MBthe ORG EE A TT ARNT eR Se Ee ES RET NRE NRE AR ET EE Se es fhe Duly Bam ner “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Enripides. THE DAILY EXAMINER. Single Oopies Two Ocnte ni + ‘ The Ex ib] Company Q einen erate Reus “wes. Bs " RIP TION @ne Year at.00 Six Mon ik 2.00 veces 5-00 fERMS : Four Dollars a Year @uc Menta Ow 4 a the THe WIEKLY EXAMINER ‘ y HO Wepaper | ‘ ae Cr1tPNDAR FOR OCTOBER is 16 | | - icihiaaiomane a New Moon, dsy . (- oo. ‘ First Quar, 13th day, 10h. 34.9m. a. m Pail Moon, 21st day, f€h. 4.83 o., noon h AW, dal >. 20 a. mm Lest quire, 2 tN at 1 have now in stock the | o Woks 5 a | largest and best line of i i ! . | -|——;——,——~| Breech & Muzzle Leading ai j ' aft ; i" ¥¥ ; ’ 5 5 The e 43] Hee’ | il Bosal uns ais tay ss 29 i S 56 : 9 27 4 ‘1 | lo CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER Lhe Requirements Of the Readymade Clothing trade of P.E.Island, have always been our study. We have given the matter such close attention and have brought it to bear so directly upon our buying, that our stock for ” om 7 a9 — ov the Fonda de Oriente. It was still early ite” oh. aS | i) a), Hver shown on P. E. Island. | / ¢ | 31 19 ):meen 118 8, 10, 12, 14. 16, bore. te ‘a tet | : 23/ Prices from $4.00 to $60.00; ssl Mooday 19} 1a] 210) from which I give special aly Beet so : 4) j au 0 | 4 231 a) ™ ¢ 3 J y ' 23 i 3 | § 4? | LSGOUsis —) t's ig | Frids rise 1) es ; ‘¥ i rs | 5 i 7 47 ee j me le FOR CASH 8, Suada; . 2 3 | 3 ci™M . 28 | l 9 7 , . 4 : Lo ae i have also a complete line 2! | j 4s3/ 1013}0f RIFLES both for long ~ r . ‘ VP {tiurtay | | 96) 104i} range and gallery shooting, Shows such an assortment of seasonable goods that we feel ourelves i . wie ‘ aircry §& . 23 | | Mi 64) 11:17 ae ae . 5) it} ; , ‘ — Birr Ltt Sf dt ds| which include the celebrated in a better position than ever before to merit the pvtronize andsup- 35/5 37 l{iaft 30 INCURSTER IE DPATE one > P , 4B | 37] $l)/an 30) Wincuester Repeater, just port of trade of the Island, 7 | | sol gs! 1 s¢{the thing for goose shooting. 98; tay .. 6 451 2 46 ’ a j 39 i, wi ee See the Duck and PLover $0 | Frida > 1. & 5 0}| Decoys at 4 9 B[Suariy fo twladt| &20 | Cn S zCCrers, = = = — 7 ’ 9 e ' Islaad Bail aWSollS 4 s PE. Isiaad Railway On and after SATURDAY, lth October, 1886 9 SEN S| FOR SALE. men’s Uisters = 95 Sundays excepted) as follows .— 9 ‘ e ; ms All th leasentiy situs 2 Trains } : ie i rains In- erty ‘ob ca punts eet Far ae ae ward. | STATIONS. ward. Read Dy Rosnsere St, over two hundred mm wie ’ ; loan, up. a dwelling house on part thereon, ill be : ; £ . . : omen tL block or division, there being four Youths and Boys Clothing in proportion to S1Ze. iia ak ‘ oa i uilding lots, ‘I his affords a rare opportunity P. M/A. M.| ’. M.jA, M, | tO persons of small means intending t) build S15 5 15) .¢ ‘ 6 30) 9 55 | 12 acommodious part of the city. Same will aa : + = be seld at a reasonable price. For further 3 36. 6 2). . Roy J m. 6 16) 9 34} particulars apply to X 423 705|. North W re..| 5 421 8 45 J, D. MASON, XA 1g toe gue oolen Company \e § 31; 7 43). Em 5 02) 7 43 r ‘TEN AY V 9 5 45| 7 53)... Freetows oe) 452-7 2 FO LET YY 6 06, 8 07|.. Kensington .- | 4 38] 7 O4 : —e IAN 6 40: & BO As : Lv.| 4 15) 6 3 That beantifully situated two story “— S’Six ,. m. | dwelling on Prince St., now occupied by 1 4) 8 45 Ly | | Ar. 4 OO11 oo} Mr. Thos. R. Brooks. Possession given - - - eS 272 3 15,10 37} about lst November. Apply to co oa” ee a ae a PEAKE BROS. & CO, oo 2a - oot 2 sepi26t—tf t R10 35). .O’ Leary. 211' 86 5 0110 51)... Bloomfield 1 55] 7 38 : > 4031 1d)... Alberton.... .... 1 30! 7 02 S 6 45111 55)..Tignish .... .... 12 50 5 55 5 a a mae tet dha ti Dieentan't Latest U.S. Gov't Report Pate i yng eager : : Cordova Has Little of \1ts Old-Tline Wealth ighes au in avening rowcr.