EL Ne | —_—- ~THE DAILY EXAMINER. | TERMS : Four Dollars a Year NEW SERIES CHARLOTTETOWN, ee ee ee —r mR memcnn re P. a —eeeeeEeEE—EE—EEEEE = ——_- = Steel Plows! Steel Plows! CALENDAR FOR SEPTEMBER, 1894. i Quar » day +h 50.5m, p. m.. Fe sos | fF M if lay 0m mid., S Last Quar 22nd day, 8h 19.6m. a.m, SE \ Mi 9th day Lt $1.5n a wW.. N eee — Week i Sun | High rise sets water ——_————- | _ | ae | — h m h m after’n Saturday 15 26 6 341 ll 55 2 | Sunday <7; 32] morn 3 |} Monday 28] 30 0 30 4 lay 28 | ae 3; W esday | 26 | l 46 §| Thursday | 32] 24) 232 | Fridas | v2} 39 ® | Saturday | 0} 4 42 | >| Sunda | 1s | 6 6 i Mf AY 16 i 719 iuesday ’ 14] 8 18 | Wed lay i 12 9 06 Thursday lo} 9 38 i4 riday i s 10 14 I Satu ay > | © li 42] Sanday ‘ i i it 13 MI Ay T ri Hn @ “ 47 ‘7 | aft 17 i y i 0 54 = | 1 i oe 15 « | , > 40 - ‘ i ) lo a4 | 49) 6 4 4) ! ) 7 | Ss | < ay | s 45 | 8 54 27 3} 9 39 28 } 4) 10 17 2 lay l 7 10 53 ‘ ‘ 62,5 387; Ii 28 NM DarLy NewsParer Tne Leapine or P. E. Istanp, . Levery af oon, from the office of EXAMINER Pu kLisHING ComPpayy, in the n House Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. We have the following reliable goods which we will sell very cheap for (IN ADVANCE) . ‘ ’ : : we Yuen go} On Credit terms: - a M a - 200 | REX fanrTus a : _ . ‘ ‘ i Ais ° a ‘ : Oxe MoNtH... "Oss Frost & Wood Steel Plows, Proctor’s and MecKenzie’s Potato Diggers, Holl’s and i ‘ ° \ ; is Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the | Dickieson’s Fan Mills and Seed Se paraters, Holl’s Threshing Machines, Fleury’s Grain , > . T Tr 2 ‘, rt United States | Crushers, Root Cutters, Straw Cutters and Ensilage Cutters (with Universal Carrier ADVERTISING RATES | attached), Tudhope’s Road Carts, ete. Buy from us and save money For smal! advertisements which are ordered for only one or two weeks the charge is 5 cents per inch for the frst insertion, and & rents en ‘“ontinuation. Rate cards are furnis mn application at the office. Special contra prices at a reduced rate are quoted | for advertisements four inches in size or larger, which are to run for three moaths or longer No special notices inserted unless paid for ai the rate of 10 cents per line, and under no cireurr stances will such paid notices appear in the local column. S-ecial discounts made on all advertise- anected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Pientes. ote the same meats cor Iniess the itive is paid Tuas EXaMIner is considered by our ia No notices will be inserted with | regular rate of 10 cents per | Merchants aod Manufacturers te be the lead- | ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- que the most valuable advertising medium | through which to make their announcements | public, is abundantly proved by the ‘act that in order to accommodate ou, auvertisers we have been compelled to enlarge the paper to ite present size. Tue Datcy Examiner is for sale by the fol- low ig agents R. H. Masen, Post Office, Charlottetown J. Meintyre. Malpeque Road, r c. Paul, Lower Spring Park Road, * W. M. Coffin, Grafton Street, " S. Grey, cor. Water and Prince St. D. Chappell, Prince Street, Pazaar Store, Queen Street, - Geo, Carter & Co., Queen Street. S& Gray, News Siall, om Bh Eaten and Ou the trains M. & T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- Merside | “utherland, Souris. Hon. D. Gordon, Georgetown, Db. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G&G. M. Clarke, Alberton A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge i a i i ’ r . . The Weekly Examiner ® issued every Friday morning from the Publishers’ office. [t is made up of matter Which has appeared in the Daily editions, and ‘lass Weekly newspaper—interesting Sn full of the latest news. is a first m for Tae Weexty Exam. , post paid te any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for Tak DatLy EXaMINER. The subseri ptt INE} Newfoundland Markets il. T. McCOUBREY, General Commission Merchant. Vats and Produce of all kinds, Ship- ments from P. E. Island carefully attend- eitoand account sales given promptly. Wi