ot . a eee ¥ THE DAILY EXAMINER . WOooM'sS PTITOSPIODINE. The Great Euglish Remedy. Six Tuckages Guaranteed to romptiy and permanently rms of Nervous eure al Bo Weakne Emissions, Sperm- = atorrhea, Impotency and a Ss e] feaf Abuse or Excesses, I yy " cavcessive use | 7 , - of Toda , Opium or Stimu- | Before and Afi Pr’. tants, 2 soon lead to In armity, Insanity, Consumpl ian early grave, Has been prescribed over So years lu thousands of cases; is the only Reliable and Hone Brown. he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, fnclose price in letter, and we will send by return mal’. Price, one package, ¢1; six, $5, One will please, siz will cure. Pamphlets free to any addreas, The W “supany, Canada. Sold in Charlottetown Drugyist )reer DUN DESPA. = ure prom ptiy hited x Six boxes $2.50. Da. L. 4.. SMI TH & CO.. Toronto. Dodd‘’s Ki —H50c. we can seil he following prices, v!z.: six boxes for $2.50. To the rr dozen, or three dozen you per box at $3.75 per dozen. Sent by mail to any address por | aid. GEORGE E. HUGHES, may 29 Charlottetown. A GREAT MEDICINE. Cod-liver Oil is useful beyond any praise it has ever won, and yet few are willing or can take it i: its natural state. Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil is not offensive; it is al- most palatable. Children like it. It is Cod-liver Oil made more effectual, and combined with the Hypophosphites its strengthening and flesh-forming powers are largely increased. Doni Sees aided ¢ Scott & Bowne, Belleville. 50c. aud $I. > cept @ substitute PUTINERS FMULSION WILL RESTORE Pale, Weak and Hmaciated CHILDREN toa norma! condition of HEALTH and STRENGH, and bring back the BLOOM OF YOUTH more quickly than any other medicine, As a Flesh Restorer. Puttner’s Emulsion has no equal, giving substance and tone to the wasted muscles. All Druggists Price 50 cents june keep it. ONE PILL AFTER EATING URE? wOOD CIGESTION. [PRICE 25 CTs. Tee PODS Mép co 70 A Pointer for Agents | T! 2 subscriber has fitted up ten of the fine st SAMPLE ROOMS in the Province in the substantial Brick structure, Corner of Queen & Sydney Sts. These rooms are all large and well lighted. They are heated by hot water, lighted by electricity, connected by t2le phone, and are fitted with sanitary ar rangements. Elevator and office in con nection. P. P. GILLIS: Charlottetown, Aug. 6, 1895—3m Dominion Blend ‘Yea, REGISTERED.- SELLING AGENTS: Beer & Goff, Charlottetown. Stewart & Gates, Charlottetown, ° R. T. Holman, Summerside. J. H. Myrick, Tignish. A. McKinnnon, Colman. Albt. Craig, Emerald. Cyrus Morris, Bradall a: e A.J. McLeod & Co. Stanley Bridge. Feehan & Egan, Mount Stewart. Sterns Bros., Souris. McLean & Cameron, Crapand. Every householder should give Domixion Biexp Tea atrial. It has great strength, fine flavor and is delicious in the cup. M Ch’town, June 20—w | yr. —____. ik You Want a™cook, Want a partner, Want a situation, Want a servant girl, Want to sell a farm, Want to sell a house, Want tc rent a house, Wart to exchange anything, Wat to sell plants or grain Want to eel! 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 EZAMINER st Medcct=s | Ask druceist for Wood's Phosphodine; if | by Geo FE Hughes | iney Pills at | trade—$4.00 | ELECTRICAL ADVANCE. 4 Few of the New Things Both In Fact and Theory. A novel scheme is being considered of connecting Aberdeen, 8. D., and Ta ccma by telephone. It is propsed, pro- viding the will con sent, to connect a rail of the Great Northern Ta- ecma; a similar conn made a. Aberdeen railroad company a wire with Railroad at ction to be A Compact Dry Cell. A French electrician has recently de- vised a dry cell consisting of a carbon vessel, in the bottom of which ts placed chromic acid mixed up with gelantin- this latter the of absorbing 60 times its vol- } ume of water. On the top of this jelly a dise of porous earthenware is laid ts hich supports a zinc spiral immersed gelatinous silica, cus silica possessing property in a second layer of this time without the addition of the chroemie acid. The cell is claimed to be very compact for its powers } ae Long Distance Transmission. An ambitious project is on foot at