& IO TA cS cc br ‘ _BY SPECIAL ROYAL >POINTMENT ASK &= Your ‘ui WIFE «: iF SME HAS Advise her to enquire from those who do use!t WHAT THEY THINK OF ITP prond of asthe kind if SKE HAS USED r a we ares I s that are said in its favor by those w ee 1 Sunlight Soap a fair trial >> @ @ & @ Oe 4&8 @SO88 ?Though you Cough ¢ ¢ Don’t Despair ! ¢ é Many apparent y hi have been cured by ¢ -YAMPBELL’S WINE OF BEECH TREE CREOSOTE ( é ; TRY IT! e T eless cases a course of AT ALL DRUGGISTS., é K. CAMPBELL &CO., Montreal. > ee ee Or \ it feed it with Scott’s Emulsion. Feeding the cold kills it, and no one an afford to have a cough or cold,acute and leading te consumption, lurking around hi SCOTT'S EMULSION Of pure Norwegian Cod Liver OU and Hypophosphites Weak Lungs, checks all Wasting Diseases and is a remarkable Flesh Producer, Almost as Palatable as v X, Prepared on wrt ener arson PILLS” Make New, Rich Blood’ Thee pills were a No otter fike then tk oil manner of dix y by Scott & Bowne, Belleville. ' yeure or relieve . . The formation around eaef the cost of a box « box is worth tea times f pile Find out alx hem, a 4 will always be thankful. Une i LA bose, They expel all imy or from the blow, seate women find great benet 4 Using thet’! illustrated ; k fr where, or s#ut @ail for & ct«. in sta boxes $1.0. DR & JOHNSON & CO.. 2 ( House St... Bortom, M NERVE BEANS solutely cures the most obstinate cases when all othet FREATMENTS have failed evento relieve. Sold by drug yi sent by mail or sists ot $1 per package, of six to 9) (ube MEDICINE pamphies. Sold in— NERVE BEANS are 8 new dis covery that cu o Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor anc ; Manhood; restores seceipt of price by acdidreseing TE Teronte, Ont Write for Gratetui—Comlorting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST. knowledge of the operati ys of s thorough ura iws which govern the dizest and nutrition, and by a careful apt n of the prope rties of well-seleet ed Cacoa, Mr Epps has pr led our breakfast :ables with a delicat flavored beverage whico may save ue many heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious u auch articles of diet that a c } } may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating | around us ready to attack wherever there | +a weak point. We may « scape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well forti fied by pure blood and a prope rly nourish ; I rvice Gazette. with boiling water or milk. labelled ei frame.”— » M acl Sold only in par kets, by Gracers, I simply JAMES EPPS & CO., Homecpathic Chemists. London, En land. New Raisins. 2.000 Boxee VALENCIA RAISINS and P if Stock CARVELL BROS 24 zw 2aw HOUSE TO LET. rO LET, a comfortable Dwelling House ertuatad orner of Kent and Pownal Street Enquire of rHOMAS W. DODD, sept23 tf At Medical Hall. WANTED.—Canvasser of good address, Salary and expenses paid weekly from start. Position permanent. Canadian and Ameri- can grown stock. Advantages unequalled.— BROWN BROS. CO., Nurserymen, Toronto, Ont. Sw (m w 8)-—oet WANTEDL.—The Provident Savings Lif Assurance Society of New York want a good man to represent them in ( harlottetown and vielnity. Low rates, and plan easily can- vassed. A very liberal contract will be given &g00d man. Address C. T. Gi LESPIE, Gen, — = Maritime Provinces, St. John, N. B, KAIEYUL. PLEASING RELIEF AFTER MANY DAYS, How a Queens County Man Found Pormanent Healing. His Own Experience Tells Fully and Freely some Truths whieh all Read- ers of this Paper Should Know. Here and there, in almost every town of our province, are “chronic” cases over which doctors disagree; cases that become worse year after year. It isto reach such that the gentleman to whom these lines refer, and whose portrait is here given, has written the story of his case. home is Branscomb's a Chipman, Queens Co., N.B it was there that a representa- ive of the Groder company alled upon him, Sept. rst, of he present year. His greeting Mr. was most cordial. He gladly icknowledged his thanks, giv- ing expression to the following statement: “It is five years since I first became afflicted with a form of indigestion. Last winter it be- came more severe, developing into chronic diarrhce: I canno! cell you how much I suffered for SIX LONG WEEKS. It seemed as though relief could not be