a Srey Gy i ; BAYER eee. THE 4 => * DAILY A SUnL 7 PLGA Well-Known® Priest :! ILABOR SAYIN penser are |PURIFYLNC col c ISING CLEANSING EXCELLENCE PURITY | SUNLIGHT )}( CuARANTE.O) |} SOAP ||| Wem A RESULT rs LARCEST MERI] LAR SALE s INTHE WORLD | mn THE ¥ : 2 os c FOUNDED ON MERIT : ‘ ‘ TO LET. i y= * 228 ee @ B&B O88 ¢ Though you Cough ¢ Don’t Despair ! $ Many apparently hopeless cases ! § have been cured by a course of AMPBELL’S WINE OF ¢ BEECH TREE CREOSOTE ¢ TRY IT! AT ALL DRUGGOISTS, K. CAMPBELL & CO., Montreal. i i i i i i i i arson® PILLS No oth rn © cost of a box of pile Find out about them, and 1 willalways be thankful UUme expel a yurities from the bireg fw. Geing them . Solid everywhere, or sent mps; five boxes $1.0. DR L Mewes, a i. 2 Custom louse 5t.. Boston, consumption is oftentimes absolutely cured in its earliest stages by the use of that won- ~ Food Medicine, Scott's Emulsion | which is now in repute the world over. || “CAUTION.” —Reware of substitutes i Genuine prepared by Scott & howne, Belleville. Sold by ali druggists. Be. and $1.0. NERVE BEANS solutely cures the most obstinate cases a neee faled — yd relieve. rusts per pac or six or gent geceips of price Oy wobieocins THT TA sate Teronte, Ont. Write for pamphlet. Sold NERVE BEANS are 8 new dis weakness of body or mind cause | errors Grateful —Comlorting. many ways show to vay i€ai as well a8 po nt- the way tf saivation M and women, in order to become 1 active Christians, should first health and strength, if there + pos#ibi itv of gelimg these blessings. i r she who struggles with disease and i powe! actively advance ‘ \ I mon Master w mad aud foolish—yes, hypocritical aatarving and famishing man un to give ap worldly thoughts and rihe peace that cometh a lo do good, the pangs oi ist first be appeased; then will to talk of things spiritual I ke manner should clergymen and : rch peoy leal with the sick and suffering [hey must first be relieved I 1 4 vy before the sin-sick soul te great Physi an It is Know that our ergymen and rch people recognize this 1 are doing a quiet but grand work for those in agony and disease. Ministers and priests have not thoughi yatory to their dignity and standing rehito show their people how roken-down health can be restored, an! explain how a new and better physical i ta I Clergymen in Canada who have been sufferers frum nervousness, sleep , dyspepsia, indigestion, rheuma- nd kidney and er troubles, have } mplete re in Paine’s celery p* and ha | ] testified for t f humanity Many a letter have we received from nand women who have been rescued | from death, stating that their clergyman ud vised and strongly re< ommended ry compound the history of any an land has there existed a medi- | ne that has alike inte rested cle rgy and | people All speak strongly and approv- of Paine’s ce lery compound, and Blood! |. i ¢ | as f va for he henefit every Cana- lia “Of Paine’s celery compound I can speak from experience. I had been laid ip with fever and rheumatic gout from the fifth of January till the middle of June; hence my system was fearfully run low [ was very thin and so feeble that for weeks I could not move along without Fos ee derful ee i | | [ therefore Fe leans high } |“ | the celery treatment until a complete cure Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST. “By athorough knowledge of the nat- vial laws which govern the operations 0 digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the properties f well-select- ed Cacoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tablee with a delicately flavored beverage whico may save us many heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of | ¢ | City to get your Books. | ‘ such articles of diet that «a constitution may be gradually built up until strong | enough to resist every tendency to disease. | Hundreds of around us ready to attack is a weak point. Wemay escape many 8 fatal shaft bv keeping ourselves well forti tied by pure blood and a properly nourish ed frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in packets, by Gracers, labelled JAMES EPPS & CO., Homecepathic Chemists, London, En_tand. New Raisins. 