Los A eles, Cal., where it is proposed to trame™it the almost unlimited power | of t Kern River to the city by elec t . and to make a strong effort to ? i? a manufacturing centre. The roost interesting feature ef the plan is ransmission. The near- est point on the Kern River ts exactly ' miles from Los Angeles. The pro- rmoters the plan claim to have eiec- | trical ‘neering advice, however, to the effect that the scheme is commer- ; Claliy practicable Light Draught Et-etrie Launches. A stock ¢ pany is being organized at Ww . Texas, to operate electric launch on the strcams of Central Texas ¢ i plan which the projectors bel will be practical d profitable wiil ta iproy ent whatever to tt Water courses t be navigated. the boats to be used. it is said, will take 24) pounds smoothly in 18 Inches f water, and over that depth is main- year | rivers and stre around in many of the ims. | taur Air Brake for Hlectrie Care, A new rake for electric cars is heing brovght out by twe Chicago in- ; Yentors. The principol novelty is the 1 use of a rect: rocating electric motor } to comp s the air, the motor taking } its current from the line wire. An au- tematic ent-out is provided, so that the | PLUMP weeks only when the air pressure reduced. Fhe reservoir contains air h to make several applications of Sint the brake. ' Face Protector for Loekeouts. Ir order to protect the man on the lookout on locomotives, ships or the like from wind, dust, sparks, ete., and |} f afford «a lear and unobstructed view, an Fnglish Inventor causes the tead wind to be deflected by means of im upwordly directed current of air, ed either by directing the mouth a curved fi toward the wind or by | rod = meens of a fan. CONVERTING LIGHT INTO SOUND. Simple Explanation of an Operation. Interesting One of the marvels of modern science is the conversion of a beam of light in- to sound. The light ray is thrown through a lens on a glass vessel con- tuining lamp black, colored silk, worst- | é ud. or other substances. A dish having ritts or openings cut in it is made t»5 revolve swiftly in this beam of light Sv as to cut it making alternate On put- ting the ear to the glass vessel, strange up, i | sounds are heard so long as the flash- | flashes of light and shadow. ing beam is falling upon it. Another phase of this remarkable discovery ts still more interesting. A beam of sun- light is passed through a prism. The dise is turned and the colored light of the solar spectrum is made to break through it. If the ear be placed to the vessel containing the silk, wool, or cther material, as the colored lights fall upon it, sounds will be given by dif- ferent parts of the spectrum, and there wili be silence in some other parts. To illustrate—if the vessel contains red wersted and the green light flashes up- or it, loud sounds will be heard. Only feeble sounds will be heard if the red and blue rays fall upon it, and other cclors make no sound at all. Green silk gives sound best in red light. It is by 0 means improbable that this discov- ery foreshadows a new law of harmon- ics, and Remington’s experiments in tene color may possibly, by this new aj plication of sight and sound, result in some practical theory which wil!l five us an entirely new scheme of music. The thing is but in its infancy, tut the mere fact that such a discoy- err has been made cannot but forecast important results.—Invention. A NOVELIST’S B_UNDER. | Forget He Had Killed Off a Character— Had to KResuscitate Him. A great master of the art of throw- ing off stories by daily instalments was Ponson du Terrall. When he was at the height of his vogue, he kept three running at the same time in dif- ferent papers. His fe.tile imagination Was never at a loss, but his memory frequently was. lie was apt to forget to-day what he did with a hero or heroine yesterday. To help his memory he at first noted down briefly in copy books what happened to his men and women, but finding that often he could not read his own writing, he invented a new system. He provured little leaden figures on which he gummed the names of his characters as they wére born, Supposing there were thre> sets of figures