A ie * 4 . 5 + ‘ i 4 t rf : , i ' 7 ‘ y : } a - fa ale THE DAiL see ee em Why is it that nearly all \ Spy - — ge yerson are Ad : aged persons are thin And yet, when you thin of it, what could you expe “t? ‘ : E Of Special Interest = +: r “1 « . . - 4 . ; Three score years of weer |; and tear are enough to maxe the digestion weak. Yet the body must be fed. In Scott’s Emulsion, ¢! work is all d t] the oil in it is dive ready to be taken into th blood. The body rests, while the oil feeds and noure Gu. a > ; , ed all Lhd, aaa c ishes, and the hypophos- phites makes the nerves steady and strong. Toronta soc, a SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, : ’ : re(, Steamshin Ca’ Quebec LUG LOL V y (Limited) Proposed Sailines frem MONTREAL and QUEBEC Durizg Season of 1899. FOR PICTOU. N.S. —- CALLING ago Father P Ce} int, Gaspe, Mal Bay, Perce, Cove, Sun: merside, Char. tetown acd Souris. From Mext:eal From Ch’town at 2 p. m at 6 p.m, Mop. 19th June Mon, 12th June do 3rd July do 26th do i §6=17th July do 10th July do Sist do do 24th do do 14th Aug. do Tih Ang. do 28th do do 2lst do dy 11th Sept. do 4th Sept. do 25th do do 18th do do 9th Oct. do 2nd Oct. ?o 23rd do do 16h do do 6th Nov. do 30th do do 13th Nov * Returning will leave Pictou, N.S. every alternate Monday at noon, on errival of Trains from Halifax and St. Jobo, call- ing at Charlottetown, Sunimerside, Perce, Gaspe, Mal Bay and Father Point. equire it. CARVELL BROS, Agents une 2nd — 2aw. Sg City of Ghent PICKFORD & BLACK LIN % 5 sacs 9 ee ates Ps amt Ee EAE ES rai. Ss. S. City of Ghent will sail from Char lottetown every Friday at / o’clock during he season of 1899 for Halifax, calling at Summerside, Port Hastings, Port Hawkes- bury, Arichat, Canso, Isaac Harbor, Saimon River, Sheet Harbor, returning will leave liclifax every Tuesday at 6 pm making some calls. The steamer has excellent passenger omodations. Saloon amidships Special low freights will be given this season Further informati« ac m apply ro W W CLARK ‘ Agent Ch’Town May 27 t! Bi-Weekly Sailing* for Boston. From Charlottetown for Hawkesbury and Halifax. SS**La Grand Duchess” Tuesday at noon—S 8 Halifax Fridays at noon From Boston Tuesdays and Saturdays from Halifex La Grand Duchesse Wed- nesdays 4pm SS Halif x saturdays 11 Boston via pm Tickets for eale at stationson P EI Railway For Tickets, rates aud infor- mation apply to W W CLARKE Agent Or to Charlotietown H L CHIPMAN Caordian Agent Balifax N § ~—< SB SABALAOSEOROSSOAODORODSD DODO | to our Farmers =: How Pigs are Raised by a Successfal Breeder. | , ; i Klug lor a sire to improve iy | | elected the large Berkshire as j ving the qualities I desired in a hog, | ‘6 litters of pigs and early | namely ; larg maturity, and making fine hams, daco }and pork. In breeding, my aim have two litters a year, one inthe first { M : and one in the first of Sep tember. The spring | fed night } ica Mgnt Subject to chunge shou!d circumstance | sold the last of September or first of October, and the fall pigs go into the April market. My aim in feeding is to make a pound of pork a day on each pig. Doing this and weighing the feed occasionally, Iam able to determine when I am feeding ata loss. In de- scribing my method of feeding I ex- | pect to be criticised, and this is just what I want to show up my weak points, but as I have always had the best re- sults by feeding this way, I still follow it, The first thing that we have to con— sider is the feeding and care of the brood sow. My sows run in the hog house which is double boarded and paper between. In one end of the house is a door, and that is always open so the cows can run out in the yard. In the opposite end, protected by a partition, the sows have their bed, which is cleaned out once a week, and a large double box of straw provided. We put in enough so the sows can crawl in out of sight. Their feed is bran and shorts, equal parts, fed once a day, and corn once a day. I always have a few squash and beets and some small potatoes, which I feed also. The sows are provided with salt, ashes and charcoal. February 15th, or about three weeks before we expect the sows to farrow we move them