CALENDAR FOR NOVEMBER, 1894, first Quar inv, im, a. m., N : | Sun | High water - > . “Oe Whee Tum No - DL So ~ et wen- | gas | 51 lay | 21 | 13 10 6 61M inv 23 I3 | 10 45 T ada 24) i897 2 1] | morn 6 | ll 0 4 7 28/410] 0 43 JOHN CALDWELL JOHN MAIR ESTaBLisHED tss3 JOdH CALDWELL & 00. Fru t and Produce Commis- sion Merchants, 187 McGILL ani 131 ST. PETER 8Ts. MONTREAL. Ma!peque Oysters por ence ®& cited, a specialty. Corre:- Tek plone L876. iL) EXAM Daily NEWSPAPER or P. E. istano, Tux Leapixne afternoon, from the office ni EXAMINER PUBLISHING Company, in the Loadon House Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. UN ADVANCE) « issaed every ihe one Year Koons seth dladies ti Six M onris peedcccsecticebs Wee I i i es a a ieee law SE MN bchedinctebedeukbecsskedsdied: 0.35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States ADVERTISING RATES mivertisements which are ordered for only one or two weeks the charge is tents per inch for the first insertion, and 6 cents Rate cards are furnished on application at the office. Specia! contract prices at a reduced rate are quoted for advertisements feur inches in size or larger, which are to run for three months or longer. No special notices inserted unless paid for at the rate of 1) cents per line, and under no circumstances will such paid notices appear ip the local column. Social discounts made on all advertise- meats connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Picuics, ete. No notices will be inserted with the same Unless the regular rate of 10 cents per line is paid. Taat Tue Examiner is considered by our Merchants and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through whicn to make their announcements public, is »bundantly proved by the ‘aet that inorder o accommodate our suavertisers we have “-on compelled to enlarge the paper to ite present size. For «ma! for each continuation Tue Dat_y Examtner is for sale by the fol- lowing agents :— M. & T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- merside. DD. Sutherland, Seuris. Hon. D. Gordon, Georgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton. A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge. ists tse > The Weekly Examiner ® issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. {t is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting snd ful) of the latest news. The subscription for Tue Wreexty Exam. NER, 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 Taz DatLy EXAMINER. Wiater FloweringBulbs. We have now on hand a fine supply of good, sound Balbs, con prising the fol- lowing well-known Flowers :— Tulips—Siagle Mixed, Queen Vict Tia, Ye iow Prin v. Crinson K ig, La Canadiens White, Double Superfine Mixed, Nar us—Poeticus Ornatus, Wh te, Double Von Scion, Crocus — Named Sorts, Snowdrops—Single and Double, Hy Bcinth+— au varieties, Easter Lilies, Chinese Sacred Lilies, Parchasers when buying Bulbs may bring their own pots and have bulbs potted free of « harge. Tivese Kulbs are eale at the lowest fur prices. Nothing is so Leantiful as a dis- play of the-e tlowers, which are very easily grown in winter. JOHN WILLIAMS, Ridgeway's Old Nursery, sept29 Upner Prinee Street, PO silat. A first-c'axe Horse Double-seated Phieton. Enquire at G. G. JURY’S Jewelry Store, north side Queen Square, opposite Post Office, Charlotte- town. 2aw (w f) 3m—may25 and Buggy, aleo a TINWARE Creameries and Cheese Factories. The very best work guaranteed on all jobe for Creameries and Cheese Factories. TE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF THIS KIND OF WORK M. STEVENSOV, MANUPACTURER OF Tinware, Stove Pipe, &e., 53 QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. Al! ordere promptly attended to, apo—tf wards. Painless ex LE | traction of teeth, DR¢J. P. MURRAY, $10 per ret. Partial sets $2.00 and up Guaieneninanrere HE |: TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. — = NEW SERIES Single Copies Two Cents CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1894. Meneses tre loge OUR IDEA is to give you a good reliable Time- keeper, fitted in a strong and hand- some Case—one that will protect the works and keep out the } sory YOURS SHOULD BE to take advantage of this offer and visit our Store. See our stock and make your own selection. G:. H. TAYLOR, North Side Queen Square, ect]? Copvacuriee, We have now in stock beautiful Rings, and _ aiso some of the newest and nicest useful for Wedding Silver Novelties, ticles suitable Presents. CAMERO\ BLOCK. oc: 26 Tickets to Boston. Buy Your Tickets for Boston by §. §. “FLORIDA,” (Canada Atlantic and lant Line), —FROM— W. W. CLARKE, Ticket Agent, Corner Queen and Water Streets, 1894 What’s the time? _ If you