in different drawers. When a character was settled off, the little man or woman in lead was taken away from its companions and laid aside, One day when Ponson du Terrail was all behind in his werk he set himg>lf | to his task without examining the Slain. His bad memory led him into a terrible blunder. He had forgotten that he had killed Rocambole—the atti] | famous Rocambole—in the previous ; feuilleton, and to the great surprise of the reader, he med? him talk again as if nothing out of the commen had be- fallen him. This resuscitation of Ro- cambole is one of the most curious things in the history of the romans- feuilleton.—Paris letter to Boston Transcript, | | | ———_——> -e.- -— WILL THEY GET IT? | Rumored Establishment by a Canadian Firm of a Branch in Albany, N Y,. Aipany, (Special) Nov. 4.—The outery in certain quarters against the high taritf still goes on, but it is to the tariff that Al- bany is likely to owe the addition of an- other industry to her namerous existing ones. A Canadian firm located in Toronto has, it is understood, been interviewed Ly an Albany business man with a view to establishing in this city of a manu/actor of the staple kidney remedy; Dodd’s Kid- | ney Pills. As the business done by the Canadian firm throughout the United States has assumed very large proportions owing to the recegnition by the American pubic of the great value of this staple, it 1s probable that arrangements will be eat isfactorily entered into. The annual out- put is very large and is rapidly increas- Ing. eo ——___ A letter has been sent to Lerd Salis- bury, Mr. Balfour and the Duke of Nor- fuld, by the Dunfermline Protestant De- fence Association, announcing that it has “condemned the appointment of a Papist to the office of Postmaster-General, eapeci- ally as the Duke possesses “allegiance and loyalty to a foreign potentate,” and “once drank in public to the toast of the P before the Queen.” The Duke of Norfolk replies that he has read the resolution “with great interest and instruction,” | | | } ODDS AND ENDS. A London magistrate has decreed that a householder cannot int rfere with an organ-grinder unless be is disturbed in bis busine, hae sickness in his house, or ix affected in his health by the sounds of the organ. oo How te Get a “Sunlight” Book, Send 12 “Sunlight” soap wrappers to Lever Bros,, Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto who will send post-paid a paper-bound book 160 pages. For 6 “Life buoy” Car- bolic Soap wrappers, a similar book will be sent. This is a splendid opportunity to obtain good reading. Send your name and address written carefully. Remember “Sunlight” sells at 6 cts. per twin-bar, and “Life buoy” at 10 cts. One cent postage will bring your wrappers by leaviog the ends open, vat kw The Duke of York has sold his collec- tion of postage stamps to one of the Roth childs. The pri cis not known, but must be considerable, since the Duke had $300,000 insurance on the collection. K ubbing It In, Never use a liniment for rhenmatiem, says a high medical authority. Don’t rub itin—driveitout. Take something that removes the acid poison from the bloed take something that will improve your digestion, and build up the body to the perfection of robust health. That ‘‘-ome thing” is Scott's Sarsaparilla, a remedy that obtains the best results in the short est time. $1, of all druggists. At Rosenweller, Alsace, a young girl was sentenced to four we-ks’ imprison- ment for mailing a letter bearing a can celled post ge stamp. She appealed and finally obtained a verdict in her favor— becaure she proved she had not written the letter. That Pale race, For Nervous Prostration and Anwmia there is no medicine that will so promptly and infallibly restore vigor and strength az Scotts "Eusulsion. Bordeaux wine is very cheap in Europe sometimes. At present the owner of a large vineyard near Bordeaux is sending out circulars in which he offers to send cases of 300 bottles of two-year old wine, freight paid, to any town, even in Switzer- land, for 130 france. That means Bor- deaux at about 8 cents a bottle. Bad Blood Between Them. The ever slaving farmer’s wife, her delicate