2 eee i cree Sah ll te a6, ple ee ie THE <4 4 A“ SUNLIGHT? (” LABOR SAviiiS PURIFYING bili llr CLEANSING © ; | pee a ae EXCELLEN PURITY |. J —— 4 7 ON MERIT & M ell, Halifax, Agents s0j Neva 8 rand P. E. | : NERVE FOUNDED BEANS by over-work, or the errors cemses of youth. This Remedy a! solutelg cures the most obstinate cases when al! othe: FREATMENTS have failed ——— relievo. _— by drug at 2d ‘kage, Or six for or sen mail or ce ee ee eee tHe TAMES MEDICINI PO Teronte, Ont 4 Write for pamphia. Soldin— pRSON PILLS Make New, Rich Blood! pille were a wondertul discovery. No cthy eure or relieve fike them in the world. Will positively tion around eet eli manner of disease. The informa box is worth ten times the cost of a box of gitie ro) out about then, and you will always be thankful ‘=. 1% 4 bose, They exp-l all impurities from the blow licate women find great benefit f«'. asing them Ulustrated pamphiet free. Sc" 4 every where, o @all for Gcts in stamps; five bores t 0a. JOUNSON & OO.. UL wm House St. ee ee ’ Though you Cough Don't Despair ! Many apparently hopeless cases have been cured by a course of AMPBELL’S WINE OF BEECH TREE CREOSOTE TRY IT! AT ALL DRUGGISTS. K. CAMPBELL & CO., Montreal. e § Tuke care that your drafts on vour physical endurance don't come back to you some day marked “no funds." Take SCOTT'S EMULSION Of Pure CodLiver Oil&Hypophosphites ‘oe imerease your energy and so g00d your account at the dank of health. 1T CURES CONSUMPTION, SCROFULA, BRONCHITIS, COUGHS, COLDS and a// forms of Wasting Diseases, Almost as Palatable as Milk. Be sure you get the genuine as there are poor imi- lations. § naPrepared! only by Seott & Bowne. Belleville, i Grateful — Comforting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST. “By a thorough kn wwledge of the nat- MISSING L'NKS. It has been estimated that Great Br- tain has yout 100,000 absolutely ‘*home- iess wanderers.’ Inthe twenty years preceeding 1886 there were 328.716 divorces in America to 258.352 for all Eur pe The Basilica was portico in which and other business was trans rigin vily a covered where heard icte.l. An English firsn is using tie silk of the wild silkworm, from which is woven a soft, substantial fabric of a light tus- sore or pougee shade It is asverted that the best, strongest and most fibrous material in the shape of wood, aow used as a pulp for paper,is wnade from spruce logs The head dresses of 1770 were so large law cases the ladies going tc balls were forced, to save their headgear, to kneel on the floors of their carriages. Steel pens were first made in 1803 The annua! sales at present in the United States are etinaatéd at 30,000,000 while the world annually consumes 200,- OO UU pens, Window glass was first used in modern times in 1556. Now the consumption of plate glass alone exceeds 6,000,000 square feetin England and 9,000,000 in the United States During a severe storm in Schley County, Georgia the other day,the house of A. L. B-ckwith was struck by light ning in five different places and at five different times, Coal oil was fi in 1826. Th in 1889 ex< led it value rst used asan illuminant e United States’ export of oil $45,000,000, In the same year the world pr »tuced 34,820,306 barrels. Wheat was first exported from the U nited States about 1759 The world’s product in 1888 was estimated at 2.271,- 000,000 bushels. The crop of the Unit- ed States last year was 519,490,000 bushels The mountains of Guatemala (meaning full of trees) are covered with macnifi- cent for sts, and the country takes its name from t.em One of its principal products is guttapercha; dye woods and trupical trees abound. Copies of The New York Gazette, re- viveiin The Weekly Post Boy, date1 March 16, 1746, and May 14, 1746, to- gether with an issue of Tue New York Mercury, of Feb. 14, 1757, are three in- teresting pepers in the possession of Benjamin Titus, of Trenton, N.J. The antiquity of the fan in the east, peers in Asia, extends far back veyond the possibility of ascertaining its date. In China and India the original model of the fan was the wing of a bird, and at one time was part o! | the emblems of imperial authority. A nearly adult specimen of the Mala- yan or Asiatic tapir is a new addition to the Zoological Gardens at Regent’s Park, London. It is only at very long intervals that specimens of this interesting anim al have been obtained, the first being in | 1840, the second in 1850, one in 1882 and the present example. Breech-loading rifles were invented in 1811, but did not come into general use for many years. It is estimated that over 