— ” ALENDAR FOR SEPTEMBER, 1894. First Quar 6th day, 9h 505m, p. m., - - rizon. ‘ M { jay, 12h 9.0m mid., S. jast Quar 22nd day, 8h 19.6m. a, m.. S E N Moon, 29th day, Ih. 31.5m. a. m., N. below , —_ in | Sun | High ' rises sets water inital Laatenae B Nit ih m ho m | after’n | 1} Sa a, (5 26,6 34] 11 55 2718 AV | 2 32] morn 3} Monday | 28] 30] © 30 i I “lay 1 T 28 . i | Weduesday | 31 | 26] 1 46 s| Thursday | 3 24] 2 32 fil i ; | Ze | 8 i Sa iav «VU 4 42 9! Su \ 6 6 | M ay | 16 719 11 | Tuesda ei is] 616 2; W Ly 10 l2 9 0 l lay ‘i | lv 9 38 l4 ‘ AZ 8 10 14 15 | Sa ay 13 | o | li 42 16 | Sunday | 45 t+} 11 13 Ay $6 | 31 83 @& 18 17 lL} aft 17 lay s15 59) 0 54 2 ay 70 o7 | 1 38 ~ . . | 1 5 2 29 22/8 . | g2] 631 384 23 | Sunda | 54 7 5 10 ‘ { im | 55 | 19 | 6 45 2 lay 26h: Ri 84 a " aday | DS | 45 8 54 27 I rsday a9 | i% 9 39 28, 1 : 6 0 4! 10 17 9 | Saturday 37 | 10 53 lay | o 2 j 5 38 Il 28 y ‘ Tl 4 Tus Leapivne DatLy NewsPaPer or P. E. Istanp, s issued every aflernoon, from the office of the ExaMiver Pcustisuine Company, in the Loaden House Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCE) THE DAILY EXAMINER. TERMS : Four Dollars a Year = - NEW SERIES Oe WORD, cccdnsceovececscesscesseepseoetoees $4.00 PE PS diva cenetteodenscenenssebecudedin 200 SE SE tlvcccccccveseseossseciennes 1.00 BE MIE, sha cceenncccesécscccensiecdeone* 0.35 Bent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States ADVERTISING RATES For smal! advertisements which are ordered for only one or two weeks the charge ia 5 | cents per inch for the first insertion, and 2 vents for each continuation. Rate cards are farnished on application at the office. Special | contract prices at a reduced rate are quoted | for advertisements four inches in size or | jarger, which are to run for three months or longer. No special notices inserted unless paid for ai the rate of 10 cents per line, and under no ¢cireamstances will such pe!d notices appear ip the local column, Svecial discounts made on all advertise- meats connected with Charch Fairs, Bazaars, Picaies, ete. No notices will be inserted with the same Unless the regular rate of 10 cents per tne is paid, That Tae Examiner is considered by our Merchants and Manufacturers te be the lead- lag newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements public, is abundantly proved by the ‘act that in order to accommodate our auvertisers we have been compelled to enlarge the paper te its present size. Tue Dirty Examiner is for sale by the fol- lowing agents :— R. H. Mason, Post Office, J. Melntyre. Malpeque Road, ©. Paal, Lower Spring Park Road, ee W. M. Cor:fin, Grafton Street, 7” S. Grey, cor. Water and Prince St. D. Chappell, Prince Street, Pazaar Store, Queen Street, Geo. Carter & Co., Queen Street. _ Ss Gray, News Siall, P. E. L Ratiway Om the trains M. & T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- merside. ly. Sutherland, Souris. Hon. D. Gordon, Georgetown. b. A. Egan, M*. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton. A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge Ee ae ae : The Weekly Examiner $ issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ ft is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and full of the latest news. The subseription for Taz Weexty 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 Tue DatLy EXaMINER. Charlottetown and office. JOHN CALDWELL JOHN MAIR ESTABLISHED 1883 JOHN CALDWELL & 60, Fruit and Produce Commi-- sion Merchants, 187 McGILL and 131 ST. PETER STS. MONTREAL. Maipeque Oysters a specialty. Corre - ponde solicited Telephone L876. nugl4—3m pat From Constitutional Weakness, Impruden:- Unavoidable Neglect or Exposure, or Culpable Indiseretion, YOUR MEALTH is BROKEN DOWN, and you need a Toxtc Mepicine, you can not affor.! to experiment on yourself with untried I medies, USE Putiner's Emulsion, Which for the past twenty years bas been endorsed the lew ling Physicians of the Maritime Provinces as raat Health Rest The Graat Health Restorer. Thonsan I+ have proved its incomparable Cxcelie . and *o may you. For vale by all good Druggists at 50c. a botil , lw—septl0 rey ro HIRE. A firet-c'ass Horse and Buggy, also a Double-seated Phaeton. Enquire at G. G. JURY’S Jewelry Store, north side Queen Sqnare, Post Office, Charlotte- i town 2aw (w f) 3m—may25 TIN WARE FOR—— Creameries and Cheese Factories. The very best work guaranteed on all jobs for Creameries and