or Is the baby too thin? Does he increase too slows ly in weight? Are you in constant fear - he will be ill? Then give him more flesh. | Give him more power to | resist disease. He certainly | needs a fat-forming food. | Scort’s Emulsion is just that food. It will make the baby plump; increase the weight; bring color to the cheeks, and prosperity to the whole body. Thin children take to it as naturally as they do to their miik. soc. and $1.00, all druggists, SCOT)! & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronta, “Quebec Stamship Co’y (Limited) | Proposed Sailings from | VONTREAL and QUEBEC During Soason of 1899. | FOR PICTOU. N:S. — CALLING AT— ”~ her Point, Gaspe, Mal Bay, Perce, Cape Cove, Suns merside, Char. lottetow and Souris. From Moatrea! From Ch’town at 2 p. m. at 6p. m, co 7th Jvle do 10th July do Slet du do 24th do do 14th Aug. do Tih Aug. do 28th do do 2lst do Jo 11th Sept. do 4th Sept. dc 26th do do 18th do do 9th Oct. do 2nd Oct. 9m 23rd do do 16h do w 6th Nov. do 30th do do 13th Nov e return ing will leave Pictou, N.S. every @!‘erraie Monday at noon, on arrival of raing from Hatifex and St. Jobn, call- ing at Charlottetown, Summerside, Perce, Gu+pe, Mal Bay and Father Point. Subjec’ ‘9 change should circumstance eqvi're it CARVELL BROS, Agents § 8 City of Ghent PICKEORD & BLACK: ‘ U a City of Ghent will sail from Chak kk tictown every Friday até o’cloc during il« season of 1$$9 for Halifax, calling at Sin merside, Port Hastings, Port Hawks- tury, Arichat, Canso, Isaac Harbor, Salmon iver, Sheet Harbor, returning will leave Is lifax every Tuesday at 6 p m making some calls. The steamer has excellent passenger accc modations. Saloon amidships. Specia ic w treights will be given this season J urther information apply to W W CLARK. Age . Ss. . ‘ ©1Town May 27 tf ike Charlottetown Steam Nav- gation Co., Ltd. STEAMERS... Northumberland & Princess Leave as below every day (Sun~ days excepted) From POINT DU CHENE (on arrival of #fieroon train from St. John) for Sum- merside, connecting there with express ‘rain for Charlottetown. Frm SUMMERSIDE (on arrivel of morning train from Charlottetown (for Poivt Due Chene connecting with day tre‘o for 3t. John. Connecting at Moncton with train for Canada aod at St Jobn with steamers of International Line end D. A. R. steamers aod railways for United States and Canada From PICTOU (on arrival of day train from Halifax) for Charlottetown. Frora CHARLOTTETOWN, seven a. m,.,. for Pictou, (connecting there with day train for Cape Breton and Balifax, at Halifax with C. 4.&.P Line for Boston. Throvgh tickets to be had at Grand Trunk,C anadian Pacific, Intercolonial and P.E. 1. Railways, and on the Company’s Steame 1+ connecting lines in United : F. W. HALES, Srenagrany ¢ 2,PE! | Ash, Of Special Interest =} to our Farmers * Ornamental Trees and Shrubs. Year by year we find a growing de e amongst our people to plant around | A Ca heir dwellings and along the road-side ornamental and = shrubbery. kvery farmer thinks more or of planting some trees to make his home more attractive, but the dairy farmer’s trees less time is often too fully occupied to at- tempt planting and caring for any con siderable number of varieties. The first step to be taken, and the one too often neglected when planning for the ornamentation of the home in this way, is the reparation of the soil fora nice lawn. If only a small place is to be planted, the Norway and Sugar Maple, the American and European Elm, the Austrian and White Pine, and the Norway and Black Spruce make very hand specimens. For larger lawns the ve named varieties with the Colorado Blue spruce, Pyramidal Arbor-vitae, Purple Birch, White Birch, European Linden, European Mountain S Ime } A0¢ ‘ American Ash, Box Elder, English Oak and Red Maple. In plant- ing trees abouta house they should be arranged so as to preserve an outlook when the trees have grown. Imitate nature as far as possible, so that from the windows