12,000,000 are now in actual service in the European armies, while 3,000,000 are reserved in the arsenals for emer- gencies. Statisticians say that there are 100,000,090 guus of all kinds in the world. Experiments with a bicycle fitted out with a smal! chemical tank and fire axe are being made by a South Boston fire compans. The bicycle has cushion tires and, with its whole outfit, weighs about sixty pounds. The tank holds | about two gallons of chemical, which amounts as an extinguisher to about twelve pails of water. Morse’s telegraph was made practical in 1837. The Western Union now has 739,105 miles of wire and sends 62,000,- 009 messages a year. The world’s busi- | ness is transacted partly by means of 246,000,000 messages se1:t every year. In | 1883 there were in Europe 41,150 tele- | graph offices. The world in 1888 had | 767,800 miles of telegraph wires, | Last year 233,495 persons visited the | Victoria Niagara Falls Park (on the Canadian side), which was nearly 40,000 | less than in 1891. The falling off waa in | the carriage travel, the number of foot | psssengers having increased nearly | one-quarter, The new electric railway | is likely tocut down the hackmen’s re- | ceipts even moro this season, When a horse is trotting a 2.20 gait his feet move a little faster than a mile } in 1.10. Ag his body is moving at 2.20 | and as each of his feet when in contact | with the ground is stationary and then is picked up and moved forward to take | the next step, the foot must move as | much faster than the body as to mak: | the step, which is over twice as fast. | The English custom of turning over a | residence to a bridal pair for the honey- moon is often imitated tits side the Atlancic, and is considereda proper and | elegant thing todo. But the lending of | houses irrespective of the bridal element | is also popular. Notinfrequently per- | sons going abroad for the summer offer | their entire establishment to a friend for | the absence. | We owe the hat to Asia, for it was ip | that country that the art of felting wool | was first known, and from the most re- | mote periods the art was carried on by | the orientals. In India, China, Burmah ural laws which govern the operations of | and Siam hats are made of straw, of rat- digestion and nutrition, and bv a careful a pplicat on ef the properties of well-select ed Cacoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage whico ‘ doctore’ bills. such articles may save us many of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until enough t resist every Hundreds of around us ready to attack * @ weak point We may atal shaft by ke ping ours Ives well forti ed by pure blood and a properly nourish ed fram Civil Service Gazett Made simply with boiling water or milk Sold only in packets, by Gracers, labelled i hue, JAMES EPPS & CO.,H mecepathic Chemists. London. England tendency to disease subtle maladies escape i} THE PEOPLE'S HOME-GUARD! ‘EMULSION on Sentry Duty It will guard you securely from disease You Have a Yery Bad Congh, Are Suffering From Lung Troubles, Have Lost Flesh Through Illness, Are Threatened With Consumption, IT WILL Cure That Cough, Heal Your Lungs, Put Flesh On Your Bones, Prevent Consumption. SMALL & LARGE BOTTLES 50c. & $1.00. if IS VERY PLEASANT TO TAKE, Ask for and be sure you get the “ D, & L. Emulsion,” heavy | It is by the judicious use of | strong | are floating wherever there many a | | tan, of bamboo, of pith, of the leaf of the Tallport palm and of a large variety of grasses. The Japanese made the.r | hats of paper. An English court has decided that a cook—male or female—is not bound to give an employer notice before leaving, nor on the other hand is the employer | required to notify the cook before dis- charging her. The reason given is that if the cook were forced to remain against her will she might revenge herself on the members of the family, or, in case of a club, upon her employers’ patrons. It will prot ably be a riatter of surpri e to the general reader to learn that the petticoat was first worn exe usively by } men. In the reign of King Henr» VI | the dress of the English was so fantas- tical and absurd that it was difficult & | distinguish one sex from the other. In the inventory of Henry V. appears a | “petticoat of red damask, wits open | sleeves.” There is nomention of a woman's petticoat before the Tudor period. | The decisive step in the knowledge of distillation was taken in Egypt. There were invented the first real distilling ap- paratus during the first centuries of the Christian era, They are described pre- cisely in the works of Zosinus, an author | of the third century, from the technical treatises of two women chemists named Chespaten and Mary. In the margin ofa ! Gree . text of Merk aro the drawin of the apparatus, and they agree exac’ with the. author's descriptions. 