have a Congh it isa 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 bas been on trial for more than 6 years and the verdict of the people ie that k& is the best remedy known. We. aad 804. par bottle. Sold everywhere. KEARRY WATGON & CO. Preraistene MON Te ear. UiDcataki G, C rerlotteto wa, 22, June The City Gents are getting so tired they can’t or won’t walk; therefore the sutr ecriber has grovided a PALL BEARER’S WAGON, which will be in readines@ at all times, together with everything re- quired for Funeral purposes, and at moderate charge-. EMBALMING notice. attended to at short ISAAC W. WADMAN, octti—eod & wy Grafton Street. P | | L POVINGa! LOdN. Pao.wciat Treasvrey, Prince Edward Island, 25th June, 1894, Under author:ty of the Act of last Ses sion, 57 Vic., Cap. 6, the Government ot Prince Edward Island is now prepared to receive, from any person or persons, Teim- porary Loans, at 4 per cent. interest, on call or on such termsas may be agrevd upon. This will afford a good opportunity for the investment of a large or suali sume for short or long periods. ANGU MoMILI. LN, S lo:y Treessur er, june225—pat —IF YOU— Want awife, Want a cook, Want a partner, Want a situation, Want a servant girl, Want to sell a farm, Want to sell a house, Want to rent a_ house, Want to exchange anything, Want to sell plants or grain, Want to sell groceries or drugs, Want to sell or trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or cattle ADVERTISE IN Office, 145 Queen St., octé Charlottetown, P. K, 1. E.W. TAYLOR, | | IT BRINGS neneeneinemmn “YE ARE RUNNING OFF our stock <« tionaries, also a few Liddle & Seott’s Lexicons ; White's Latin English, reduced from $2.00 to $1.25. Muglish Latin, 32.00 to $1.25 French Dictiondries, 50 and 75 L. & S. Greek Lexicon, $1.25. Allen & Greenough’s Latin Grammar, reduced from $1.25 to $1.00. |All the English and French College Text Books at the | lowest figures st the BAZAAR STORE, We received to-day a new lot of CILLNA, including |Flower Pots, Fairy Lamps, Berry Dishes, Vases, Rose Bowls, Toilet Sets, ete. We want to hustle off a lot of Toys and Fancy Goods ;to make room for our Xmas Goods. Why not help us? |We will give you the profit. | BAZAAR COMPANY. eent?. Charlottetown, October 25, 1894--t t s DOCTORS DIFFER Occasionally, but never on the question of ‘“‘HEALTH BRAND” Combinations being absolutely the best thing for women and children to wear. Eyery first-class dry goods house keeps them. Look for the word ‘“ Health” “>, on silk label at neck. Buy no imitations. ee eR OSes. _— =. ~—_ THE MONTREAL SILK MILLS CO., Ltd. » MONTREAL. ar- | DONT _ worry! ™ | | j | ~ Spnucir | COMFORT : RIGBY! This is the season when we properly ap- preciate a warm, comfortable, Porous Waterproof Coat. Everybody is asking for “Rigby.” UEEEENERRNNEDSETONEDYTePnepeOgee eT eEHeMaeyT Annet ePeT | HAT TAT EEE TUTTO ETH HEHE CEPTS CM PTTL PET Priestley’S_& : In the long run it is the quality of D the materia! that will determine the ress success of a lady's costume. Every > 3 lady who has at al! studied the matter Fabrics AREWRAPPED.~ | kuows this. Pricstley’s Black Dress a Goods are “he best that the market affords. ‘That is ccn- ceeded on all hands. The ladies of Great Britain cerdially acknowledge it. The 3 American ladies prefer Priestley’s dress fabrics to Vrench. Our Canadian ladies E arenow asking for them. ‘They wear better than other goods; but their great charm consists in a peculiar richness and softness of appearance, and a flexibility which emables them to drape in tlie costume with that suggestion of flow and rhythm which it is the dream of ail tasteful women to realise. ° Cranby mubbers Always to the front. This seasen’s goods finer than ever. Now that the public is familiar with the excellent Quality, Style, Fit and Finish of the Granby Rubbers, the demand is almost universal. Kverybudy wants ' them = Every dealer sells them. ——>—————— - - ~~ octlj—dy'm wf & wky ESS Tat eS THEY PLEASE A Another lot of these WOVEN WIRE SPRING MAT: TRE:SES and SPRING COTS, the Our beautiful Rug Drawing Room Sets and Parlor Suits, very cheap. Look at our new line of CHAMBER SETS before We please the people every time. Don’t forget JOHN NEWSON. cheapest yet. buying. the place. ‘THE EXAMINER Charlottetown, Angust 18 1894—t t 6 ff Latin, English and French Dice- i } Greek | | GREAT GAME PLENTY. Shall I rustit? /A TALL HUNTING STORY OF THE * GOOD OLD Days, A Deer, @ Panther and Three Bears Bag- ged in One Shot—-A Deer Played One Hear Against the Panther—Both Died— The Hunter Shot the Deer. “Game was plentiful in those days.”’ said the old hunter “One day I was still hunting around the headwaters of Cow ley } Kun | stull-hunt that