SO OO Om NEWS AND OTHER ITEMS. | DS. THE FIGHT AT RICHMOND. The tactics of the Confederates in the war now being waged in the United States bas undonbtedly proved superior te those of the Federals. Though unable te ope vith the large fleet ars gun-boats on the seaboar. and on the rivers wherever na- a . —_ i vigeble, their land forces in the interior bave un- GREAT G BORG Ee = ET, ; questionably established their superiority. At | CHARLOTI BERG Oe Meseceencs .P. E. ISLAND. times the Confederates submitted te what many! N. B. Consignments advanced on, and Grain persons supposed were defeats; but subsequent | Cargoes purchased on Commission. events have proved that these movements, how-) April 14, 182. ly ever much they may have Capua the prowess | — liane ef the South in the eves of the world, were neces- | + sary to the succesa{ul accomplishment of its inde. | MR, W. A, JOHN STON, widence. What the Confederates lacked in| BUSINESS CAR Commission Merchants AND Wine and Flour Dealers, fumbers bas been fully made up by skiltul gene- ralship, determined courage, desperate energy, aod a thorough devotion to the cause in which they were called upon to do battle. On many trying occasions these varied qualities have proved of essential service, but at po tume or in BO posi. tion have they proved of so great advantage as in the recent contesta before Richmond. The un- questionable defeats whieh the Federale sustained in the seven days’ fighting, and the immense sa- erifice of human life which resulted therefrom, might, in some measure, have beea obviated by the display ot that military genius which 8o es- sentially pertains to a great commander. Though laced in adverse circumstances, it cannot be vould that the Federals tought heroically, and in a maoner to comma@@ the admiration of the world. Every attack of the enemy was, as all the accounts admit, bravely met; and though at times the men were literally mowed down, the retreat was accomplished without disorganization. If the Federal troops so distinguished themselves when improperiy led, what might not have been accomplished had their movemeuts been directed by a man possessing that military genius se often ascribed to MeCiellan, and of which the denoue ment bas clearly proved him to be sadly deficient. It has been said that the retreat of MeUClellaa's army to the pesition now occupied was a master. piece of strategy. Well, admitting that it was, doea it not prove that the plan of operations whieh left this as the army's sole resort was fauity? Why did MeCletian encamp his army around and on malarious marshes, if there were other positions frem which he could operate more suceesstully! ‘The aaswer ia plain. MeClellan expeeted that hy the time he established a position iw the vietity of Richmond, other branches of the Federal army would be in a position to co-operate with him, and then at one fell swoop the Coufede- rate forces would be immolated, and the rebellion crushed. In all his arrangements, bowever, he made no provision ter that possible contingeacy — a defeat, and hence his retreat. ‘The Confederates, by a masterly effort in vari- ous places, succeeded in preventing the junction of the different seetions of the Federal Army, and ja concevtrating their own. Thus they were en- abled to bear down on MeClellan while he waa meditating a change in his plan of operations, and by rapid and brilliant movements succeeded in driving him from those siege works the erection of which cost so much treasure, and of which ao) much has been said in praise. McClellan's de- feat has protracted the campaign, has paved the way for a greater sacrifice of human life, has ren- dered necessary the expenditrre of millions more of treasure, and it may possibly achieve for the Southerners their compicte inuependence. Uv- less by some speedy and brilliant movement Me- Clellan iw enabled to turn the tide of victory against the enemy, it were folly to prolong the struggle. One partion of the Northern press attributes McClellan's defeat to the tardiness of President Lincoln and the War Department in forwarding | i ae : | Groceries, Provisions, Liquors, &c., &e reinforcements; another portion attributes it to MeClellan’s faulty generalship. ‘The views of the latter will, we think, be faund correct. It has been established beyand a doubt that not only did the President or his Cabinet not interfere with MeClellan, but that reinfureements Were fur- nished ag demanded. Indeed it has been publicly stated by reliable authorities in Washington, that the President holds MeClellan’s letters thanking OF HALIFAX, N.S. Attorney and Barrister at Law, Notary Public. &e, &c. |\ggr Orrice——Mrs McDonald's, next door to Mrs. Fursyth's, North side of Queen Square. Charlottetown, October 21, 1861. Commission Merchants, And Wholesale Dealersin FLOUR, GRAIN, POTATOES, EGGS, BUTTER, CHEESE, Beans, Pork, and Produce general!y, 44, NORTH STREET, BOSTON, (Opposite Merchants’ Row.) Refereuces in Chariottetown— W. CUNDALL, Esq. June 23, 1862. GEORGETOWN. WILLIAM SANDERSON, tail General Agent, Auctioneer & Broker. NOTARY PUBLIC. ing’s Ceunty. Agent for Pictou Iron Foundry. Sale in Hing’s County. Nov, 18. . ALFRED PURCHASE, | Horizontal Watches in Silver cases £4 0 0 I incense s st ocns clink aud 410 0 Lever Escapement...............5 10 @ Hating ...€0.. cocccevccecessccess 6 0 6 ly Chariottetown, Sept. 23, 1861. Dentistry. C F UBERT, Dentist, ° e is prepared at all times to attend to the various branches of the ’ professian. ed, and filled. Office hours from 10 8. m. tod p.m. Re- sidence at Mrs. Douglas’, Water-street. Charlottetown, Jan 20, 1862. of General Commission Merchant, AND DEALER IM SMARDON'S BUILDINGS, North side Queen Square, (formerly occupied by H. Fraser, Esq.) Charlottetown, P. E. Island. | _Deceraber 16, 1861. ly him for reinfureemeata, and declaring, after Me- | JAMES MoCOMEB, Call's division arrived on the Peninsula, that be | “had more than enough troops te enter Rich- mond.” The fact is, McClellan was too contident in his own strength, and only discovered that he | Lad miscalculated the strength, courage, energy | and endurance of the enemy when it was too late. | Bat even this serious mistake might have beeu nted if MeCletian had possessed but a s ark | of that daring whieh was #0 eminently characier- istic of the man unte whom he bas been so fre quently likened. Instead of retreating the Fede- ral Army migut have assailed the weak poiuts of the esemy, aud marched ou to victory. In this | view of the case we do not stand slene. The Washington ‘National Republican,’ which is doubiiess better qualitied than we are to under- stand the relative Jrttion ofthe parties, thinks MeCiletian to bave acted differently. It says that “the battle of Sunday. ought not to have been fought, or should hare! been fought in a very different manner. There is no excuse for allowing our men to be over- whelmed by superior numbersat particular points. Either the right wing should ave been further withdrawn upan the ceutre, or, if halted for a fight upon Gaines’s Hill, should have bees sup- ported by the troops of the centre and left, which | were kept idle and useless. Or these troops | should have been precipitated upon Richmood, | where the rebel strength was so much reduced | by the great force seut to attack our right wing.” Tere, then, was clearly ap opportunity for Me- Clellan to have made a brilliant dash, but he ne- | glected it, and the fact is too plain for denial,that | he was unequal! to the oecasion.