found. You will remember how [ told you of my condition and isked your advice about taking : bottle of Groper's Syrup You told me that the medicine was a laxative and might not neet my needs. | delayed buy ng for a few hours until I be- gan to hope that it would help me. Even my clothes seemed a burden because of bloating of stomach It was with difficulty that I kept about sufficiently to attend to my business. But I ama well man now from the use of your remedy. In three days after | bought Grover's Syrup the terrible pain and distress acruss my stomach were removed, My bowels rapidly assumed a nat- ural, healthy condition. Now I ut and drink as well as I ever wuld. | have gained constant- y in fl-sh since March last. I in perfectly cured, ic seems a duty for me to tate my case fully, that others ho suffer as 1 did may kaow vhere to find a cure.” Truly yours, E. A. BRANSCOMB, Removed! I HAVE REMOVED MY Bookbinding Business AROUND THE CORNER ON Grafton Street, (IN THE SAME BUILDING), where I will be pleased to see all my old enstomers. The cheapest place in the City to get your Books. Day Books, Ledgers, Journals, Cash Books, ete , a Specialty. J. D. TAYLOR TO LET. One-half of the Brick House on Upper Queen Street, containing nine large rooms, Possession about the middle cf November. Apply at the office of A. HORNE & CO. oct24—tf CELERY! CELERY ! 12,000 Choice Celery of the best quality, hard and firm, unequalled in flavor. The following low price speaks for itself :— Per dozen, 30 cents; per 50, $1.15; per 100, $2.00; per 1,000, $18.00. Celery shipped to all the Maritime Pro- vinces. No extra charge for boxes. Address J.J. GAY & SON, Pownal, P. E. I. octl9—mon th & wy eee — _ en THE DAILY EXAMINER . | “MINISTER OF CHARITY.” | The Part Mme. Carnot Plays in Parisian Life—Her Charming Manners. In Fracce, constitutionally, every pre sident is a bichelor, Mme, C..rnot exists, but Mie. la Presidente is, regular: | speaking, an uninown title, Mme. Carnot, savs The New Yori. Herald, is a Parisian, the daughter of M Dupont- Withe, a lawyer practicing be fore the Council of State and the Court of Appeals and gener secretary at th: Ministry of Justice in 1848. M. Dupont Withe is furthermore a distinguished writer whose works are found in al: solid libraries, He is also remarkable asan adept in the science of politicial economy and is besides a witty conver | gationalist much sought after in society. | He took special care with the intellectual culture of his daughter, and inculeated in her at the same time the liberal phil- osophy so dear to Americans, a taste for forcicn languages, Mme. Carnot speaks and writes fluently several tongies, and even—this is a detail bat little known—when M. Dupont-Withe } published for the first time a French edition of Stuart Mill it was his daughter who translated the work of the English philosopher, a work which is in parts quite obscure HER CHARMING MANNERS. To praise the wife of the Chief of State as ‘Mme. lia Presidente” ia to make one’s self the echo of t.e unanl- mous opinion of aii who have approac h- ied her. ‘‘Mme. Carnot.” said an old Ambassador to me personally, a grandce of Spain who isa maser of al. ques- tions periain.bg to etiquette, “is a lady of the first rank, a mistress of a house- hold who has been abie to keep up the old traditions in the art of reveiving guests. The manner in which gle re ceives us has much tudo with the cor- diality and sympathy whieh unite us to the Chief of State, aud you wy be cer- tain that my opinioy is shared by all the members of the Diplomatie Corps.” THE ‘*MINISTER OF CHARITY.” But the greatest merit of Mme, Carnot consists in her having organized at the MME. CARNOT. Elysee a kind of special ministry that one might call, if discretion was not the dominating quality of the work, the ministry of charity. In fact, the requests for aid arrive by hundreds every day at the Elysee. After the first sorting of the appiications all those that appear worthy of examination are made the object of discreet inquiry. lf the result is favoraple a lady visitor calls on the applicant, examines into her needs and relieves the most urgent o! them. it is generally the rent that must be settled in order that the family, which may be afflicted with death, sickness cr the enforced idleness