O \ o f _L i, i- » ' ‘*‘~; L '_ ~'»' ,~ -. = 1.- ‘ is* f" "*` www your " » . ‘ , ' ' ' ~‘-- ' ' - “i »=‘ ' . es-.~“‘.. ~ cf ‘ . » _ ff . . -f ..._ .‘...»-.,- ~ _ _ . 'rar ,cUaiin1.~.N, onaatorrnrowivfraisccgcwann ist-.Ano mvgiisn io atm 'fit ' - - =sf'\ I l ». .~-/- .- 5 @». ~_f'~~/< Q i. Hockey I Q Q nl-Ill C/3 l am.. nwggn &.__..ul. ¢-...M ...~..,...- Aww# “WW mawasndm ~a.>\\h~Ull` ~w»»» 4 ,w\.»aa»u » ..»,.....,,,. E i Are llur Seeeiallyyy.. iitll ‘ , (Jur assortment- this vis-iii is running over with new ideas - im .W-.\l provelnents -- attrac- iiveiieis - and at re- dticcd prices. The Spsrtaii Hockey at 'll 1 79 1 in y r~L_e_q your breath awav. ~ King Hockey at ` » >-l 475 + 3 ,G ( D C cn’ _ _ /_ ~ V ,` -1:3 £15’-l F95' I; (D 3 ,` ~_» leads among le aders. P and S Make .50 Black or Choc_late- :rc gieatly improved. ie 'Slater Hockey at $3 00 ` is un=urp-isséd-sliows improvements this sea- ~ 'On were possible. .filler e e Slater Shoe Agents' § us 1':/_jg N ee l\J g:::> vu - be J ...u...L. >..-.eu L ~\`““ ‘ if » f' _.4 -1 ev ,-`\ :)7‘l§iA‘l{ P. i. |._e__AliwAi On and after Monday, June l8th,l9G),the trains of this railway will inn daily (Sun- days excepted) as followsz- Trains Outward. Trains Inward Read Down. Stations. Read Up. P.M. P.M. A. M. P.M. P.M. A. M. ' '.35 lv. Ch`tovvn ar 1.25 9.55 . ' " Royalty June. 8."' . .‘ .‘ . ` N. \Viltshire Hunter River Emerald J unc. `S P?PWP 8955535 @@@r~ 223358 mow O .~‘.~‘. t"si2.’=E&s l-lr-ev-4 r"!\'~!°"* usd? :~ 9°9°‘° Ssiiieee FA .Get-"~> rl. 2”:-==-?’. $5256 388 nv.. i M. i"‘ fl 3 Kensington .o_o_ ar .. . jlv _ _ 10.10 lv Ssldep ar . ' 7.1. 11.00 Wellington .E T.-L5 11.40 Port Hill 3.37 12.52 O Leary 9.17 1.50 Allfcrton . '_ 9.55 2.45 a.r'i`i;nish lv 2.50 5.00 p. nr, P.:u.A.M r.M. Aoi. Aoi. Pau. 2.00 6.0.3: lv Ch'to\vn ar 8.10 3.50 _ {l\'It. Stewart }_ ~ CDG P’ ssassh” ‘if 99°F' 9 ease P-4 cc éuuii 9°? Sb -f -v Z Emerald Jct. _ __ __ l i lf; APUCUI U P-‘ O .<=><==- sir? -“tiff 3m; Junction Morell St. Peters ' ar S-ouris lv 5.10 11.35 a.M. P.M. Mt. Stewart P 3.30 7.15 lv June. ar (7.55 2.0(- 4.23s' $.05 Cardigan 0.03 12.51 5.0.) 3.20 ar Geolown lv 5.50 12.30 P.M. A-NL 'LZ5 Emerald 5.-13 lv Jun ar - -8.15 ar C. Traverse lv 5.V0 P.:.i. A.;-i. Trains of this railway are run by Easi ern Standard Time. D. POTTINGER, Gen Man. Gov t Rys. ` Moncton, N .P. G. A. SHARP, Snot. 'vi ¢'~`.“‘°:“.°~" 1.: il' S1”-rr ga See >-4 FUR SYDNEY llllillll Allll Slllllll. S. S. ELLIOTT \Vill sail as above from Sll\llIl&l°Sido‘ \9\ll insi- Uharlottotown 20th inst WCOOOWIOOCWC I°*l°°¢°l°°O0l PRESGRIPTIUNS _ at very low prices. We guarantee everything we use rin them to be the best and it will pay you to give us a trial. ie ...ieleiiei 'f THE WILD ANIMALS The native are picking up courage and Q. Mall/IILLAN. wiumi a am: we pu up \ ; It _ . lee i>liiii'i_eeiiiiieo]30¢1¢1’S een.. ... ._ ,__ ‘A permanent position and good 300 bbls bnvht Grocery Sugar. ' - "“ -` a 1 ~ . . Q ‘ - V . V _ _ . -. p J' i ' to me right; mm if _applied fo, 'i New lt.ndi§°g" Connolly sff svhait and p a.:D.=:l:'.a.*sr:r_.c>:a.. ` 0ct`L9 ti iNiin’s I 1 PAMINE Ended by a Terrible Raiii Storm. Sought Q the Habitatiou of Mau,- Couiitry Flooded and People Drowned. C.»\i.cUrr.\, October 15.