2,000 Boxes VALENCIA RAISINS and Prime off Stock CARVELL BROS. ; WANTED.—Canvasser of good address. Salary and expenses paid weekly from start. Position permanent ean grown stock. Advantages unequalled.— BROWN BROS. CO., Nurserymen, Toronto, Ont. ow (mm w s)—oct4 H cuspres of health have heen Or are being restored to health and strength by the Hawker’ It has become great and family remedy iadies im ill Tonie. popular —————- $6-0~ De. Maxxise’s Greunay greatest rheumatic, cure of the age, both Price 50 cx nts hKiemepy, the and pain internal audexternal. ne uralvia - — USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY a Blood and NerveRemedy. » the great wherever there! . : | interest the despatches almost weekly ap- subtle maladies are floating | | ; ete | the facts that they have a very large sale | by Dr. L. A. Smith & Co.,. Torente, and | ceipt of price, 50 cents a box, or-@ boxes for $2.50. Canadian and Ameri- | ¢rs of “Sunlight” Soap to find their goods ; market; and it must also be pleasing to His Words Have Influenced | Thousands in Canada. He Shows the Way toa New Physical Life. Many Other Clergymen Doing the Same Work. They Endorse Paine’s Celery Compounl, ir peop Many good and right thinking men and hat the faithful his tate to recommend it The Rev A. Ouellet, parish priest of liae, N. B., ope of the ablest priests of ardent advo- never hesi Provinces, is an nature’s great medicine The reverend gentleman found in Paine’s celery | he could not He writes that ybtain from any other source. npound a new life help. I then began to take Paine’s celery mnpound according to prescription, and to-day I am as fleshy and strong as I was years ago 1g I do not aay that I am radically cured AS VK nm g but the attacks are ss frequent, in fact I have not been one single day prevented from at- tending to my usual work since that time. take great pleasure in certify- ng to the wonderful efficacy of that mar- is medicine | purifier it has no equal, and influence on the digestive inot be questior ed. In view of 2, I do not hesitate to advise sick ve Paine’s celery compound a fair trial in the various ailments for which ti ommended. Ae farasI am con- ned Tintend to follow up, if possible, As a bloo its benefi ial ca these fact persons te is effected Removed! I HAVE REMOVED MY Bookbinding Business AROUND THE CORNER ON Grafton Street, (IN THE SAME BUILDING), where I will be pleased to see all my old customers. The cheapest place in the Day Books, Ledgers, Journals. Cash Books, etc, a Specialty. J. D. TAYLOR sept23 Deservedly Popular. Our readers have no doubt read with pearing in this and other Canadian jour nals regarding cures of a most startling nature made by Dodd’s Kidney Pills. These pills have proven themselves to be a certain cure for al! diseases of the kid- neys and blood, such as backache, rheu- matism, Bright’s disease, diabetes, dropsy, Enquiry amongst local druggists elicits and are an infallible cure for kidney dis- orders. Dodd’s Kidney Pills are manufactured are sold everywhere, or by mail on re- —-— woe -- — Two More Gold Medals. It must be gratifying to the manufactur- 80 splendidly appreciated in the Canadian them to receive the highest recognition at Canadian exhibitions for the superior qual- ity of theirsoap. Atthe recent Fall Shows held at London and Ottawa, “Sunlight” was rewarded a Gold Medal, which brings their gold medal list uptol4. Added to this grand record is the important fact that “Sunlight” is used in Windsor Castle and in the Royal Laundries, and owing to the excellence of their soap, the manufactur- ers have been specially appointed soap makers to the Queen. “oe USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the great blood and Nerve Remedy, — : - EXAMINER : THE SAND OF AN OLD TIMER. Patel Hravery That Won « Rare Tribute l vom a Dand of Apaches A compauy of ranchmen sat about the railroad station in Pomona the other aft- ernoon waiting for the belated overland train for Los Angeles. Every man in the party knew the others, and there be- ing an hour or two to wait story telling of the early days on the border and in Arizona and California came natural. Stories of old times, when Indians were | bad and the white pioneers knew what bravery meant, were related. John Wil- son of El Monte told the most absorbing story of the hour: ‘Talk about sand in a man, gentle men! | am telling you that it takes sand of the genuine article in any man to try and stand off single handed 40 or 50 Apaches when he knows just how the | scrap will end, and that the end will be his owa death. But that was just the kind of sand that was in Felix Knox when he was killed by the Apaches. You see Knox was an all round gambler, such as the tenderfoot from the east ycorns so much and knows so little | about, but he had a heart in him bigger | than any tenderfoot's head. Well, it was in the spring of 1879 Knox, with his wife and baby and a Mexican driver, was com!ng from Silver City to Clifton, down in Arisona. get to York's ranch, which is om the Gila river, about 80 miles from CHfton, all right, but were told there that signs of Apaches had been seen, and that they had better goin camp there for a few days, but Knox—who had fought the Apaches dozens ef times and didn’t know what feay was—said he wanted to make Clif- ton that day, Indians or no Indians. “Well, the Knoxes drove on. When they were about two miles from York's ranch, sure enough sa big buck Indian came from behind a low, round top mesa. Knox knew there were plenty more of the red devils hid there and that it meant a fight to death for him. He was as cool as a cucumber.. He jumped out of the wagon, filled his pock- ets with two boxes of cartridges, and then kissed his wife and baby for the last time, but saying that he would have the redskins quieted in a few minutes. He ordered the Mexican driver to lash the team for all he was’ worth and to drive back to York's ranch as fast as the horses could jump. Then Knox waved his hand to his wife and said he was go- ing to stand off a few Apaches, although he was sure there was a big band of them. As the team and wagon flew back to the ranch Knorx, rifle in hand, started toward the hill for his last fight. He turned once and waved his sombrero to his wife and child and then strode on to his certain death. “The Apaches a second later rushed out frora behind the hill where they were secreted. Knox faced his foes, and standing stock still pumped lead at them until he fell down dead. The next day a party of us was made up, and we went out where the fight took place. Knox's body lay there amid the cactus in the sun. The Apaches, con- | trary to their usual custom, had not mu- tilated the fellow’s body in the least. They had taken a clean pocket handker- chief out of Knox's pocket and carefully spread it over his face and had fastened it there by putting a small stone on each corner of it to hold it in its place and keep the hot san from the dead man’s face. That was their tribute to the sand in Knox. Seventy empty shells were found that had been emptied from Knox's winchester, and one of the raid- ing Indians afterward eaid that their party numbered 42 and that Knox had killed seven of them.”—Pomona Prog- ress. The Servant Was Horrified. Dr. 8. had a newly arrived Hiber- nian for a servant. He had also recent- ly purchased a pair of porpoise leather boots. His wife, attracted by the nov- elty of the new footwear, asked the doc- tor in the presence of the servant what they were made of, to which he respond- ed, ‘‘Porpoise hide.” Shortly after the lady from the Emer- ald Isle interviewed Mrs. 8. and an- nounced her intention of ‘‘laving whin me week is up.” Mrs. 8., somewhat surprised, asked the disturbed domestic the reason for her announced departure, to which Bridget responded with a hor- rified air: “Your husband is a docther, mum, an I've heard them docthers do be cuttin up people, an didn't I hear um wid me own ears say that the boots of him were made of pauper’s hide. It’s me own ould father that died in the poorhouse, an | wouldn’t be servin a haythen that uses the skin of the poor to cover his dirthy fees wid.”