of its head, may bave an assured shelter for three months. It often happens that coal aud provisions are needed immediately, and these the lady visitor procures on the spot, without delay, and sometimes ciothing and beddimg. In the last case, the lady visitor draws up a list of the necessary objects, which are furnished immediately at the expense of Mme. Carnot, by that very interesting work of charity which provides work as assis- tance. Nota day passes without a cer tain number of poor Parisian families be- ing succored and put on their feet again. In addition to this daily system of re lief. Mme. Carnot institutes every year, m New Year's Day or Christmas, a more extended plau of relief distribu tions, which take place under different forms. One of the Contented Any season does fer :we— Kinder made fer ali time ; Jes lief melt in summer bect as treeze ter death in fall time. Summer—carvin' melons ripe ; Makes my mouth grow wider ! Wir ‘er—finds me with my pipe, Drinkin’ apple cider ! When it’s hot, why, close ls cheap— Don't take much to do you ; When it’s cold—the red flames leap— Warmln’ through an’ through you ? Spring, or summer-time, or fall— Don’t mind how you get her ; Take this here worid, ail in all— They don't make any better ! —Atianta Constitution. The Welcome Girl. The welcome guest, a writer says, is the girl who, knowing the hour fi. oreakfast. appears at the table at the proper time, does not keep others wait ing,and does not getin the way by being down half an hour before her hostess ap- pears. The welcome guest is the girl who, if there gre not many servants in the house, has sufficient energy to take care of her own room while she is visiting, and if there are people whose duty it is, she makes that duty as light as possible for them, by putting away her own belong- ings, and in this way not necessitating extra work, The welcome guest is the one who knows how to be pleasant to every mei- ber of the family, and who yet has tact enough to retire from a room when scme special family affair is under discussion, The welcome guest is the one who does not find children disagreeabe, or the various pets of the household things to be dreaded. The welcome guest is the one who, when her hostess is bu.y, can entertain herself with a book, a bit of sewing or the writing of a letter. The welcome guest is the one who, when her friends come to see her, docs not disarrange the household in which she is staying that she may entertain them. The welcome guest is the one who, having broken the bread and eaten the salt of her friend, has set upon her lips 4 seal of silence, so that wheu she goes from the house she repeats nothing but the agreeable things she has seen. This is the welcome guest, the one to whom we say good-by with regret, and to whom we call out welcome with the ‘ips and from tise heart. Testing His Honesty. Your druggist is honest if when you ask him for a bottle of Scott’s Emulsion he gives you just what you ask for. He knows this is the best form in which to take cod liver oil. Dr. Mawnnine’s German Remepy, the t rheumatic, neuralgia and pain cure of the age, both internal andexterna]. price 50 cents. Deservedly Popular. Our readers have no doubt read with interest the despatches almost weekly ap- pearing in this and other Canadian jour nals regarding cures of # most startling nature made by Dodd’s Kidney Pills. These pills have proven themselves to be a certain cure for all diseases of the kid- neys and blood, such as backache, rheu- matism, Bright’s disease, diabetes, dropsy, ete. Enquiry amongst loca) druggists elicits the facts that they have a very large sale and are an infallible cure for kidney dis- orders. Dodd’s Kidney Pills are manufactured by Dr. L. A. Smith & Co., Toronto, and are sold everywhere, or by mail on re- ceipt of price, 50 cents a box, or 6 boxes for $2.50. —- - —-—~ USE SKOLA’S DISCOVERY, the great J vod aud Nerve Remeily. Our $10 Overcoat has knocked out everything in the market at the same price. We have been making this Coat for one vear and it has given complete satisfaction. OVERCOATINGS in stock from Ten to Thirty Dollars. JOHN McLEOD & CO, Charlottetown, November 7, 1893—tu th sat & w ky —_— - Loading and to Arrive : O00 Tons Coal. Oid Syduey Round and Slack, Victoria Round and Slack, | Acadia Round and Nut, Intercelonial Nut, Vale Nut, All of which will be sold at the Lowest Prices. Cc. LYONS. Chaslottetown, Oct bor 5, 1893. a ———_—— $$ ———$——— 2 = \ SASS > SE AS SSL % Castoria is Dr. Samuc! Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotie substance. 15 13 a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Caster Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, eurcs Diarrhoa and Wind Colic. Castoria rclicves tecthning troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castoci1 assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowcls, giving heaithy and natural sleep. Case toriu is the Childron’s Panacea—the Mother’s Friend, Castori1. * Castors is an excelicnt medicine for chil- tren. Liothers have repeatedly told me of its good effect upon their children.” Du. G. C. Oraoon, Lowcil, Mass. Castoria. “ Castoria is so well ad »pted to cl:i!ren thet T recommend it as superior toany prescription known to me.” i. A, Ancner, M. D., 111 fo, Oxford St., Drooklyn, N. Y. “Our physicians in the children’s depart- ment have spoken highly of their experi- ence in their outside practice with Castoria, and although we only hare among our medical supplies what is known as reyuiar products, yet we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it.” Unirrco Hosrrran ann Disprnsary, Boston, Mass * Castorig is the best resucdy for clldren of which lum acquainted. [hope the cay is not ¢ ° @i cant when mothers willconsiter the real iaterst of tucir chil.iren, an i use Castoria in- s'-adefthev riousquack nostrums which are d-strovin, fh ir loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurt‘nl agents down their throats, therely sending tne in to preiaature graves.” Dx. J. F. Kincneror, Conway, Ar The Centaur Company, TI Murray Street, New York City. Avien C. Surru, Pres., Prices Down! We have just received a large stock of Gold, Silver and Silverore Watches, which we are seliing fast at lower prices than ever. Also, a big stock of Jewelry and Clocks to select from at a big discount on former prices. Join in with the multitude that are more than pleased with the Bargains. We also Repair CLOCKS, WATCHE3 and JEWELRY G. G. JURY, North Side Queen Square, opposite the Pest Office Charlottetown, Sept. 7, 1893—ly thu sat & wky Branch Confectionery. —— — (1) — — — _ Lhave opened a BRANCIL CONFECTIONERY in the Store in the Stamper Block recantly occupied by Mr. Theo. L. Chappelle of the Diamond Bookstore, where I will keep everything usually found in a first-class Confectionery. Iam fitting up a new and improved Soda Fountain, which I will have in operation in a few days. I will keep only the best Fruits and the purest Confectionery. W. A HUTCHESON, Confectioner, STAMPER BLOCK, VICTORIA ROW. june 27—eod. 0-DAY! Diamond Rings, Silver Mounted Scent Boitles, Fancy Clocks, Silver Mounted Paper Knives, Fish Carvers. E. W. TAYLOR, Charlottetown, Nov. 3, 1893—tu fri CAMERON BLOCK. | | = _— SSS The Daily Examine The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. - | One Year, - - $A\Three Months, - $I Six Months, - $2/One Month, - 35c Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 months at 35 cents a month. By special arrangement w.th the publishers, we are enabled to make a most exceptional offer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fille out the following blank form, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 35 cents a SUNITA TTS month. CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. TTTTTTTTTTTATITTTTTETITIGIII IIIT ov ide Tue Exasiner Publishing Co., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. You will plesse send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months from date, for which I agree to pay 35 cents a month, it being understood that you are to have sent to my address for one year, without extra charge, McCULURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current number. OG 66k 6 65050 cr cccoveihbnticcbeceveubecessene poe one DO, ciguiccvsetsibianenncoulh De cc ccuiinstcctesiiad asi ik belli ia Nl Tl oo Ho Kole US Ho Mla Ha Mo SoS IIb Io Io bb lb = Me Sn Sn bo SS So Sob i nN Sn ll Ln Nn Son Sb nS Sb Sb lb in Ln SL Sb ln ob ln Sn Sb ln Son i bn Ln ln ln ln bl lo no CALL AT OUR OFFICE and see the entertaining and finely illustrated