—St. John Courier. | —--—2 00 Batts sy Miisions.—The United States Government has contracted for five thousand , tonsof pig lead. This vast quantity of metal | is to be turned into Minie rifle bullets. It) will make one hundred and fifty millions of balls; sosayean exchange. woe The Londoners have discovered a method of extracting turpentine from petroleum, and says it can thus be obtained at one third the price that bas been heretofore paid for the eame article from the Carolinas. In France, sinee the begiuning of the present eeutury, there have been comunitted not lesa than three hundred thousand suicides. There were 3,903 im 1553, and 8,050 in 1959. oe A Nicatincacs Story.--A few days ago (says a correspondent of the Manchester | Guardian). & certain Merchant in Bremen had a twlerably large and very respectable company arsembled at his house ; amongst | the rest, a lieutegant in the Hanoverian ser-| vice, who was betrothed to his(the Merchant's) danghter. [t was a beautiful evening, warm, | but not uncomfortably so. The greater part | of the company were sitting near the open windows, overlooking the garden. All at once the sweet notes of the nightingale were heard. Everyone rushed to the mindows to hear the lovely sengsier pour forth its song, conversation ceased as if by mutual consent, and nothing was beard from the company but ¢xelaumations of ** Ach wie schon,” * Prachtvoll,’’ ** Himmliach,’’ &e. After a time, the bird ceased for a few minutes, when the company gave free vent to their pent-up feelings of admiration; and never was a nightingale so bepraised as this one. This agreeable state of things ouly lasted a short time ; for the company were rather startied by hearing @ man's voice in the garden cal! out, * Herr Lieutenant.” Every voice was hushed immedistely, and in a few moments they heard the following words: ‘ Hist, Herr Lieutenant, just let me do the little ig ; it beats the nightingale ali to pieces."’ he company looked at each other, and ve quick!y closed the windows upon this wou be speaker. reapecting whom the speaker was immediately called to account, and was quickly forced to confess that the nightingale was only a lark, It appeared that the lieu- tenant had a private suldier in his aaee that was quite proficient in imitating bi and animals; and, thinking to oblige the company, he had engaged him imitate the pightingale for this might, without telling him, bowever, that he was not to attewpt anything else. The was, the praises of the company aoe the wan offer ee, specimen of hie abilities as ve. _—-—-36e-——— Wuorxsour Taurns.—We clip the follow- ing from the Quebec Chronicle : pers Outlive the silliest of sncers, but we waut to snemutate iothe gutta oe “P| Phe Loudon and Liverpool IMPORTKR OF Clocks, Watches, Jewellery, FANCY GOODS of all kinds, Ambrotype and Photographic Goods, Chemicals, &e. Wholesa’e and Retail. Bazaar, Great Georgo Street. Nov. 4, 1861. JOHN & ROBERT SCOTT, Coach & Siecigh Builders, Kent Street, pXForu the inhabitants of Charlotte- town and the Country generally, that they have now ov hand a number of new and second-hand Cantriaces, open and coyered. of ditteront atyles, | whieh wit! be sold cheap for prompt payment. Fw All orders punctually attended to. April 14, 1862. A CARD. ELL RANKIN begs leave to inform the | MERCANTILE and TRADING COM- MUNITY of Prince Edward Island, and the | Neighbouriag Proviucee, that he hae made arrangements for the immediate prosecution of business as an Auctioneer, Commission Merchant & General Agent, in each of which lines al! Commissions with which he =a be favoured (at home or from abroad) shall receive his prompt and best attention. Charlottetown, July 8, 1861. BOARDING HOUSE. Transient and Permanent Boarders ACCOMMODATED IN THE BEST STYLE, AND ON MODERATE TERMS, MRS. McKAY, DORCHESTER STRGET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. B. ISLAND. June 30, 1862. Im CARD. JAMES COMEFEORD, Carriage and Cleigh Buiider, OPPOSITE CLAKK’S HOTEL, SU alco cbe sch ccees P. E. ISLAND. Orders in the above line executed with neatness and dispatch. Terme liberal. i A Summerside, July 14, 1862. 6i a an entenaenpnnannnaainn enema en] Queen Insurance Company — OF LIVERPOOL. | FIRE AND LIFE: | ae Subseriber, having been appointed | agent for tle above first class Insurance Com | pany, is prepared to take risks on all descriptions of | property. J.8. CARVELL. | Cha wn, Feb. 10. tf } {[Exrmacts rnom Newsrarens.} On seference to a return made to Parliament. and ordered by the House of Commons to be printed, 7th Jane, 1861, it will be seen that the increase of Duty for the year, pa by the “ QUEEN,” was £2567, being upwards of £1000 more than paid by any other office ever yet established in this City. {From Gore’s General Advertiser, Oct. 24, 1861.} “ Indeed, we believe that we are perfectly justi- fied in wane that no ether Company, within the same pe , ever attained so large an income in either the Fire or Life Departments as the Queen | fosurance Company. In making this staterseut,we make no eons aren tp oper of our older local companies, namely, Liverpool and London, the Royal, and the Lancashire [nsurance Companies.” [From the Civil Service Gazetie, Nov. 2, 1361.] “‘ Among these important inatitutions stands emi nent for its solidity, as well as for its success, ‘the | Queen Insurance Compai-y,’ which last week held | ii# annnal meeting of prc prietors in Liverpool. A | refereace to the ample report in another page will fully satisfy every reader of the signal progress condi by this association since its foundation. Such | success is, indeed, rarely attained; and it atiesis at | ouce the excellence of its management, aud the pub- | lie confidence in its constitution.” {From the Liverpoo] Mereary, Nov. 2, 1861.} “It must be gratifying to the public generally, and ially to the proprietors, to find that its in- come during the past three years has increased at the rate of £20,000 per annum. We believe that no other Company, within the same short period, ever attained so large an increase either in the Fire or Life Department. This speaks highly fer the activity veal of the munagement, while the promptness with which all the cleims, arising out of the late disastrous fire in London were met, tes- tifies to their finwncial ability and the care and pru- dence which marked the investment of these funds.”’ FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. . Capital. Rockwell, Higley & Garland, | W. B. DEAN, Esq. | yr Commission Merchant. Wholesale & Re-| Agent for Col. Life Assurance Company in| Town Lots, Pasture Lots, and Farms for | Watch and Clock-maker, Smardon’s Corner. | Teeth carefully inserted, extracted, cleans- WM. KOUGHAN, | the ete | ' Now Advertisement. ~~ infection which we call Scrorveca lurks in the constitutions of multitudes of men. It either produces or is produced by an en- WW feebled, vitiated state of the blood, wherein that finid becomes in- ; RS comin tent to sustain wrth vital forces in their = vigorous action, and leaves the system to SS fall into disorder and decay. The scrofulous contamination is va- riously caused by mercurial disease, low living, disordered digestion from unhealthy | food, impure air, filth and filthy habits, the depressing vices, and, above all, by the venereal infection. Whatever be its origin, it is hereditary in the constitution, descending “from parents to children unto the third and fourth generation ;” indeed, it seems to be the rod of Him who says, ‘I will visit the iniquities of the fathers upon their children.” The diseases it originates take ; ' Various names, according to the organs it | & attacks. In the lungs, Scrofula produces tubercles, and finally Consumption, in the glands, swellings which suppurate and be- come ulcerous sores; in the stomach and bowels, derangements which produce indi- gestion, dyspepsia, and liver complaints; on the skin, eruptive and cutancous affections. These, all having the same origin, require the same remedy, viz., purification and invigora- tion of the blood. Purify the blood, and these dangerous distempers leave you. With feeble, foul, or corrupted blood, you cannot | healthy, you cannot have scrofulous disease. Ayor’s Sarsaparilla is compounded from the most effeetual anti- dotes that medical science has discovered for this afflicting distemper, and for the cure of the disorders it entails. That it is far supe- rior to any other remedy yet devised, is known by all who have given itatrial. That it does combine virtues truly extraordinary in their effect upon this class of complaints, is indisputably proven by the great multitude of publicly known and remarkable cures it has made of the following diseases: King's Evil, or Glandular Swellings, Tumors, , Eruptions, Pimples, Blotches and Sores, arene, Rose or St. Authony’s Fire, | Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Coughs from , tuberculous deposits in the lungs, White Swellings, Debility, Dropsy, Neuralgia, | or Indigestion, Syphilis and © | Dropepeia ov Tn yphil | Syphilitic Infections, Mercuria! Diseases, | Female Weaknesses, 2nd, indeed, the whole | series of complaints that arise from impurity of the blood. Minute reports of individual cases may be found in Ayer’s AMERICAN ALMANAC, which is furnished to the druggists for gratuitous distribution, wherein may be | learned the directions for its use, and some of the remarkable cures which it has made when all other remedies had failed to afford relief. Those cases are purposely taken from all sections of the country, in order that every reader may have access to some | one who can speak to him of its benefits from personal experience. Scrofula depresses the vital energies, and thus leaves its victims far more subject to disease and its fatal results than are healthy constitutions. Hence tends to shorten, and does greatly shorten, ' the average duration of human life. The vast importance of these considerations has led us to spend years in perfecting a remedy which is adequate to its cure. This we now | offer to the public under the name of AvEr's | SARSAPARILLA, although it is composed of | ingredients, some of which exceed the best of Sarsaparilia in alterative power. By its aid you may protect yourself from the suffer- | ing and danger of these disorders. Purge | out the foul corruptions that rot and fester in the blood, purge out the causes of disease, and vigorous health will follow. By its pecu- liar virtues this remedy stimulates the vital | functions, and thus expels the distempers which lurk within the system or burst out + on any part of it. | We know the public have been deceived | by many compounds of Sarsaperilia, that promised much and did nothing; but they will neither be deceived nor disappointed in this. Its virtues have been proven by abun- dant trial, and there remains ro question of its surpassing excellence for the cure of the afflicting diseases it is intended to reach. Although under the same name, it is a very different medicine from any other which has been before the people, and is far more ef- fectual than any other which has ever been available to them. AYER’S CHERRY PECTORAL, The World’s Great Remedy for | Coughs, Colds, Incipient Con- sumption, and for the relief j of Consumptive patients in advanced stages } of the disease. This has been so long uscd and so uni- | versally known, that we need do no more | than assure the public that its quality is kept | up to the best it ever has been, and that it } may be relied on to do all it has ever done. Prepared by Dx. J. C. Aven & Co., Practical and, Analytical Chemists, Lowell, Mass. Sold by all druggists every where. | W. R. Warsos, Wholesale Agent for P. £. Island. | and seld by Merchants threughout the Province July 21, 1862. i | Hanuaewell’s Universal Cough Remedy. Cures Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Broachial Com- plaints, and all Throat Irritations, leading to ACTUAL CONSUMPTION, Its great feature is a freedom from every com- Poneut which produces debility, and its unerring certainty in ail of the above Complaints rests with the fact that it may be used every hour without re. straint Therefore from childhood and its terror, Whooping Cough, to old age and its infirmities, allow it to be the companion from the cradle, and the grave will be spared many of its early victims Make it your pocket companion by day,and your bed- side friend by night, using it wheaever you please. tiunnewell’s Tolu Anodyne Cures all Com plaints of Nervous and Spasmodic character, such as Neuralgia, Gout, Rheumatism, St Vitus Dance, Tooth and £ar-Ache, Bowel Complaints, Nervous and Spasmodie Sick- Head Ache,to that terror of all nervoug dispositions, and probably the chief cause of Lusanity, “LOSS OF SLEEP” Hunnewell’s Eclectic Pills. Designed as special assiatant to the above-named preparations, when aggravated by Biliousness or Indigestion, and the great substitute for ail Mercurial preparations. Tae Ecvectric Pitts, without the common fatal | necessity of alunost making a meal of such, wiil in most cases, by the application of a single Pill, pro- duce all the requireneats of a sure, geutle,aud ree liable FAMILY PHYSIC, Let me have your confidence to make trial of the | above-named Remedies, as the only sure tribunal by which real character can be attained, and my decla- ration is that such confidence will not be misplaced. The greater justice is to procure and read the des- eriptive Pamphlets to be found with all dealers, or will be sent free, by JOHN LL. HUNNEWELL, Proprietor Practical Chemist and Pharmacentist, Boston, Mass. To whom please addressali communications. Prices withia reach of ail. Fac-simile of signature over cork of genuine only W. R. Warson, General agent for Prince Edward Island; aleo for sale by T. Despeisa y, Apothecaries’ Hall, and M. W. Sinner, Charlottetown; and also by ali dealers throughout the Island. J. D. B. Faaser, General agent for Pictou, N.S. Oot. 21, 1861. ly NOTICE. Alt persons are hereby cautioned not to trust Capt. E. Evans, formerly of the Steamer ‘ Westmorland,’ on my account, as he has not for sou time past been in my employ ; alvo, all rsons are forbid ing any freight or other bills th wi to bie, self they do, they will have t Pay te aniounh again bth bere ae pee _om y, ranking and take risks for insurance en al! descriptions of Pa W. A. JOHNSTONE, Agent ‘April 7ah, 1982, P Charlottetown, P.E.1., 2d June, 196°. Tue peculiar taint or | have health; with that “life of the flesh” | it ee NE EY HEALTH AND CHEERFULNESS! PHILOSOPHY AND FACT. —— ERRY DAVIS’ VEGETAELE ‘ Gol, Pain. Fritller le the aitention of the public to this ” " long tested and unrivalled Paes ~ iw 7 - a yee } 7-7 ; famiuy /' LUCTIE. fe B has Been favorably known for more eee {fan twenty years, during woh —— eA BS | X tS have received theusands of testimonials, | “Siw” =#] le a> 9 Sen es a3 f.Jicine to be an almost | as Ss | showing th | WAY’S PILLS. fe r remedy for diseases caused by HOLLO A Ss I 4 . 