into the back barn, where we have pens for them 514x8 feet with fenders all around the pens, 8 inches from floor 6 inches wide. The doors in these pens swing out and close the alley, sothat the sow can run right into her pen. ‘The sows are and morning in the pens, and are turned out in the yard in the daytime. Two days betore I expect the sow to farrow, I shut her in her penand give} her about two bushels of short straw or chaff, and this is renewed every day till she farrows I give warm wate, and after 12 hours Ladd a handful of feed and increase the feed gradually as the pigs need it. The third day I let the sows run out in the yard a_ few minutes, and keep increasing time every day till the pigs are a week old, | and then let them out, too. This is; to give the pigs exercise, so they will not get too fat. As soon as the pigs begin to eat, I put a trough in an empty pen with a hole for the little pigs | to get in. I commence by feeding a} little warm skim milk, and after they | have learned to take this, 1 add some shorts. In this it is necessary to be very careful and not feed too much and give the pigs the scours. At the age of four weeks we castrate all male pigs intended fer pork. The pigs bedding must be changed every day, and they must be kept dry. In-— crease the feed as they grow older, and at from nine to ten weeks wean them. After this I feed some skim milk with shorts, corn and barley meal. The milk is fed first and then the meal is fed dry. I feed just enough so the pigs will clean the trough out, and would still eat a little more. This I do so the pigs will take plenty ef ex-| ercise and not get off their feed. The hogs run inthe yard two. or Co Hughes | The a Peoples’ Druggist Drugs are expensive, Sometimes they are more expensive than need be. And sometimes they are not so rejiable as they ought to be. There was atime when the prices of drugs were away up—too high altogether. That is not the case now. The Apoth- ecaries Hal] changd that sume time ane. | You can get perecriptions from pure drugs at the proper pricee— no fancy profits | ou can get all my re/istle epecial remedies; they’ve been tried and fuund eifective. The price -—- the main thing —will be found right in every case. Geo. B, Hughes The Peoples Druggist Apothecaries Hal) Sunnyside Charlottetown | ) | nio re fed ! i 4 pigs are fed ana) an | | 1 ' i _—_s. 7 iY AN! ay 2° Me three hours in fine days in winter and pasture. months old! in summer have a clove After the pigs are six weigh about 200 pounds, I keep them in a large pen and do net let them out. I feed chem all they w'!l eat, corn meal | with what skim milk I have Ll give! all the water th want ‘ 1 day At this ¢ \ eat one-tenth as much charcoal as they will corn, and | am certain itadds nearly that much to the value of the corn As id want to make my hogs a ba lar i c thi 3 to 40 days C ug ie tp meat solid ; 1 firm L sell hogs to the loca! butchers and dress them mivseli j v tne Noy ) vl he mudand on a dry floor wiih plenty of dry straw I find they Cress easier j nd look nicer when taken to market. Minnesota, in the Shying in Horses. The vice of shying is one of the most annoying and dangerous, and many farmers cannot understand why horses shy in the first place, and why it is so difficult to break them of this evil and dangerous habit. ‘They do not stop to reflect that shying is simply a revival of an old habit essential to the very exist- ence of the horse when it ran wild on desert or plain. Every horse from colthood up was obliged to be on the lookout for an enemy. Were it not for its speed the horse would be almost as defenceless as the sheep. The only reasonable way to break a horse of this habit is to require it to stop when ever it shies and let it see that there is nothing to be afraid of. Mankimself is sot much afraid of anything he clearly sees and understands. [t is the unknown, the mysterious that which comes sud- denly and takes us unawares of which we stand in fear.