7 “An ounce of prevenuon, &c. Do not neglectthat cough! One bottle of Put- tner’s Emalsion (the cough medicine par excellence) taken now, may save you | weeks of illness, and a long doctor’s bill. Large bottle, only 50 cents. They Do Not Despair. | An utterdoss of hope is no not charac- | teristic of Consumptivés, though no other form of disease is so fatal, unless. its pro- j gress is arrested by use of Scott’s Emul- | sion, which is Cod Liver Oil made as pal- | atable as cream. For Over Fifty Years | Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrnp has been used by millions of mothers for their child- | ren while cutting teeth. It relieves the | little sufferer at once; it produces natural, ; quiet sleep by relieving the child from ; pain, and the little cherub awakes as | “bright as a button.” It is very pleasant | to taste. It sooths the child, softens the | gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regu lates the bowels, and is the best-known | remedy for diarrhoea, whether arising from | teething or other canses. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for “Mrs | Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup,” and take no ther kind. Days of Agony is the experience of thousands of sufferers from piles. Hawker's Pile Cure is a posi- tive and painless cure. Sold everywhere. Price 50 cents, If sfilicted, try it. eereee DAILY EXAMINER, Make Somebody Glad, I. On life’s rngged road As we journey each day, Far, far more of sunshine Would brighten the way. If, forgetful of self And our troubles, we had The will and would try To make others glad II. Though of the world’s wealth We have little in store, And labor to keep Grim want from With a hand that is kind And a heart that is true a To mak There ; : the door, others giad is much we may do 11 A word kind!y spokes, As -ora lear, The ivi: S@emiing vial tt! fles Full often may cheer Each day to our Some treasure would ad ‘yea To be conscious that we Had made somebody glad. scram th handed simi <citfedie-thedadipecilccaie A SPLENDID RECORD. A Provincial Industry Trebies its Business in the Last Three Months. Some three months ago this journal in- formed its readers that a new provincial industry, that of the Hawker Medic‘ne Company, of St. John, had completed its first qurrter’s business, and that ites book showed a development of trade and a_re- cord of sales that was not only gratifying but really astonishing. Another three months has now elapsed and the company have balanced their ac counts for the six months. The results show that in the last three months - thes have trebled the business of the first three: have about doubled their working staff and work has been carried on in the packe rs room till 11 o’clock every night in fill orders promptly. From all parts of New Brunswick, and P. E. Island, from Newfoundland and parts of the United States, the orders have rolled in. The business is now firmly tablished. The experimental stage is past Repeat orders come iti constantly, showing they wrder to Cee standard remedies are all that they are claimed to be. Indeed, this last readily be assumed without a trial, jndging solely from the character of gentlemen who form the Hawker cine Co., as they are numbered among the leading citizens and most honorable and successful business men of St, John. The Hawker Medicine company are now patenting their remedies in Great Britain and will presently extend their operations there, as well as more extensively to the United States. About the middle of this month Thomas Rankine, who so success- fully introduced the Hawker remedies in Newfoundland last spring, will start and traverse the western part of Canada, from Montreal! to Vancouver in the interests of the company. With such a record as that of their first six months now closed, the Hawker Medicine Co. are evidently destined to achieve a great success. They control standard remedies, which have received the endorsation of leading physicians in Canada and the United States, as well as the fervent praise of sorely aftlicted people who have by their means been restored to health. Their place of business is at 104 Prince William Street, St. John, N. B., where they have the most extensive and elabor ately fitted up premises of the kind in the Lower Provinces. William