-The drought to which was due. the famine with all its attendant horrors, came to violent end rainstorin that lasted four days and en- I dangered this city. f Theinhabitants revelled at first in the watcr.Tlieytook thelposition thatthey co ild not have too much ofa good thing. There \vas it general rejoicing at the downpour and few objected to being drenched. But before the storm was half over the natives began to suffer. In some places the waiter stood six feet deep, and the fliiiisy. .\'_x'rivn norslgs coLLAPsED. The nuinber of persons killed in the floods was seven, and nine were injured. Two hundred and seventy nine buildings were destroyed. It was the irony of fate that following the drought, there should come n flood. The sweeping water made such destruc- tion that hundreds were rendered home- less and dependent. Relief funds were started to save them from starvation. ‘A terriblefeaturel at the flood was the fight that it caused between man and beast. Venomous snakes and tigers were driven into houses for refuge from the raging waters and there they battled with the tcrriiied natives. snor rocn coi3i=i_»_5_ In Entally one resident found- tliat‘ cobras has taken refuge on the high land in his compound. He shot four of them, one nearly five feet long. The snakes were so frightened by the flood that they fell an easy prey to his gun. At the same time the wild quadrupeds in which India. abounds were running to the high ground. Deer and leopards trotted side by side, the first forgetting their fear, and the carnivora their hunger and instincts in the race for life. They clustered together upon knolls and hills and stayed there while the panic lasted. When the waters began to sub- side, however, the wild__ beasts remem- bered their habits and pounced upon their unlucky fellow sufferers. f CROPS CAN NOW' GROVV. ` Rain fell generally through India, and it is hoped that fear of prolonged famine is at an end. The crops will not grow. looking hopefully to the future. The qestion of rosponsibility for this famine and the measures to be taken to prevent another are eagerly discussed The British deny that the farnines are due in any measure to their administra- tion. Drought and its consequent dis- asters, they say, have always been a characteristic of life in the vast peninsula, whene the periodical rains are subject to variation. "The real difference between British rule and that by which it was preceeded is the spirit in which the calamity has been met," says the Allahabad Pioneer. ,“Under previous rulers fatalism, neglig- ence and corruption must have obstructed the most benevolent projects of relief. “The peculiarity of European action in l` this matter is the sincere altruism by which it is marked. The sufferings of the people are registered and they are care'U 1 r - - i 19 ii-ii ffrl L - Q,/l `*; __ '-- <4 A _. ‘A- an simply kidney disorders. Thekidneyc iltef the blood of all that shouldn’t bo there. The blood passes through the kid- ,ueys every three minutes. If the kidneys . do their work no impurity or cause of disorder can remain in the circulation longer than that time. The fore if r ,blood is out of ocder your lsidneysgse failed in theixtework. They arein need of ltimulation, strengthening' or ,doctoring. One medicine will do all three, the Hneei _pnd most imitated medicine there ‘.1 due to errors of judgment, ,ascribiiblel to the most humane intent-ions. - “By a rule which prohibits all the natural social and other checks on Increase the government has favored the qrowth of an exuberant population almost ex- clusively rlepciidcnt on agriculture for subsistence. . “When nature endeavors to redress the balance by famine the g-overnmcnt steps in with an almost universal system of out- door relief. Tliat is the real problem of the present and its importance will be readily perceived." _ V- ____.,, ---L.