ss ¥ vx CALENDAR FOR NOV EMPER, 1894, iAyv, ‘ ‘mm, 1 ° N c Wua : \ p zm & ot ' j } Ta. oo HT pact ‘2 | ' ' j Nes i 2 s Su High | sels water | wanton | | |b m | 1 | 4 40 I i 9) } 29 | 1 44 318 37 | 3 32 ; $6 | 3 25 bia LS 4 28 si 33 & 34 ri We ‘ 32 | 6 38] al 30} 7 35 9/ Ff 29 8 22 .0) Sa ‘ 28 i 9 3 17S 2 aii 8a 2) Ml 25 | 10 24 13 ae, Ba Gi 14; 4 eA $s} 42 Sty 15 * } atr’r 3] |. ‘ i i isi 17 | Saturday ] 20 2 23) i OUS : : i? | = ai : taf a. I , | is] 46} ) a: 6 638i 668 2 4 6 | 17 6 59} 2 iv 7] 6 56 2 19} 1S 8 43} ui ay 2 l4 9 26 95,18 2 2 13 10 6) 26 | Monday 2 13} 10 45) 23 : } 24] 12 | Bi; 38 ot 40 Gene ' 2 4 2 11 j 0 4] ; 7mr1té ts 43 | | Begins in November and runs through } eight numbers. UE DAILY EXAMINER ' Tux Leapive DatLy NEWS PaPER ' or i’. E. Istanp, g iasued e noon, from the office of | the Examinen Pcoetisuive Compayy, in the | Leadon House Building, Queen Street. } RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) ery Alix stties Si. | -« BOO} oes LD ° v.36 | Ove YeEar Six Mon Tis Turee Montes Ont MontH Sent post paid to any part of Canada or tne | United States j ADVERTISING KATES For *ma!| advertisements which are ordered | for only one or two weeks the charge is cents per inch for the frst insertion, aud @ eents for each continuation. Rate cards are | furnished on application at the office. Special i contract prices at a reduced rate are quoted fer advertisements four inches in sise or | larger, which are to run for three moaths or lenger. NO special wolices liserled Uliess paid | at the rate of 10 cents per line, and under oe | circumstances will such peld notices appear | ip the local column. Svceial discounts made on all advertise- | meats connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, | Pienies, efc. No notices will be inserted with | the sarne Quiess the regular rate of 10 cents per itne is paid That Tue Exawiner is considered by our Merchants and Manufacturers te be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium | through which to make their announcements | public, is »bundantly proved by the ‘aet that | 73 orde’ ) accommodalie Ole suvertisers we i have «on compelled to enlarge the paper to i'a present size. Tur Dati.y Examiner is for sale by the fI- jowing agents -— M. & T. J. Waish, Eelectic Bookstore, Sum- sutheriand, Seuria. Hon. D. Gordon, .eorgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Albertoa A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge. | ie ES OS =e 3 T . The Weekly Examiner S issued every Friday morning from the Publishers’ office. it is made up of matter which hae appeared in the Daily editions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting end full of the latest news. The subscription for Tue WeexLty E.x4m.- (NER, post paid to any part of Canada or ihe United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for Tag Daity EXaMINER. JOHN CALDWELL JOHN MAIR ESTaBLI-HED 1553 JON CALDWELL & 00, Fru't and Prodace Commis- sion Mere rants, 187 McGILL and 131 ST. PETER STS. MONTREAL. Oysters a spec ialty Corres Mal peque pondence solicited. augl4—3rm pat Telephone L876. Tickets to Boston. Luy Your Tickets for Boston by §. §. “ FLORIDA,” Canada Atlantic and Plant Line), —FROM-—— W. W. CLARKE, Ticket Agent, Corner Quocn and Water Streets. TINWARE Creameries and Cheese Factories. The very best work guaranteed ow all jobs for Creameries and Cheese Factories. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF THIS KIND OF WORK. NW. STEVENSON, Tinware, Stove Pipe, &e., 35 GUEEN STRELT, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. All orders promptly attended to. apy—tf N ewfoundland Markets i. T. MeCOURRE:, Genera! Commission Merchant. a Oats and Produce of all kinda. Ship ments from P E. Island carefully attend- ed to and account sales given promptly, Wharfave and Stores. Correspondence solicited Ul. T. McCOUBRRY, P. O. Box 307 St. John’s, N. F. sepi—dyim wy 3m :; NAPOLEON, | TERMS ; Four Dollars a Year | NEW SERIES “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. ‘@ », = , - “eag " = ma — ca “OTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, McCLURE’S "MAGAZINE Vol IV. Begins December, 1594. | A splendidly illustrated life of be | great feature of which will SEVENTY FIVE PORTRAITS of Napoleon, showing him from youth to teath; als0 portraits of hia family ang contemporaries, and pictures of famous ittiefielde; in all nearly 200 PICTURES. The Eight Napoleon Numbers, $1.00. TRUE DETECTIVE STORIES by authority from the archives of the Pinkerton Detective Agency. Lincoln and Pinkerton (Nov. 1894); the | Molly Maguires; Allan Pinkerton’s Life; Stories-of