day because Zenas Cowley The fact of the matter is I had to had shot my two hounds. believe in Zenas didn’t running deer with hounds, and he always put a ball into anybody's dog that c.me his way on the trail of veni- son. My two hounds were Russian grey hounds. The day they were killed Laroy Lyman came to me and said : “*What'll you take for them tyro hounds 0’ your’: Noah ? “*You ean’t huy ’em for $100 apiece,’ said J. ““T didn’t know,’ said Laroy, ‘but I seen ’em taking a deer over toward Cowley’s half an hour ago, and I thought I’a@ ask you,’ ‘In that case,’ said I, ‘you can buy them hounds for four shillin’ ! “And hecould, too, for I knew they'd never come back if they had been so for- getful as to take a deer over toward Cow ley’s. But there isn’t any doubt that is just what they did, for I never sew ‘em again. And they were the best dogs in Haliburton. So I was out still hunting that day. “T sat down at the roots of a big fallen hemlock to wait and see what would come my way. 1 hadn’t waited long before I saw a big she bear and two cubs come slouching up out of the hollow and tum- ble into a clump of bushes not more than twenty rods from where I sat. I was get ing ready to send a bullet into the old bear when I saw a deer break out of the woods and come bounding along the open side hill opposite me. Only a few jumps behind it came a big panther, hot on the trail of the deer, and as the panther was clearing more than thirty feet feet at every jump I saw that it wouldn’t bea very lou chase before he had his claws on that deer. “The course the deer was taking brought her—it was a doe—along above the bushes where the bear and her cubs were lying. I saw at once that the deer either saw or smelt the bears from the way she kind o° swerved as she went past the bush. Now, there isn’t anything a panther likes more han bear cubs, and there is the deadliest enmity between bears and panthers just m that account. The old she bear smelt the panther and got to her feet just as he was bounding by. The panther was ovidently too intent on the deer to either Lear or see the threatening bear. Of course this all took place in a few sec- mds, and before I made up my mind just exactly what tactics to adopt to get he most benefit out of the situation. I uadn’t fully resolved yet, when, to my surprise I saw the deer wheel like a flash, leapelear over her savage pursuer, and atke her back track. The panther took up the chase with renewed fury, and gained ‘apidly on the deer. I was on the paint of stopping him with « rifle ball, when I saw by the action of the deer that she had dis- vovered the bears in the bushes, and it struck me that she had a scheme. “There's going to be some fun here,’ thought I, and I lowered my rifle. “Withathe passing of the panther the first time the old bear, seeing that her cubs were not the object of the panther’s quest, had returned to the bushes and lain down with her cubs again. The second time he went by she got up again and stood ready to tackle him if necessary, but the punther shot by without noticing the bear. The deer bounded on and into the woods. In less than a minute she came out again, with the panther dangerously close. This time the deer was headed straight for the bushes where the bear and her cubs were, and she slackened her pace- “‘Aha! said L ‘Smartdeer! She's going to turn that panther over to the bear!’ “When she reached the bush she leaped over it, and the panther was only one easy spring behind her. He crouched to make it, but he didn’t, for right in front of him out of the bushes rose the gigantic front of this savaze she bear. The suddenness of the change in the situation seemed to sur- prise the panther, but not for long. He was out for blood, and if he couldn’t get deer blood he would take his chances with bear. He lashed his long tail nervously on the ground for a second or two and then lannched his big body straight at the bear. His claws were in the bear’s shoulders and his red jaws at her throat the next instant. But the huge bear folded the panther in her terrible embrace and put all her strength in the hug. I could hear the pan- ther’s bones crack, and both bear and panther fell to the ground dead. AsI dis- covered later the panther’s fangs had sev- ered the bear’s jugular vein and windpipe both. The deer took but two leaps after bring- ing the panther face to face with the bear. Then she stopped and became an excited spectator of the result of her stratagy. When the bear and the panther came to- gether her eyes blazed, she shook her head high in the air, stamped her feet, and re- lieved her feelings by resounding snorts. She seemed to take fiendish enjoyment in the sight of her deadly