__ '_;L._.l "l 3;.) _Q _ llll|lS Allllll t 1 3 o MARRIED ~ Edwin Smith, B. A. Miss Sadie-McKay to Mr. Herbert Donald, all of Sea View. received official notice from the secretary of the Canadian Commission at the Paris Exhibition; that thc Province had been awarded a gold medal for the exhibit of vegetable foofl products; :id a ~ silver medal for the exhibit in horticulture. people of Vernon River and vicinity as-' , sembled at St. Joachim's, Church| to',wit-- ness the marriage ceremony of one of their fairest and most popular young' ladies, Miss Ada Acorn, daughter of Mr. William Acorn, of Mill View, Lot 49,fand M-r John here in September. There was at terrible* Callaghan son of Mr Bernard Callaghan of Lake Verde, Lot 48. The bride, bc- comingly attired in a suit of fawn, with hat to match was attended by her cousin, Miss Martha Acorn while the groom was supported byhis brother, Mr. Alfred Cal- laghan. 'l` he . nuptial knot was tied, the Rev.'Dr. Do; le. At Sea View, Nov. 15th, by the Rev. -- - W -- - . THE Government of P. E. Island have I \l t. ON TUESDAY Monm-.\iG, Nov, 5th, thel for and whatever evils,exist are uianily Sympathy may help a wounded heart., but it woift heal \ a wou1;i_ded~ limb. That fact is so obvious that y`ou won- der why any one can offer “sympathy” as the chief. feature of treatment for the delicate diseases ofwvomen. Yet women are invited to “ write to a woman who can sympathize with woman," and the theme of their correspondence is to be the delicate, diflicult and dangerous diseases which undermine a womai1`s health and strength. It is true that siicli offers are combined' with an offer of . “medical advice.” But medical acivicc can only be given by a competent phy- sician, and no mention is made ip such offers of a ph 'sician’s or doctor’s advice. It is not offlered because it cannot be given. The oder is not being made by a qualitied physician. ` The offer of free consultation by letter, made to ailing women by Doctor R. Y. Pierce, has behind it a physic1an‘s _abil- ity. Dr. Pierce is Ygonsultxng physician of the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical In- stitute, Bulialo, N. Y. Associated with Dr. Pierce is a staff of nearly a score of physicians, each man a specialist. _In a practice of over thirty years Dr. Pierce and his staff have treated successfully more than half a million women, who have been cured of debilitating drains, inflammations, ulcegations and female troubles. The age, erzpenence and skill of Dr. Pierce give hinia supreme ad- vantage in his chosen lie-ld of diseases of women. You can write to Dr. Pierce without fear and without fee. Every letter is read privately and answered_conl:`iden- tially, the answer being _sent in a plain envelope, without any printing upon it. Dr. Pierce’s Common -Sense Medical Adviser, free on receipt of stamps to cover customs and mailing only. _Send 31 one-cent stamps for the _edition in pa- per cover, or 50 stamps for cloth bound. Address Dr.