Cheese Factories. fE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF THIS KIND OF WORK. MW. STEVENSOY, MANUFACTURER oposite ’ oF Tinware, Stove Pipe, &e., 53 QUEEY STREFT, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND All orders promptly attended to. apy— tf | } | } i | “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. ere SS CILARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1894. — = = ome al SS Steel Plows! Steel Plows! We have the following reliable goods which we on Credit terms: — Frost & Wood Steel Plo-vs, Dickieson’s Fan Mills and Seed Separaters, Holl’s Threshing Machines, | Crushers, Root Cutters, Straw Cutters and 'attached), Tudhope’s Road Carts, ete. Cnarlottetown, August 29, 1894—dy & will sell very cheap for Cash or Potato Diggers, Holl’s and Fleury’s Grain Carrier Proctor’s and McKenzie’s Ensilage Cutters (with Universal Buy from us and save money. A. HORNE & C@. wky Newfoundland Markets HW. T. MeCOUBREY, General Commission Merchant. Oats and Produce of all kinds. Ship- ments from P. E. I<land carefully attend- ed to and account sales given promptly. Wharfage and Stores. Correspondence solicited. Hi. T. McCOUBREY, P. O. Box 307 St. Julin’s, N. FP. septi—dy lm wy 3m Tickets to Boston. Buy Your Tickets for Boston by | Tt ” §. §. - FLORIDA,” (Canada Atlantic and Plant Line), —-FROM—— | W. W. CLARKE,’ Ticket Agent, Corner Queen and Water Streets. Charlottetown, June 22, L4)t What's the time? © If you have a Cough it ia time you were taking GRAY’S .. RED SYRUP ~* SPRUCE GUM THE OLD STANDARD CURE FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS, Gray's Syrup has been on trial for more than 60 years and the verdict of the people is that it ip the best remedy known. 2c. and @«. per bottle. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Paopnitreas MONTREAL. | } Quebec Steamship Co. STEAMER MIRAMICHL = Leaves Ch’town ! 10th August, Leaves Montreal 6th August, a 24th * 3rd September, 7th September, 17th ” 21st * lst October; 5th October, | Sth ** mm * | pe 2d November galling at Father Point, Gaspe, Mal Bay, Perce and Summerside. Freight handled carefully and carried at reasonable rates. Passengers will find this a delightful route. Full particulars from CARVELL BROS., Agents aug?—wed thu Columbia Bicycle Tires A difference of opinion exists among riders regarding the merits of the single and inner tube tires, and a choice of the two styles is offered on the 1894 Columbia wheels. You can have the strong resillient and easily repaired Co- lumbia single tube or their new inner tube, which you will unhesitatingly -ronounce far ahead of any «duier tire of this type. Full parti. wars ia catalogue, whick you can >)tain from R. M. Young, Agent. BASKETS. Two Thousand POTATO BASKETS for sale low. CARVELL BROS. INSIST — Upon having Featherbone Corsets. Refuse all substitutes. i | See they are stamped ihus: NONE ARE GENUINE UNLESS SO STAMPED. RAND BAZAAR. The CONGREGATION OF ST. DUNSTAN’S, Char- lottetown, intend holding a GRAND DIOCESAN BAZAAR n aid of their propose] NEW CATHEDRAL, —-— |\ —- — Hillsborough Skating Rink, Fitzroy St. —COMMENCING—— MONDAY (fit G8, 00. 24th: NEXT, And Lasting Several Days. There will be a profusion of USEFUL AND FANCY ARTICLES, which will be disposed of at reasonable prices. There will also be DINNER, TEA and REFRESH- MENT TABLKS, where visitors can procure everything in these lines at moderate rates. This will be the grandest affair of its kind ever held in the Province. Parties visiting the Provincial Exhibition prove the opportunity by taking in the Bazaar should im- A FIRST-CLASS ENTERTAINMENT will be given each evening. Admission, 10 cents, By order of Commitiee. A. J, QUIRK, SECRETARY 0 AP Has proved 5 sale that it is of any soap in the market. is they who have proved its Charlottetowa, August’3, 1894—All Islan | wky prs eow tl Ist sept, then wky by its The best value for Millions of women throughout the value. It brings them less enormous the Consumer world can vouch for this, as it labor, greater comfort. sept]? —4i Seeton and Mitchell, Halifax, agents for Nova Scotia and P. E. Island. NEW CURE FOR DIPHTHERIA. European Hospitals Practicing a Method of Blood Inoculation. So many thonsands of children are an- nually carri-d «ff by diphtheria, the suf- ferings oansed by the disease are so agon- izing and the remedies hitherto at the dis- posal] of the medica] profession so inade- quate