— : mJx| ew | @ YOU Can always Feel Gay... rere : 7 05) 3 14).. Royalty Juncti 9 O1 5 W - From the station we drove through a a 7 38) 3 37| Bedford *....... $ 371 4 47 no matter how cold or stormy staring white suburb, past the well- g 10 4 OOAr.1«, 1 | Q 15 the day is—be you man, woman whitewashed walls of the bull-ring, to ee et et OS i] a ~ be or child—if you have your fall! and winter clothing interlined with Fibre Chamois. This popular style and warmth giver Sells now for 25c. a yard so that every one can afford to enjoy the comforting, healthful warmth it furnishes—no extra weight or bulk, only a pliable stiffness and a cosy warmth of which the coldest winds or frost- iest air cannot rob you. See that it is put in all ordered clothing, and look for the label which shows that a ready-to-wear garment has been interlined with it. You really can’t afford to do without it. x = ‘= te mS bo Oo ee OF . bs = oe _— = o . ® : . . . bot he Trains are run by Eastern Standard Time A McDONALD, D. POTTINGER, Super ntendent, Gen Mer Govt. “ Charlottetown. Moncton, B. Railway Office, June30 , 1896. >i- x” a ' ” <= —_ = a le ais “ = St & > O° ic = = oe ors w& ° 4 _ e = ECE OT OLE FRE CCCC CC EC CTE } ° ; , < 6 ins , Honestly made $ p , of pure Rubber. > . “4: . d 5 $ Thin, Light, a . § : $ S ; Elastic, Stylish, % ; “ WELL, SAM, since the engagement : Modelled each Durable. 3 ring wears so well these long eight years » year to fit all the q you bongbt from G. G. Jurs, I accept | F jatest shoe shapes. . om B 3 geet peopaael if pon poomsine te Sey Set tates Cate Sell : $ ¥Othu vy ing fror Him Aliso. awh pet Neil was married a few davs ago, and you and heel. $ should see the veantiful ring she bas, and : <4 oh,so cheap. She says Mr. G. G. Jury Sold everywhere. they Wear like Iron. < has a fine assortment from 14k to 18k, oh th eee ptt thle pete Abad bhdatrhh blebs. P and he buys them from the iargest estab- oe lishment in Canada, and they will last a 7" : — — — lifetime; and you know one wedding ring pust do these hard ti _ £4242 = 2£4 4242 444 A444 2624828282642 ’ oe Dare cane £44242422424244 224 £4£44422242422) “Agreed, I will go and buy the ring from G. G. JURY, Watchmaker and Jeweler, Charlottetown,” NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE, OPPOSITE P. O. 7 @ Y) W © ” @ 92 fa & entee . os ‘ . o,° eepi23—dy & why. To have people critically examine cur furniture. It stands eriticat examination. It stands the wear. It’s made to wear, not merely to sell. We won't sell anything tat people won’t satisfied with after New Prices in Watches We have lately received a pice assortment of they get it home and live with it. There is no profit in such selling. A dissatisfied customers will spoil lots of business, We wont allow a customer to feel dissatisfied either: with what he gets or what he pays for it. Silver Watches for Ladie’s and Gentlemen, which were bought right, and can- fail to ylease in price. Many people buy all their furniture here—DO YOU ? ——— JOHN NEWSON FURNITURE “== not Call an! inspect them. W. N. TANTON'S iat >-a > a o>a - po>-c fo- -a > a a-a )-t o> -a >-at o ata o> o> po>- a af al o> at ~, e Strect as SS SS SS SS STS St SS SS SSS SSS STS Creat George Street, STFFITTVTTVTveorvT TT TT?" vv" NEAR QUEEN SQUARE. Good Herring! How is Your Watch Keeping Time 350 half barrels choice No. 1 sworn i deca pec or Fat Herring. 150 quarter barrels re si we ke ing ea i extra choice Cape Breton Herring tends mention. tring t atone ol A lSo g lot of large Codfish for sale needs attention. bring it at once to unniug order at lerate ch ve | ; runniug order at a moderate charge | wholesale or retail. G.H. TAYLOR, YW. CRANT & CO. Graduate Optician. oe eee | QUEEN STREBT...... North Side Queene Square, Ch’town. in the afternoon, the sun fleree, the light blinding—the hour when all summer we had been sleeping and dreaming in the Alhambra’s halls and the Generalife’s gardens. Remembering their loveliness, and hoping for new beauty like it, we could not stay in the dull hotel bed- room, though with its tiled floor it was fairly cool and clan, and we went ovt into the town. Silence hung over it like a pall. Every winding street in the labyrinth