— Rural World. IT’S T00 To undergo an operation for itching . Piles when Dr. A. W. Chase’s Ointment is a surer, cheaper, easier way to cure. Cruel, barbarous methods belong tothe dark ages of the past. There wasatime when a surgical“ operation was considered the only possible cure for piles. Notso now. Occa- sionally there is still found a physician wha adheres tothis dangerous and expensive method, but to every one who still believes in using the knife, ninety and nine recommend the use of Dr. Chase's Ointment. Dr. C. M. Harlan, writing in The American Journal of Health, said : ** We know that ‘ Dr. Chase's Ointment’ meets all the requisitions of the highest stand- ard of worth, that it will be held in high esteem wherever it is used, and consequently we endorse it to every reader.” By force of merit alone Dr. Chase’s Oint- ment has won its way into this wide, wide world, until it has made the name of Dr. Chase familiar in almost every hume, and won for the venerable discoverer the title of ‘‘ America’s Greatest Phy i, Dr. Chase's Ointment has rever been known to fail as a cure for piles, It matters not whether blind, itching, bleeding or protruding, Dr. Chase’s Ointment is an absolute and pers ect cure, Dr. A W. Chase's Ointment is the discovery of the authes 0k Whose portrait and signature le a | dealers, @ genuine al of Dr. Chase's Recipe I on every box of the , Edinunson. Bates & Co. , Toronto The Charlottetown Steam Nay- agation (o., Ltd. STEAMERS.... Northumberland & Princess Leave #8 below every day (Sup~ days excepted) From POINT DU CHENE (on arrival of #fteroon train from St. John) for Sum- merside, connecting there with express train for Charlottetown. Frm SUMMERSIDE (on arrivel of morning train from Charlottetown (for Point Due Chene connecting with day} train for St. John. ; Y EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 14, lov? PERFECTLY SATISFIED. Listowel Gentleman who has no Complaint to Make Regarding Dodd s Kidney Pills. | | | | ! ' outward appearance. Listowel, Gaticad 1 10 —Mr. Thomas | Tamblyn of the firm cof Tambly ard 1 Clime, grocere, was larely -) Yeceipt of a COMMUGICBLION [rom & ce Lore OoloO Who Is gathering Stati by Dodd's Kid: ey Pils Some three Mr. , was troubled with a weak back the kidveys Ki ney Pi }s and bis trouble Tamblyn and s-vere years azo pain th He used Dodd’a ; was removed, loronto er askea ifthe ihe qguirer cure bai been satisfactory. Mr. Taml ly o teok ithe letter and wrot on th bottom ina i firme band, * The cure was quice ealifaca tory. T. TamBiyn. Weary of Experimenting With salves, supeositories and ointments and d:eading aturyvical oderation, scores and hundreds have turned to Dr «». W. Chase’s oin' ment and found it an ~bsolute cure for pile ihe fisrt application brings relief from the terrible itching, and it is very seldom that more than one box is required tn effect a per- manent cure There is a better half in every wedding— but the best man doesn’t get ber. Minard’s Liniment is used by Phy- ' Sicians. Great Britain, the Uuited States, and France represent one-half of the total wealth of all nations, Lh fli. lage nd) DR. A. W. CEASE’S A CATARRH CURE... 2B c. is sent direct to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. Hea!s the ulcers, clears the air passages, Stops droppings in the throat and permanantly cures © Catarrh and Hay Fever. Blower free. All dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Toronto and Buffalo. > The evil that men do is coon forgotten— by themselves. I HIS OWN FREE WILL oe Dear S1re,—I cannot speak to strongly | of the excellence of MIN..RD’S LINI- | MENT. Ic is THE remedy in my house- | bold for buras, sprains, etc., and we | would not be without it. It is traly a wonderful medicin:>, Joun A, MacponaLp, Publisher Irnprior Chronicle, A literarv statistican declares that for the year 1898 eighi novels a day were pub- i Sundays aad holidays not includs ed. Ask for Minard’s snd take no other. A New York derpatch states that the Standard O11 Co. bas increased its capital stock from $100,000,000 to $1106 000,000. . > of Girls’ Nerves Schos! Girls’ Nerves Many a pele, week school girl. tufiering the evil effects of an exhausted neé rvous sys- tem, apd thin, waterp blord, bas been fully rertored to the vigor and bucvancy of robust heaitb, by using A. W. Chases Nerve Fooc. the