—Boston Commercial Bulletin. Better Left Unsaid. A certain young ae is equally fa- mous in the world of lette:# as an au- thor and among his friends for his blunt candor that is forever betraying him into one of the things one would have preferred to say differently, as Du Mau- rier puts it, On his last birthday he was given acharming dinner by his doting parents, at which he was bitterly disap- pointed by the regret of several nota- bles. Thus, when a society girl said to him st the close of the evening, ‘‘What a delightful time we have had!” he ex- claimed from the fullness of his heart: “T’m glad it hasn’t seemed dull to you. We invited some awfully clever people, but notone of them came!”—Philadel- phia Press. Pensions For Workingmen Im Austria. Under the provisions of the Austrian poor law, at 60 years of age aman may claim from his native town or commune a pension equal to one-third of the wages which he had received during working years. The amount varies from 2 to 6 florins a month. In Vienna alone there are 16,000 persons who receive these pensions from the city. She Had Been There. Perdita—You haven't the faintest idea how much I love him. Penelope—Oh, yes I have—I used i 1¥ him that way myself.~Brooklyn & For Over Fifty Years. Ax Ovp Axo Wett Triep Renepy.— Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth- ing, with perfect snccess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea, Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for’ Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind—m. w. f. wkly—Ly He Was Convinced. A man in Nova Scotia was in doubt as to the genuineness of the reported cure of Mrs. Bernard Magitiire and ex-Councillor Lingley, of Petersville, Queen’s Co., by a course of Hawker’s Nerve and Stomach Tonic and Hawker’s Liver Pilis. He wrote to Squire Lingley, and that gentle man promptly assured him that the testi monials were genuine. _ - eo --— For sick headace, sour stomach, loath- ing of food, dyspepsia or billiousness, take Hawker’s Liver Pills. They will cure you. Recommended by leading physicians asa most reliable medicine. USE SKOwA’S DISCOVERY, the great i vod aud Nerve Remedy. MONTREAL. OF Colonial PHILLIPS SQUARE, OUR STOCK HOSIERY, DRESS GOGDS & MANTLES is verv fine. and contains all the latest Makes and Styles. Samples sent on application. Mail orders receive prompt and careful attention. HENRY MORGAN & CO., Montreal, October 19, 1893—tu th sat Prices Down! - . . : n “ We have just received a large stock of Gold, Silver and | Silverore Watches, which we are seliing fast at lower prices and Clocks to than ever. Also, a big stock of Jewelry select from at a big discount on former prices. Join in with the multitude that are more than pleased with the Bargains. We also Repair CLOCKS, WATCHES and JEWELRY G. G. JURY, North Side Queen Square, Opposite the Post Office Charlottetown, Sept. 7, 1893——ly thu sat & wky What is OSL A ns SS P’ ye a toe Lf Pea Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor {i is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing fyrups, and Castor Oil otlecr Nareotic substance. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty ycars’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays fovcrishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhoa ard Wind Collie. Casteria relieves tecthing troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castori. assimilates tho food, reculates the stomach and bowels, civing health; eu natural sleep. Case toria is the Children’s Panacea—tho Mother’s Friend, Castori.. ny astcrii. “Castoria is 2a excellent medicine for chil- fren, Tt thers ha<e repeated!) to.d «.v of its pood eficet upon their children.” D... G. C. Oraoon, Loweli, Mass. *“ Coctoria is sowec!lLadapted toc! I'dren thrt I reconunend it ascuperior toauy prescriptiot knov. n to me,"* Ml. A. Ancare, M. D., 111 So. Oxford St., Lrooxlyn, N. Y. “Our physicians in the children’s depart ment hsve spoken highly of their experi- ence in their outside practice with Castoi ia, and although we only have amory our medical supplics what is known as reguiar products, yct we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with fsvor upon it.” Unirzep Hosprrau axp Dispeweary, Boston, Mass. — * Cagtoria is the best remedy for c!.cicron of which Isa acqiainted, [hope tie coy i3 1.06 far distant when mothers wi:l consider the rea! inter-etof