sr taye ami Stores Correspondence li. T. McCOUBREY, P. O. Box 307 St. John’s, N. F. eplim—-aly to wy am r Constitutional Weakness, Imprudent ivoidable Neglect or Exposure, rf Uu pable I indise retion, YOUR HEALTH Is BROKEN DOWN, axl you need a Toxte Mepicine, you can aflord to experiment on yourself with | USE Puttner's Emulsion, | A. HORNE Charlottetown, August 29, Is94—dy & wky GRAND BAZAAR. ‘The CONGREGATION OF ST. DUNSTAN’s. lottetown, intend holding a GRAND DIOCESAN BAZAAR Char- n aid of their proposed NEW CATHEDRAL, IN—— Hillsborough Skating Rink, Fitzroy St. —UOMMENCING MONDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 24th NEXT, And Lasting Several Days. —_— There will be a profusion of USEFUL AND FANCY ARTICLES, which will be disposed of at reasonable prices. | There will also be DINNER, TEA and REFRESII- MENT TABLES, where visitors can procure everything in these lines at moderate rates. This will be the grandest affair of in the Province. ; Parties visiting the Provincial Exhibition prove the opportunity by taking in the Bazaar should im- A FIRST-CLASS ENTERTAINMENT each evening. Admission, 10 cents. By order of Committee. A. J, QUIRK, SECRETARY ugust®3, 1894—All Island wky prs eow tl Lst sept, then wky a Charlottetown, A : — : nen (KER' CATARRH w for t past twenty vears has been Cred ed } ® leading gy Phy sic .ane of the M:; arit , ax the Great Health Restorer. I i nr ‘ i {3 inco ym parab le iv you t sll eood Drugyists at 50c.a bert lw—septld rey TO HIRE. A fis ss* Tlorse and Buggy, also a ib es i Pheeton. Enquire at G. G JURY'S Jewelry Store, north side Queen Sq are pposite Post Office, Charlotte- bowr 2aw (w f) 3m—may25 —FURKR-—— Creameries and Cheese’ ‘ability. Factories. The ver est work Jobe for Cr WE MAKE A KIND OF guaranteed on all ries and Cheese Factories, SPECIALTY OF THIS WORK M. STEVENSON, MANUFACTURER OF Tinware, Stove Pipe, &e¢., QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, ,. = All orders pro mptly attended to, apI— tf ISLAND. NCR RE’ safe ue o CTUALL TARRH, COLD IN THE ee. Se aMRHAL HEAD- o— 7 Orr nk AnD DEAFNESS, INFLUEN ‘ NB. Bold ee Price, 25 cents. M’fd. by THE H 1.WKER MEDICINECOY..L td., St. John, N. RUN VOWN Patronize We make a specialty of bringing Fine Watches to keep close time. Special attention given to Railroad ‘Men’s Watches. Correct time your watches will keep if we repair them. Watches and Jewelry at| ~~; lowest prices in the city. G. G. JURY, North Side Queen Sauare, Opposite Post Office. Charlotteiown, August 1, 1894. kind ever held, will be given | ~ WATCHES Watchmakers of recognized | & CO. JOHN CALDWELL. JOHN MAIR ESTABLISUED I885. JOHN CALDWELL & 00,, Fruit and Produce Commis- sion Merchants, and 131 ST. PETE MONTREAL. 187 McGILL . STS. Malpeque Oysters a specialty. Corres- pondence solicited. Telephone L876. augl4—3m pat Tickets to Boston. Buy Your Tickets for Boston by $. 8. “FLORIDA,” (Canada Atlantic and Plant Line), nema ROM ince W. W. CLARKE, Ticket Agent, | Corner Queen and Water Streets, | Charlottetown, Jun 1e 22, 1894" ‘Quebec Steamship Co. | STEAMER MIRAMICHI | Leaves Montreal Leaves Ch’town 6th August, 10th August, 7a CF ae OC | 3rd September, 7th September, > imé «* Zit « lst October, 5th October, lbth th. Mh * 2d November, | calling at Father Point, Gaspe, Mal- Bay, Perce and Summerside. Freight handled carefully and carried at reasonable rates. Passengers will find this a delightful route. Full particulars from CARVELL BROS., Agents. aug7—wed thu Provincial Loan. ' : Provincia, TREASURY, ; Prince Edward Island, 25th June, 1894. Under authority of the Act of last Ses | sion, 57 Vic., Cap. 6, the Government of Prince Edward Island is now prepared to receive, from any person or persons, Tem- porary Loans, at 4 per cent. interest, on call or on such termsas may be agreed | upon, This will afford a good opportunity for the investment of a large or small sums for | short or long periods. ANGUS McMILLAN, Prav Treasurer. june225—pat Columbia Bicycle Tires A difference of opinion exists among riders regarding the merits of the single and inner tube tires, and a choice of the two styles is offered on the 1894 Columbia wheels. You can have the strong resillient and easily repaired Co- lumbia single tube or their new inner tube, which you will unhesitatingly “ronounce far ahead of any «iver tire of this | type. Full parti. wars in catalogue, whick you can 9’)tain from | R.M. Young, Agent. FOR SALE. The Dwelling House on Fitzroy Street, } | now in my possession. The pens | may be inspected daily from 1 to 4 p. m. For terms apply to Messrs. M. & 0 JAMES McLEOD. 