Capture of Train Robbers, For- gers, Bank Robbers, etc; each complete in one issue, 12 in all. SHORT STORIES BY W. D. Howells, Conan Doyle, Robert Barr, Bret Harte, Capt. King, Joel Chandler Harris and many othere. NOTED CONTRIBUTORS. Robert Louis Stevenson, F. Marion Crawford, Archdeacon Farrar, Sir Robert Ball, Prof. Drummond, Archibald Forbes, Thomas Hardy. Rudyard Kipling, Clark Ruseell, Octave Thanet, Send three 2-cent stamps for a sample copy to the publishers. S. 8. McCLURE, Lrp., 30 Lafayette Place, New York. novl4 Gentlemen, we don’t want to court you for your trade, outside of treating you with courtesy and giving you what we conssder values not easily duplicated. If we give you goods for little or nothing we are cheating somebody. Our good customers would not go in for that, so we promise you that none can undersell us, value considered. Our trade has been steadily growing, through, we presume, just treatment, which is an indica- tion of life and health from a business standpoint. Don’t be afraid to put us to a little trouble by asking to see our goods. We will be always pleased to see you. JOUN T. MCKENZIE. NOTICE. SHIPPERS to BOSTON THE steamer “FLORIDA” will make her last trip from Charlotuetown to Boston fur this sea-on, on FRIDAY, THY 16th INST. F. W. HALES. nov2 t] dte A first-clase Horse ‘ond Buggy, also a Double-seated Phaeton. Enquire at G. G. JURY’S Jewelry Store, north side Queen uare, opposite Post Office, Charlotte- oo . 2aw (w f) 3m—may25 What's the time? If you have a Cough it ia time you were taking GRAY’S RED SYRUP SPRUCE a—— GUM THE OLD STANDARD CURB FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS. Gray's Syrup has deca on trial for more than 60 years and the verdict of the people is that ie is the best remedy knows. I<. aad Be per bottle. Sold everys bere. made crudely, seld cheaply. Used Internally and Externally. Prices, 5Cc., Cheap. Bi, Cheaper, B1.75, Cheapest. “@a THIS IS YHE GENUINE. Our trade-mark on Buff Wrapper around every bottle, | THE WONDER OF HEALING. FOR RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, | 4 WOUNDS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, —o_" PILES, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, Refuse Substitutes, INFLAMMATIONS, CATARRH, HEMORRHAGES, and ALL PAIN, TE Se Genuine is strong and pare. Sole Merwiacturers POND’S EXTEACT CO.. 7G FIFTH AVE., MEW YORK '$ EXTRACT SCLD BY ALL ORUGGISTS Can be diluted with water. IN SHEDS, LANDING, AND TO ARRIVE FROM Dominion Coal Co's. Mines in G. B. en We have now our Sheds full of SCREENED RUN OF a full supply of SLACK MINE, and Winter trade. — ALSO—— The following Schooners discharging namely :— Lady Speedwell, Springbird, Hilda, Maggie Blanche, George P. Trigg. Tartar. We have sold a large quantity of Coal from the abéve Compuny’s Mines this season, which has given entire satis- faction, and are now prepared to sell at very lowest prices. ee ooo Selling Agents for Dominion Coal Co, Ltd. Charlottetown, November 7 SOAP Seeton and Mitchell, Halifax. agents for Nova Scotia and P. E. Isiand. x DODD & ROGERS. Charlottetown, Novermberr 2. 1894—tn thu sat Heating Stoves COAL, for our and to arrive, Lady Franklin, Kate McKinnon, Hope, Advance, ‘Velephone. Lizzie C. Has proved by its enormous sale that it is The best value for the Consumer of any soap in the market. Millions of women throughout the world can vouch for this, as it is they who have proved its value. It brings them less labor, greater comfort. From $3 up. Cook Stoves From $14 up. Coa! Hods from 256, up Fire Shovels from 6c. up Stove Pipe & Granit Ware COAL! COAL! ON HAND AND DAILY Round, Nut and Slack, THE LEADING Also, HARD COAL and WOOD. FROM ALL before the streets are muddy. N. B.—The Sydney Coal that I handle is from the Old Mines at North Sydney, properly known as the Sydney Mines, and is the oNLY GENUINE Sydney Coal having a registered trade mark as such; and the public are cautioned against other Coals sold with the prefix “ Sydney” that they are not the genuine “ Sydney Coal.” Charlottetown, October 1,£1894-—6m dy & wy KR KERRY WATSON & Co. Pre MON TMEAL. REVERE HOTEL, (Vormerly Rocklin House ) This centrally located Hotei, which is within five minutes’ walk of Railway Depot, has been thoroughly cleaned, painted and renovated. Is fitted with hot water, and possesses the finest bath roomea in any Hotel ia the city. Terms moder ate. Coach meets ail trains. P. 8. BROWN, Proprietor. weptli—dy 6m wy lyr Ensilage and Hay Cutters, ALL SIZES, with or without Hay Carriers; Turnip Slicers, cheap, T $8.00; I. X. L. Feed Mills, only $8.09. DE DO ccintinn Plow