Me- CLURE’S MAGAZINE, which has among its contributors the most famous authors in America and England, inchuding R. L. Stevenson, Radyard Kipling, A. Conan Doy le, Octave Thanet, William Dean Howells, Bret Harte, Clark Russell, Joel Chandler Har- riz, Thomas Hardy, J. T. Trowbridge, Jerome K. Jerome, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Theodore Roosevelt, Joaquin Miller, Gilbert Parker, John Burroughs, Hamlin Gar- land, Prof. E. 8. Holden, Prof. C. A. Young, H. H. Boyesen, Robert Barr, Henry M. Stanley, Archibald Forbes, Andrew Lang, and many others. Each number of McCLURE’S MAGAZINE contains two illustrated interviews with famous people. Jules Verne, Franses Hodgson Burnett, Tissandier, the famous French Balloonist, Archdeacon Farrar, Thomas A. Edison, F. Hopkinson Smith, H. H. Boyesen, Alphonse Dau det, Camille Flammarion, Edward Everett Hale, Professor Graham Bell and many others, have furnished material fur especially prepared inter- views, which will appear fully illustrate.’ in this magazine. HENRY M. STANLEY will contribute, especially for young readers, a story of AFRICAN AQVENTURE. NATURAL HISTORY AND ADVENTURE.—There will be several articles written by Raymond Blathwayt, who has been called by Mr. W. T. Stead the best interviewer in England, from material furnished him by Carl Hagenback, of Hamburg, the great animal importer and trainer. These articles deal with the Capture of Wild Beasts, the Training of Wild Beasts, the Transportation of Wild Beasts, the Adven- tures and Escapes of Car] Hagenbeck. ‘Che series will be illustrated by an English artist of great skill in drawing animals. JOHN BURRCUGHS, C. F. HOLDER, DR. C. C. ABBOTT, and other writers famous for their work in this field, will contribute to the Magazine. Of interest to both Young and Old will be PROF. R. L. GARNER’S AFRICAN EXPEDITION TO THE GORILLAS. Arrangements have been made, in connec- tion with aleading English review, to publish Professor Garner’s letters descriptive ot his present expedition to Africa. Professor Garner is noted the world over for the curious and interesting investigations he is making in the epeech of monkeys. Le sailed for Africa last September for the purpose of further pursuing his siudies in the native haunts of the gorilla. The illustrations of these articles will be from photo- graphs taken by Prof. Garner in Africa. McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under the heads : The Edge of the Future,” “ Newest Knowledge,” “ Knowledge of Immediate Value,” The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” ete. We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for oniy $4.00 a year, payable in advance or in monthly instalments of 35c. as desired. We make this exceptional offer in order that we may secure a large number ot new subscribers, but all who are already subscribers may avai! themselves of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magazine. Address: The Examiner Publishing Go., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. e eee am a a NEW THA, JUST RECEIVED. (a ee a Tea is a staple article that nearly everyone uses, and we intend to make it one of our specialties, and pay par ticular attention to it. We have just received direct from London, Fngland, 2; resh supply of THIS SEASON’S NEW TEAS, and as we | have bought them right we intend to sell them right. | It will pay you to call and see our prices and give u, w trial. | ? : S.B. ENMAN &CO., | McLEOD'S OLD CORNER. | Charlottetown, November 7, 1893—tu thu eat \ n DLt CUTLERY ! BOUGHT LOW AND WILL SELL LOW! AT THE—— City Hardware Store. R. B. NORTON & CO Charlottetown, September 5, 1893 mon thu | and specification to be seen at the 1893. The Greatest Rheumatic andN paige Cure Of the Age WAOXE HOUSEHOLD p No ~~ Eh PPAINGURE —” ((BOTH INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL) > PRICE. SO CENTS if MANUFACTURED ONLY BY 4 THE HAWKER MEDICINE COY LI; ST JOHN. N. B. al oy Sealed Teaders addressed to the undersigned, and endorsd “i:ender fer Wood Isia: da Work,” wiil be received at this office on il TUESDAY, the 4th day of Noviemmer neat, inclusively, for the reconstruct.on and repair of works at Wood Islands, Queer’s County, Prince Edward Isiand, acending to a plen Post office, Charlottetown, and at the Depart nt of Public Works, Ut\awa Tenders will not be considercd unicess made on the form supplied, and signed with the actual eignatures of tender’ rs. An accepted bank cheque, payable to the order of the Minister of Public Works, equai to five per cent of the amount of lender, must accompany each tender, This cheque will be forfeited if the party deciine the contract or fail to complete the work contracted for, and will be returned in case of non-accepianece cf tender. The Department does not bind itself to ac- cept the lowest or any tender. By order, E. F. E. ROY. Secretary. Department of Public Works, ? Uttawa, 7th October, 1893. 