal on a proposed tour through Canada the Moutreal press has given you flatter We're onto yor, Nellie Bly, of the New York World, sized you up well and we know the trick The number of actresses who think that they are Civinely designed for the succes sion of Rosina Vokes is only limited by the number of young women who are starring The veteran ‘Gus’ Pennoyer says that during the five years he was connecte | with the management of Lotta’s tour Was scarcely a page in the account which did uot show a “charity” entry Trota 310 to 8300 Wilkie Collins, at the performan el his own plays, used to sitin a box, with | his back to the stage, and watch the effect ofevery speech upon the audience. He then jotted down the memoranda in .. note-book, and whatever failed w “go” was certain to be ent out the next day. Sarah Bernhardt is going to play the “Second Mrs. Tanqueray” in French, Mrs. Langtry will sail for America on October 27 and will remain here until June. William A. Brady, manager of Corbett, Bobby Gaylor, Joseph Grismer and Pho-be Davis, and the melodramatic production x, “The Cotton King” and “Old Glory,” is the latest theatrical man that wants to have a theatre of his own in New York. He says if he can’t find one ready made he will have it put up to order. Lineoln J. Carter will prodace “The Tornado” in London next month for a run at the Alhambra Theatre. Manager Car ter’s first play, “The Fast Mail,” has been touring the English Provinces for three years and its great success there is the in centive for the production of “The Tor nado It is rather remarkable that the enga | ment of Cissy Loftus to cross the Atlantic and appear as the ingenue of Augustin | Daly’s Company has called forth so little comment. Last summer in London, where she was exclusively engaged at the Palace Music Hall, she was the greatest of all favorites, Her name was more spoken | than that of Irving ing notices, Bernhardt or Rejane STAGESTRUCK Improving on the Typewriter. An inventor claims to have constructed # machine which will accomplish not only the work of an ordinary typewriter, but is adapted for successful operation in the case of bound books of any size, as the de vice can readily be clasped upon a book of any breadth or thickness for the recording of a deed or other instrument of writing. In this mechanism there are seventy-four characters, including all carried by usual machines, while there are but twenty- seven keys to be operated, and in its move ment it strikes downward and travels over the page of paper from left to right, along aspacing bar, the printing contrivance which moves along the bar weighing only four and one-half pounds, while the clasps and the entire apparatus weigh only nine and three-fourths pounds. There is also provided an ingenious kind of lining ar rangement—suitable for application like- wise to other typewriters—insuring per fect regulation of the distance between lines until the machine is finally worn out, Personal Paragraphs. Mrs. Cleveland rarely receives less than 5) letters daily, oftener 100. Queen Victoria numbers among her choicest possessions a welkingsstick that was owned by Charles IT. Mrs. Jefferson Davis and Miss Winnie Davis were conspicuous and interesting figures at Narragansett Pier last summer. Mme. Demont-Breton, the painter, is now a member of the Legion of Honor. The only other Frenchwoman so honored is Rosa Bonheur. Emperor William is said to covet the $1,000,000 diamond—now deposited in the Bank of England for safe-keeping—to put in his new crown. Mme. Carnot is honorary president of the Union des Femmes de France, the largest voluntary ambulance organization in that republic. An Interesting Experiment. A vessel containing acertain white pow der is placed upon the table, where the operator advances, waving his wand and uttering some magic words coined by him self, when lo! of a sudden the room is lighted up with a brilliant light, so efful- gent that it dims the eyes of the specta tors. The secret is this: The powder is composed of equal weights of loaf sugar and chlorate of potash, separately reduced to fine powder, and then well fixed to- gether. This is placed in a cup, and when the powder is touched with the least drop of sulphuric acid it will instantly burst into a flame. The end of the glass rod should be dipped in the acid immediately before use. Regarding An Impropriety. A young woman was arrested in Berlin for kissing such men as came her way both publicly and privately. Kissing of this kind has generally gone to the other sex, and itis frequently a bad rule that works both ways; but itis most surprising than any woman should have so little re finement as to make an open display of her susceptibilities when it isso easy to exer cise them without publicity and far more satisfactorily. Think of the annoyance to the person hugyed One View of Horseracing. Horse racing in New York state isin danger of extinctioi, and men like Keene, Galway, Belmont, Morris and the Dywers are opposing bitterly the proposed consti tutional amendment. Horsemen interest ed in racing and the breeding of the thor oughbred