Repairs, Mould Boards in Steel or Metal, Land- sides and Shares for all Plows in general use on the D. W. FINLAYSON, IN Island. Ch’town, Oct 16, 1894—tis & wy ARRIVING: MINES. Leave your orders MeMELLAN. R. McMILLAN. ' ; H. T. LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. AN AGED LOCOMOTIVE. ete ene HERO OF ALEXANDRIA INVENTOR OF IT. And It ts Two Thousand Years Old— The Shrine of Baccheue Aleo Deacr! bed— Moved Automatically in Various Diree- tions. A writer in a scientific journal says: The Scientific American contains an account by R. W. Durfee of a locomotive that was invented and ised 2,000 years ago. There is a general belief among mechanicians what vehicles containing within themselges the means of their own populsicn gre of «omparatively re- cent origin; and the fact of the ad- hesion of the rims of their wheels to the earth ora supporting rail being sufficient to enable adequate power applied to the wheels to move the vehicle was a dis- covery of not earlier than the middle of the last century. But in this instance the writers on locomotive machines have not dived deep enough or stayed down long enough among the records of antiquity to discover the bottom facte in the history of such mechanisma. The first locomotive, or self-moving vehicle, of which we have any account was the invention of Hero of Alexandria, who lived abont 5,000 years ago. In his work descriptive of automatic or self- moving machines, there is illustrated a shrine of Baccheus mounted upon three wheels concealed within its base. The shrine was crowned with a can- opy, about which figures of dancers were made to move by hidden mechan- ism. Within the base of the shrine were three supporting wheels. Of these two were fixed to an axle, ou which was adrum. Around this drum was wound & rope which passed upward on one side of the ehrine and over two pulleys. It was then attached to a heavy leaden weight. The gradual escape of sand throngh a hole in a compartment be neath the weight caused it to descend The weight thus pulled on the cord and revelved the drum and wheels, causing the shrine to move forward in a straight line. Hero also describes how to arrange the wheels in order to make the shrine move in a circular path and to make it move in atraight lines at right an- gies. By turning the figure of Victory two fountains beneath the canopy could be made to discharge wine or milk at pleas- ure, This apparatus is an adaptation of the two-way cock, familiar tomodern inechanical engineering. The mechanism of the shrine of Bac cheus proves that 2,000 years ago the fact that wheeled vehicles could be propel- led by power applied to the axles on which the driving wheels were fasten. ed was wel] known, and that the me chanical principles involved in the ap plication of the power were well under- stood. Furthermore, the shrine afforded evidence of a high degree of refinement in mechanical manipulation in the cyl- indrical plug two-way cock, as well as in the general arrangement of the de- tails of apparatus for performing the seeming wiracle of changing wine into milk or milk into wine. lt is confidently believed that this is the first time this self moving vehicle (which the shrine certainly was) of Hero has been descrihed or even referred to by any writer in the English lan- guage. This is not strange, for the work of Hero descriptive of automata is very scarce, and the translations of Comman- dine into Latin and of Baldi into Italian are also rare. It is universally admitted by writers on mechanics that Hero is the author of the first description of a machine ac tuated by steam; but hitherto no one has claimed for him the honor—to which the evidence above submitted clearly entitles him—of having invented the first self-moving carriage or loco- motive. A Camera for Naturalists. At a recent meeting of the Royal Photographic Society, T. R. Dallmeyer described a new modification of his telephonic lens, by which it is made suitable for long or short extensions of the camera within certain limita, so as to give the power of obtaining at will s large or small amplification of distant objects. He said that the main point with lenses of this class is the question of rapidity; itis easier to make a tele. photographic lens at the sacrifice to some extent of the luminosity of the image upon the sensitive plate. He alsu exhibited his new naturalist’s camera, a long, narrow instrument of light weight, made chiefly for photo- graphing wild animals from a distance, when the camera is beld In the hand, or when it can be partially rested against a tree or other fixed object, or when lying on the