of the house the view shall be pleasing. Do not plant too close to the house or overcrowd the lawn. Always bear in mind that the | trees are planted to remain, and the planter should have in mind at the time of planting the size the tress will attain when they are 25 or 30 years old so thatthe mistake of close planting may be avoided. A Good Lawn. There is nothing so attractive around a place as a good lawn. In order to have such a lawn the ground must be thoroughly worked up and enriched. It is impossible to form a good lawn by simply ploughing up a piece of worn- out land and seeding it down to grass. Plough deeply and thoroughly work in a good dressing of well rotted stable manure, then harrow and grade off the land so as to make it as even as possible for seeding. A mixture has been tried of 5 pounds of Kentucky Blue Grass to 1 pound of White Clover, sown at the rate of 5 bushels per acre, which has madea good lawn. An- other mixture for lawn seeding that has given good results is pounds of White Clover to a bushel of half and half Red Top Blue, Grass at the rate of 5 bushels’per acre the Red Top stands than the Blue Grass, butCrought beiter the land isinclined to be wet or shaded, the first named mixture would probably give the best satisfaction. If not sown thickly, the Red Top is liable to grow bunchy, and make an_ uneven lawn. The seed should be sown carefully so that a good even growth will be obtain- ° ed. The best way to cover the seed ) is to scatter, witha sieve, fine rich earth over it ; should it be rakedin the greatest care is necessary to get it covered evenly, after which roll the lawn thoroughly. The best time to prepare a lawn isin the spring and it will require little attention again that season except to keep down any weeds that may grow. Grass and Grain for Working Horses ]. A. MacDonald, of Hermanville, writes to the Country Gentleman: I have always believed that we farmers feed too much hay to our horses. Cer- tainly we feed fully twice as much as our friends in the city, and only about School Children's Byes Defective eyes stunt the mind Can you expect fair progress in school or success in business if so handicapped ? Examination of children for glasses is a special feature of our Optical Department. G. F. Hutcheson, OPTICIAN AND JEWELER, Charlottetown. THE DalLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETUWN, OCTOBER 6 1839 ERT IT EE half as much grain as horse-owners in the city feed. Since June rst, I have been feeding my horses by a novel! Mr. W. H. Odell, of Brockville, Strong method, which I find eminently satis factory. Atthe end of May, this year, I find myself without hay for my horses and a large amount of work to do. | could procure hay from some of my neighbors but of very poor quality. This kind of hay I did not want. Up to this time the grass pasture was very poor, but along toward June it began to be fair. I therefore decid ed to get along without hay, and d pend entirely on pasture and grain. On the evening of June 1, I turned my work horses to pasture. In the morning I teok them upand gave them a feed of oats and bran, about five quarts per horse. ‘That’s all they St tor breakfast, in addition to what grass they had eaten. At noon they were fed no hay, only a_ feed of oats and bran—six quarts per animal, and no- thing else. At four o'clock, as is usual with us, we took them up for tea, watered them and fed another feed of oats. At sundown, when we knock off work, the horses were turned out to pasture. This has been and is still the “bill of fare” for my horses—-grass during the night. and grain (about a half-bushel of oats, in three feeds) during the day. Asa result my horses are doing splendidly and gaining all the time. Oats After Oats. All farmers know that oats are an exhaustive crop, and also one that it is especially hard to get a clover or grass seeding with. Where winter grain is not grown, and oats are the chief small grain raised, one