asserts that the proposed amend- ment to the Constitntion prohibiting pool selling and book-making will ruin the value of their propert ies and seriously al fect the general agricultural interests, A Great Bicycle Track. American wheelmen sre indeed enter. prising” There is now under consideration a scheme for a bicycle track between New York and Chicago. The construction is suggested of a 2-foot cinder path on each side of the common roads, and it is pro- posed that immediate steps in the matter be taken by all the wheelmen between New York and Chicago Size and Speed. The opinion that a horse of more than ordinary size was handicapped in the race for extreme speed used to be quite general Joe Patchen, 2.04, however, weighs 1.200 pounds in road condition, and John R Gentry, 2.3 3-4, is not so very much lighter Among the trotters Azote and Rex Ameri cus furnish illustrations of speed combined with size | An Actors’ Strike. The first strike in the history of the Ae | tors’ Protective Union of America took place at Brockton, Mass., the other day; but the strikers were out only one night, the dispute being arranged satisfactcrily. } sale —<—oee For children’s coughs and colds Hawk ; er’s balsam of tolu and wild cherry is un- | equalled. Itis the children’s favorite. } 7+er+e Tommy—Paw, teacher wants us to tel! | what is the difference between ‘speak’ and ‘talk.’ | Mr. Figg—Um—lemme see. (enerally when I get into an argument with your mother she is outspoken and I am cut- talked. Diteititigica The best is Pond’s Extract, because it is the strongest, purest and mo-t uniform ar ticle made. Note bottles with buff wrayr pera, aa —— Sroken in Health Wis. ced Feelis g, Constipation ¢ Pain in the Back sive APpeute ae ith : Restored by Hood’s ¢ aritia. Don't come west, Annie, even if | Mr. Chas. Steele St. Catherine’s, Ont “©. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: “ For a number of years I have been troubled with a general tired feeling, shortness of breath, pain in the back, and constipation. I could get | only little rest at night on account of the pain ’ and had no a petite whatever. ; / I | I was that tired in my limbs that I gave out before half the day was gone. I tried a great number of medicines but did not get any permanent reiicf from any Hood’s=*" Cures source until, upou recommendation of a friend, i purchused a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilia Witieh tnade me feel better at once I have con tinue d its use, Nav ing taken 1 ee } lies, und i Fee! Like a New Man. i have a good appetite, feel as strong as ever did, and enjoy perfect rest at night. I have much pleasure ip recommending Hood's Sarsa- parila.” CHARLES STEELE, With Erie Pre- serving Co., St. Catherine's, Owtario. Hood’s Pills are prompt and « ficient, yet sasy Inaction. Sold by all druggists. 25¢ « : wrens i ~5 . WRAL PPPA LPL APE Pe 2 ; ELU RIC ATRL! , ADAMS’ TUTTI FRUTTI } in the world It allays thirst ar rater ¢ ystern, Allow no in A f om yor ew A MPO S Iv 15 Really. Equal to any Imported -~)} CiGARO iG | j / | Take ny Advice and 9) / Insist on Getting this « SY ) 10 Cerny Smoke far | /- 10 Cenv Smoke for PX CENts _ e) ad Ra *e es fe BEE PRRE Coe Fon #7 Poa Poureen. } —— Grateiul —Comtorting, Epps’s © pps’s Occoa. BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By athorough knowledge of the nat- aral laws which govern the operations of ligestion and nutrition, aad by a careful application of the properties of well-select- ei Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for breakfast and supper a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution nay be gradually built up antil strong enough to resist every tendency to disease, Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around ns ready to attack wherever there is @ weak point. We may escape many a tacal shaft by keeping ourseives well forti fied by pure blood and a properly nourish d frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in packels, by Grocers, labelled tus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Lid, Hon ecepathic Chem London. Knyiand. CANADA’ ATLANTIC —ae A ND— Plant Steamship Line, TO BOSTON. Past Direct Line, Not Calling fat Malifax. CHARLOTTETOWN SERVICE. ap rhe SS. “FLORIDA” will leave Navigation Co’s. Wharf, Charlottetown, FRIDAY, Sept. 28 (and every Friday thereafter until further notice), at 7 p. m., Hawkesbury, Saturday, 10 a. m., arriving at Boston early Monday morning. Returning from Boston every Tuesday at,10 a. m. HALIFAX SERVICE’ The favorite steamships “ OLIVETTE” or “ HALIFAX ” will leave Plant Wharf Halifax,every Wednesday at 8 a. m., for Boston direct. Returning, will leave north side Lewie Wharf, Boston, every Siturday at noon. Passengers arriving in Halifax evening trains can go directly on board steamer. Through Tickets for sale and baggage checked at Prince Edward Island Railway stations and Charlottetown Navigation Co. H. L. CHIPMAN, Agent for Canada. Piant Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents, J North Side Lewis’ Wharf, Boston. septsi See ere eee pe ly Bp: S SE 6s! es: = ma a 4 Pr * - * =