stomach on the ground. It is a long camera of light weight, preferably fitted with a telephotographic iens, acting upon @ sensitive plate of somewhat small size. It has a lengthy eye-piece, mounted upon its upper sur- face, and when this is sdjusted to suit the eyesight of the user, it need never be shifted from that adjustment for the particular user; the image on the plate being atthe same time in focus, it is never necessary afterwards to alter the adjustment of the eye-piece, for all the objects he sees in sharp focus through it will also be in sharp focus upon the plate. To minimize vibration a parti cnlarly light spring had been made for the instantaneous shutter. Miss Arabella Jones-Smyth, She isn't very pretty, She isn't very witty, i Her conversation sometimes te quite plain; But the “swells” all flock around With reverence profound— For she proudly sports a hyphen in her name. She dances like a camel, Her compiexion is enamel, Her figure wonld a hat-rack put to shame; But the “dudes” bow down before her, And for “just one waltz” implore her, Fascicated by that hyph.» jn her name. Truth. oe mE PAST guarantees the future. It is not what we say, but what Hood's Sarsaparilla does, that tells the story. Remember HOOD’'S CURES —~_—.>--—— For tue sext fortnight, (ray & Dou will sell good large winter-keeping celery, at 25c per doz. A plan to keep celery through the winter given away free toeach urchaser. Call at our stall in the mar et Chariottet wn, or address orders (with cash) to J. J. Gay & Son, Pownal, dy 2 wk m & th & wk WAS THE Brings comfort and improvemen’ ne tends tu 7“ enjoyment when rightly uv The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy ‘ife more, with less expenditure, by more promptly wlapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptab’e and pleas- ant to tire taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative ; effectually cleansing the system, livpelling cokis, headaches and fevers and permanently ening conatipation. ft has given satisfaction +o millions and met with the appr-val of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowe!s withort weak- ening them and it is perfectly frce from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug. gists in 75c. ‘hottles, but it is manu vactured by the California Fig Syrup Uo. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not ceept any substitute if offered. Gratetul—UComlorting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By athorough knowledge of the nat urai laws which govern the operations of jigestion and nutrition, and by a careful a of the properties of well-select- Coeoa, Mr. Epps has provided for breakfast and supper a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy loctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease, Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there isa weak point. We may escape many a taal shatc by keeping ourseives well forti tied by pure blood and a properly nourish d frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelled tius, JAMES EPPS & CO., Lid, Homecepathic Chemists. London. England LANDING TO-DAY, EX S S. THAMES. 2,000 barrels Beaver Flour, 600 * Famous “ 150 Fine Rose Flour, f 100 Onions, 100 “ Winter Apples, 600 cases Canned Goods, 250 bags Rice, 1 car Fine Salt (table use). 200 barrels Rolled Oate, 500 “* Granulated and Yellow Sugar. N. RATTENBURY. nov9—4i ead . NOTICE Money Wanted. Allfpersons indebted to us by note, of hand,§ book account o- otherwise must make immediate paymeat. All accounts not settled or arranged for on or befare December lst will be sued for without further notice. POOLE & LEWIS, novS—d Li w 4i Lumber Dealers. AT CRAPAUD. A. H. WADMAN, of Charlottetown, “tarted the Undertaking at Crapaud last pring. All kinds of Caskets, large and small, and all small prices. Ladies’ and Gents’ Robes at sinal] prices. A first-class Hearse and Horses. Draped Stcols for the Caskets will be furnished with drapery. Funerals will be promptly at tended to by Mr. A. Wadman, Crapand. Orders for Embalming, if wanted, will be attended to at once by A. H. Wadman, Chariot etown. dy sat wy ly—oct26 THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), CAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000. A Society established with a view to disseminate the taste for arts, to encourage and heip artists. Incorporated by Letters Patent of the Goverumeut of Canada, the 27th February, 1893. GALLERY OF PAINTINGS Nos. 