aa EN a ae °F tn aloe 4 fae a eee Pee < es THE DAILY EXAMINER . sy A VOLPE A downright good Soap, so good that you IF YOU | WANT | can use it for all pur- oses without risk to A Coop | : skis or fabric, no mate ter ow tender or Gell- SOAP cate SUNLIGT oun 2s SERVICE AT Your Croce@ars T) < mn VW sor Castle ars i r turers ary te v « yal War- e% BOAE ae , THE LIEN *SL a ’ i Medals r purity aud exce e « M la x \ & tur N 2S ‘ ros ARSGH PILLS Make New, Rich blood 7 L hex ts Fem? o ain ul me r 4 oe @ I» t tt. ' wnt ‘ gia PR uo WHNSON & CU..2 I . Lorton, Maga ! ON NA ‘ I i R : i 4. D aw : 1 tees _ W 7 p x ’ berth hi Y J py ui 21s I I 2 I SAt } i r N A. 1 4. B. WARRUI Mt 4 N iH ws 4. B. WARB PUN ' ‘ Agety TOOTHACHE! HEADACHE ! NEURALGIA! INSTANTLY CURED BY ONZE APPLICATION OF NERVOL. 14 25 } cents per Bottle, at all Druggists. —_ - i S[[4e1/eq “eumog F TO0g 44 4 uo peivdelg "WIIW SY J1GVivIVd SV iSCWIV¥ ' SI 1} “SHIyoUOIg pur EYNjO10g ‘voRdwnsuoD *spjog syinog sound ‘ayy peorshyd joejsod pur ABseue wry Guii6 os pue ‘poo;q yor pue Ysey ‘eyjedde Guyojses fq webe yo yt exw UL sayiudsoydodiy pue [iQ JOA] po UeIZaMION ashy JO NOIS INN: §.LL008 ynq {| suo “Op pides & Ul 8g 0} SW9eS pue Urey} siy pue ayjeddy siy ysoj sry cum ‘200d $}| POojq esoYyM ey SI poepL! NERVE BEANS ere 2 new ts covery that cure the worst cases 0 Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor an Failing Manhood; restores th weakness of body or mind causec bd over-work, or the errora 0- ex exses of youth. This Femedy ab wt obstinate cases when all other riled eve ase etal “ond by drug or six r $, or mal or e by sate, oe HE JAMES SMrpIc SIN? Write for vempiic solutely ires the PREA MENTS have f sists at $1 per packag seceipt of price ®., Tereata, Unt = Oo LEP. FO WELLINGS P Si with Sta i ¢ H i rood orl 4 1 rh tti pie M Dp & Us i ! ‘) ~ : VILLIAM DODD Ch’town, Sept 21—2aw Se Pena? ; Though you Cough ¢ ¢ Don’t Despair! ; M: any apparently hopeless cases $ have been cured by a course of CAMPBELLS WINE OF BEECH TREE CREOSOTE ¢ TRY IT! AT ALI, DRUGGISTS, K. CAMPBELL & CO., Montreal. ee ee i i i Gratelui — Comlorting SPP Cocoa. BREAKFAST. wwledge of the nat- operations of a carefu) “Dy a tuorough ral laws which govern the digestion ated and by application of the propert ed Cacoa, Mr Epps has breakfast tabl with a delicately flavored beverage whico may save us many heavy doctors’ bills. It i= by the judicious use of such articles of diet that gradually built up enough to resist every Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there 13a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by ke pig ourselves well forti fied by pure bl youd and @ pr a nourish ed frame.”—Civil Service Gazette Made simply » with boiling water or milk. Sold only in packets, by Gracers, labelled ius, J AMES EPPS & CU » Homecepathic Cuemistes, Loudon, En gfand, utrition, provided our a constitution until strong tendency to disease. may be es of well-select Lillian, says: “I ope n ‘ THEIR = DAINTY FEET. WOMEN SHOULD BE CAREFUL WHEN SELECTING SHOES. French Women Are Supposed to Wear Pretty ShoeseEnglish and Ameiican Girls Are Not Afraid to Walk The French women are given c edit for beauty of foot and ankle superior to that of their Boglish and American 8is- ters, One reason for this is not difficult to find. The English and American girl of the period are addicted to athietic sports, long walks and mountain climb- ing, and ailthis tends to increase the size of the foot. However, we must commend _ the French woman for her attention to de- tails in the choice of her footwear. Her huse is carefully chosen; the length of the foot, thes pe of the ankle, the elas- ticity of the siik or wool and the fast- ness of the dye are all considered. Her shoes, too, are made to order. A woman rd is authority on the subject that ready-made shoes are never lesirable, and pronounces them a snare ind a delusion, *‘Every woman who has tried it knows the coufort as well as the conomy Of having het made to mdr fine growths and deformities of the feet that ca sullering are the result of clothing the foot in a cover- ing made upon a plan entirely different from the pattern after