Hawker, the wiginal inventor of the remedies, has been a druggist in St. John for 30 years, an: iad long proved the value of the different remedies before the present company was wyanized. It is with pleasure that this juurnal records the company’s wonderful success. and The Test ot Time, Willam Holder, sailmaker, St. John, writes: “This is to certify that for nearly 1 year I suffered with dyspepsia, indiges- tion and severe bilious headaches. I lost lesh and became very weak. I was re- ‘ommended to use Hawker’s Tonic ani Pills, and am pleased to say that they -omplete'y cured me. I gained flesh very fact, and became hearty and stronger than { had ever been, and have never suffered ince, now over one year.” —2e* Notable failures are nuterous in the States nowadays, but the latest and great- est is the passing «f the Nicaraguan Canal Construction Company, ef which Hon, Warver Miller is president, into the hands of receivers. The Directors could not borrow $300,000 upon $19,009,000 of sc- curities in order to pay floating depts ot $255,000. Thusends for the pre-enta scieme by which much trade was expected t? be de iv rel from British hands. eo Avoid all Injurious Habits, Tea drinking is an injurious habit, and nervous people should be careful in the use of it. It is not a food, it is nota tonic, and if drunk strong it may be as baneful in its effects as brandy would be. Anyone who feels as if they were a bundle of nerves should give up both tea and tobaeco, and use Membray’s Kidney and Liver Cure, which wil] help them to exist in comfort without them. Way! Do you want a nice, comfortable SUIT for Summer wear? THE McKAY WOOLEN COMPANY is the Firm to uy it of. This Month we are offerin SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS MER CLOTHING. in SUM Prices anything ever heard of in Charlottetown. McKay Woolen Mills Charlottetown, July 6, 1893, GOAL! COAL! We beg to inform the public that we have opened a COAL DEPOT on our No. 2 Wharf. We will be glad to book orders for all kinds of Coal at very lowest rates. PEAKE BROS, & CO. aug?—eod tf Nova Scotia | lower than : that where once the remedies are intro- luced, they win permanent favors with | the people, who know as soon as they have given any Of them atrial that these might i the | Medi- | RARARFRIRIR AR TRIR RIE LR PIRIR ICP RICE IR PRIRIO~ AMHERST, N. S., May 27, 1893. THE GRODER DYSPEPSIA CURE CO. GENTLEMEN: —I I{ive beea alllicted with sick headache most all my life, which developel into Dyspepsia of a astld type about ) twenty years ago, an! has continued to grow worse until during the past seven am 71 years of az». or eight years I have not been able to take a drink of cold water or milk, as they would produce severe pains aud sometimes vomiting. I have been subject to severe pains in the chest, with dizziness, wich have been more frequent dur- ing the past three or four years. My mouth was furred up in the mornings, ) accompanied with bad breath. My case was yearly growing worse. During all this long period I have trie many popular medicines, as well as prescriptions from the regular medical practitioners, but without producing any ; improvment. & In the fall of ’92 I concluded to try a bottle or two of your medicine and such were its effects that I continued it and nov: I can drink cold water or milk ’ without any inconvenience. Those dizzy pains are all gone and my mouth is as eweet as a baby’s. In short, your medicine has cured me and I am sure that all Dyspeptics can be cured by its use. (Signed) W. H. ROGERS, Late inspector of Fisheries for Nova Scotia. C25 SSAA IS RUE —~ SF NEE mt 7 : , ae aoe: Cee SANSASSSANSAS SSosc Castoria is Dr. Gamucl Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Children. It contains ncither Opium, Morphine nor other Naresotic substance. {5 is a harmless substitute for Parcgoric, Drops, Soothing fyrnps, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantco is thirty years’ use by Hillions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms end allays overishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhoa and Wind Colic. Castoria reiicves tecthiug troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castovi. assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving eaithy cad nateral sleop. Case toriu is tho Chilircw’s Panacea—the Mother’s Friend, VOT} fowm ive «- Vo Castorin. lictne for chi!