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame St., Montreal. The hichest Gallery of Paintings in Canada, Admission Free, All the Paintings are originals, most! from the French echool, the leading mod- ern school. Eminent Artists, such as Francais Roc! , 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 Parie. Sale of Paintings at easy terms, and distribution by lot every walk Price of tickets, 25cts. Ask for our Catalogues and Circulars. aug29—mwf tf DR .CONROY tas removed his Office and Residence to P. P. Gillis’ new building, corner of Great George and Dorchester Streets, opposite the Bishop’s Palace. Entrance to office on Dorchester Street octl1—tf ee te > Bil, | He Wae Delude. «sy His Sympathy for | Beanty in Distress. A man had occasion to go to the Union depot yesterday afternoon to meet } } wife, who had been ontin the countrs fora time. When he got to the station he fonnd his train was half an hon; late, and he bought a paper and sat down on one of the benches. Not long after he had seated himself a rather pretty girl, who wory 3 pin’ waist and had nice, red cheeks and clear biue eyes and who looked to be rot over aeventeen, came and sat down next to him. The man who was waiting for his wife took a casual look at the girl and went back to his paper. Pretty soon another pretty young gir). who also wore a pink waist and had blue eyes and a fresh complexion and allthatsort of thing, came along and stopped in front of the first girl. The second pretty girl looked as if she want ed to cry. She said with tremulons voice: ‘Why, Nettie, what do you think? ‘The fare’s a dollar.” “A what?” gasped Nettie. “A dollar! And she told us it was only 50 cents, and I haven’t got enough to get the tickets; and, oh! dear, I don’t know what we will do.” She sank down beside Nettie and the two looked at the tiled floor with ver solemn faces. Presently Nettie looked upand said: “I'll take a walk around ; theroom. Perhaps there is somebody | here I know.” She made the tonr of | the roomand came back with her face | gloomier than ever. ‘‘Nobody here | ever saw before,” she said, brokenly The other girl sprang to her feet. “‘I'n going to tell the ticket man just how ii is,” she said. ‘‘Perhaps he will tax what we've got and Jet us send him the rest.” She came back with tears in her eyes, ‘He won't,” she said, sadly The manu who was waiting for hi wife heard all of this. His heart wa touched. Sohe leaned over and said “{ beg pardon, but, ladies, I—that is will yon allow me to help yon in you: hour of trouble?” The pretty young girls started and looked at the man with frightened airs The man hastened to re-assure then that his intentions were honorable, ani after many protests and arranging fo repayment and exchange of names a: all that, he gave the pretty girls §i. | and they thanked him prettily and wen io get their train. It so happened that the man’s wif: did not come on that train. and he wen down to another train in the evening While he was sitting on a bench wuit ing for the train he got to thinking « tis afternoon experience, and conclu / ed that he had done a right and wort!) act. As he was in the midst of thi train of thought a pretty girl in a pin waist sat down beside him. Pret: soon another girl, looking all woe! e gone, came along and said: “Why Nettie, what shall we dot The fare’s « dollar.” The mar who was waiting for hi wife got up and walked slowly to tl: door. He had seen agreat light. The were the same girls. ; ———— ae “= THE DEARMAN MYSTERY. A Story of Mistaken Identity Involving the Dend and the Living. “I have heard of a great many case: of mistaken identity,” said an Uliste county lawyer, “‘but never of one quit as remarkable as that of Johu Dearmat of Old Hurley, in my county. Ten vee: ago John Dearman married Katlicri « Crispel, a well-to-do farmer's daugit: 1 Soon afterward he took to drink, and time abnsed his wife shameful y Fis years ago she determined to have bi arrested for ill-treating her, but ine dis appeared before she carried out he. intention. ‘Mrs. Dearman heard nothing of he: husband after he went away, but a yea or so later she read an account of th discovery of the body of the Hudson river, near Newburgh. Tu description of the drowned man was » much like that of her missing basiw that she went to Newburgh to see 1f th pody was his. Sheshowed to the cor oner, the physicians who had held the posf mortem, and to others who had seen the body a photograph of her hus band, and every one at once pronounce: it that of the dead man. “Mrs. Dearman had the body disin terred in order that she might herse!f see the face and make sure that it wa her husband. She recognized the bods at once, and the further fact that th: dead man had two front teeth missing just as her husband had, made