sister in the city, suffer more than they care totell. The dark rings round the eye*, headaches, dizziness, palpitation or rhenmatic twinges, betoken a run-down system. Tie blood is poor, and isa bar to evjoymet of life. Scott’s Sarsap -rilla purities the blood, strengthens and vitalizes the system, and speedily restores the bloom of health to the cheeks. It cures when all others fail. The Velo makes announcement of an important tricycle race shoitly to be held in the veludrome at Lyons, France, bet- ween Baroness Emma von Sattender, and Miss Amy Ewer. The victorious maiden will win the hand of a German millionaire, Albert Meller. Seize the Upportunity at Once. When the opportunity occurs to escape from death only lunatics will refuse to do it. But there are many cousumptive people lying on death Leds whocan escape the threatened doom if they will take Miller’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. Some are not aware of such a preparation, and if they die it will be the result of ignorance. Those who know that Miller’s Emulsion inakes new blood and enables the con- sumptive to get strength to overcome the disease are self-destroyers if they still neglect to obtain the life-giving remedy. Miller’s Emulsion is the great nerve strengthner and blood maker, and cures Coughs, Cold+, Bronchitis, Scrofula, and all Lung affections. In Big Bottles, 50c. and $1, at all Druy Stores. The artistic po-ter fad, like the adver- tising card craze, is rapidly numbering the days of its brief existence. Tore His Flesh In Agony. “I was troubled with blind itching piles for 20 year-; was unable to work and tore my flesh in agony. United States and Canadian doctors failed to relieve. Chase’s Ointment was a God-send. I am a better man than in 20 vears,and am able to work every day.” Phillip Wallace, black- amith, Iroquois, Ont. Ciase’s Ointment cures piles, eczema, and irritant diseases. All druggists, 60c, per box. isl Mr. J. Israel Tarte has given instruc- tions to his lawyers to commence suit for fifty thousand dollars damages against the Toronto Worll on account of a despatch from Montreal publi hed in that) journal in which certain charges were made against him. Ay O_p Axp Wett Triep Remepy. Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty years by millione 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 Diarrhea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists iu every part of the world. Tocnty Ava cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mre. Winsloe’e Soothing Syrup, and take no other kiud.—m. w. f. wkly—1 y There are 970,524 names on the United States pension rolls and $140,000,000 will be paid in pensions in the coming year. “It's None of Your Business” if you never want any Luinber. require any at any time MAKE IT YOUR BUSINESS to see our excellent stock and get our low prices. DO IT NOW! JAMES BARRET, Cannollv’s Whar f, But if you oer?! SKATING RINK TO LET. Tenders for the lease of ee Skating Rink for ensuing season will received up to 20th November, at noon. D. C. McLEOD, Secy-Treasurer. oct31—tl dte pat guar UNDERTAKING Having bought out the whole under- taking outfit of the late Isaac W, Wad- man, I am now prepared to supply every- thing necessary for the business at the shortest notice, at Mr. Wadman’s old stand, Graiton Street. J. R. DAVISON. Nov. 2—tf . s Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has ted to the placing on the market J many misleading and unscrupulous imitations of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu- facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are used in their manufactures. 