1 | ; McLeod, or to the subscriber. j augé—3w m ws E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, ee Cash or | “Shorter” Pastry and “Shorter” Bills, We aretalking about a “ shortes ing’’ which will not cause indi- gestion. Those who “know a thing or two” about Cooking (Marion Harland among a host of others) are using COTTOLENE instead of lard. No:: but the purest, healthiest and cleanest ingredients go to make up Cot- Lard isn’t healthy, and is not always clean, Those who use Cottolene will be healthier and wealthier than those who use lard—Ulealthier because they will get bread; wealthier because they will get “shorter” grocery bilis—for Cottolene costs no more than lard and goes twice as far—so is but half as expensive, tolene, “ shorter” Dyspeptics delightin it! Physicians endorse itl Chefs praise it! Cooks extol it! Housewives weloome it! All live Grocers zell it! Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO,, Wellington and Ann Streets, MONTREAL. THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. CAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000. A Society established with a view to disseminate the taste for arts, to encourage and help artists, Incorporated by Letters Patent of the Government of Canada, the 27th February, 1893. GALLERY OF PAINTINGS Nos. 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame St., Montreal. The hichest Gallery of Paintings in Canada. Aim‘s3i91 Free, All the Paintings are originals, mostly from the French school, the leading a ern school. Eminent Artists, such as Francais Rochegrosse, Aublet, Baron, Pezant, Petit- jean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a great many others, are members of this Society. 68 members of this Society are exhibitors in the Salon in Paris. Sale of Paintings at easy distribution by lot every week. Price of tickets, 25cts, Ask for our Catalogues and Circulars. aug29—mwf tf terms, and THEY DON’T ACREE. Ponn’s Exrracr on |e apaai em bigger. INSTANT RELIEF Sting of MOSQUITO BITES Heat of SUNBURN Ta A ee vs The universally rec COOLING ognized Specific for REFRESHINC PILES. (See directions HEALING with each bottle.) For aut Exrernar Wounps anp InrLaMep SurFaces A WonperRFuL EALER,. Bathe the Aching Head or the Swollen Feet with POND’S EXTRACT. What comfort! When the mosquitoes send subs‘ itutes to do their work, then use something else ‘‘just as good * in place of Pond's Extract. But when — mosquitoes come themselves, use —— t genuine Pond’s Extract. Made onl by fed 's Exrracr Co., 76 Fifth Ave., N.Y. City. Je-sey Mosquito a small size. Have ‘em much bigger. What’s the time? If you have a Cough it is time you were taking GRAY’S RED SYRUP SPRUCE GUM | THE OLD STANDARD CURE FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS. Gray's Syrup has been on trial for more than 50 years and the verdict of the people is that it is the best remedy known. 25c¢. and 6. per bottle. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Prepnixcrens MONTREAL. NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, &c. The subseriber is now prepared to make Surveys of Land, run Boundary and Division Lines, furnish Pians, ete.; also, Mechanical and Architectural Drawings, Plans, Specifi- cations and Estimates, J. P. NICHOLSON, Land Surveyor, Pownal Street. Charlottetown, Aug, 25, I894—dy & wy | i “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. SEPTEMBER 15, 1894. LIEUT. SCHWATKA WRITES OF GI- GANTIC ICEBERGS. The Frozen Mountains That Inspire Awe Around the North Pole Thrilling Arctie Scenes—The Terrible Dangers Which Attend the Submerced Monsters. An i ‘hse iceberg is one of the sta- pendous s, cetaci-s of nature, and can only fe compared with other awe Msplriny Sights, as an earthquake, an avalauche, or some of earth's convulsions in presence of which puny man stands dumb and over- owered with the sense of his own weak- ess and Jittheness, One who haa ever sree an immense stately mountain of ice weuli not eredit it with eratic movements or capers ofan undignified nature, sv im- pressive is it in ite awful grandeur, Still, hey will ofien vary their monotoneus aud grotesque character on in-vements by Couble somersaults tricas of the mo t he overturnuiugand breaking up of a mor ibs Mountain I have sivit never witnessed bat one such and surely it looked waters of the end «f all things had cone. Peete & as if the ‘‘yreat and Immense by as if a uours across # that but a short time before was as as amill pond. Great flying flecks dashed down from dizzy and the slirpery sides were atu st covered with cascades formed from ihe waters that had been lifted up by the rapidly overturning mass. Our first intimation of the coming con- ihe deep were bres king np” Vee Went thunderins uir.cane had been raging fo hie » qulet f toutn were elplits at ove, ; Yulsiou was a dull shock against our ship’s side under the water, somewhat as if a sib-marine blast had been exploded, and a moment after a huge rising of the sea near oue side of the iceberg was apparent, and through this vast mass of uplifted waters broke a snow-whixe berg that had been detached from the crystal mountain far down in the ocean's depth, and that came the surf:ce with a swiftness hat apparently lifted it half way out of ie sea and kept it spinning and splashing ior full five minutes afterwards. Ihe release of this portion of the moun- from its frozen fetters far below had disturbed the stable equilibrium of the parent berg, and but a few moments after- wards it began its stupendous swaying, as fsome earthquake were influencing it untilin one cf its gigantic careenings it tell over and seemed to be buried in amass of milk-like foam that sent tr: mendous tidal waves tearing across the great depths that would have engulfed any ves- sel near. It only sunk from sight » mo- ment, when it rapidly reappeared with a creamy crest that poured down ita ioy tides in a shallow sheet of white, Woe to the ship that ventures too near one of these monsters of the deep just as it has determined to give a display of its Arctic antics, for if it be broadside to the tremendous tidal wave that comes curling outward from the centre of commotion, and has not time to turntend on to meet the rapid rosh of watere, it may be thrown upon its beam ends, as a sailor would say, 0: thrown over on its side, by the steep front of the wave, then filled with water and sunk. Such accidents have been known to hap- yen inthe iceberg region, and probably some of the mysterious disappearances of cruisers in polar regions may be accounted forin this way. So it behooves the navi- gators in Northern seas not to approach too near these Arctie serobate when they are feeling in their best modes for a little quiet fun of their own. Aud they generally do give them a wide berth when sailing in these icy seas, not ly fearing the frightful waves which they set in motion, but when they turn a salt water somersanit, if they approach directly alongside, one of the ascending masses Of ice may come up from below and crush in the bottom of the ship. Then again if the boat has only sailing power, as isthe case with the majority of the crattin these Northern sean she is liable t) meet the most erratic guste of wind aud sudden squalls that can upeet her quite as »nddenly as a tidal wave, Every one has noticed how much more powerful and erratic are the winds around the base of a very Ligh building in the city than elsewhere. And so with a great ice- berg. It catches all the wandering winds of high heaven, and directs them down- wards, winding