-R. V. Pierce,-Buffalo, N. Y. , i ' , Liberal illeuieiilioii A Liberal Convention will be held in the Hall, at Eldon, on THURSDAY, Nov. 22nd at 2 c/clock, p. in., for the _purpose cf selecting two candidates to contest the Belfast District in interests ofthe Liberal party at the forthcoming Local Election. , The Directors of each Pfoll in the district will call Poll meetings to select four Delegates frcm each Poll to attend said convention. GEORGE FORBES. Ifres. East Queens, Lib. Asso. D. J. R. McMILLAN, nl 7 d&w Vice President. , _ To-Let er For Sale. p Having decided to remove to Sydney, I will Seller Rent my Dwelling) House on Upper Queen' Street. This Welling, is pleasantly located, contains twelve rooms, `well finished from sellar to att-ic. The house is heated with hot air and has hot and cold water connection, Bath Boom, Electric' Light, Telephone connection and all modern conveniences. 1 The party rentinf or buying the house will have the priv' exe of buying; tons of Acadia Round Coal now in‘t e cellar. day and Thursday aiternoons from 3 to 5 .o'c1ook. - `_ B1:o;ss;:,s:sip|n` giver; ap short nlgtice. or t er part cu ars app . to. 11 172wur T. J. .4 T Y- ,_-9---. _.iff -‘:.~.°.--_--r-5; sansaoos ' Direct from West Indies, csrgo sehr. 1* my -> 195', \v \¢((’ A \ \§i§\\\\\\`d~\\\`\\`\\‘i's\\\\i.\\.\\\\\ 0 >-»-f=/ \8 0 '\\\\\\ One bright Navy Ladm Cloth, red satin lining, in coat and skirt, lined throughout and faced with rad satin, finished with stitching and pearl buttons Sli Come in anl see what we are asking fo: this Sui Three Ladies BlaclrG.oth The Jacket is made in Eton style, lined throughout with black taifeta silk, new shawl collar which is faced with stitched silk, il: closes with braid loops and p=arl buttons made with double inverted plaits and lined with hnenelte 0 d if a. cut price will take ir One Blue Cloth witn Appl e trimming on Ja ket -skirt is made wit! douolennierted pleates lined wit l1n°nette and bJu1i ev .1 v lv 3 . J J ll Il sell at the reduced price Four Black and White Plaid The coat is made in Eton sly e, skirt is lined throughout and bound with velvet $11, now Six Black Coats with plaid slnrt, the skirt is lined throughout and is mide with double inserted plaits $14 50 now . . . SI] 50 Two M.xed Tweeds with several rows of stitching, coat and skirt lined throughout $13 25 no v . $10 50 One Light Gray home spun the Jacket is I9 inches long ily front lined with Sateen, skirt is lined with linenutte and bound $14 50 no - - - $11 50 Three Blue Serges with coat and skirt, heavily braided, coat and skirt 1 ned throughout $11, now One Ladies Blue Serge Jacket and Skirt, trimmed with black satin folds, Jac et and Skirt lined throughout $31, now . . $16 50 Four Mixed Tweed in Brown, G ay, Gieen and Blue, skirt is lined throughout-made double inverted plait and new ilu. Jacket in mcoy finished with rows of stitching and peirl buttons $15 25 now . $10 15 Six Suits, these are made of all wool imported tweed in B ue, Brown and Black, the Jacket is 17 in hes long, lined with black Roman Sstm, closes with pearl buttons, skirt is lined with huenette and bound with velvet $14, will go at , _ $10 50 One brown tweed lined throughout Jacket is finished with several mug nf stitching .$7 50 now $5 25 _._.._;___._¢44;.4-mg Three large Green plaid the colt as made in Eton ¢;&rf/if A in ‘I . - Ht ~ 'D jr. J gl Q4: K fh- ’» if " .- u " g_ 1 orsalelovr A ~ g _ - ‘ 1-1-s=f~4.'e.,,-_»`>~-*` ' - , , ,_ ,, N. hAITENiUnr. ~ -f ff ` - ~-..~' _ ,~.-..‘__~;_._v ,¢,- . "ff" ._; L ` a .=,_, ~r _eg-_f-_~¢~.,;,-~r ._ st;-a»~»¢~»-_Lat,~;,p, ,. , qw* * -1-as .¢ e .ee *N __ _ ,,,_ I