4 Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.’s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. ae ‘- - <i a * e e s - bo = A ot ae HEATING STOVES from $3.00, COOK STOVES from $14.00—with the Utensils. Examine our Jarge stock. DODD & ROGERS. Charlottetown, October 25, 1895—135 FEATHERBONE SKIRT BONE A light, pliable, elastic bone made from FORK CIVING quills. It is soft and yielding, conforming STYLE and SHAPE readily to folds, yet giving proper shape to tkirt or Dress. The only Skirt Bone that may be wet TO Ladies Dresses. without injury. the Celebrated FEATHERBONE CORS*TS are corded with this m iterial For sale by leading Dry Goods Dealers. CONIA an CA Ss HEAVY i if ANE... STEEL PLATE ie? ‘a Fats. Coal or Weood. om Miade in various sty!es from the ordinary family to the larcest hotel size. =e Ga . “— - . Ac* constructed ia Che most substan- inl amanner cnd afier the moct ij roved patterns. ARE STRICTLY UP FA part Es LVERY PARTICULAR. Et will pay you toinvestigate the cocd points of these ranges before pur- chasing others. LONDON, MONTREAL, .. . TORONTO, WINNIPEG and The McClary Mfg. Co. :s2oxv0."winsinn §. W. Crabbe, Agent for Charlottetown. 0O$4O 9664S CE*~AHAANS 69699 F$OSSOOOOL SE GASH4O 5H PEO POSOS OO VESOSl 00090999 F9005000060000 - t mane Ld ee eee = SUS at aUABa rae FiRE. Haszard’s Sea Shooting Powder, F, F, Acadia : Smokeless 1-22 Papers " Shells, Nos. 8, 10, 12, Wire Cartridges, Loaded Cartridge3,10 and 12, Shot, all Sizes, Wads and Caps, 1 Double Barrel No. 8 Gun (Muzzle), Guns, Muzzle and Breech Loaders, 10 & 12 SIMON W. CRABBE, Ch’town, Aug. 23, 1895—135 & wy ’ Stoves and Hordware, Walker’s Corner HAPPY WEDDING. LOW PRICES and HIGH GRADE GOODS were joined together at the “City Hardware Store,” especially “Jewel” Stoves and Ranges. R. B. NORTON & CO. City Hardware Store. Charlottec wo, October 22, 1895~—25 Advertisers! Lhe home circulation is the most valuable for advertisers. Tue EXAMINER reaches the homes of our citizens every evening. That accounts for our large advertising patronage, THE EXAMINER; PUB. COMPANY THURSDAY, DE WITT TALMAGE. Joe Howard ween ita Preacher Who Built Three Immense Brook- lya Churches. Talmage goes t> Washington. Hiow well I remember his coming to Brooklyn in 1860, a gaunt-faced, long- haired, side-whiskered, rasping-voiced ranter as it seemed, Lrooklyn was then well known as the city of church- es. On its m nisttrial lst, as I recall, without consulting recogds, were the greatest preachers of the age, B.echer, th: p.et Bohune, the ornate Storrs, th robust Schenck, the pictures-juc Cuyler, the rhetorical] Chadwick, the schol ily Constantine Pise, and the Sturdy Bishop McLaughlin. Into chis srouping came a new man with hew metLow¥s, with quaint oratcry, with got sjyue gesticulation, thatric in matter. melcdramatic in manner, ive built a tremendous church, he bought a magnificent organ ind soon succeei- ed by his extraordinary declamation and marvelous acting in drawing and holding the l rgest congregat on .n the city. Cr.ties carped, scorners sncere, the know-alls shook their heads, and busybodies laughed, not only in their sleeves, but openly, at the coars®nes and roughness of the new man’s ways, but he kept on. Three churches were reared, each coming down a heap of ashes, but evcn that fale il te fecze him, | Fis apparently «xtempor.ne>.us ser- mons were memorized efforis, iad, through the medium of a syndicate, appeared the morning after their de- livery in the newspapers the wo.1! around, apparently sent by wire, in reality tr nsmited by mail in time for publication. Like many men who really know better, Talmage stuck to the It- eral meanings of scriptural phraseolo- ey. I heard him say he thanked Lo man cf science to explain to him the mysteries of geology, the wonders cf the heavens. He didn’t care to know that a hundred thousand years were needed in the formation of a coal bed by natural precess, nor would he listen to any story about a possible ford in the Red River, or a sea fish with 4 different’'y constructed throct from tha: of the medern whale, but much pre- ferred to believe the Bible meant what it said. "She Lord made the world in six literal days of 24 hiurs ea*h rested on the seventh because he tired. I used to I'sten to Talmage with interest. As a psychologic stndenat he is a ccrker. Like Orator Puff, however, he has two voices. His public utter- ances grate the ear as a fil ra:p3 a saw. In private life it’s diffe ent. Brooklyn will miss him. He wus as much a feature of New York's annex #s the bridge aercss th: river, the cemnetery in which hundreds of thou- sands sleep their last sleep, and inul- titudes went every Sunday