foe in the toils of the equally savage bear. When the two combatants fell to the ground and rose no more the deer approached them cautious- ly, suiffing and snorting and stopping every few steps to stamp her feet on the ground. At last she came to where tae two big beasts lay dead together. She sniffed at the carcasses. The hair on her neck stood erect, and she showed the fury she felt by rising on her hind feet and striking with her sharp forefeet the body of the panther. I wanted that panther’s skin and knew that the deer would soon rip it into worthlessness with her hoofs, so [shot her where I stood. She never knew what hurt her. I was always sorry that her vindictiveness against the pan- ther forced me to kill her, for she played a smart trick on him to save her life, and she ought to have had it. I captured the two bear cubs alive. And that is the way I bagged all that game with only one shot.”’ Wigwame Classed as laprovemenss. The land office has just rendered an _m- portant decision, and one entirely without precedent. The land laws require that a settler taking up government land must make improvements thereon, and in the case in question a Sac and Fox Inéiza, who had become a citizen and settled vo mn government land, was contested on tae ground of not having made proper icn- prov.ments. But the office holds that as he had erected a Wigwam upon the land and that being all the improvement he considered necessary for comfortable liv- ing, he was entitled tothe land.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat, « 7-er+e — For Over Fifty Years. An O_p Axo Wet Triep Remepy.— Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth- nig, with perfect snecess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and is the best: remedy for Diarrheea. Is pleasnt to the- taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty. ve cents a bottle. its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind—nm. w. f. wkly—1 y Will It Meet My Expee- tation ” The Answer of Thousands is : “It Has Cured Us and Will Cure You.” Paine’ Celery Com- pound Never Fails. Testimony of a Well-kacwn Mecha- nical Ergiveer, Shall I trust Paive’s Celery Compound ? Will it meet fully my expe tation, and give to me the health and vigor for which I have ro earnestly sought. | the fashion. These questions are asked asional!y by wearied, overwot ked, nery Is Sleep ¢ and dyspeptic men and women, who aye met failures and dissappointments afte using the common pat rat prac nes of ou Limes, ; We adizit that re peate ! failures have tendency t> weaken an i dk faith ; w sincerely eympathize with those who lave been duped in the past by worthless nos- trume, The dissappointed ones have not only lost their money, but ticy have bee cast deeper into the mire of disease ana suf: | fering. All doubts and fears as to the cfilcae and puwers of Paine’- Cr | % © mp mu } should at once be banished from the mis Phe strony te-titmenials of promisent and w-ll-known Canadians received in the pa and coming in every day, are tie best strongest proofs of the value of tue gx medicine. When trustworthy friends auc neighbors are cured, and you know it, wiia further evidence is Wanted 2) Surely the medicine that has cured thure who were given up by physicians will meet your case, reader, Paine’s Celery Conspound is a guaranteed cure anl never fail-. Read the testimony of Mr. ©, E. Rob- ertson, Government Steamboat Inspector for Manitoba and the Northwest. Mr. Robertson say> :— * It gives me much pleasure to give you ny Opinion of your preparation known is Paine’s Celery Compoun!, aed how un and acted on me. A little over a year ago, while coming through a very aox- ious time first in connection with my busi- ness as an engineer, and then by the loss of my child, as well as overwork, my nerves gave out completely ; I could not sleep for weeks, and conld not werk through the day at such work as drawing, owing to the twitching of my nerves mak- ing me blot the work. “A friend told meto try your Compound which I did, and Itirmly believe it did more forme thanany doctor coulddo. I am now strong, sleep well, and es steady as a rock; my whole system has been in- vigorated by it. “I have recommended it to a large num- bar of people, and find it asa rule never failed to do them good. I could give you examples ofa number of cases where it has been the decided cause of restoration to health.” iii liiinielsanvigd de “1 aimost died when my wife elope,” said the solemn man. “She was an angel, so kind, so loving, so patient. I fairly worshipped her, and she was idolized by everyone who knew her. She was the best woman in the world.” “It seems, then,” said one of his hear- ers, “‘thatshe was too good to be true.”