and twisting around its base, until it is very unsafe for a sailing ves el to venture near these eddying gusts, So between the little icebergs popping up from the water below and failing down trom above, and the chance of the colossus of them all turning such antics and capers as to fairy set old ocean frantio with ax c.tement, coupled with the twisting toraa- does the berg grinds down to its base, it is altogether au uncertain undertaking to sail too near one of these crystal moun- tains, The Arctic whaling masters, who are the best navigators in these ice-laden waters, call the little bergs that break off the big « either above or below the water “iceberg calves,” and they have no friendship fur them, for reasons I have already given, althongh they do pull up alongside a small calf and cut enough ice to fill up their iceboxes and have enongh ice wateraboard until they en- counter another, Ihave spoken of them as little icebergs, and yet they are bigger than the largest building in York or ( hie Wo, (by con p «wiring to fan ‘hes, line, much New Each one of these little i on) ieeberys still sheds smaller ones is th y siowly crumble to pieces on their mare. to the equator, and the huge bery itself with which we began the de- | scription was only a calf that had once broken off the forward face of glacier, or moving river of ice, So they keep dividing and subdividing as they march along until the mountain that broke off from the Greenland glacier in the Arctic seus really becomes millions of molehills of ice in the temperate waters of the warmer seas. and then disappears altogether. And every time they split asunder we have another acrobatic per- fo:mance. It may be only the smailer ones perform if the dismemberment is not of enough importance to disturb the par- ent Lerg, while oftentimes they set up a polar dance that lasts some minutes, Some Arctic authorities say that they have seen Att DISEASES of the blood are cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which by its vitalizing, enriching, and aiterative effects makes only PURE BLOOD. The general passenger and freight agent of the L. C. R. at Winnipeg reports a much freer movement visible all along their line in passenger travel and the Ausrtalian boats have had for several weeks more freight consigned to them than they pos- sibly could carry. USE SKUDA’S DISCOVERY, the g ceat Blood and NerveRemedy. & grand TITANS OF THE NORTH. | Single Copies Two Cents these mountains fall apart; and when this occurs a thin pale smoke or light vapor goes up from the sides of contact, and if the sun be just right for such effect, beau tiful rainbows can be seen arching from one crystal peak to another, which coupled with the foaming waters underneath forms a wonderfully beautiful sight. The sounds made by the sunderings of | these masesof ice is like the roar ofa thousand cannons, and joined with the hissing of a score of tidal waves is a sound that can be heard for many miles. An Arctic iceberg has been seen that was twenty miles wide, and forty miles in length and four hnndred feet in height; « square township or two could break off | from this and hardly affect it. On side of this monster was a big berg whose bounding capes were twelve miles apart, ' and into this an English emigrant ship sailed bound for Australia, and seeking shelter from a storm; but it was a disas trous thing to do, for the ship was wreck- ed therein and many lives lost. 5 But of all the strange performances cut | by those colossal masses of ice, none is more singular than one I saw in the en- trance to Hudson Straits. A furious gale was raging that was driving a drifting ice- pack before it as if it were aherd of fright enedanimals, The great flat fields and floes of ice were speeding eastward before the whistling wind almost as fast as our snug littie ship, for we were under double- reefed sails, so furious was the storm. Looming up out of the drifting gusts and whirling eddies of the snow, bearing westward, came the pearly sails of an Arctic ship, a mighty