night to hear him talk. Some of his thoughts are beautiful. Much cf his imagery is poetic. At times he sounds the depths <f human sorrow with intelligence, and again he soars upon strong pinions of imagination to the very heights ef poetc fervor, and WAS Mental Eff ct of Hasheesh. A writer in the Cornhill Magazine le. scribes the peculiar mental condition induced by e.ting the nDParcote drug: LasLhcesh, the extra:t of Indian hem: “A sultile warmth came, as it were, in gusts to my head and chest, a:;! scemed to permcate my body wit: a sirgular emotion. The cconve.sation around me reached my und: rstandiag charged with droll slgnificanze, The no'se of a fork tapped against a flass struck my ear as a mst harm-nious vibraticn. The fac.s of my companio: g were transformed. The particular an}- mal type, which, accerding to Lavater. is the basis of every human counte- nance, appeared to me strikingly clear. My right hand neighbor became an eagle, he on my left grew into an owl, with full projecting eyes; immediately in front of me the man was a lion, while the doctor himself was meca- morphosed into a fox, But the most extraordinary circum- stance was that I read, or seemed ¢< read, their thoughts and penetrate the depth of their intelligence as easily as One deciphers a page printed in large type. Like an experienced p r no'o- gisi I could indicate accurately the force and quality of their endowmen‘s and the nature of their s*nt’ments: In this analysis I discovered affinities ang contrasts whch woull have ese>ped ome in a norm! state. Objects around me seemed little by little to clothe th>mselves in fantastic garb, the arabesques on the walls ro- vealed themselves to me in rich rhymes of attractive poesy, sometimes melan- choly, but more generally rising to an exaggerated lyrism or to transcend wt buffoonery. The por-elain the bottles, the glasses sparkling on (th> table—all tock the most ludicrous forms. At the same time I fel; creep- ing «Hl around the region of my h art a ticklirg pressure, to sque ze Out, a; it were, with gentle force, a laugh which burst forth with noisy violenc«., My voice s emed to have gained con- siderable strength, for when I spoke it was os if it were a @ischaree of cannon, and long after I hed uttered a Sentence I heard in my brain the re- verberat‘on, as it were, of distant thun- der. vases, Tie Rebla’s Rad Brent. The country people of E: gland, as well as of several other countr es, have fn idea that the red of the robin’s breast Was caused by a drop of blood which fell upon it at the crucifixion. According to the story, the robin, com. miserating the condition of Chri:. tried to pluck the crown of tho ns fr om his biow, and in doing so got its breast wet with the blood flowing fron the wouncs, The color became pera anent, being transmittd from. gener.tio, to generation, and thus, according to the legend, the rotin is a perp*tual re- minder of the sufferings o/ Christ, Oxygen Now Two Gases, Oxygen is no longer a single element, but the admixture of two. distin-t gases. So at least says Mr. F.C. Baly of University College, to the Royal So- ciety, in a preliminary note of his ex- periments, If oxygen be submittei to the silent electric discharge the gis collecting at the negative p<le difrers in intensity from Oxygen le’cre ejoo- trification, and the dens‘ty is greicer cr less, according as short or long sparks are used. The infe ence is tha oxygen contains two gases of dis*irmi lar molecules which are separated }) the electric discharge. BLEEDING SICK PEOPLE TO REMOVE DISEASE USED TO BE COMMON OW ‘TIS DIFFERENT. Poor, weak and watery blood is turned into rich, vila lizing and iissue buildiug. The new dis- covery," THE KIND THAT CURES," THE BIG FOUR RHEUMATISM, SCIATICA SCROFULA, SYPHILIS Some medicines cure mild casos—it takes the latest discovery in medical science — Scott's Sarsaparilla—to reach stubborn cases. Cures where other medicines fail because of its differ- ence. Contains new blood purifying properties —never failing. $1 PER BOTTLE OR 6 FOR $5 EDMANSON, BATES & CO., - - TORONTO. WHOLESALE AGENTS SCOTT'S SKIN SOAP CLCANSES ANO HEALe a NOVEMBER 7, 1895. Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Childron. It contains ncither Opium, Morphine nor pther Narcotic substance. {6 is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil, It is Pleasant. Its guarantce is thirty ycars’ use by Tlillions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves tecthing t' «bles, cures constipation and flatulency, Castoria a..-milates tt.c food, regniates the stomach and bowels, giving hew‘thy and natural sleep. Case toria is the Children’s Panacca—the Mother’s Fricnd, cures > ~ . Castoria. Castorix. * Sast« ria isan excellent inedicins for chi"- aon, > ic Sowell adapted to children th @ren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its E rex it aS superior toauy srescripss gvod effect upon .beir children.” know , = H. A. Arcaza, M. D., i:: So. Orford St., Lbrvoklyn, N. ¥, “Our yhesicek as in the ch'lren’s depart ment h..e spoken highly of thelr expert ence in tw t outside practice with Castoria, aod altho: bh we only have among our rcd:cal cu; plies what is known as regular prod.cis, yt we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor open it.” Lo»urzp Hosprrau anp Disrewsany, bostun, Mage Da. G. C. Oscaon, Lowell, Mass. * Castoric is the best remedy for children of which Lam acquainted. I bopetucd.y isnot | far distant when mothers will consider the real interest of tacir children, and use Castoria in- stead of the various quack nostrums which are destroy iag their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves.” De. J. F. Kixcnevor, Conway, Ar Avis C. Surrn, Pres, She Centaur Company, TI Murray Street, New York City. ee ee VUESE SESS SESESESESE 5 E6S66SS8 6E8488888 RIPANS 7 ONE GIVES RELIEF. S888 SSS BOOS ESBS OOOH £46664 83688 ‘Fine Feathers Make Fine Birds” Women are not all Beautiful but all women arc attractive who are beautifully dressed. Beauty unadorned may do in poetry, but the nicely fitting gown is the desire of every true woman. Priestley’s dress ARE WRAPPED.~ | fabrics have due much to realize a woman’s ideals by offer- ing, in their texture, appearance, fit and wear,a character and di-tinction, which no other derss goods, however excellent, have quite attained to. Andnow Priestley’s have something new. The “ Eudora’’ is all the rage, It is even better than the Henriettas so much admired. The “ Eudora” has somethicg which the Henrietta © tacks—to wit: greater width, greater weight, and a superior dust shedding quality. And then it has an exquisite surface which gives it an almosi regal presence. Wrap- ped on “ The Varnished Board,” and the name, Priestly, stamped on every five yards. KEPPFPPEPPP SSPE PEE TET PE PE EET PPT PE PPS EPP P PTT TT ON WHICH THE GOODS * — a ee CAIRNS BROTHERS Successors to Cairns & MeLean, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. L. Monuments, Tablets and Headstones In Blue, White and Brandon Italian Marble and Freestone. 7 Ww i ly deal P. E. Isla: SCOTCH GRANITE, 005.2 "Scotcn Gravite on baud, i Low prices for 30 days to reduce our °x‘ra large stock. Wholesale Sold tt and retail by Ge E CharloHugh 5 s,etown : HOWARD FLOUR If you have se ai used it ask for it and take no other, ALL RELIABLE GROCERS KEEP IT. octl—246 Creme de la Creme «» La Fayette CIGARS and CIGARETTES Are for sale in every store in the city. Give them a trial and convince yourself that you are smoking the finest. Manufactured by J. M. FORTIER, Montreal. sept24—dy & wky tf True Lovers of delicious TEA are satisfied when supplied with our lines of English Breakfast Congou, India, China, Oolong and Ceylon Teas. We believe our 22c. Blend to be the best on the market for quality, strength, flavor and price. The public realize a good article when they use it, and to-day our sales on this Tea are larger than ever before. We carry a full line of Canned Goods, Jams and Jellies, Fisk, Boned and Skinned Dried Codfish Flour, Meal, ete., which we will sell at the very lowest prices. Our aim is to bay the most reliable goo and sell them at the lowest prices. Ezzs tak2n in ex change for cash or goods. Goods delivered to all parts of the city. WILLIAM GRANT & CO., Charlottetown, June,19, 1895—135 w QUEEN STREET.