beyond the Paseo was empty; not a living creature in sight, only once in a while a beggar, who rushed from some spot of shade to assail us; all the low, white houses, with their iron-barred windows. were tight shut; the place was abandoned and desolate, its silence un- broken by sound of toil or traffic. Was this really the Cordova of Musa and Abderrahman, the Cordova onee called the Bagdad or Damascus of the West, whose streets were ever alive with the clang of arms, the pomp of proees- sions, the clatter of students going to and from the schools, whose name was asynonym for wealth and power, for culture and industry—the world-famous town with its scientists and merchants and women doctors? It was as ifa plague had fallen suddenly upon the town, and left not one man, woman, or child to tell the tale.—‘‘Midsummer in Southern Spain,’’ by Elizabeth R. Pennell, in the September Century. KOOTENAY. — MRS. MARGARET PATTERSON CURED OF RHEUMATISM OF SEVEN YEARS’ STAND- ING AND PARALYSIS. (Testimony Under Oath.) The following testimony of Mrs. Mar- garet Patterson, given under oath before W. F. Walker, Notary Public, marks the most wonderful cure in the history of any medicine :— “For six or seven years I was badly afflicted with rheumatism and severe nev— ralgia in the head. At times I enff-red very much pair from violent headaches, and in order tu stop Sawe, and upou the advice of a physician, I hada number of my teeth extracted, without deriving any advantage. “In May, 1894, I had a paralytic stroke in the left side of my body ; this was fol- lowed by the total loss of eight of my left. eye, bealing of bot) eare, violent headache, severe fi<, and gre st weakness. J] be@ame totally nnable todo any work about the house, and was not safe to be left alone on account «f my dizziness and general weak-- ness. “T consulted four different physicians,. who attended me, and they told me that. they would do what they could, but that I would never become well again. “ About t-vo months ago I began using the medicine being put up by Mr.S. 8. Ryckman, M. }*, of this city, and now known as Koo.enay Cure, and am now taking the fonrth bottle of such medicine. “Before I finished the first bottle I noticed a great improvement in my cond.- tion. I bave now ieceived the use of my eyecight, the use cf my hearing, and the use of my limbs and body, the headache has completely disappeared, and my strength has come ‘sack almost completely, and, in fact, thorgh 62 years old, I feel almost a new woman. Mrs. Margaret. Patterson, 91 Vine Street, Hamilton, Ust.”” And I meke this solemn declaration conscientiously believing it to be true, éte.. MARGARET PATTERSON. —— H i cad =x i Ro al WAFS Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE A TERRAPINS LOVe OF HOME. One Caught in 1840, Marked and Neleased, Returns Three Different Times. The devotion of a land terrapin to its thome is well illustrated by 4 story trom Paoll, Ind. In 1840 Miss Davie Peele, of ‘that city, was ten years old. While in the woods one day she came upon one cf these orcatures, and took it home. Ite urious ways pleased her and she put it in a box to keep asa pet. The little prisoner refused food and chafed at con- finement. As the young lady was about to release the terrapin some one suggested that she carve her name on its shell. She did this, adding the date. The little animal was let go. Ten years later Miss Peele married County Clerk Wible, of Orange County. One day she found herself in the village where she had first discovered tbe terra- pin. To her great surprise she again found the Iitsle fellow within a few feet of whexe she first saw it. Her name and the @ate were as plain as when she put them there. The terrapin was again made prisomer to show her friends the marvel- Jous fad. Again tracipg her now name on the sivJl, she released her captive. The date, 1850, was put on. After msny years Mrs. Wible became a widow, removing to Hutchinson, Kan. Yhero she married Dr. McKinney and still resides there. In