1 . g , i é ’ - Beis : piers be Fer and fgue,| The Exciting Cause of Sickness: Y 4 is, * Cve an yigu 7 said . e ~™ : 7 a a ah The blood is the life-sustaining agent. Ht fureiones } } E er, Koes ow ee components of flesh, bone, muscle, nerve, ae og a 1 Loins, as i ell as wr the |jintegument. The stomach is its eee aed une ‘BOGE Ay een ie arteries and veins its distributors, and the intestiltes | Joints ana 4 ans Meuralace and the channels through which the waste matier ~ | J/> ’ _ i, a ; ; : ahaa ei m the ' Ltheumatse SPainsa im any part : jected - its pee tion, a eh “ = o 6 tite or Taathach PB s int ach, the e'rculation and the bowels, Ue t “ Toathach wt Pains in the | stomach, the er i ; Dae the sysiem, Toothache an ; siimultancousiy, relieving indigestion, puritylig | | ‘ ; | Hi vw and Face. the fluids, and regulating both the secreuols and ene. medivipes uver everything of the kind,ig acknowledged, and the ex them without precedent. Many there are, who from natura] diffdence, fear of discovery,would silently bear their rather than apply tor aid to those from may reasonably expect relief. With the dies the sufferer way without the knowledge ar second person, cure bimselt speedily, pri of lat the least pose ble expeuse. "yy and ‘JT have taken your Pills and alwa 3 derive W.A 2 “THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY. | By Royat Letters Patent, under the special sanction of Her Majesty's Government, and the Chiefs of the Faculte de France. » , HERAPLON:—or CURE OF CURES, This successful and highly popular | medicawent, as employed in the continental hospi- \tals by Kostan, Joubert, Velpeau, and others, cou- | | bines all the desiderata to be suught in @ medicine ‘of the kind, avd surpasses everything hitherty eW-/ +, 006+ from them ”--W . |poyed. Devoid of taste. odour, aud appearance NS) Comiridge, ‘1 bave takea your Pills with |wedieine, it can be lett or carried anywhere, aod pi o55 result."—B. H., Cork. * Your ral i taken from time to time without exciliog Suspicion | great good,I fee! better this last twelve ie |Kach package contains full instractious for every | ¢,, years befure."—F. G., Ware wDouths | sett |«« Your Pills did me more gcod than anything | THERAPION, No 1, in three days only | taken.’ —M J Dursiey. “1 bave tried yout Pas | removes gonorrhea, gleet and all discharges, effec- | and derived tho greatest benefit therefrom," y, | tually superseding injections, the use of which does | G., Navy Hotel, St. Helier's. | irreparable barm by laying the foundation of stric- | Sold by Langley & Jebneton, Mullis if ture and other serious diseases. In dysentery, | piles, irritation of the lower bowel, couch, bronchitiz, asthma, and some of the more trying cow piaints of this kiud, it will be found astonishing:y efficacious, | ailfording prompt relief, where other well-tried reme i} dies have been powerless, | TUE RAPION, No. 2, for syphilis, disease of the bones, sore throat, threatened destruction of | Orleans; Fongera, New York; Musson & | lifax, Nova Sevtia; W. KR. Watson, Charlottes | Prince Edward {sland; d. Ward, Esq . News Ofiee, Syduey, Cape Brewon; BH, Parker (late Potmer & Uo ) Kingston, Canada West, Strickland a Mobile; M. F. Decouge and Edward Gait lot, New ; Co., Que - A. & J Langley, Yates Street, San Prats bee, C. Murdo, Druggi t, and J. cisco; Mr. | Esq., St. John’s, Newfoundland; Thomas Welge, Lles d LPurificr and Denice | Ae ar | for the Alomach, tt seidom fas tc aure | Dyspe neia, Indigestion, Liver Complaint, | gmid. Stomach, Heartburn, Kidney Com- plaints, Piche MHMeadache, Piles, Asth ina or Chthisie, Ringworms, Boils, F'elons, Nd Swelled Joints, and v ¥¥ iit-iows, | General A clility It is also a prompt and sure Remedy for Cramp and Pain in the Stomach, Painters’ | Colic, Diarrheca, Pysentery, Sum- \ mer fpomplaint, Cholera Jécrbus, Chol- era Infantum, Scalds, Burns, Sprains, | Brus 1s, Frost Bites, Chilblains, as well sects, Scorpions, Cen- sof Poisonous Insects es mpanying each bottle. been tested in every variety of | climate, and by almost eueru nation | Aevroutn. to Americans. It is the almost | constant companion and inestimable friend | of the missicnary and the traueller, | ——on | travel on our lakes or rivers without it. Prices, 125 cts, 25 cts, 50 cts, and $1.00 per Bottle, PERRY DAVIS & SON, MANUFACTURERS AND PROPRIETORS, PROVIDENCE, R. I. Sold by dealers every where. Agent, T. DESBRISAY, Apothecaries’ Hall, Charlottetown, P.E.I. January 28, 1861. 18m j sgn ip : i € a ae) . vervt iv. a i IMPORTANT TO THE LADIES. soe welaiets dhepmios are properly ultended to, as | arising from youthtul imprudence or the excesses of Great Sales for Cash, AT AN IMMENSE REDUCTION. [_ADLES’ and MISSES’ HATS, newest styles, Ladies’ french Kid and Summer Gloves, Ribbons, } Scarfs, Flowers, Lonnet Borders, Ladies’ and Misses’ Sammer Jacketa. A large variety of Dress Goods- | Ladies’ Black and Brown Mantle Cloths, | Lacies’ and Children’s Hosiery, | Ladies’ White and Colored French Corsets, Grass Cloths, Hollands and Linens Ladies’ Elastic side French Walking Boots, Ladies’ Muslin Dresses, from 3s 6d to 12s. Ladies’ Silk Parasols, from 3s 4d to 12s 6d. WITH A GENERAL ASSORTMENT OF HOUSEKEEPING GOODs, ALL OF TUIS SPRING’S IMPORTATION. C. C. VAUX, Glasgow Honse, Queen-street, July 7, 1862. Hat and Cap Factory. “PXUE subscriber graieully acknowledges the liberal support hitherto received, and ax | quaints his friends and the public that he continues the Manafacture of Paris Sire Croru, and other {HATS and CAPS. from the best materials, and at ; lowest prices. Silk and Felt Hats re-stiffeaed and teleaned. Ladies’ Felt Hats altered to the newest style. Military and other Cap Per is for sale. JAIN HOBBS. Volunteers, Attention! LAKOS aud other Mititary CAPS made to order. ’ JOUN HOBBS. ENTS’ HALEF-WORN CLOTHES, Ladies’ Mantles, &¢., cleaned and renovated, | the colors restored, and the garment made to look as Well as new, by J. HOBBS. S' i ‘@*EA, SUGAR, MOLASSES, ard other choice GROCERIES, for sale by J. HOBBS, Opposite the Temperance Hall. 2m Jane 9, 1862. | geal os | Hats and Caps, )yN PANAMA, Leghorn, Felt, Tweed