— Truth. Hae eet CULV CIT LIGHTS OF THE — OTA ONE OF % Mra ‘ ct REN iy The brikiant 1 Whose pleasing face is well known 19 1nusi French star appears above al people every- rfui success in ‘srmev’ has placed her where. [er wonde the opera of “ fu the hichest renk ef ar s. Speak- lug of *\ nm Jins-ani,’ the “at Nerve aud stomach touic, sho says she took it to ‘eure a cold,’ al it really en- abled her t> sinz Carmen the same evening. ‘Vin Mariani’ (Mariani wine) nourishes and strengthens the whole system. i: very palatable, never produces constipation ; but, on the contrary, zids digestion and assimila- tion. Send stamn to Lawrence A. Wilson & (Co.. Mon‘real, and they will send the po-ra’ts of many cele- brated roomie lave testified in favor o° nierful coca tonic. vga iat Tilia Wife This is the third time you have come home tipsy this week. Hubby—D-don’t be so p-pesai mistic, my dear. You should think of the four nights I came home sober.—Boston Home Journal. Grateful —Comtorting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of the nat ural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful a of the oe ary of well-select- Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for breakfast and supper @ delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy foctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease, H 8 of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there isa weak point. We may escspe many a tatal shaft by keeping ourseives well forti fied by pure blood and a properly nourish od frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. one ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelled tus, 5% JAMES EPPS & GO., Lid, i Chemiste. London, es — ——_ VOL 34.—NO. 108 NAPOLEON ASACAP™, ~ LAST DAYS OF THE FALLEN QUERER AT ST- HELENA. CON- A British Doctor Who Aecompanied “The Trampler” Talks—Bonaparte’s Habit of Asking Questions— Opinions of the Great Soldier. Contributors to Napoleonic history are The century is going out profusely placarded with annals of a creature whom Lord Wolseley, in a recent article, Qeclares was ‘‘a super- latively bad man, dishonest and untruth- f ul, whose career embraces some serious mistakes in national policy, whose pub- lic life ended in disastrous defeat, and who died in prison and is yet so great a man that his name filis more pages in the world’s solemn history than that of any other mortal.” People never tire, apparently, of reading about this Corsi- can who revolutionized the Europe of his day, made a new France, and from its new people secured canonization. It is only a few months since there was published in a leading monthly of the United States the diary of the secre. tary of the rear admiral (Cockburn) who conveyed the conquered warrior to St Helena. There was enough new infor- mation about the man to justify its ad- dition to history. But there was another diary keeper on board the same ship at the same time, and eighty-seven years ; he put his reminiscences, 1 the brain, into the compa thttle book for circulation among nid ; writer was Dr. W h orf ft m I F i i i \ i u { S i > ex . the of the | adn) In h ln | } ‘ star S T vy 1 i vers ith him : th } i persons of his su ‘ t hic son Bo rt is of sn vin prop ti \ n \ ea 2 v t and i : er j j t of all the n ‘ outhern cb te is oO.lVvée I li prominent; the lower part of his face thin and his forehead syuare and pro jecting.” On the day of his transferto his foat ing prison, Dr. Warden describes him as wearing the uuiform of a general of the French insfantry—a green coat with white facings, and with the rest of the same color. His stockings were of white silk and his feet were covered with a handsome shoe, with gold oval buckles. His face was pale and unshaved and he had an air of weariness or dejection. His forehead and the top of his head were thickly covered with hair of a dark color. The head was large and of a singular flatness. The little hair on the back of his head was bushy and without the siightest showing of gray. The eyes were gray and in continual motion, turning quickly from one object to an- other. His teeth were good and well shaped, his neck short, his shoulders of fair proportion, and his entire figure, thongh having what the doctor callsa ‘Dutch fullness,” was handsome. Later on, when the voyage was half over and the writer had had ample time to study his subject, he adds to his picture of the emperor by saying that his face was an uncommon one, large, full and pale, but not sickly. While in conversation there was no play of the wuscles of the face except those close to the mouth; and to those at a distance his face as he talked seemed fixed and the forehead, which