which nature formed the foot, Walking boots and shoes with sharp- pointed toes are very unbecoming to a High heels also engender breadth by forcing the wearer forward ivd thus wideninz the ball of the foot. \ square-toed shoe is by far the most suited to a large foot and, if a good fit, willin time bring about an improve ment in shape and s.z*. Soft kid shoes, with narrow flat seams, low in the heel and fitting snugly ove whose we leclares SiLOe¢s tae sO much wide foot | to the genuineness of the the instep should be worn when the foot | is really ul-shaped. A shoe a size longer than the number usually worn, on a narrow last, gives the foot a neat, styl- ish appearance, decreases the size and ades to the comfort and grace of the wearer, Colored shoes are, to my never in good taste for thinking, street wear, and they are suitable for only the daintiest feet. rhe shoe, being an article of primary utility, was used, more or less, in the earliest ages. lhe shoes of the ancient were made of pagyrus. The Chinese, as well as the inhabitants of India and other nations of antiquity, manufactur- ed them from silk, rushes, wood, iron, brass, silver, gold and the bark of trees, and sometimes ornamented them With precious stones, A writer that the citizens had various coverings for their feet, the chief of which were the calceus and the sole. ‘*The calceus,” he writes, we Wear at present and was tied upon the instep with a latchet or lace. The or sandal, was a thick cork sole vovered above and beneath with leather and neatly stitched on the edge. It left the upper part of the foot bare and fastened to it by means of straps, were crossed over the instep and wound bout the ankle. The Roman citizens wore the calceus with the toga when hey went abroad in the city, wlea was worn at home and at journeys. he solea was also used at entertain- ments, but it was changed for the cal- ceus when the guests were about to sur- round the table,’ Ihe senators, we are told, wore shoes which come up in the middle of the leg, aving a golden or silver crescent on the yp of the foot. rhe shoes of the women were general}- ly white. som Egyptians solea, Was etimes. re dl sca} ret or pur- ile and were adorned with embroidery nd pearls, but those of the men were wostly black. Ondays of public cere- mony, however, the magistrates wore ed siiocs The fashion of Loots and shoes, like very other part of dress, has been sub- ject to many changes, both as regards iorm and material. In Europe about a thousand years ago, the greatest noblee shoes with wooden soles, In the reign of William Rufus, the English wore shees with long, sharp points, stuff- d with tow and twisted like a ratin’s horn, Though the clergy preached against this fashion,the points continued to increase in length until the reign of Richard IL, when they were fastened to the knees with chains of silver or gold, Parliament, in 1463, interposed and pro- Libited the manufacture or use of shoes w boots with “pikes” exceeding two inches in length. Iu Europe and America boots and shoes re commonly made of leather for wo- nen’s shoes, however,it is not unusual to ise prunella, a kind of twilled worsted ‘loth. In all cases thick leather is used or the soles vore Novel Evening Costume, London Sketch, hustic Prams Here is a way to make a picture frame both rustic and artistic. Use cattsil iods. Have them perfectly dry, hide the corners where they are joined with ivy or handsome autumn leaves and the verries of uttter-owert t. Well te Know, To cure white canker sores in the mouth get at «a druggist’s 5 cents’ worth f gold thread and steep in warm water, amd sweeten with honey or loaf sugar: wet the canker spots with a sw ab dipped nthe tea ever hall hour aud give a litte of the tea.