chy and Cloth. ‘The best yuriety to be found in the city. ; _ BEER & SONS. i Charlottetown, June 9, 1832. ~ ATRS BOOTS and SHORES, in Ladies’, Gents’, Misses’, Youth's and Children’s, for | sale low by BEER & SONS. Charlottetown, June 9, I862. | NOTICE! To Merchants and others. of the Hustem. | the excretions The National Complaint: Dyspepsia is the most common disease among all | classes iu this country it assumes i thousand | shapes, and is the primary source of Innumerabi and dangerous maladies; but whatever its type or | syluptoius, however obstinate its resistance to ao nary prescriptions, it yields readily and rapidly to this searching and uncrring remedy. Sick Headache, with Loss of Appetite. A certain cure for headache, loss of appetite and These Pills may be taken without low spirits. danver from wet or cold, aud require no restraimt from business or pleasure. They strengthen: the stomach, and promote a healthy action of the liver, purifying the blood, cleansing the skin, bracing the nerves, and invigoraling the system A Word to Females. { The local debility and irregularities which are lthe especial annoyance of the weaker sex, and | whic h, when neglected, always shorten life, are re lieved for the time being and prevented for the Unae to come, by a course ol | terative } . ‘ if | Dropsical Swellings and Turn of Life. | This is the most distressing period in woman's | history, it destroys thousands, the whole of the gross | humears collect together, and like a tide sweep sea and land, ---and no one should | away health und life itself, if not timely and power- | with the atmost severity. fully checked. The most certain remedy for all lthese dangerous symptoms is Holloway’s Pills. | Armed with this great antidote, the fiery ordeal) is | passed through, and the sufferer is once more res- | tored to the possession of unimpaired heaith. These | } Pills are equally efficacions in all fe:nale complaints, | and obstructions at the dawn of womanhood. } Diseases of the Head and Heart. Why are these diseases so. fatal? The answer is self-evider.i—because the first disordered action is ne- lected, or the means for its rectification are misap | | plied. | + . . . “¢ No misapplication ean occur if tthey invariably address themselves to the seat of the affliction, without deranging those organs which | are already acting healthily. Holloway’s Pills are the best purifiers, and there- fore the surest preventives of serious maladies; of which, if they be already established, they then be come the most unremitting eXtirpators. Nervous Disorders. Any derangement of these delicate organs affects disastrously both the body and the mind. To the } nervous invalial Holloway’s Pills are wl article of | vital necessity. They impart tone ard vigour to the | l internal organs, and consequently to the nervous | system, which pervadesand connects them. Henee | their marvellous eures of hysteria. low spirits, spasins, fits, headache, nervous twitchings, and other { kindred complaints. which are all radically removed by the use of these invaluable Pills. | Holioway’s Pills are the best remedy known in the world } Jor the following diseases : —~ , Agne Female Irregula- Scrofula, or Asthma | rities King’s Evil | Bilions Com- [Fevers of all (Sore Throats } plaints kinds iStone & Gravel Blotches on the Fits Second'ry Symp- ; Skin Gont tous + Bowel Comp- |Head-ache \Tic-Douloureux laints Tudigestion {Tumours Colics ‘Inflammation jUleers Constipation of Jaundice iVenereal Affec- | the Bowels jLiver Compl’nts| tions Consumption —|Lumbago jWorms of all Debility Piles | kinds iWenxkness, from Dysentery whatever cause Ery sipe las | &c., &e Sold at the Establishment of Prorgrssor Hortro way, 244, Strand, (near Temple Bar,) London, and by all respeetuble Dragvists and Dealers ia Medi | cives throughout the civilized world, at the follow- } ing prices: — Is Ljd, 2s 9d, 4s Gd, Lis, 22s, and Js exch box |Rheamatism Retention of rae Dropay *,” There isa considerable saving by taking the larger sizes N. B. — Directions for the guidance of patients in every disorder are affixed to each Box. June 16, f862. Dr. La’mert on Self-preservation. Price, with Eagravings and Cases, 25 cents ; by pos’, 30 cents. ELE-PRESERVATION ; a popular Rssay on Nervous and Physical Deb.lity, re- ' ‘ sulting from injurious habits contracted in youth, or | 5S J y > excesses in maturity, which, by prematurely ex- | hausting the tuactions of Manhood, destroy the happiness of Married Life, or prevent the fuifilment of engagements that constitute the must cherished objecis of existeuce, | By De. La’Mext, 37 Bedford Square, London, | Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh ; Member of the Royal Cullege of Surgeons, | Eagland, &c. Tue above work contains most useful and interest- } ing information oa the physiviogical changes which occur in the Reproductive System during the periods of youth, puberty, and manhood ; and on jthe due attainment of that degme of functional | vigour upou which the hopes of posterity depend. | It also pvints out how ail the attributes of Manhood } this mild but thorough al- | Neither need be the case at the present day, | . y td i when these excellent Pills can be purebased every- | where, at a price which places them within the | the nose and palate; impurity of blood, scurvy, pim- | ples, spots. blotches, and all Ciseases for which it lhas been too much a fashion to employ mercury, sarsaparilla, &c., to the destruction of the sufferer’s teeth; and ruin of health. Under this medicine every vestige of disease rapidly disappears; aud the skin assumes the pleasing softness of infancy. THERAPION, No. 3, for reiaxation, sper- | matorrhoea, and all the distressing consequences arising from early abuse, excess, residence in bot, unhealthy climates, &e It possesses surprising power in restoring. strength and vigour to the devi- litated. To those who are prevented entering the | marriage state by the consequences of early error, it will render essential aid by subduing all disquah- fications; and restoring the lost tone to the system. | Therapion may be procured at Lis, and 33s per pace | lage, through all medicine vendors, or in £5 pack- | ages for fureign shipment, direct from London only, | by whch £1 12s. are saved: and £10 packages for ltae more inveterate cases, by which a still greater | saving iseffected. In ordering the above, the pur- !ebaser should state which of the three numbers he requires. Her Masesty’s Hon. Commissioners have gra- ciously permitted the Government stamp bearing the | word “* Therapion” in white letters, to be attached | to each package; thus insuring the public against | fraudulent imitations, and securing to the proprietor | the sole right of supply throughout her dominions; ‘and any infringment of which they will prosecute & Sons, St. Joho, New Bruaswick; Lywans & Co, Toronto, of whom also may be had « Tyg MEDI. CAL ADVISER,” or should d:fficulty Srise in pre, /euring any of the above, enclose the smunrg by drait or otherwise, to 26 Bedford Plage, B bury Square, Londons, W.C,, and securely packed per return, CAUTION. — There being highly