5 oct3—3i Harm Eor Sale. THE subscriber offers for sale his farm on the Mount Edward Road, about one mile and a half from the city, well and favorably known as the “Welsh Farm.” The farm consists of sixty acrea, and con dains a good Dwelling House aud five Outbuiidings, all in good condition. There is also a good orchard in connection. Terms easy. Apply to C. BENOIT, Water Street. July 3, 1893. WE ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR Wooden Buiter Dishes and Egg Cases. We also carry a large stock of WAXED PAPERS for covering Butter and Lard. WRAPPING PAPER, PAPER BAGS and TWiNE of every description. SCHOFIELD BROS., Importers and Wholesale Paper Dealers ST. JOHN, N. B. P. O. Box 435. P. BE. I. RAILWAY. Until Further Notice the trains of this Rail- way willrun daily (Sundays excepted) as follows :— Trains will leave Charlottetown : Express for Summerside and Tignish .6 6 am Accommodstion for Mount Stewart, Georgetown and Souris...............6 8 * Accommodation for Summerside 2” pm Express for Mount Stewart, George- Sree RUN NMI. Bi ine caso dnsesias OO? Passengers for the West can leave Char- lottetown atéa.m.,arriving at Summerside at 8.15 and Tignish at 11.55 a m., returning same day, reaching Summerside at 4.05 an Charlottetown at 6.20 p. m. Expres Trains make close connection at Summerside with Steamer to and from Point du Chene. Pss sengers going East can leave Charlottetown at6.00 a. m.,-arriving at Souris at 10.55, or Georgetown at lida. m., returning te Char- lottetown same day, arriving at 5.45, p. m. Trains will arrive at Charlottetown : Express from Georgetown, Souris and Mount Stewart...... , hoi .§ Dam Accommodation from Summerside. .9 49 “ Accommodation trom Georgetown, Sourisand Mount Stewart.... 5 Spm _—— from Tignish and Summer- 5600 ote seedapned 6s 6 we . 6 2 * All Trains are run by Eastern Standard Time. D. POTTINGER General Manager. Moncton, seuhingiintgnaaiin ileal J. UNSWORTH Superintendent. Ch'town, Pickford & Halifax & P. E. Island §.§. Line STEAMER FASTNET Leaves Halifax, N.S., for Charlottetown every Monday, 6 p. m. Arrives Charlottetown from Halifax about 6 a. m., Wednesday. Leaves Charlottetown for Summerside about 10 a. m., Wednesday. Arrives Charlottetown from Summerside about 4 a. m., Thursday. Leaves Charlottetown for Halifax, WN. 8., 4p. m., Thursday. For Freight or Passage a yply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent, Charlottetown, July 12, 1893. STEAMER JACQUES CARTIER. 1893. (aaalh 1893. Until Further Notice the Steamer “Jacque Cartier, Hugh McLean, Master, will rua a follows :— Will leave Orwell Brush Wharf for Charlott town é¢very Tuesday, Wednesday anc Thursday mornings at 7 o’clock, calling at Halliday’s Wharf. Will leave Charlottetown for Halliday’s and Orwell Brush Wharves same evenings at 8 o’clock, remaining at Brush Wharfevery Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, and on Thursdays will return to Charlottetown, arriving there abeut 5 Will go up to Vernon River Bridg: alternate Wednesday. On Fridays will leave Charlottetown for Cranberry Wharfand Haggarty’s W hari, East River, ot 5 o'clock, a. m.; aving Cranberry Whari for Charlottctowa at 7.30 a. m., calling at Haggarty’s and Hickey’s Wharf. Will leave Charlottetown for Hickey’s and Cranberry Wharves at 3 o'clock, p. m., Te- turning to Charlottetown same evening. Every alternate Friday will go to Mount Stewart Bridge. On Saturdays will leav: lottetown at7 o’clock, 4 m. Selock. every or Char- Crapand : will leave Charlottetown for Crapaud, at § o'clock, p. m., and return to Charlottetown, arriving about 9 o’ciock. L. C, OWFRN, Ageus Ch'town, ri Ae ata oa A AB tee