- “ Oast-ria is ga eacellentin ai ters 2-6 repeater); * Cactor’a is so weil adapted to chi! tren tht I recommend it as superior any prescripticw krewn to mic.” | told me of its fra. ) 20d effect upon their children.” Da. G. C. Orceoen, Loweii, hiass. i. A. Ancnes, M. D., 111 Me. Oxf. ri St., Lrooxiyn, N.Y. “Our physicians ia the chiliren’s depart mens have spoken highly of they experi cuce in tueir outside practice with Cutoria, iud ahuencgh wo ouly hare amons quack nostru:ns Wlichare ince cal supplies what is known ag reeuior " : ones, by foreing epiun. products, y.s weare free to confess that the Biers *. Soothing syrup and other burt fl rerits ef Castoria bas won us to look with azonts dewn their throats, thereby sending favor upon it.” iuc a to premature graves.” Usitep Hosrrrat axp Disrexsary, * Tag oria is the best peinedy for children cf Da, J. F. Kiscuewos, : Boston, Maca Conwar, Ar Atuen C. Surru, Pres., The Centanz Company, Ti Murray Street, New : © ie ae ar York City. a Branch Confectionery. _— — (IX — —_- — I have opened a BRANCH 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.” I am 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. ASK YOUR CROCER FOR The Celebrated CHOCOLAT MENIER Annual Sales Exceed 33 MILLION Lbs. For Samples sent Free write to C. ALFRED CHOUILLOU, MONTREAL. Would you Like to go Shopping in MONTREAL COLONIAL HOUSE, PHILIPS SQUARE, MONTREAL. Special Attention Given to Mail Orders Dry Goods, Carpets, Curtains, Furniture, China and Glass- ware, Kitchen Utensils, Silverware, Lamps, Japanese Goods, Ladies’ and Children’s Boots, Shoes and Slippers, Mantles and Millinery. A full Stock in each department. Trial orders solicited. HENRY MORGAN & Co.. feb 9—-t ta MONTREAL, TIVIVIGIVIVIGIIIIIIATIIGG , SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER ’ The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. mw One Year, - - - $4/Three Months, - $I Six Months, - $2/One Month, - - 35c Read This Splendid Offer to Subseribers : McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 35 cents a month. By special arrangement with the publishers, we are | enabled to make a most exceptional offer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fills out the following blank form, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 35 cents a mouth. CUT THIS CUT AND SEND IT TO US. VITTTTTAT TET TT CTV ITTT TTT T AIT TTTIITIIITITII Titi isso - Tae Examiver Publishing Co., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. | You will please send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 mouths 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, McCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current num ber. TRON ois. sp iv cngnoet cntenesoieageneensatl ia dae Teel TB on ck bob destessenel PI, octvieincess ces seneineste deg (saubiaawae No ln Ts Uo Nn “nL Sh Sn Sn Nn Ss Sl Si» Sb Sos ln Nn Hn ip Sn in ln Yo Sis! Kt = Ny Do Sy Ln bo Son Sn SS So So bn Sn Sy bn i> i» > bn ln bo Sn be Sp bb Ib bo Se bo nb bh be eb be bebe nnd» CALL AT OUR OFFICE aad see the entertaining and finely illustrated Me- CLURE’S MAGAZINE, which has among its contributors the most famous authors in America and England, including R. L. Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, A. Conan Doyle, Octa\e Thanet, William Dean Howells, Bret Harte, Clark Russeil, Joel Chandler Har- rie, 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, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Tissandier, the famous French Ballocni+t, Archdeacon Farrar, Thomas A. Edison, F. Hopkinson Smith, H. H. Boyesen, Alphonse Dan et, Camille Flammarion, Edward Everett Hale, Professor Graham Bell and many others, have furnished material for especially prepared inter- views, which will appear fully illustrated in this magazine. HENRY M. STANLEY will contribute, especially for young readers, a story of AFRICAN ADVENTURE. 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 Beast=, the Adveu- tures and Escapes of Carl Hagenbeck. The series will be illustrated by an English artist of great skill in drawing animale, : JOHN BURROUGHS, C. F. HOLDER, DR. C. C. ABBOTT, and other writers famous for their work in tiis 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 a leading English review, to publish Professor Garner’s letters descriptive of his present expedition to Africa. Professor Garner is noted the world over for the curious and interesting investigations he is making in the speech of monkeyr. He sailed for Africa last September for the purpose of farther pureuing his studies 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 Elge of the Fatare,” “ Newest Knowledge,” “Knowledge of Inmediate Value,” The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” ete. We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for