injurious i 2 of the above, sufferers should guard aan ae a mendation of other medicines by dichow st ’ a thus obtain a larger profit. Vo protect mae beniis / AGAINST FRAUD, liza Masmsty’s Mom, Cu: Ens have directed t, at the words * Waurern Dy sen. Loxpon,”’ be printed im white letters om te St *e affixed to the ubuve, to imitate which 1s felony. February 3, 1862. MOFFAT’S LIFE PILLS | PHCINIX BITTERS, PF \HESE Medicines have now been before the lic for a period of THIKTY YEARS, mag during that time have maintained a bigh in almost every part of the globe for their extruer. dinary and immediate power of restoring perfect health to persons suffering under neariy every king _ of disease to which the buman frame is liabie, IN MANY THOUSANDS of certificated instances, they Lave veu rescued suf. ferers from the very verge vf an untimely grare, after all the deceptive nostrums of the day bad ot. terly failed; and to many thousands they have | permanently secured that uniform enjoyment of health, without which life itself isbut a partial bless. ing. So great, indeed, has their efScacy invariably and infallibly proved that it has appeared seoarsely Jess than miraculous to those who were acquainted with the beautifully philosophical priocipies which they are compounded, and upon which THE. consequently act. It was to their manifest and sen- sible action in purifying the springs and ebanpels of life, and induing them with renewed toneand vigor, | adult life, infection, climate, is. Qheorvaticns en | that they were indebted for their name. marriage, the prevention and removal of certain dis-| Unlike the host of pernicious quackeries which |qualifications. Rules and numerous prescriptions bosst of vegetable ingredients, the LIFE MEDI. ‘for seiftreatment. Sufferers who are prevented | CLNES are purely and solely vegetable; and contain | from matrimony by the consequences of iamprudence | Dewwher Mercury, nor Antimony, nor Avsenic nor any | Should read this work, as pointing out the sure way | Other minerel,in any form whatever, They are en. | to restoration of health. Sent post free in an enve-| tirely comp sed of extracts from rare and poweriy) | lope on receipt of 3s, by Mr. Lawes, Medical Pub- | plants, the virtues of which, though long known te | lisher, 14, Hand Court, London. | several! Tadian tribes, and recently to some eminent ; ; ‘ | phacinacentical chemists, are alaugether anknown to. | the ignorant pretenders to medical science; and were ) never before adwinistered in gv happily efficacious ; a combiuation. Toe first operation is to loosen from the coatsof the direct froin the Author, for 2s 6a. st.nach and bowels the variousimpurities and crudi~ e Wk . . ia | ties constantly settling round them; and to remote pue MEDICAL ADVISER on the/the hardened fwoes wie cvilect in the eonvelu- modern treatment of mental and physical in- | tious of the smali intestines. Other medicines only | capacity, syphilis. stricture, &e.; with unfailing | partially cleanse these, and leave such coliected | rules and prescriptions for the speedy cure, by very | masses behind as te prodace habitual Cost veness | simple means, of all the more common diseases and With all its train cf evils, or sudden Diarrhea | supposed incurable maladies of the sexual system. | With its imminen dangers. This fact is well-known | By Dr W De Roos, M. D., M.K. C 3., LS A,/teall regular anatomists who examine the bomen | ke., of the Ecole de Medirine, Puris, Graduate in Me. | bowels after death; and hence theprejudices of | decine, Surgery and Midwifery; Licentiate of the | these well informed men aguinst the quack medi. | Royal Scciety of Apothecarirs, §c. be oan us iraiine effect of the VEU } Se i . ) TABLE "E MEDICINES is t cleanse the kid- | REVIEWS AND NOTICES, | neys and the bladder; and, by this means, the liver | ** To be yeur own counsel or your own doctor, en- | and lungs, the healthfal action of which entirely | tails risks that have become proverbial to a degree | depends upon the regularity of the urinary orgaas. that prevents much good resolution from taking any | The blood, which takes its red eolor from, the ayeney ; benefit or advantage when reasonably offered. Sus- lof the liver and lungs, befire w passes into the | picion begets irresolution, and where there is no con- | beart, being thus purified by them, and nourished | deuce good results seldom follow. Medical books | by food coming trom a clean stomach, courses freely jarea fie d for the faculty alone, and the public act | through the veins, penews every part of the system, | Wisely in refraining from theirstudy. ‘ Drink deep| and triumpbantly mounts the banner of health in or taste not the Pierian spring,’ is good advice where | the blooming cheek. the unioformed mind, listening to its own apprehen | The following are among the distressing variety | tons is oltener ready to imagine thaa use its cool | of hamnan diseases in whieh the VEGETABLE LIFE |juigment. There is one class of medical jure, how- | MEDLOINES are well known to be infallible, | ever, that stands in a position somewhat exceptional) DYSPEVSIA, by thoroughly cleansing the fires | tu our remark, and which treats on disorders and | and second stomachs, and creating a flow of pare irregularities in which morality is offended. For| healthy bile, instead of the stale and acrid kind; | this reason the paticnt too often suffers in secret, or | Flatulency, Loss of Appetit, Heartburn, Headache, pursues Iu ignorance practices that daily bring him | Restlessnesy, Hl-Temper, Lingour, and Melancholy, j into & more hopeless condition for want of friendly | which are the general symptoms of Dyspepsia, will | advice. To such we recommend a perusal of the | vanish, as « natural consequence of its cure. | ‘Medical Adviser’ of Walter De Ros, M.D, of} COSLIVENESS, by cleansing the whole length of London, an established Physician, graduate snd | the intestines with aselyentprocess, and without vio- | licentiate of alf the regular institutions of London’! jeace: all vivlent purges leave the bowouls costive and Paris; and who has made nervous disorders and | within two days. their baneful vrigin bis pirticular,staly, rnd obtain-! DIARRHOEA and CHOLERA, by removing the | ed such a practice in this branch of therapeutics as | sharp acrid fluids by which these complaints srewec. } Qualifies him to be a safe and competent adviser.— | casioned, and by promoting the lubricative secretion | County Chronicie, May 7th, 1861. of the mueuvus membrane, | the MEDICAL ADVISER, by Wacren FEV ELS of all kinds, by restoring the blood to 1 Dr Roos, M. D, for theclass of diseasus upon whieh | Tesular circulation, through the process of perapi. it treats is usdoubtedly the best and most soundly | tien in such cases, aod the thorough solution of practical book which has come under our notice | #!! iutestinai »bstruction in others. Ibe author is aman of most enlarged experivace.’ |, fhe Lire Muvicines have beew knows t cure —Derby Telegraph, June 29th 1861. | Rheumatism periuanestly in three wecks, ond Gout To those who eontemplate marriage its perusal is | 19 balf that time, by rewoving local inflamumation especiaily recommended. —The kn wledge it imparis | from the muscles and ligaments of the joints. must Oowe some time, and happy they who du net! . Dr ypsies oi all kinds, by freeing and strength a- possess it too late. —Cure is certain in every curable ing the kidneys and bledder: they operate mest de- case, and few indeed are they which are not so,— | ‘isuttully o1 these important orgacs, aad heave they [tis catculated to effect a complete revolution in ihe | He ever been found # certain remedy fur the treatinent of these complaints —Simple and inex. | Worst cases of Gravel. pensive, every sufferer may cure himaclf sp edily, } Aiso Worms, by dislodging; from the turnings of privately, and at the least possible cost. the bowels the slimy matter te which these creakares From long practical observation of the treatment | #4here. pursued ju the most famous Institutions of this coua- Asthma and Consumption, by relieving the sir try and the continent, for those diseases referred to | Vessels of the lungs from the mucous which even in the above work, the Proprietor bas bad somewhat | *!iglt colds will occasion, and whieh, it not removed, | AGents ror ExGianp, Thomas & Co, 7, Upper | St. Martin’s-lane, London; Kaimes & Uo., Liverpool; | Apothecaries Comp., Glasgow; Ferris & Co., Bristei; Uornish & Co., Plymouth; Rowe, Devenport; Ran- jdall & Co., Southampton; and obtainable througa j all wedicing vendors in the known world, or in case | of difficulty, by enclosing a draft or order for £5 or | | £10, according to the nature of the case, payable in | London to Messrs. Thomas & Co., as above, a large | package will be sent by return wail, carefully se- | cured from observation or accident. } | SYSTEM, and its perfect restoration, whether | The Cause and Cure of Pre Decline. | Sold by all the Agents for Dr. De Roos? Medicines, i or sent post free, secure from observations mature | can be preserved to an advanced period of life, how | they are lost, and how they can be recovered. It ,is free from the gross exaggerations, alarming anusual facilities for acquiring that uniform success | 2°Comes hardened, and produces those dreadful dis- which has hitherto eharacterized bis practice, in ; ©4504. they Will be senug : FESHE sabseriber will hold an AUCTLON on the second THURSDAY in every month, | Bake disposal of any kind of Merchandize place in his hands. Goods to be sent to the AUCTION ee ; ROOM two days previous to sale. aati gt see stat | aagpamgend ee ee ee | be handed over without delay | The Author is the only legally qualified practi- } NEIL RANKIN, Auctioneer. tioser whose name stands on the ‘ Medical Register ’ | Queen-street, March 31, 1862. | (the sole test of medical qualification), who has been | exclusively engaged for a series of years in the treatment of the various functional disurders of the | nervous and reproductive system, which, owing to the great discoveries o! modern science, are render- | ed suds srvient to a rational, simple, and easy mode j of treatment. ~ At home for consultation daily frem ten till two, | and from six till eight, either personally or by | letter.—37 Bedford Square, London, England. | Patients residing in the colonies can be successful- ly treated by correspondence, and remedies can be | forwarded in secresy and safety to any address, ** SELF-PRESERVATION ” may be had of the undermentioned Agents, price descriptions, and dangerous remedies so generally | | resorted to by persons, who, practising with false | wedical qualifications, inflict most serious injuries, MAILS By Steamer ‘ Wostmorland.’ SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. HE MAILS for the neighbouring Pro- | r vinces, etc., will, wntil further notice, be made | ° up and forwarded as follows :— , | 38 conte, free by post, SP conte ¢-— For Nova Scotia, via Pictou, twice in each week, | Hauirax, N. S.—Mr. E G. Fuller, Express Agent. asfollows:—The week in which Mailsare forwarded Y4sMouTH, N. S.—Messrs. Young and Baker, to England, on MONDAY, at 12 o'clock, noon, and | _ Booksellers. WEDNESDAY, at8 o'clotk, p.m.; and the follow- | Sypxey, C. B.—Mr. J. P. Ward, ‘Nows’ Office. | tirely obviated which the distressing consequences resulting frous the injurious employment of mercury, Capivi, sar- saparilla, and similar dangerous medicines are en- | Lasting benefit in these cases can | only be reasonably expected at the hands of those | who devote their chief attention to such diseases; and te such only can confidence be safely extended. Dr. De K. refers with pride to the numbers he has been instrumental ia restoring to health and happi- | ness, whilst to ail who need such aid be offers every | assurance of speedy restoration. Foreign Kestpents can be successfuily treated by | correspondence,on sending the detail of their cases, | with a Bank note or Bill on a Londou house for £53 | or £10, in order that a package of medicines to meet the exigencies of the case, may be sent out by uext mail, thus avoiding the pr tracted suffering and | unuecessary loss of valuable time, which must other- wise occur. RK. DE KOOS’ GUTTA VIT-E on) LIFE DROPS; Protected by Royal Letters Patent of England; Seals of the Faculte de France; i Royal College of Prussia, §c , have in numberless | instances proved their superiority over every other advertised remedy for Spermatorrhcea, languor, Jas- situde, depression of spirits, irritability, anger, ex- | sitement, needless fear, distaste and : ic Scurvy, Ulcers and Inveterate Sores, by the perfect | purity which these LP K MEDICINES give to the vlood, and al} the humors, Scorbutic Eruptions aud Bad Complexions, by their alternative effect upon the Buids tha: teed the skin, and the morbid state of which occasions ail erup- tive cuwplaints, sallow, cloudy, and other dissgree~ able cow plexions. The use of these Pills for a very ehort time will effect an entire cure of Salt Rheum, and a striking improvement in the clearness of the skin. Colds and Influenza will always be cured by ows dose, or by two even in the worst cases. Common PILUS. As a remody for this most distressing and obsiinate walady, the VEGETABLE LIFE ME- DICINES deserve a distinct and emphatic recom- mendation. city, that the furmer proprietor of these valusble Medicines was himself afflicted with thie complaint for upwards of TaigTy-rIve YeARS, and that he tried in Vain every remedy prescribed within toe whole It is well-known to hundreds in this oumpass of the Alateria Medica. He, bowever, at length tried she Medicine which is now offered to the public, and he was cured in a very short t'me, after his recovery had been pronounced not only impro- |bable, but absolutely impossible, by sny human | means, ing week, on MONDAY and THURSDAY, at 12} o'clock, noon. For New Brunswick, Canada, and the United | States, via Shediac, every TUESDAY and FRIDAY | morning, at a quarter past eight o'clock. For Newfoundland every MONDAY, at 12) o'clock, noon. For England, Bermuda; and West Indies, every alternate MONDAY, at 12 o'clock, noon, viz:— Monday, June 24th Monday, Sept. Ist July 7th ”" Sept. Lith . July 21st “ Sept. 29th “ Aug. 4th - Oct. 13th “ Aug. 18th . Oct. 27 tla