iceberg, that with a superb serenity in the awful storm cut its way directly through all the obstacles that faced its front. It bore down in the very teeth of the wind, crushing the fields ard floes as if they had been so many egg shells, and scattering the giacial splinters port and starboard as a swift-rolling wagon-wheel scatters the dust. This mast- less hulk was obeying the mandates of a marine current down in the depths of oid ocean’s bed. As six-sevenths of an iceberg is sub- one j Montreal, P. Q. A Marvelous Medicine Whenever Given a Fair Trial Hood’s Proves Its Merit. The following letter is from Mr. J. Alcide Chaussé¢, architect and surveyor, No. 153 Shaw Street, Montreal, Canada: C. L. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: “Gentlemen:—I have been taking Hood's Sarsaparilla for about six months and am glad : » say thatit has done mea great deal of good ast May my weight was 152 pounds, but since HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES I began to take Hood's SarsapariWa it has in- creased to 163. I think Hood's Sarsaparilla isa marvellous medicine and am very much pleased with it.” oe ALCIDE CHATSSE. Hood’s Pills cure liver ills, "constipation, Wilic usness, jau ndice, sic kh headache, * indigestion. BIBS HGESTIO AND PURIFIES THE ; BREATH ADAMS TUTT: FRUTT! no imitations to be palmed off on you. eee Allow raw ; PPAR ew” merged, and the superficial current be- ing shallow in the Straits, while the air being 80 much lighter than water that even a gale can form but a small component of the forces that determine the track of these Titans of the North, we were greatly awed and edified by the singular yet superb spectacle of anicebeg sailing directly against the wind, and forcing its way through solid fields of ice that would have crushed and sunk the mightiest man-of-war of modern times, This scene is one that can never be forgotten, and is so strange a one that few have ever witnessed it, Let the voyager to the realm of eternal ice and desolation encounter this and the overturning of an immense iceberg, and he can truly say he has seen one of the most wonderful sights that can dazzle the eye of man. FREDE RICK Sc HW ATK A. A Kussian Fruit yy The Russian government proposes to hold an international exposition of fruit culture and products at St. Petersburg, under the auspices of his majesty the Czar, beginning Sept. 22 and closing Noy. 12. The international exhibition will be held with the object of showing the present con- dition in Russia and other countries of the enitivation of fruits and vegetables, of viniculture, the cultivation of medicinal plants, herticulture, and of the manufac- ture of their produets. A congress of pomologists will be convened simuitane- ously with the exhibition. The exhibita will comprise the following sections: Fresh fruits; fresh vegetables; dried fruit and vegetables, treated by other processes; wine, cider, perry and other fruit beverages; hops and medicinal herbs; seeds; fruit trees and shrubs; horticultural implements and ap pliances, and technicality of production; literary, scientific and educational asses- sories, collections, plans, etc. Application for further information can be made to the offices of the international exhibition of fruit culture 1894, at St. Petersburg, Imperial Agricultural Museum, Fontanka, 10. The Russian government makes the usual concessions in relation to customs and railroad transportation. ~ The Seat of Melancholia. _ The opinion has been expressed by some physicians that this disease, in certain cases, is purely functional, and that these changes which are often found in the nery- ous system are merely secondary, and are not really the pathology of the ailment. Some interesting investigations have been made of this subject by Richardson, of London, and to these experiments is prob- ably due the attention which has been given tothe liver as the seat of melan- cholia. Noticing that all diseases occur ring below the diaphragm are attended by depression of spirits, and that diseases of the