that the news of the introduction into the Berlin and London hospitais of a new and « ficacions enre for this fell mal- ady cannot be regarded otherwise than as amatter of public interest. Very little hes been heard about this remedy until now, says a writer in the New York Trib- une, oWing to the fact that the distingnish- ed bacterivlogists engaged in its discovery have been uiwilling to subject themselves to the disadvantage as Dr. whose cure four consumption has been un- justly proclaimed a failure. merely because it was published to the word jic.u.turely and befure it was ready for medical appli- cation. The new cure, briefly speak- ing, one inocula‘ion, with this difference that, instead of in- jecting the poison into the sys- tem of the patient, one injects the blood of an animal which has been inoculated with a weak culture of the diphtheria dac- twiia-—the viras of the latter being, how- ever, of so weak a character that it does not affect the animal with the malady, but merely reiders it immune tlicreto. Re- peated ex;eriments made of late have #hown that a few drops of blood from a horse or any other animal thus rendered immune injected into a human being suf- tering from diphtheria are sufficient to ar- rest and cure the disease, Of course it is tov 8002 us yet to quote the statistics of the few hundreds of cures which have been ef- fected in Berlin and Loudon by this treat- ment, but whatever the ultimate result of its application, it has at least one advant- age over all other forms of inoculation hitherto discovered, namely, that the mat- ter injected into the system of the patient is free from poisdn and consequently harm- lews. SA Koch, is of Taxes and Taxations, In the time of Queen Anne soap taxed £28 per ton. The tithes in England amounted to £4,- 080,000 a year. Rassia raises $1,500,000 a year by the sale of passports, A tax on dogs was levied in Rome dar- ing the reign of Nero, In 1888 the people of Great Britain paid taxes on 492,200 carriages. In Portugal the tobacco tax brings £900,000, the land tax £700,000, In parts of Peru taxes are paid in cocoa leaves and Peruvian bark. The soap duty in Holland brings $750, - 000 a year to the government. Charles IL farmed all the customs for an annual payment of £390,000. A hearth tax was formerly assessed in many of the German States. The rate of taxation has nearly quad rupled in France since 1830, Male servants are taxed in Great Britain and several other countries. The French people pay ever $10,006,000 & year taxes on their windows, Germany pays $10,000,000 a year taxes on salt and $13,000,000 on sugar. The Australians pay £10,000,000 in taxes to support their Government. Holland is the only country in Europe that admits coffee free of duty. Tutil about forty years ago, the Persian Government levied a tax on cata. The taxes of the people of this country equals abwut $10 to each inhabitant. The capitation or pole tax is believed to have been the earliest form of taxation. Almost all the turkish taxes are farmed ont, and the resulting corruption is very great. In the early days of the Virginia and Carolina colonies, taxes were paid in to- bacco. Doring the fourteenth century, in Italy, s tax was levied ou everyone who wore shoes. Customs duties on imports were collect- ed ‘n England by Ethelred IL. as early as 979. Most of the Asiatic countries have been ruined by the system of ‘‘farming the taxes.”"—St. Louis Globe Democrat, was “Team” and ‘‘Dock,” A Bostonian writes to the Listener from TAincoln, Neb., that the misuse of the word team,” which applies it to the wagon in- stead of the horses, has not crossed the country. Hesays: ‘‘I was much humiliat- ed one day, on commenting on a ‘team’ that had been left in the middle of the street, to be told, by a sort of cowboy ina siouch hat, that I meant ‘wagon.’ And he was right. I fear itis a local, perhaps merely a Bostonian mistake, And I, as an exiled Bostonian, feel grieved at it. Will she people here come to use it wrongly, too, or sball we reform? Iam trying to reform—in conversation. Most of us use it correctly in writing.” Itis not a local vice merely, but it is eastern rather than western. ‘To offset thia bad easternism, they have a curious mixturs of terms in New York and further westward which we, in Boston, have been spared. When they speak of a ‘‘dock” they mean a wharf and not, asthe word really means, the water between tue wharves, And nothing is mere astonishing to a New Yorker than to come to Boston and hear of a man fall- ing into the ‘‘dock.”