Supplementary Mairs for England and New- foundland will be made up every Wednesday, in the same week as the above dated Mondays, at 8 o'clock, p.m. : L. C. OWEN, Postmaster General. Genera) Post Office, June 16, 1862. neta teenies tenses E MAILS OR Saiot Eleanor’s, Princetown, Bar- | _ rett’s Cross, Summerside, and all Mails for delivery by the Western Route, also all Mails for leque, Tryon, &e., andall Mails for the Southern Route, viz: Georgetown, Murray Harbour, Belfast &e., will, on and after TUESDAY, the Ist of April, be forwarded from the Genera! Post Office nt Bight o'clock, a.m., instead of nine, as formerly. Bomenapors to be sent by these Mails must be posted the previous afternoon. Those for the Mai] of Monday mornings mastbe posted on Saturday afternoon. . Letters to be Registered must in all cases be posted at least a quarter of an hour before the time for closing the Mail by which they are to be sent. L. C. OWEN, Postmaster Gene General Post Oilice, 27th’ March, 18620 NOTICE: T HE Public are requested to take notice. aa _ts enend after fe Ist JULY next, all Let ets " i i teat ae eens n any Pest Office in this PREPAID by STAMP. within this Island, must be PA y Letters unpaid, or propel in ont wi be fi ~~ to their destina- ~—subject very b saan and Sleo to 8 FINE two. PENCE, WEN Postmaster General. , Ch. Town, May 98, 1862. Sr. Joan, N. B.—Messrs. ‘Courier’ Office. CnarLorretown, P. B. I —Mr. J. Ings, ‘Islander’ Office. March 31, 1862. DENTIFRICE SOAPS, &c. Rimmell’s White Rose Dentiiice Soap. Robinsons’ Jndexica! Dentalsoap. Pelletier’s Antiseptic and Aromatic Tooth Soap. John Gosnell and Co’s Cherry Tooth Paste. H. Chubb and Co., fPXUHESE DENTAL SOAPS, which are of- ered as substitutes for all the Powders | and Washes heretofore used, are prepared expressly for the TEETH, of The purest Materials of which Soap can be Made. They are tasteless, save an agreeable aro- | matic flavour, imparted to them by the Anti- septic and Astringent properties with which they are combined. They effectually rid the mouth of the foetid matterand tartar, which render the breath 80 impure and disagreeable. Tuey give tone and strength to the gums, and a clear pearly whiteness to the Teeth, preventing the pre- mature decay of those priceless organs, the fall value of which is never realized unti! they are lost to us forever. THE STEREU DESMIC, cR DENTISTS’ TOOTH BRUSHES. _ These TOOTH BRUSHES have been exten- | sively introduced, are highly recommended | by the most eminent Dentists, and are war- | ranted to purchasers by JOUN GOSNELL. & CO., Inventors and Patentees of the TRICHOSARON HAIR BRUSH. Only sold in this City by WM. R. WATSON, t# A supply of SILVER SOAP recom. mended asthe BEST ARTICLE EVER SEEN | for cleaning Plated and Silyer Ware. January 6, 1862, "8 WS | bottle, ' FEVER AND AGUE. incapacity fer | ; . puins in the | , For this scourge ef the westorn country these Me. side, palpitation of the heart, giddiness, noises in| dicines will be found a sate, speedy, and cortaie te the head, impotency, impediments to marriage, &o /medy. Other -nedicines leave the system sutijeot This medicine strengthens the vitality of the etels | to w return uf the disease—a cure by there medis system, gives energy to the muscles and nerves, thas | Het is permaneut—TRY THEM, BE SATISFIED, speedily removes nervous complaints,renovates the | 4ND BE CURED. impaired powers of life, ard invigorates the most Bilious Fevers and Liver Complaints. shattered constitution, Four skin eruptions, pore ¥ ' a8 throat, pains in the bones, and all those diseases iv Conanal sehilinay, Logs oy Aregeres, oop Sap ith which mercury, sarsaparitla, 4c. are too often em |” F.MALES—these medicines bave been sed wi ; ployed in vain, to the serious detriment of health, | a igo od et Sarin its surprisi . : >} —AING ns and SCROFULA, in i . surprising efficacy has only to be tested to be ®P-| yields to the wild yet powerfal action of these Te- preciated. ace “ D As these complaints if . | warkable Medicines, Nicur Sweats, Newvous Da- Paints if neglected become chronic | siiry, Neavous Compcaints of all kinds, Patti. or incu: able, sufferers wil! do well before the peed valuable time io seeking aid frown elena aaa on. ge Haans, Pasusen'a foro aags , other absurdities professing to supersede medicines, | —_ society, study or business; indigestion | to make fair trial of a remedy, which concocted oa MERCURIAL DISEASES. pam scientific principles, cannot fail, and may | Persons whose constitations have become i aon «bout the person, or left upon the toilet | by the injudicious use of Mercury, will Gad these = 8, br pete exciting a Suspicion of its vature | Medicines a perfect cure, as they never fail to ete- —— 2m ae the quantity at om per | dicate from the system all the effects of Mercury a . Packages containing twelve 11s | infiuitely sooner than the most powerful prepare quantitics, Sy which saving of £1 12s is effected, | tions of aaengertihe: A Magte trial will place them wi.l be sent from 25, Bedford Place, only on receipt | beyoud the reach of competition, in the of the amount per draft on a London house or other- | of every patient. wise. maaan bom letters prea es be seen by cap) BE CAREFUL OF COUNTERFEITS. one. “*i am happy to say that [ am now quite Well,| Several have lately been discovered, and theif a dy ead your medicine of medicines.”’— | nefarious authors louie, both in the city of New ot Sadie 4 a 4 appy ~ or that T shall | York and abroad. ore, than od, an hope He wil . ; . reward you for what you have done for mate Bay sf ne one whe ls apt on queneneiay SIRT Hartlevool “If my tongue could speak, or my pen Prepared by Dr. W. B. MOFFAT, 335 Broadway, N, Y. ee ~ express my gratitude to youl should | cei happy, but neither tungue nor pen of mi | ~ can do so.”—H}J. 4. Birmingham. «Without eo Bold by T. DESBRISAY, Cs [ should have been in my grave. but now [ am a lettotown, General Agent, y happy man again.”—D F.F., Inverness. “1 can| James Pidgeun, New London; John Beer, Bedequei never thank you suflisiently; had I never read of | Garret and Hudson, do.; H. Beer, 5 ; the Guttw Vite, where or what I might have been W. Shaw, New Giasgow Bridge; Benj. Kod- mows T canst toll. Ws Gi, West Pelton, gers, Cascampec; J. J. Fraser, St. Bleaper #3 John Frost, Grand River; George Wi Crapaud; P. Stephens, Orwell; RK. 8. olman, Summerside; Wm. Brow, Cape Traverse. July 17, 1861. ly. AINS IN THE BACK, GRAVE LUMBAG i GOUT, RHEUMATISM, DISEASS OF THE | KIDNEYs, BLADDER, &. DR. DE ROOS’ CuM- POUND RENAL PILLS are a most safe and Speedy | Remedy for the above dangerous cowplaints. Dis- | charges and Diseases of the Urinary Urgans gene- | rally, which too frequently harass the sufferer over) the bast years of life, and end only in an agonizing : death, They agree with the moat delicate and inthree days effect a cure when capivi, cubebs, &e,, have utterly fuiled. 2s 9d., 49. 64., Ils , and 33s. per box. The Superiority of these celebrated The Examiner Gots S printed and published every Monday I Eowano aon at his office, ile borough-street, near King’s-square- Pelle. Lis per ai payable half yearly en advance, et