failure to seed is apt to be followed by others, until the land becomes so exhausted that neither oats nor grass can be grown. Most of these failures to seed with spring grain come from pleughing the land in early spring, thus turning up a lower strata soil that has not been properly mellow- ed by freezing. ‘The remedy for this is to autumn plough the land leaving it rough, and then so soon as it is fit to work, cultivate it lightly and put in the grain and grass seed before ploughing can be done, if the frost freezes the soil an inch or two after the grain and grass seed are sown, it will be all the better for both. If the second crop of oats fails to give a grass and clover seeding, plough the stubble in the autumn after the oats are off and sow wheat or rye, seeding with grass seed in the autumn and with clover seed in the sprirg. This rarely fails to give a good grass catch and if the season be favourable, there will be some clover with it, even on poor thin soil. Qteeeceeeneeeeeeegenee DR. GAUTHIER ENDORSES The statement that histite to... « Bite GHASE’S his lifeto... 4 Kidney Liver Pills Dr. J. T. A. Gauthier, of Valleyfield, Que, writes: ‘‘I, the undersigned, certify that the contents of this letter, in regard to the cure of Mt. Isadore Major, by the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, is correct.” Here is Mr. Major's letter: ‘‘ After 20 years of suffering from backache and kidney disease I owe my life to Dr. A. W. Chase. I had tried an endless variety of remedies to no avail, and on the recommendation of a friend began the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. Two pills that night and two next morning gave great relief, and I continued their use until now [am completely cured. My friends are surprised and pleased to see me well again, for I spent hundreds of dollarsin vain trying to get cured. Befove using Dr. Chase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills my back ached so I could not put on my shoes and couldn't lift @0 Ibs. My shoulders were sore, I had headachesanda bad taste in the mouth. These troubles are now entirely pues and what I say I am ready te pa have told my friends of my wonder cure, and many have been greatly benefited by aang these pills,” Dr, Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills are the great- est kidney cure the world has ever known One pill a Se °p. a box at all dealers, of Kdmanson, Bates & Co., Toronta, Go Bare Footed. No Never, = When yos can buy girls’ nice Strap Slippers and Laced Shoes; also Children’s Butt on ed and Laced Boots for 50cts PAIR ome A T —— J.H- BELL'S See window for next tw days. NOTICE. The Fire Wardens of Souris offer for sale Debentures tothe amt. of $2000, for 18 years st 4% interest. buy a Fire Hand waas C. Cc. 197 3 Also want to CARLTON, JR., tf Sec ’y»Tre | } | | | BY THE ST. LAWRENCE, Believer in Dodd’s Kidney Pills, srock ville, Oct 2.—Nowhere in Ontario are Dodd’s Kidney Pills more appreciated than among the St Lawrence River, aod the Great Lakes. Where there is water there is damp and denger from rheuma- tism end colds, The kidneys are the organs most suseeptible to colds and the getting out of order therefrom causes rheu- rmati-ta, tackache, etc., Mr W H Odell, of Brockville, writes to an erquirer ae fol- luws t-— Brockille, Aug 28th, Dear Sir,—I received your letter ard intended to answer it before, but I am ashamed to sey neglected to do so, Dodd’s Kidney Pills have done me the world of good. Tovey are a splendid cure for the kidceys and Jam always ready to say 60. I remain, Yours truly, W. H. Ope.t. Weary of Experimenting With salves, suppositories and ointments and dreading aturgical cderation, scores and hundreds have turned to Dr a. W. Chase’s ointment and found it an «jbsolute cure for pile ‘he fisrt application brings relief from the terrible itching, and it is very seldom that more than one box is required tn effect a per-« manent care She—I will marry you