with Frenchmen is generally wrinkled, was in Bonaparte’s case perfectly smooth. However inexpressive he might bein conversation, there was no dis- tortion of feature. Sometimes, when he became unusually earnest, he gestured with his hand, but the doctor mis- cheviously insinuates that such display might reasonably be attributed to ‘‘the nrcommon handsomeness of the hand.” Bonaparte was, according to Warden, an inveterate questioner. From the time he put his captive feet on the quar ter deck of the Northumberland until he landed at St. Helena, ne« arly ten weeks afterwards, he was continually making inquiries about all sorts of Nothing sec : 3 subje ts med to escape hi ciothed n Canoni ica ri when he was sa with such an : i interrogatorv luted ‘His conversation,” doctor, *‘at ail ti s consisted of ques tions which never failed to be put in such a way as to prohibit a return of them. To answer one question by another, which frequently happens in common discourse, was not admissible with him. Ican conceive that he was habituated to to this kind of colloquy when he sat upon such a throne as that which sup ported him, and before which no one spoke but when he commaided utter- ance; nor does he seem disposed to lay it aside when he sits in the cabin, stands in the gangway, or patrols the deek of a ship where he is subject to the control of its commander.” The long boats evoked from the em- peror so many inquiries as to suggest the idea that he thought them ‘‘part of the naval apparatus peculia:ly provided to prevent his escape from the island to which he was destined.” His jiscon.- tent manifested itself in continual in quiries as to the rate of the progress of the vessel. And these inquiries were daily made, as if the emperor were anxious to have his exile on land begin. continues the — ee —____ — For children’s conghs and colds Hawk er’s balsam of tolu and wild cherry is un- equalled. Itis the children’s favorite. Young husband (in alow tone to his wife, who meets him at the railroad depot with her mother)—Didn’t I tell you not to bring your mother to the station ? Young wife—That’s just why mamma has come along. She wished tospeak to you about it. She opeued the telegram. The best is Pond’s Extract, because it is the strongest, were and most uniforméar- ticle made. Noete bottles with buff wray- OOO er Oe dol leita dl Toronx >», Ontario, As Well as Ever After Taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cured of a Serious Disease. “I was suffering from what is known as Bright's disease for five years, and for Gays ata time I have been unable to straighten myself up. I was in bed for three weeks; during that time I had leeches applied and derived no bene- fit. Seeing Hood’s Sarsaparilla advertised ia the papers I decided to try a bottle. I fonad HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES relief before I had finished taking half of a bot- le. Igotso much help from taking the first bottle that I decia try another, and since taking the second | le | feel as well as ever I didin my Lie.” Gro, MERRETT, Toronto, Cat. Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient, yet easy of action. Sold by alldruggists. 25c. VPARAAI IS ee wes + AAA ower & PDIP "ee fp " a go ~~ * FF rs tips Nd hh 8 JUST THE THING FOR YACHTSMEN Cougning. — For ail the ailments of Throat and Lungs there is no cure so quick and permanent as Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oi!, It is palatable, casy on the most deli- cate stomach and effective Scott’s stimulates the app aids the digestion of other foods, cures Coughs and Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, and gives vital strength besides. It has no equal as nour- ishment for Babies and Children who do not thrive, and overcomes Any Condition of Wasting. Send for pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. Free, Scott & Bowne, Belleville. All Druggists. 60c. & $1. Newfoundland Markets i. T. McCOUBRKa, Eeneral Commission Merchant. Oate and I all kine, Ship- carefully attend- en promptly. Cor respondence | MoCOUBREY, P.O.B 7 i John’s, N. F. ~ , =—\ 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- ™., Hawkesbury, Saturday, 10 a m., arriving at Boston early Monday morning. Returning from Boston every Tuesday at 10 @. m. — HALIFAX SERVICE’ The favorite steamships “ OLIVETTE” or “ HALIFAX ” will leave Plant Wharf, Hatifax, every Wednesday at 8 a. m., for Boston 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 — and checked at Prince Edward Island Railway stations and Charlottetowa Navization Co. H. L. CHIPMAN, Agent for Canada. Plant Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents, ~ North Side Lewis’ Wharf, Boston. septs! ——