—Roseleaf, Warp off the cholera by getting your system in healthy working cond.tion. Hawker’s Nerve and Stomach Tonic, with a course also of Hawker’s Pills, will excite to healthy action -guard every organ of the body and afford the surest safe eee eee ee coneenetiieigigppeesiasececmen Testing His Honesty. Your druggist is honest if when you ask him for a lo tle of Scott's Emulsion he vives you just what you ask for. He knows this is the best form in which to take cod liver oil. Poaran Cartas Joun R. Hint, of schooner was suffering with in- flammation of the chest, brought on by exposure at sea. Took a good supply of | Emulsion, which It has Puttner’s cured me. lungs. How to wet a Sunlight Picture. Send 25 “Sunlight” Soap wrappers (vrappers bearing the words “Why Does | # Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man”) t» Levey Bros.,Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto. and you will receive by post a pretty picture, free from advertising, and well worth framing. This is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is the best in the market and it wlll only cost le. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends Write vour address carefully, linen, | on Roman customs tells us | “somewhat resemble the slice | which | while the | lie Was oavinced. { man in Nova Scotia was in doubt as Mrs. Bernard Maguire and ex-Councillor Lingley, of Petersville, Queen’s Co., by a Hawker’s Ne rve and Stomach Tonic and Hawker’s Liver Pills. He wrote to Squire Lingley, and that gentle man promptly assured him that the testi Tone of monials were genuine. USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the great blood and Nerve Remedy. §. §. “ELLIOTT” — FOR Barbadoes & Trinidad, — A LLING BERMUDA. The New Steamship “ ELLIOTT,” ‘ lassed A l English Lloy | : Anu s Brown, Master, will sail for above ports about lst Dece rn be Pr, and will carry pro- duce, horses and other stock at reasonable rates of freight Apply to R. McMILLAN AT— nov 1S eod & wy *+KATEFUL, PLEASING RELIEF AFTER MANY DAYS. © en How a Queens County Man Found Pormanent Healing. His Own Experience Tells Fully and Freely some Truths which 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 is to reach such that the gentleman to whom these lines refer, and whose portrait is here given, has written the story of his case. Fa Mr. Branscomb’s home is a Chipman, Queens Co., N. B it was there that a representa- ive of the Groder company ‘alled upon him, Sept. rst, of the present year. His greeting was most cordial. He gladly acknowledged 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 diarrhoea I cannot cell you how much I suffered ‘or 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 meet my needs. I delayed buy- ing for a few hours until | be- zan 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 | Groper's Syrup the terrible pain and distress across my stomach were removed, My bowels rapidly assumed a nat- ural, healthy condition. Now | perfec tly g.ven me a new set of | against | at and drink as well as I ever 30 uld. | have gained constant- ly in flesh since March last. I an perfectly cured. it seems a duty for me to state my case fully, that others vho suffer as 1 did may know «here to find a cure,” Truly yours, <*> E. A. Branscoma, Removed ! I HAVE REMOVED MY Book binding Business AROUND THE CORNER ON Grafton Street, (IN THE SAME BUILDING), where I wil! be pleased to se: all my old oustomers. The cheapest place in the City to get your Books. Day Books, Ledgers, Journals, Cash Books, etc., a Specialty. J. D. TAYLOR sept23 reported cure of i Colonial House, ME ONTRE. Ak. FA LL and being mailed our and is We have pleasure in sti iting that new WINTER CATALOGUE is now seadey, to country customers. Those not receiving a copy will oblige by writing for one. We have taken cousiderable trouble this year to make this Catalogue as complete as possible by adding prices and within the next few days illustrations, and trust that our customers will consult it in ordering. Toys and other Christmas goods are omitted from this these the book for time for Catalogue, as we will issuc hings alone, and this will holid Ly season, Mail orders promptly and carefully attended to. HENRY MORGAN & CO., Montreal. LS93—tu th sat NEW GOODS, consisting in part of Diamond, Garnet and Pearl | Necklets, Gold i supplementary be ready in gcodd Novemle 9 Set Bracelets and Studs. Watches. Rings, Chains, Also, a reliable timekeepers, good value. G@. H. TAYLOR, , 1893—tu fri NORTH SIDE large lot of and Silver Ch’town, Nov. 1! QUEZN SQUARE Loading and to Arriyo: Tons Goal. G'd ‘ydney Round and Slack, Victoria Reund and Slack, Acadia Round and Nut, Iutercionial Naf, Vale Nut, will be sold at the Lowest Prices Cc. LYONS. 