cn one condition you must giveupyour pipe. He—I will on better than that, | will buy a brand new doe. Minara’s Liniment for everywhere, Do not clip ahoree and putan over- coa’: on yourself. Take your own medi- cine. Minard’ PR sale 3 Liniment cures Dandruff, DR. A. W. CHASE'S va 7" 9 A GATARRH CUNC .., & SPP fe sent direc. to ths u-seased marts Oy the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, ch ars the air Passages, stops drop. ings in.the ° throat and permanantly cures Catarrh and Hay Fever. Blower free. A'l dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medigine Co., Toronte and Buffalo. _——-—- © 6 o —__—____. Why is the woman eceldom sincere who tells another woman tbat ehe is pretty. —— HIS OWN FREE WILL Dear Si1re,—I cannot speek to strongly of the excellence of MIN.:RD’S LINI- MENT. It is THE remedy in my house- bold for buras, sprains, etc., and we would not be without it. It is traly a wooderful medicine. Joun A. Macpona.p, Publisher Irnprior Chronicle, A literary statistican declares that for the year 1898 eight novels a day were pub- lished, Sundays and holidays not includs ed, Minard’s Liniment Relieves Neu- algia. A New York despatch states that the Standard Oil Co. bas increased its capital stock from $100,000,000 to $110,000,000. Rheumatism Can't Exist When the kidneys are kept heaithy and vigors by the use of A. W.Chafe’s Kiduey- Liver Pills. Itis Uric Acid le*t in che blocd by defective Kidneys that causes rheumatism Dr_ A.W. Chase’s Kidney- Liver Pills make the Kidneys stroug and active in their work of filtering the blood, and thIs removes the —— of theumatism, One pill a dose, 25 cents a box. There is a better half in every wedding— but the best man doesn’t get her. Active Man Wanted. To read this advertisement and then give Putnam’s Painless Corn Extrector a trial. It never fails to cure. Acts in twenty-four hours snd causes neither pain nor discomfort. Putnam’s Corn Extractor extracts corns. It is the best The evil that men do is soon forgotten— by themselves. <> -.— -— ~~ .—— Minard’s Liniment Cures Burns & The average man who tries heroic measures gets a misfit. SUNNYSIDE DENTSTRY” TA IS Office in New Prowse Block, first door to the right up stairs. W. F. H. GARVELL, B, A. BARRISTER-AT-LAW Bank of Nova Scotia Building CHARLOTTETOWN, Telephone No. 170 Money to Lean, ~ _—— NoMore Wap ‘¢ D iL armers co not need to wait till the eace Conference” ; over, before buying their plough rhares, as they can do gg opce, by calling at tne Masonic Temple Store, where share, or other p!ough extras can be had for Jess money : . Denw om 8 setter than any imported. Prove this at once, by try hem, Week [» os NE Oh Me Ais as iar NA OF NL * is "> “a MANOPACTURER Of ALL KINDS OF DAIRY & FARM MACHINERY, Esdale Foundry and mechinery Depot. Office. + «onic Temp!r harlottetown, P, TO TVPORTERS. We are prepared to quote through rates of freight, og finplates Hardware, Liquors and General Merchandise from London, Liverpool, Glasgow, Avonmou:h Deck and Antw to Charlottetown and all points on the P K Island Railway, Apply to PEAKE BROS & C0 a C’*ohwn Tuly 11, 1899—pat ——— Tempting Bargains MEN'S UNDERWEAR SUITS S6c to $7 OO . _ White and Co’ored Shirts, Collars, Ties, ete. thing in Men’s Underwear ¢ x:epting boots. All at selling prices. D. A- BRUCE moras sock Every ——— Se ee oe eee = Great rush at P MOV ‘ AGHAN'’'S, Quecn St. He =| is selling crockery, go} ass ware and groceries at m= reduced prices. PARISGREEY DEPOT 26000 LBS RECEIVED THIS SEASON BERGER’S and CANADA PAINT CO’S WHOLESALE and RETAIL LL & CHANDLER _aane gf PETE so. rag , iS) Ad a Le YY A/eE€ hb P-% of F Giasgow Cf all Wine Merchants Wholesale from the distiller, A. G. Taou3ox & VU), en ’ ne ‘ aa i . 4 7 _ i : < : q Ewords will be beaten into plough shares later on; but 9 n a, \ $s SF a a = G % % 3 ‘4 si , - aa ee T. A. KEACLEAN a ———— TS _ W e - in} to eel you der ics tha spe BI ~ 1 EN ote Tav pen: nd stud jk oo il ¢ t