only $4.00 a year, payable in advance or in monthly instalments of 35¢. as desired. We make this exceptional offer in order that re may secure a large number ot new subscribers, but all who are already subscribers may avail themselves of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popu’ar Magazine. Addrese: The Examiner Publishing 6o., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. —- --AND—— School Supplies OF EVERY DESCRIPTION CHFAP AT HASZARD & MOORE'S: Charl-ttetown, August 26, 1893—tu th sat ; Bisquit DuBouche & Co. COGNAC. THE SECOND LARGEST SHIPPERS OF BRANDY FROM FRA\CE, | | On Fridays will leave UNSURPASSED IN AGE AND QUALITY, Ask Your Wine Merchant for Them, L893. | Ale & Stout Goods pronipt!y delivered to any part of tue ©.19 Conntry orders solicited S. a] ‘Db, SON & CO Tie@ie Are No FBiies There is no Seda PAPERS for covering Batter and Lard, 4 and TWINE of every description, Importers and Wholesale Paper Dealers tg reetenet on the Mount Elward Road, about one mile and a half from the city, well anl favorab!y known as the “Welsh Farm.” The farm consists of sixty acres, and con a tains a gool Dwelling : Outbuild.age, all in good condition, There is also a Terms easy. Will leave Charlottetown for fla! | Will go up to Vernon River Bridge Dil Hickey’s Wharf. THEIR BRANDIES ARE * turning to Charlottetown same « tg Every alternate Friday wi Mount tewart Bridge. On Saturdays will leave Crapa or Char lottetown at7 O'clak, @& mi.; will leave x AWFUL HEADACHES 2 YEARS CF SUFFERING, LIFE A TORTTER, Kendrick Gathouse, of Tiverton, 8 & esys : For several years I sud -red from «, Vere at- tacks of biliousness, which came on period its about every tcadays. I had wrful headach.¢ and the swell of ansthing cooki, tick. I became weak end were. ne ambiion or strencth to work. eomany sleepless nights, and for J Bot retain i.o! on my stomach. teneely with piles aul hives, and my lie "as @ my frien 's gave wp cl hopes My browuer brought me a boule HAWKER'S HERVE AND STeaAC: TORE, HAWKER'S LIVER PILLS, T had poi taken them long before J to impreve avd wm a short y cured. I grew strong and el gore ows, my appetite retaraea, I slept emelg and mm 8 few months had gained 30 pounds ig weight. I have not evttered frea piles or bili. ousress since, now 2 years, and am as » and keerry as any pan could wich te bo, g firmx.y believe that” 2 HAWHKER’SNERVE AND sTOm ACE TONIC AND LIVER PILIS Saved Ry Life. I hereby certify the above rtat: rect in every particular. ment is oon MOLLaND Ovrsousy Sold by all Dreggists an: general dealers, TONIC SO0cts.; PILLS 25ets, Memafactured by HAWKER MEDISINE 00,, 7H, $2. JOHNNY. B X¥ XXX, In Wood and Botts al sizad Cack= and he gs, 10 ®t tal iy U sna ana like the flies that fishermen can obtain at the St. George Pharmacy. like that which the traveller can obtain at our hirsty “cool refreshing fountain.” ¥. deC. Davies. a St, George Pharmacy, Victoria Row. WE ARE HEADQUARTERS © FOR Wooden Buiter Dishes and Keg Cases. We alvo carry a large stock of WAXED WRAPPING PAPER, PAPER BAGS SCHOFED LD BAOS., ST. JOHN, N. B. P. O. Box 435. — ee Farm For Sale. THE subscriber offers for sale his farm House aul five orchard in connection. Apply to Cc. BENOIT, Water Street. zg rod July 3, 1893. At night is always a trouble, and it is often an entirely unnecessary trouble if Perry Davis' PAIN KILLER fs xept in the house. A few dron: of this old remedy in a little sweet. ened water or milk, brings prompt relief. Sold everywhere. Have you seen the New BiG BOTTLE Old Price 25 Cents, ae PSR SLRAM ER b JACQUES CARTIER. 1893. 4.52 1893. Until Further Notice the Steamer “Jacques “ | Cartier, Hugh McLean, Master, will run as } follows :— Will leave Orwell Brush Wharf for Charlotte- nd ng at town every Tuesday, Welnesday Thursday mornings at7 llalliday'’s Wharf. o'clock, cali lay’s and Orwell Brush Wharves 6ime evenings at $ o'clock, remaining at Brush W barf every Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, and on Thursdays will return to Charlottetown, arriving there about 5 o’elock, every alternate Wednesday. Charlottetown for Cranberry Wharfand Haggarty’s W bart, East River, at 5 o’clock, a. m: leaving Cranberry Wharf for Charlottetown at 73) a. m., calling at Haggarty’s anc ill leave Charlottetown for Hickey’s and Cranberry W harves at 3 o'clock, p. m., Te vel nz. ate A i sate as 98 Charlottetown for Crapaud, at 8 o'clock, p- a m., and returo to Charlottetown, arriving 3 ahout 9 o’c.ock. L. C, OWEN, = o Ageal, x Ch’town, at —! a . mg a