—Boston Transcript. Building and Loan Societies. In the early history of building societies thay were organized and almost wholly managed b mechanics and laboring men; managed honestly, conservatively and suc- cessfully, and to this ‘‘class” belongs the honor of originating, conducting and car- rying toa point of magnitude and useful- ness 4 scheme that commands the admir- ation of financiers the world over. The honest, thrifty homeseeker has proved himself to be the best citizen as far as managing a building society is concerned. When failures have occurred in building societies one of the main causes has been theintroduction into the management of financial ideas emanating from the brains of theoretical bankers. Nearly all, if not every error introduced into the scheme, are scholarly errors, always accepted un- der protest by the mechanic or small store- keeper. —Philadelphia Press. TH E STRONC POINT about the cures by Hood's Sarsaparilla is that they are permanent. They start from the solid foundation —Pure Blood. —_— > — Look into James Paton & Co’s eastern window for millinery this evening. Sept. 24 Umbrellas, Umbrellas, | Umbrellas James Paton & Co. Sept. 24 USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the great blood and Nerve Remedy. eee ae ee MOWBRAY ON ANARCHY <4 KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvemen. ond tends to personal evjoyment when rightly vsed, The many, who live bet- ter than others end enjoy ‘ife more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, wil! attest the value to Aealth of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most asceptab’e and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanentiy ecming constipation, It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the “id- neys, Liver and Bowels withort weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substa:.ce. Syrup of Figs is for sale by al! drug. tists in 75e. bottles, but it is manu. factured by the California Fig Syrup Co. ouly, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not weent ny substitute if offered, NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, &c. The subscriber is now prepared to make Surveys of Land, run Boundary and Division Lines, furnish Plans, ete.; also, Mechanical and Architectural Drawings, Plans, Specifi- cations and Estimates. iJ. P. NICHOLSON, Land Surveyor, Pownal Street. Charlottetown, Aug. 25, 1894—dy & wy Ask for a Lymans Coffee is delicious. free sample. PARKER HOUSE, (FORMERLY OAKLAND HOUSE) FOR SALE. To be sold by Public Auction, on Tues- day, 2nd day of October next, 1894, at 12 o’clock, noon, on the premises :— That valuable vroperty known as the “ Oakland House,” and fronting on King Street, with good stables and coach house attached. The House is in good state of repair, having been lately painted and papered al! over. Terms.—Half cash, and the balance may remain for a term of years secured by mortgage at 4 p. c. For further particulars apply to Bayfield & Blanchard, Solicitors, Charlottetown. CHARLES GALLANT. sept22—s m w f THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), CAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000. A Society established with a view to disseminate the taste for arts, to encourage and help artists. Incorporated by Letters Patent of the Government of Canada, the 27th February, 1893. GALLERY OF PAINTINGS Nos. 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame St., Montreal. The Richest Gallery of Paintings in Canada. Admission Free, All? .e Paintings are originals, mostly from th: ."rench school, the leading mod- era school. Eminent Artists, such as Francais Rochegrosse, Aublet, Baron, Pezant, Petit- Jean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a great many others, are members of this Society. 68 members of this Society are exhibitors in the Salon in Paris. Sale of Paintings at easy terms, and «listribution by lot every week. Price of tickets, 25cts, Ask for our Catalogues and Circulars. aug29—mwf tf Provincial Loan. Provincia Treasury, Priuce Edward Island, 25th June, 1894. Under authority of the Act of last Ses sin, 57 Vic., Cap. 6, the Government ot Prince Edward Island is now prepared to meseive, from any person or persons, Tem- porary Loans, at 4 per cent. interest, on call or on such termsas may be agreed mpon. This will afford a good opportunity for the investment of a large or small sums for short or long periods. ANGUS MoMILLAN, Prav Treasurer. , jane226—pat i Single Copies Two Cents VOL 34.