thoracic cavity are not thus attended, the result of his observations is expressed in the discovery, as claimed, that the seat preserved or | ——— TO CURE DEBILITY, Loss of — sleeplessness and all nerv- ous trou physicians recommend Campbell's Quinine Wine. Do not let your druggist pursuade you that some other is just as good. K. CAMPBELL & Co., Mfrs., MONTREAL, Waich your Weight If you are losing flesh your sys is drawing on your latent strength. Something is wrong. Take Scott’s Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil, to give your system its need= Strength and restore your weight. Physicians, over, endorse it. Ben’ ‘tbe decel elvcd by Substitutes! . Delleville. All Druggists. 60c. 4 $1, ed healthy > world | | Equat to any Imported x. ‘Take ny Ade ™ 4 Insist on ‘Qe 10 ¢ Cae Soe foe Ba = Been 7 Be Ve Ere a srt >... WEARE Showing our new stock of Spring & Summer Tweeds, Worsted & Fancy Overcoatings. of this trouble is the solar plexus—that is, Also, a beautiful assortment of Panting there is an obstructed flow of blood to the | Our goods are all new, and our prices just solar plexus and a consequent imperfect | Tight. We can dress a man for a moder- nouirshment of this ganglion, In regard | #*¢ sun It willecost nothing to look to relation between diseases of the iver | through our stock and name your price. aud melancholia Hammond is quoted as amoug those who have taken the view that a considerable number of cases of melan- eholia are the result of abscess of the liver, and that the aspiration of this abscess, or removal by surgery, will bring about relief of the melancholia Measuring a Koom, In a catalogue recently iasued the fol- lowing rules are given for the measurement of rooms to determine the exact amount of paper required to cover the surfaces, As most paper when trimmed is eighteen inches wide and twenty-four feet to the single piece, a piece will contain thirty-six equare feet, Measure the length and height of each wal] in feet and multiply. Add together the number of feet of each wal! getting the total number of square feet Divide the total by thirty-six, which will give y ber of pieces required f: side wail square uu the num yr Allow one-half piece of paper for each door and window. To sallow for waste and matching it is safer to divide by thirty-three instead of thirty-six. To fird wemies of single pieces required for ceiling, multiply length by width in feet aud divide . thirty-three, —_—_—_—_—_—__ Testing his Honesty, Your druggist is honest if when you ask him for a bottle of Scott’s Emulsion he gives you just what youask for. He knows this is the bestform in which to take Cod Liver Oil. -_- - Alexander Gibson commenced on July 23rd, to build the six-mile Black Brook extension of the Canada Eastern railway. The line was opened for traffic on Septem- rbe ll to travel, established house. increase, and position permanent if suited- We Will Genranias Satisfaction. 4.J.MURPHY , ’ Merchant Teilor, June I 1894.—tu fs tf SKODA. This beautiful ship was built by Mr. Cc. Purgees, a prominent shipowner, of Walt: v N.5., and named for the popular rem. ‘ + that are doing 80 much good in the | Canada. It will carry Skoda’s Discovery, Sk dias Lictle Tablets, Skoda’s German Soap, Skoda’s Ointment and Skoda’s Pile Cure, not only to keep her own crew in — but to introduce them into foreign rts. In proof of their high standing read ihe following. Rervous Prostration & Chronic Diarrhea CAN BE CURED. [have used several bottles of Skoda’s Dis- very in my family, and regard it an excel- lont remedy, espec fally for nervous prostra- tion and chrouic diarrhea. In my extensive trave is, Thear frequent and favorable ref- erence to the 7 rome dies. . ISAIAH WALLACE, ™ A. General Home wise mary for the st Home Board of the Mari: ime Provinces. Medical Advice Free. SKODA DISCOVERY GO., LTD., WOLFVILLE, W. $. ~ WANTED.—An 1 honest, aclive gentleman with expenses id, eye | Salary B65 x MONTHLY wi Enclose reference.—-THE DomMINION PANY, 317 Omaha Building, Chicage. julyl4 law (eal) tf Com, | i