the id tification the more positive. She moved the body to her home and had i: reinterre4d. “A year or so ago Mrs. Dearman mar riec John Branthover and removed with him to Albany, where they a inahn 1 i now iive prosperous and happy. One day las week, to the amazement of everybody who had known him, John Dearman, long supposed dead and buried, returned to Old Hurley. There could be uo wis take as to his identity. Too many cir cumstances proved that he was the tru | John Dearman. The story of his sup posed drowning was told to him and the grave where it was believed he had been lying these four years was shown t him. He also learned that his wif had remarried and had moved away and he said: “It's all right. I deserve it.’ “Then he walked away and hasn't been seen since. But who was the man who was drowned, identified, and buried as John Dearman’?’—New York Sun, Naming the Baby. They talked of Medora, Aurora and Flora, Of Mabel and Marcia and Mildred and Mes: Debating the question of Helen Honora, Clarissa, Camilla and Vhyllis and Fay. They thought of Marcella, Estella end Pella; Considered Cecilia, Jeanette and Pauline; Alicia, Adela, Annette, Arabella, And Ethel and Eunice, Hortense and Irene. One liked Theodore, another Leonora; Some argued for Edith, und some for Elaine, For Madeline, Adeline, Li'y and Lora: And then, after all, they decided on Jane ~E. L. Sylvester, in Judg« s+ The best is Pond’s Extract, becanse it is the nt ers and mo-t uniform ar ticle made. Nete bottles with buff wrap pers. —— Tom—The management seem to have spared no expense in the production of this play. Kitty---No, indeed; they have given each chorus girl at least three coats of paint. For children’s coughs and colds Hawk er’s balsam of tolu and wild cherry is un- equalled. Itis the children’s favorite. Pains in the Joints Caused by inflammatory Swelling A Perfect Cure by Hood's Sarsa- paritia. “It affords me much pleasure to recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla. My son was afflicted with great pain in the joints, accompanied with swelling so bad that he could not get up stairs to bed without crawling on hands and knees. I was very anxious about him, and having read Hood’s*Cures so much about Hood’s Sarsaparilla, I deter- mined to try it, and got a half-dozen bottles, four of which entirely cured him.” Mure. G. A. LAKE, Oshawa, Ontario. N. B. Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilia. Hood's Pills act easily, +t promptly and efficiently. on the liver and bow.... 25¢. AIDS DIGESTIO AND PURIFIES THE It i5 Really Equal to any Imported | ‘Take my Advice and Insist on Getting this / 10 Cente SAoKe & es EX BGs ENOTICE. LAND SUKVEYING, &e. MThe subscriber is now prepared to mahe surveys of Land, ran Boundary and Diviaie Lines, furnish Plans, ete.; alse, Mechanic and Architectural Drawings, Plans, Speci ae cations and Estimates. J. P. NICHOLSON, Land 8u Pownal Street, Charlottetown, Aug. 26, b4—dy & wy * Si Coughing. For all the ailments of Throat and Lungs there is no cure s0 quick and permanent as Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil. It is palatable, easy on the most deli. cate stomach and effective Scott’s EE A BEY Emulsio stimulates the appetite, aids the digestion of other foods, cures Coughs and Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis,and gives vital strength besides. It has no equal as nour- ishment for Babies and Children who do not thrive, and overcomes Any Condition ef Wasting. Send for pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. Free. Scott & Bowne, Belleville. Al! Druggists. 60c. & $1. CANADA ATLANTIC ——AND—— Plant Steamship Line. TO BOSTON. Fast Direct Line, Net Caliing at Halifax. CHARLOTTETOWN SERVICE. The SS. “FLORIDA” will leave Navigation Co’s. Wharf, Charlottetown, FRIDAY, = 28 (and every Friday thereafter until further notice), at 7 p. m., Hawkesbury, Saturday, 10. m., arriving at Boston early Monday morning. Returning from Boston every Tuesday at,10 a, m. ne HALIFAX SERVICE: The favorite steamships “ OLIVETTR” or “ HALIFAX ” will leave Plant Wharf Halifax,every Wednesday at 8 a. m., for Boston direct. Returning, will leave north side Lewis Wharf, Boston, every at noon. Passengers arriving in evening trains can go directly on board steamer. Throagh Tickets for sale and checked at Prince Edward Island war stations and Charlottetown Navigation Co, H. L. CHIPMAN, Agent for Canada. Plant Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Ageaty, North Side Lewis’ Wharf, Boston. septs] aren De soe + seas mane aaananr = - iG . a 3 ed Se filer -eantlirtineriate <ttinnlhnnpttigae-« nar . 4