1895 which Chaalottetown, October 5, —— — | EXPEDITION | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, The Daily Examiner The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. ceca i et A CD THE BEST for the Public and for Advert.sers. One Year, - ap hen Months, - Si Six Months, - $2\One Month, - Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. | McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE at to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 » sonths 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 fille out the following blank form, | ste uly work, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 35 cents 4 month. CUT THIS OUT AND SEND [Tf TO US. TTT ITA TITAS TITT— TITUTVITVGTI TTT GTI ITA es o Tur Examiner Publishing Co., - Charlottetown, I’. E. Is!and. You will please send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months from date, for which I agree to pay 35 cents a mouth, it being understoo] that you are to have sent to my address for one year, without extra charge, McCLURE’S MAGAZINE, with the current commencing num ber. Wiehe oi ic dicedccsenesd easier Address ¢obbes 00600100 e +0eed eens 20009 s 0806600 6900 TIO isis se cacendaneencsanenas TVA ‘a »'» lb lb » S55 » >> eee >i» b Io 'b Th 'b fh to tb bb = - So ‘by by Shp Lo Sb» > lbp a» ‘bb > by py» >> ‘bb b> b> » eb» 1 » pb b> > >! s bo» l»» b>» yp bla» ly lp le and see the entertaining and CLURE’S MAGAZINE, which has among its contributors the most famous authors in Americs. and England, including P:. L. Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, A. Conan Doyle, ‘4 Octave Thanet, W illig . Dean Howelis, Bret Harte, Clark Russe i, Soni Chandler Har- is, Thomas Hardy, J. T. Trowbridge, Jerome K. Jerome, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Theodore Roosevelt, oe Miller, Gilbert Parker, John Burroughs, ‘Hat ilin Gar} land, Prof. E. S. Holden, Prof. C. A. Young, i. Be. Boyese B, Robert Barr, Henry M. Stanley, Archibald Forbes, Andrew Lang, and many others. MAGAZINE contains two illustrated interviews | F ances Hodgson Bur.ett, Tissandier, the famons 4 Frene h Balloonis hy Archdeacon Farr r, Thomas A. Edison, F. Hopkinson Smith, H. | H. Boyesen, Alphonse Dau ‘et, Camil ¢ Flammarion, Edward Everett Hale, P rofessor | Graham Bell and many others, have urnis shed material for especially prepared inter} views, which will appear fully illustr te’ in this magazine. CALL AT OUR OFFICE finely ijlustrated Me- i Each number of McCLURE’S with famous people. Jules Verne, HENRY M. STANLEY will contribute, especially for young readers, a story of AFRICAN AGVENTURE., NATURAL HISTORY AND ADVENTURE.—There will be several articles as been called by Mr W. T. Stead the Lest furnished him by Carl Hagenbr *k, of Hamburg, | These articles deal with the Captu ¢ of Wile Transportation of Wild Beasts, the Adven- series will be illustrated by an English written by Raymond Blathwayt, wh¢ interviewer in England, from materia the great animal importer and trainer. Beasts, the Training of Wild Beasts, ‘he tures and Escapes of Carl Hagenbeck. The artist of great skill in drawing animais. JOEN BURROUGHS, C. F. HOLDER, DR. C.C. ABB OT famous fcr their work in this field, will contribute to the Magazine. Of interest to both Young and Old will be PROF. R. L. GARNER’S AFR ICAN | TO THE GORILLAS. Arrangements have been made, tion with aleading English revi iw, to publish Professor Garner’s lett ers descriptive ot his present expe lition to Africa. Pr ‘Garner is noted the world over for the in con sec- j fessor | curious and interesting investigations he is making in the speech of et i He sailed for Africa last September for the purpose of further pursuing his studies in the native haunts Of the gorilla. The illustrations of these articles wil be from photo- graphs taken by Prof. Garner in Africa. McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under fle heads The Edge of the Future,” “ Newest! inowledge,” “ Knowledge of lumediats Value,” } The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” ete. We are offering this splendid Magazine with T Te DAILY EXAMINER fer only $4.00 a year, payable | advance or in mouthly instaiments e7 35¢. as desired. : WRG | | | j j | Castoria is Dr. Samucl Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine rer other Narcotic substance. [t is a Larmless substitute for Parcgoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantco is thirty years’ use by Plillions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhea aud Wind Colic. Castoria relieves tecthing troubles, cures constipation and flatuleney, | Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Case toria is tho Children’s Panacea—tho Mother’s Fricud. Castoria. “ Castoria is an ¢ xcellent medicine for ch'!- dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its good effect upon their chiidren.” Dx. G. C. Osaoon, Loweil, Mass. 1 Castoria. “ Cactoria is so well adapted toch! ‘ren thes I recommend it as superior toany prescriptic4 known to me.” Tl. A. Arcnen, M. D., . Oxford t., Lrooxiyn, N. Y. 11150 “Our physicians in the children's depart- ment have spoken highly of thelr experi ence in their outside practice with Castoria. and although we only hare amonz medical supplies what is kKiown as reytuics products, yet we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it.” Usirep Hosprrat anv Dispensany, Boston, Mase, lren of sduy is rot * Castoria is the best remedy for chil which I ain acquainted. I hope the far distant when mothers willconsiJer the real interest of tarir children, and use Castoris in- stead of the various quack nostrums which cro destroying their loved ones, by forcingopiurn, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves.” Dx. J. F. Kixcurroeg, Conway, Ar The Centaur Compsx;, CUTLERY BOUGHT LOW AND WILL SELL LOW ——AT City Hardware Store. _ Se SO KR. B. NORTON & CO t Aten C. Suits, Pres., Ti Murray Street, New York City. THE Charlottetown, September 5, 1893 mon thn opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magazine, TEA We make this exceptional offer in order that we may secure a large number of } new subscribers, but all who are already subscribers may avai! themselves of this § Address : The Examiner Publishing bo. CHARLOTTETOWN eet . ISLAND. TEA! Our TEA TRADE "Tast season was the largest fur some vears, and we attr | bate it to the fact that the Teas we offered the public suited them both in | QUALITY and PRICE, i Numbers of our customers have come back to us this Fall, and told us tl at | if we could give them as good value this year as we did last year they wou ‘| want no better. : : We believe that WE CAN give them, and everyone elxe who favors us with |} an order, BETTER VALUE than even last season, as this vear’s. « rop of Tea seems to run more even than last year’s; and having bought a much larger stock of it this year, we were in a position to buy it at very Close fizures. We don’t advertise to sell Cheap Shoddy Teas, as we don’t keep them at all, and would not sell them at any price; but we believe we do rell the best 20, 24 and 28 cent Teas in the city to-day. We make reductions off alove quantities of five pounds and upwards. Every Pound of Tea sold warr: BEER & GOFF. Charlottetown, November 17, 1893—m w f pric s on ic ed by NEW TEA, JUST RECEIVED. | a Tea is a staple article that nearly everyone uses, and | ae intend to make it one of our specialties, and pay par ticular attention to it. | r . . . . | We have just received direct from London, England, a) resh supply of THIS SEASON’S NEW TEAS, have bought them right we intend to sell them right. and as we | will pay you to call and see our prices and give a trial. 