—NQ. 7: THE FAMOUS ENGLISH ANARCHIST DEFINES ITS MEANING. How He Considers Murder and Arson—Be Would Reorganize Society and Establish & Great Brotherhood on the Basis of Mutual Aid to One Another. Charles Wilfred Mowbray, the Engiish | anarchist, writes: It L.28 notoften happened that the peo ple of the United States have taken excep- tion toan Englishman janding on their shores, but the unusual event has hap- pened at last. .1 was not aware before the otuer day that I was such a very danger- ous personage. On the contrary,my friencs in England have thought me rather mild. The officials of the United States gcvern- ment hold a different view, based on what we call in Eugiand funk bred, no doubt, from the fear born of corruption and ia- capacity, Iam here and Ishall go away when I like unless force is used to compel my return, You laugh, no doubt, when I say peace. And you think about the actions of men and women who have been identified with the anarchist movement. But let me tell you that these actions, this violence, have no more to do with anarchism than it had to do with every movemeut of the past to- ward progress. The genuine anarchist looke with sheer horror upon every destruction, every mu- tilation of a human being, physical or moral. He loathes wars, executions and imprisonments, the grinding down of the workers whole nature isa dreary round of toil, the social and economical slavery of woman, the oppression of children, the crippling and poisoning of human nature by the preventabie crnelty and injastice of man to man in every shape and form. Cer- tainly this frame of mind and homicidal outrage cannot stand on the relation of cause and effect. Aa a communist-an- archist I look upon human societies as es- sentially natura] groups of individuals who have grown into association for the sake of mutually aiding one ‘nother in self-pro- €uction and self-development. Artifici- ally formed empires, constructed and held together by force, I regard as a miserable sham. The society which I desire and would re- cognize vould be that which would be bound together by real sympathies and common ideasand aims. Where iu all the world to-day do we nnd a society bound ty such ties as I have named? In my eyes the true purpose of every sucé natural so- ciety, whether it be a nation or a confeder- ation of nations, a tribe or a village com- munity, is to give every member of it the largest possible opportimities in life. The object of associating is to increase the opportunities of the individuals, One isolated human being is helpless, a hope- less slave to external nature, whereas the limits of what ie possible to human beings in free and rational association are as yet unimagined. Now I hold a natural society good in proportion as it answers what I believe to be its true purpose, and bad iv proportion as it departs from that purpose,and instead of enlarging the lives of the individuaw composing it, it crushes and narrows them, For instance, when society recognizes the right of a comparatively few men to ths exclusive possession of the soil, and there- by prevent others from enjoying or using except upon hard and stinting terms, I hold that society, in so far as it recognizes such an arrangement, is bad and fails of its purpose, because such an arrangemen:, instead of enlarging the opportunities for a full buman life for everybody, cruelly curtaiis them for all workers and many others, and moreover is forced on the snuf- ferers against their will, and not arrived at, as all social arrangements ought to be, by mutusl agreement. Such is my view of human societies in general, and, of course, I endeavor to find out and make clear to myself and to othere the main cause why our own exisiing sov%- ety is here and now failing so dismally, in many directions, to fulfill its true fune- tion. | have arrived at the conclusion that these causes of failure are mainly two, Fiist, the unhappy recognition of author- ity of man over man as A morally righe principle, a thing to be accepted and sub- mitted to, instead of being resisted as es- sentially evil and wrong. Second, the equally unhappy recognition of the right of property, i.e., the right of individuals who have complied