the summer of 1872’Mrs. McKinney visited her vld home at Paoli. A search again revealed the terrapin at its first abode. Again she carved her changed pame on the shell. It was-the talk of the little town. Returning to her Western home Mrs. McKinney thought little of her terrapin until a friend in 1895 sent her a copy of a local paper containing the facts. The terrapin had been again found and the date 1895 carved on its back It was found right where it had been first dis- covered by Miss Peele. Each time it had been released near the center of the little town and had found its way to its ori- ginal home. World’s Increasing Population. The astonishing growth of European cities in the last twenty years is but part of a movement in population which is general throughout civilized coun- tries. It is certainly unprecedented in history. In this country the increase from 50,- + 000,000 to 70,000,000 in less than two de- cades is paralleled by Germany, which has increased from 30,600,000 to 52,000,- 000 since the Franco-Prussian war. Eng- land shows a like increase, confined chiefly to the cities. While Ireland, Italy and Spain are not so responsive to the movement, it is for causes too well un- i derstood to make their cases seem excep- Declared hefore me at the City of Ham-- | Iter, in tie County of Wentworth, this: 20th day of August, A. D. 1895. (signed) W. F. WALKER, A Notary Public in and for the 136w Province of Ontario. —_—__ Headquarters fur rubbers at McEach gn’s Shoe Store. Now is the time to get supplie(l ith glass and crockeryware as we will sell off cheaper than ever before removing. W. P. Colwill. i ‘ ‘ tional to the rule that the great scientific and mechanical improvements of the century are making it possible for the world to preduce and support a larger population than was dreamed of even by the most pronounced opponents cf Mal- } thugianism in their controversies with the ignorant theorists who believed that the limit of population had been or was about to be reached. According to Mulhall the total popu- lation of the eurth in the time of Augus- tus Caesar did not exceed 54,000,000, so that in the United States we now have more people than the earth contained when the empire of the Caesars was at ite greatest. According to the same authority the population of Europe was only 50,000,000 in the fifteenth century, while now it is estimated at over 357,000,000 peopla, whose average of living is far higher than that of the age of Augustus or than that of the fifteenth century. It is bevoming a more and more self- evident proposition that the increase of civilization is not only accompanied hy, but is dependent on an increase in popu- lation. And no fact in economic history 4 ig of more far-reaching Sngestanes. Gentleness. Gentleness is love in society. It {is love holding intercourse with those around It. It is that cordiality of aspect and that soul of speech which assures that kind and earnest hearts may still be met with here below. It is that quiet influence which, like the scented flame of on ala- baster lamp, fills many a home with light and warmth and fragrance altogether. It is the carpet, soft and deep, which, while it diffuses a look of ample comfor, deadens many a creaking sound. It is the curtain which, from many a beloved form, wards off at once the summer's glow and the winter’s wind. It is the pillow on whieh sickness lays its head and forgets half its misery, and to which death comes in a balmier dream. It is considerateness. It is tenderness of feel- ing. Itis warmth of affection. I6 ts promptitude of sympathy. It is love in ll its depths and all its delicacy. it is everything included in that matchless grace, the gentleness of Christ. His Time Had Come. “Hat ha!” sardonically cried the heavy villian in the fcurth act, “now my time has ceme.’’ And then the supe came on and handed him the property watch. How's the Children’s Health? Are they Thriving or are they Weak, Puny or Sickly? Build up their health with MANLEY’S CEL- ERY NERVE COMPOUND. There is no remedy that takes pale, pinched and puny children and ¢o quickly ' down School children, as it ard effectually starts their growth, puts flesh on their bones and restores the ring- ing laugh, and vigorons romp of childhood as Manley'’s Celery-Nerve Compound. It is tye best remedy for over-worked, ran- restores the fagged brain and renews the energies, “Cough Chaser’'—The best for Childrens Coughs. For sale by Geo. E. Hughes and Johnson &Jyhnson Charloitetown and Souris. Constantinople advices state that the embassies of the powers have sent identi- cal notes to the porte refusing its demand | to be accorded the right of searchinz for- eign vessels in Turkish waters for Ar- menians. REMARKABLE CASES Curonic Invalids Raised from Their Sick Beds After Giving Up lope. London, Ont.—Henry R. Nicholls, 176 Rectory street, catarrh ; recovered. Dr. Chase’s catarrh cure. 25e. Markdale—Geo. Crowe’s child, itching eczema; cured. Chase's Ointment. Truro, N.S.—II. UH. Sutherland, travel- ler, piles—very bad case ; eured ; Chase's Ointment. 60c. Lucan—Wm. Branton, gardener, worms; all gone. Chase's Pills. L’Amable—Peter Van Allan, eczema for three years. Cured, Chase’s Ointment. Gower Point—Robano Bartard, dread- ful itching piles, 30 years. Well again; Chase's Ojntment. 60c. pin 1896. Meyersburg—Nelson Simmons, itching piles; eured. Chase’s Ointment. Malone—Geo, Richardson, kidney and liver sufferer; better, Oue box Chase's Pills. 25c. Chesley—H. Will’s son, crippled with rheumatism and suffering from diabetes, completely recovered. Chase’s Pills. Matchard Township—Peter Taylor, kid- ney trouble, 30 years; cured. Chase's Pili. 25c. Torontu—Miss Hattie Delancy, 174 Crawiord street, subject of peraee colds. Cured by Chase’s Syrup Lia- seed and Turpentine. 25 cents. Dr. Chase’s remedies are sold by all éealers. Edmanson, Bates & Co., manu- Seetarera, Tosonte. 3 sig. sis | Rawr Gtp.~-Warhington Senet, SCLD HIS SECRET CHEAP. Happens That the Discoverer Kieaps Little Monetary Advantage. The leather industry of the country hes taken on a decided boom during the last few years, mainly through the adop- | tion of a new process of tanning invent- ed by an old German named Angust Schultze. The inventor has secured scarcely £20,000 from the sale of his pat- ent, while several manufacturers have gathered in iarge fortunes by means of it, Schultze-was a chemist and had ab- solutely no knowledge of the tanning business. WWuowever, he had an idea for the improvement of the tannage proces- res in yorre in the various establish- ments of the country, and he seught to enlist the intereat of the big tanvners. He finally attracted the attention of Blumenthal & Co., of New York, who closed a deal with him. He sold his patents outright to this firm for about 20,000, and with the money bonght a little property at Manassas, Va., where he settled down. He is out of it all pow, bat many men are making fortunes from the application of his discovery. Blumenthal & Co. sold out to Beebe & Foerderer of Philadelphia, who crgan- ized the Patent Tannage Company, with works at Wheat Sheaf Lane and Coral street, Frankford. The merits of Schultze’s least of the chrome tanning process, which is practically the same thing, have been sufficiently demonstrated in the report generally credited in leather cir- cles that Foerderer has made several million dollars during the last five years. secret, or at What Language Did Christ Speak ? This much-diseussed question has a deeper interest than that of mere curt- osity. It has practical bearings on prob- lems of biblical interpretation, and the verbal inspiration of the Scriptures. It is an old question,but one that is constantly new in its interests, as is seen from the repeated discussions it has elicited in re- cent years. ‘The latest and possibly the best of these is found in es emall volume by Dr. Arnold Meyer, of the University of Bonn, entitled ‘‘Jcsu) Muttersprache’’ (Jesus’ mother-tongue), which is rich in historical and other data,and from which we condense the folowing facts:— The question as to the language spoken by Jesus did not particularly interest the earliest Church fathers. They confined themselves in this regard to the question as to the original language emp!cyed by Matthew in the preparation of his gospel, whick, Papias declares, was ‘‘Hebrew.’’ The current opinion was that the Lord had employed the ‘‘Syriac’’ as his ver- nacular, which term was mused inter- changeably with ‘‘Hebrew’’ and ‘‘Chal- dee.’’ This became the settled tradition of the Church down to the Reformation and later, and when in 1555 Widman- stadt published the first edition of the New Testaiment in Syriac, this work was greeted with a warm welcome on the ground that now the Chureh possessed the very words of the Lord as he had spoken them. Only a few skeptical minds, such as Scaliger and Grotius, donbted the correctness of this conclu- sion, and claimed thas the Saylor had spoken a mixed dialect then current in Pelestine. Among the Jesuits the idea early gained ground that the Lord’s ver- nacular must have been the Latin, as this was the language spoken by the saints in heaven. This view was first promulgated by the ater Inchofer in 1648. A century later another Jesuit scholar, Hardouin, assigned as aA new reason for this view the fact that the Vulgate, or official Bible of the Roman Catholic Church, was also written in the Latin language. On the other hand, Protestant scholars began to maintain that Jesus spoke Greck, the language of the New Testament. So good an authori- ty as the late Prof. Delitzsch believed that Christ spoke a relatively pure Hebrew, the study of this language having been rigidly taught in the schools of Palestine. The facts in the case, especially as seen inthe words of the New Testament other than Greek, show that the Lord spoke an Aramaic language, and of this Jlanguage again a Galilean dialect. The Aramaic is a branch of the north Semitic and as such a sister tongue of the He- brew. Long before the close of the Old Testament canon the Aramaic had sup- planted Hebrey in popular use In Israel, and had become the language of trade and business between the people of Syria and countries farther enst. Already a Jeremiah and an Ezekiel show the in- fluence of this tongac; the same is true of the later Psalms, Ecclesiastes, and especially Ezra and Daniel, both of which contain portions written in this dialect. During the Maccabean period the Ara- maic had virtually supplanted Hebrew in Israel. It is used in the Talmud, and its general use Is reported by Philo, a contemporary of St. Paul, and by the historian Josephus, who calls it the “language of the fatherland.’’ Only in one respect the old Hebrew maintained its hold, It was the language of the sacred writings of Israel and the official tongue of their Scriptures. In the synagogues these books were read in the original Hebrew, but were interpreted to the people through Aramaic para phrases called Targumim. Testimonies abound and agree that such was the case regularly, so that the common people could no longer understand the sacred tongue of their fathers, and of their Scriptures. The current language of the day was accordingly the Aramaic, and this was the tongue employed by Christ in his discourses with his disciples and with the people. The Hebrew as such was known well only to the learned, but was not understood thoroughly by the common paople. The correctness of this conclusion is attested by the words cited in the New Testament. Why She Gave Up the Bonnet Parade. The other day the clergyman of quite a humble little church in the suburhs was electrified to see among his small and devout assembly a well-known “butterfily’’ who had been one of the constant attendants at the most fashion- able church in the neighborhood. After seeing her there several Sundays in suc- cession, he felt bound to call upon her, when she at once remarked on the ser- vice, and told how giad sie was to find the general congregation snch a humble one; ‘‘for,’’ said she, ‘“‘my poor dear husband has had severe losses lately, and I have had ‘+o leave St. Peter’s; I found in our altered circumstances that it was impossible to dress up to it as usual and [ really could not go there any more to show my old clothes in the midst of the new ones of my friends.”’ All Ready for It. Teacher—Now, children, I want you all to be so still that you can hear a pin "Fos (after a moment’s silence)—Let eel AE etc : A fresh lot of -Cnildrer’s Underwear just received.—Moore & McLeod. Physical Culture — Mies Marmillan, Prince. Street, isat home to intending pupils in reading and physical culture. We are making the nobbiest enits and overcoats in the city. Den’t that wearethe high clasa tal r —McKsy Wovlen Co,, tai'ors, forget Get your stationery, books and reading matter at McMillan & Hornsby’e. | display work, Prices low. Work premptly done. Call and see us. ‘Examiner Publishing Company Mothers Anxiously watch declining health of their daughters. So many are cut off by consumption in carly years that there is real cause for anxiety, In the early stages, when not beyond the reach of medicine, Hood's Sarea- parilla will restore the quality and quantity of the blood and thus give good health. Read the following letter: “Tt is but juet to write abcat my daughter Cora, aged 19. She was com- pletely run down, declining, had that tired feeling, and friends said she would not live over three months. She had a bad Cough and nothing seemed to co her any good. I happened to read about Hood’s Sarsape- rilla and had her give ita trial. From the very first dose she began to get better. After taking a few bottles she was com- pletely cured and her health has been the best ever since.”” Mrs. ADDIE PEcK, 12 Railroad Place, Amsterdam, N. Y. “T will say that my mother has not stated my case in as strong words as I would have done. Hood’s Sarsapariile has truly cured meand I am now well.” Cora Preck, Amsterdam, N. Y. Be sure to get Hood’s, because Hoods Sarsaparilla Ts the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. Hood’s Pills | | | a re purely” vegetable, re- liable and beneficial. 2a, SUN LIGHT! - SOAP PICTURES WRAPPERS: A pretty colored picture for every 12 “ Sunlight” or every 6 *Life- buoy” Soap wrappers. These pictures are well worth ; getting. ADDRESS. Lever Bros., lt, 23 Scott St. Toronto =a222 es Seeton & Mitchell, Halifax, Agents for Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, We Don't Claim To have the cheapest boots on the Island. To be able to sell you boots at or below cost. To be the only people who can give you good beots. We Do Claim That we can give you good boots at low prices. That we can give you as good boots as you can purchace anywhere. That we can sell you boots as cheap as any person in tbe trade. TRY US, é é ¢ é ¢ é ( ‘ ( R. K. JOST, _July 30 STAMPER'S CORNER The Canada Accident ASSURANCE CO, FRED. W. HYNDWAN, ACENT FOR P. E. L., Accepts Plate Glass Instrance also. May 23, 1896—law (6) ALBANI Grand Operatic Concert Including the 3rd and 5th acts of Gounod’s FAUST. ACT IlIL—The Garden Scene. ACT V.—The Prison Scene. :Tne acenes from the opera in costume. croreenl SE sees MADAME ALBANI, Prima Donna. MISS BEVERLEY ROBINSON, Mezzo — VEMPRIERE PRIENGLE, a MR. BRAXTON SMITH, Tenor. MISS BEATRICE LANGLEY, Solo Violinist. HERR RUDOLPH VON SCARFA, Conductor. The ecenes from the opera under the di- rect supervision of ERNEST GYE. Subscription lists are now at Dodd’s & Rankin’s Drug Stores, for the appearance of the aabove artists at the O H ” pera House on November 23-d. EVENING = CLASSES kw AT THE...... P.£. | COMMERCIAL COLLEGE Giving a full Business Course and § hand Course, 3 nights each week a open on Monday Evening, 5th October at 7.30. Reduced rates, Apply at the Col- lege to ISAAC OXENHAM, Principe! sept29 —eod—tf, ... 900 Printing We have first-class facilities | for turning out the best qual- lity of Job Printing, from a visiting card to the largest es Poe. 4 ee OP