1895. ——" ns am 35c' BUSINESS. “ paue, es | (util Further Notice the tr |} Accommodation for fe xpress from Tignish Wilel Cher AS GUAR AND ynes FOR a gp" : “fe evel Motrat OOre Ata colt h al | ue Dia tila ray awd AD, THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES, POEASANT. gn EAP To tase SUFTo cut PFMCE 26 AND CO CENTS THE HAVINER MEDICINE €O., S: Jone. N.B. a AT ONCE Sa'ary sa Com minsiong pre ap pay. . Hope Nae Uj bse 4 2540 Naot cat in the work = rie } ‘LLWANGER® BARRY, Roch or, N | £ oO 122—«) li a 53 A - t N o Farm *'‘er ale. THE inion r offers fer sale his Torm on the Mount Edward eed, about ong leanda half from twee C.t¥, well and to take 0 ler#. series. E-tat tnt favorably known as the “Welsh Parm? The farm consists of sixty Aeres, snd con tains a gool Dwelling ifouse aud five Outbuildings, aif in good eordition. Therg is .lso a good orchard in connection, Apply to Cc. BENOIT, Water Siveet, STANG AT ORWELL. Terms easy. oo” 1893 Jul i TO LET, and possession given on lst De cember next, or sooner if desired, the Bask ness Premises and Iwelling House at OR- WELL CROSS KOADS, now oceupicd by Ms, Norman McLeod. This is one of the mow desirable St: ods in Prince Edward Island jor a country stor There is a large Store, Ware. Shed, Dweilirg House and ¢ yrehard, adi in good order. Apply to Norman McLeod, on the premises toM.& D. C. Melcoc, Charlottetown, or & the subscriber, HUGH McLEBoD, Orwell, Noy. 3, 1880—™m 8 & wy lm Mt ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR | | Wooden Buiter Dishes and Egg Cases. We also carry a large stock of WAXED PAPERS for covering Butter and Lar, WRAPPING PAPER, PAPER BAGS and TWINE of ev ery description, SCHOFIT: LD BROS, Importers and Wholesale Paper Dealers ST. JOHN, N. B. P. 0. Box 435 $$$. oe E “RAILWAY, ins of this Ralk way will run daily (Sun ndays excepted) no follows :-- Trains will leave Chariottetown: Express for Summerside and Tignish.6 ®am ssoumt Stewart, | Georgetown and Souri 6% * | Accommodation for Summerside 2pm Express for Mount Stewart, George- town and Souris ; 30 * Passengers for the West can leave Char lottetown atéa.m., arriving at Summersidé =~ at&.lj and Tignish at 1.5 a m., returnr same day, reaching Summerside at 4.05 * Charlottctown até2) p. m. E xpres Traine make close connection at Summerside with nd from Point ao ‘Chene. Pas leave Charlottetown Steamer toa sengers going East can at 6.30 a.m., arriving at Souris at 10.5, @ Georgetown atlia, m., reiurning to Char lottetown same day, arriving at 5.05, p.m, Trains will arrive at Chariottetown;: Express from Georgetown, Souris and : Mount Stewart Sham Accommodation from Summersid 9a * Accommodation trom Georgetown, Souris and Mi vant Stewart Spm znd S:unmer- side 62 * All Trains are ran by Eastera Standard Time. D, POTTINGER General Manage, J. ONSWORTH Superintendent. Ch’'town, Moncton, ‘Pickford & Black ‘Halifax & P. E. Island §.S. Line STEAMER FASTNET tetown every ax about Lea’ es Halifax, N.S., for Charlot ) onday, 6 p. mi. Arrives Charlottetown 6 .% ™m., Wednesday. Leave. Charlottetown for Samimersid Ww a m., Wednesday. Arrives (Charlottetown from about 4 a. m., Thursday. Leaves Charlottetown for Ilalifax, 4p. m.. Thursday. For Freight or Passage apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent. from TIfali about Summerside N. Sey Charlottetown, STHAMER JACQUES CARTIER. 893. Ty). 1893. ets Master, will run July 12, 1893. Until Further Notice the Cartier, Hugu McLean, follows :- Will leave Orwell Brush Wharf fo town every Tuesday, Wedns Thursday mornings at 7 o'elo« Halliday’s W hart. Will leave Charlottetown for Halliday’s and Orwell Brush Wharves sime evenings at 3 o'clock, remaining at Brush W hart every Tuesday and Wednesday eve nings, audon Thursdays will return to Charlottetewn, arriving there about 5 o’elock, Willgo up to Vernon River Bridge every alternate Wednesday, On Fridays will leave C bar tt mn fo Cranberry Wharf and Ha riy’s Whar, East River, ot 5 o'clock, a m leaving Cc sanberry Wharf for Charlottetown at ; . m.. calling at Maggarty'’s and Hi foley rs W hart. Will leave Charlottetown for Hickey’s and Cranberry W harves at 3 o’clock, p. m., Te- turning to Charlottetown” same evening, | Every alternate Friday will go Movnt } Stewart Bridge. i On Saturdays wi ll leave Crapeud or Char : lottetown at7 o’clock, a. m.; will leave ; Charlottetown for Crapaud, at 3 o'clock, Ps ; m., and return to Charlottetown, arriving S. B. ENMAN & CO.,, MeL. EOPS OLD CORNER. Charlottetown, November 7, 1893—tu thw eat about 9 o'clock. L. C, OWEN, Agent Ch’town.