wich certain legal | formalities to monopolize material things, whether they are asing them or need to use them or not, and whether they have pro- duced them or not, To me thie state of publie conscienee which permits these two principles of authority and of property to hold sway in our social life seems to be the root of our mieerably desocialized condition, and, therefore, I am ayainst ali institutions and all habits which are based on these princi ples or tend to keep them up. The Largest Churches. We find a list of the largest churches in Europe with figures representing their seat ing capacity, but we have an idea that the figures given indicate the capacity for the stauding multitude, as in few cases are there seats provided. We give the list, however, as we find it: Seats. Se. Poter*s Church, Beane ..ccccccscccceees 54.900 iad TEL. vn00s beens, seenbbhidons 37,000 St. Paul's, Rome bvicecc dee St. Paul's, London 000 406060080. 0000s Oe Pasronio, BeleRRn. 6000 cccceceticceeess 24400 Florence Cathedral. ..........cccsccecceses 24,300 Antwerp ( I a ain a i 24.000 St. Sophia's, Constantinople.... St. John’s, Lateran att DE I binbta~ ssecesseventéest ene Fe i inns ocvencdonvesongessoess 13,000 Oh I BR hp tnctecensaed sees 12,400 ee anew secede 12,000 St, PORE, DORs occ csvcccccccescccecece 11a Cote OF VIO dn ovsscddccneadecnsss 11,000 6 Dia WOO, 6 ois d sc ctWskec cakes 66s 7,000 Spurgeon’s Tabernacle, London.......... 7,000 The figures opposite Spurgeon’s Taber- nacle mean the seating capacity. An Essay on Fools. Asmart fool is always dangerous, and if he is ignorant the case is worse. But when he is complicated with high moral preten- sions he may easily become unsafe in the extreme.—New York Sun. = Ss SP Salt! Salt! To arrive, per bark R. B. Peake, from Liverpool, due here about 15th October, 8,000 Bags Salt. Parties wishing to pur- chase can book, now at low rates. PEAKE BROS. & CO, Charlottetown, Sept. 26, 1894. ae Hood’s Cured. After Others Failed Scrofula in the Neck—Bunches All Cone Now. Sangerville, Maine. “C, I. Hood & Oo., Lowell, Mass.: “Gentlemen :—I feel that I cannot say enough in favor of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, For five years I have been troubled with scrofula in m neck and throat, Several kinds of saedicines which I tried did not do me any good, and when I com- menced to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla there were large burches on my neck so sore that I could Hood’s=* Cures not bear the slightest touch. When I had taken one bottle of this medicine, the soreness had gone, and before I had finished the second the bunches had entirely disappeared.” BLANCaE ATWOOD, Sangerville, Maine. N.B. Ifyou decide to take Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla do not be induced te buy any other. Hood’s Pills cure constipation by restor- ing the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. — 2 FDS Bo” DIGESTIO “~~ wwe a 2 n y 4 AND Loh pis i THE —_ aa : (Bons 2? BEAT : ADAMS’ ‘TUTT! FRUTTI pIUELE ¢ Allow ro imitations to be palmed € oi: On you, ee _-2aae - CAMPBELL’S QUININE WINE ne. CURES: Dyspepsia, low spirits, loss of appetite, painful digestion, malaria, and ves tone and vigour to the whole system. Pe sure vou get CAMPBELL’ S. i 15 Really ~. Equal to any Imported = ‘Take my Advice and ¢ ) Insist on Getting this /\ a Fase ee Gn a7 2 " Ae t i ? Ee ance G Moreen. | Physicians, the world over, endorse it; babies and children like the taste of it. Weak mothers respond readily to its nour- ishing powers, Scott’s Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil, is the life of the blood, the maker of sound flesh, solid bones and lung tissue, and the very essence of nourishment, Don't be deceived by Substitutes! Seott & Bowne, Belleviile. All Druggiste. Go. 446i. CANADA ATLANTIC Plant Steamship Line. TO BOSTON. Fast Direct Line, Not Calling at Halifax. CHARLOTTETOWN SERVICE. The 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 Weduesday at 8 a. m., for Bosion direct. Returning, will leave north side Lewis’ Wharf, Boston, every Saturday at noon. Passengers arriving in Halifax evening trains can go directly on board steamer. Through Tickets for sale and checked at Prince Edward Island Railway stations and Charlottetown Navigation Co. H. L. CHIPMAN, Agent for Canada. Plant Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents, | [North Side Lewis’ Wharf, Boston. septs!