healthful glow cn ihe cheek and the brightness in theese tell of the bn lding up process which is taken piace in the body, —— > © << _ . ; The average man who tries heroic measurss gets @ misfit. Rheumatism Can't Exist W hen the kid neys are kept heaithy and vigors by the use of A. W.Chafe’s Kiduey- Liver Pills. It is Uric Acid le*t in che blo d by defective Kidneys that causes rheumatism Dr a. W. Chase’s Kidney- Liver Fills make the Kidneys stroug and active in their work of filtering the blood, and thIs removes the ae of theumatism, One pill a dose, 25 cents a box. Seemann _ The annual interest charge on the Span- ish nations) debt is $125,000,000 and the total revenue is only $150,000,000. —— & & @ ~ Active Man Wanted. To read this advertisement and then give Putnam’s Painless Corn Extrector a trial. It never faile to cure. Acts in 'wenty-four hours spd causes neither pain por discomfort. Putnam’s Corn Ex‘ractor extracts corns. It is the best ee ee Connecting at Moncton with train for Canada and at St. Jobn with steamers of International Line and railways for United States and Canada. From PICTOU (on arrival of day train from Halifax) for Charlottetown. From CHARLOTTETOWN, eeven a. m., for Pictou, (connecting there with day train for Cape Breton and Halifax, at Halifax with C. A4.&.P Line for Boston. Through tickets to be had at Grand Trunk,Canadian Pacific, Intercolonial and P. E. I. Railways, and on the Company’s Steamers and connecting lines in United States. F. W. HALES, Ch’town,P ET SECRFTAR ARTIFICIAL soooe f KETH =e It issaid that the soldiers who had taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla stood the long marches in Cuba much better than the ethers. Mibard’s Liniment Lumberman’s Friend [Am $0 Glad— You Didn't Forget a Bar of ROYAL OAK SOAP. We’re sure to want it in our house. It im- proves the clothes so much, besides it Js very pure and one bar will do as much as 2 bars of filled imported soap. For sale everywhere, Beware of imitations DR. JOHN P. MURRAY, Queen St., rear London House, ‘ VElel2 ; } | { ; | ' Remember in Purchasing : That the Action of A riano Very Life and Sq PE | , . That is 1 or . ee inside of a _Heintzman Piano, than tog 1a for the all right in orngmeny ye Orang’ They are t of t2¢ Wa have ad better + Ee ase THERSE.. De BI 1] st com pods, yo y line © r men @ w and < Lin Shi: Belt Coll More attention is paid A ti furnturs, but a plano with The Best Action In The World which is the Wesel Nickel & Gass of New York, the only kind used ip, Heintzman Piano, insures you that the inside contains only the ; material and the Highest Skill iu workmanship that the world CAN pry duce. ‘The outside appearance of a Heintsman Piano is »lways neat, @ ane Attractive. Our prices for a He*ntzman Piano, are no higher than thy of other makers, VILLER BRO i yee, ~s. 5 ; f bee 3 a a ed The P. FE. Island Music House Connolly Building Queen St, to the ] ‘aVY carved fancy Case es = ~ a F TIFFEPAAT FER TTT IEP FEFET TETAS POT ATER AS TENT PPP A OPT PTA PPT eM Men’ 3 , Shirts J. nan Underwear Collars hes Gloves WS AAALbAALAd ALdAbibd sdbLdd Ack Sid dabMdsdecAkeaseddc dad dda cddddd MudMee __ ; = ; ; en : ——_=> ©? Se 4 PEPETETPRER TEP HTTYTROTATED DTT HE TERN H MNP T TTT T ANAT H ET TT TT tT SPIED $IOF LOO $360 0988606 9600086002099 eee, M a8 ol witn the af you b Sehop.. | ive matt little « Di, As g pena of ell plee ati sfac rgans|~ = iy era, Ein parm Na Charl -—JUST ARRIVED AT— FLETOHER’S PIANO WAREROOMS. OPERA HOUSE BUILDING. Important Notice Ot: Lancashire Fire Insurance Co. Victoria-Montreal tire Insurance Co. The above Companies are not connected with the P. E. Island Board of Fire Underwriters, and are not bound by the tariff rates. Iam, therefore, prepared to effect insurance & substantially reduced rates d. J. JOHNSTON, Agent, Charlott:town, P, E. Island June 4 —2aw tf een Plant F'ood. We manufacture complete Fertilizers, using in prepat, ation— Dried Blood. Bue Meal. and Tankage. accumulated in killing of hogs, combined with Po d Nitrate of Soda. vid applying the crop in suitable proportion, assoziation trom, with the Plant Food it requires. B. & M. RATTENBRY. Charlotteton