tu ir children, an! use Custoria in- st -ad of tee various quack nostrums which are destroriag th ir lovea ones, by forcia:r opium, morphine, Svothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sencug tucm to prcilaa‘ure graves.” Di. J. F. Kincuzroer, Couway, Arc The Centaur Company, TI Murrey Street, New York City. Avien C. Surva, Pres., CARD! —--—— ——(x initia )-—— We take this opportunity of thanking our numerous friends and customers in Town and Country for the gener- ous support extended to us during the last twenty-five years, and of asking for the continuance of their favors. We have sold our entire stock of Groceries, but not our business, to the McKay Woolen Co., and transferred our lease to them. We therefore beg to announce that we have rented the new and commodious Brick Store of Messrs. Dodd & Rogers, Queen Street, one door north ot the Old Stand, which will be fitted up in first-class style, and where, in the course of a few weeks, we will offer for sale at lowest possible prices a new and _ varied GROCERIES second to none in the Provinces. J. D. MACLEOD & CO. N. B.—We will be found, until our New Store is ready, in WHITE'S. BULLDING, occupied by W. B. Robert- son, Esq., two doors north of the Old Stand. I.D MM. & CO. Charlottetown, Sept. 15, 1893—ly lw then eod & wky THE CHHAPEST STOVES fire at Dodd & Rogers’. Charlottetown, Qctober 4, 1893—-tu th sar } stock of LUTEUS TET Se NOVEMBER 4, — SATURDAY, he Daily Examiner The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. One Year, - - - $4) Three Months, - $1 Six Months, - $2/One Month, - 35c Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 months at By special arrangement with the publishers, we are enabled to make a most exceptional offer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fills out the following blank form, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 35 cents a 35 cents a month. month. CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. TTITTTTTTTTTTTTT TGV TITITTTT—-TIITT IIT S it . Tue Examiner Publishing Co., Cha) lottetown, P. EB [sland. You will y’eaxe send to my addrese the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 mouths from date, for which I agree to pay 35 cents a month, it leing understood that you are to have sent to my address for one year, without extra charge, McCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current num ber. PEAS chersnciciictbsmnnhdoreragiiiaisbteresrccesatl BR iieicoincidcnasidicodbuncousvee Ria ok Sie ee ee ee wy CALL AT OUR OFFICE and see the entertaining and finely illustrated Mc CLURE’S MAGAZINE, which has among its contributors the most famous authors in America and England, including R. L. Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, A. Conan Doyle, Octave Thanet, William Dean Howells, 3ret Harte, Clark Russell, Joel Chandier Har- rie, Thomas Hardy, J. T. Trowbridge, Jerome K. Jerome, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Theodore Rooseve't, Joaquin Miller, Gilbert Parker, John Burroughs, Hamlin Gar- land, Prof. E. 8. Holden, Prof. C. A. Yonng, H. H. Boyesen, Robert Barr, Henry M. Stanley, Archibald Forbes, Andrew Lang, and many others. Each number of McCLURE’S MAGAZINE contains two illustrated interviews with famous people. Jules Verne, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Tissandier, the famous French Balloonist, Archdeacon Farrar, Thomas A. Edison, F. Hopkinson Smith, H. H. Boyesen, Alphonse Dau tet, Camille Flammarion, Edward Everett Hale, Professor Graham Bell and many others, have furuished material for especially prepared inter- views, which will appear fully illustrate’ in this magazine. HENRY M. STANLEY will contribute, especially for young readers, a story of AFRICAN AqVENTURE. : : NATURAL HISTORY AND ADVENTURE.—There will be several articles written by Raymond Blathwayt, who has been called by Mr. W. T. Stead the best interviewer in England, from material furnished him by Carl Hagenback, of Hamburg, the great animal importer and trainer. These articles deal with the Capture of Wild Beasts, the Training of Wild Beasts, the Transportation of Wild Beasts, the Adven- tures and Escapes of Cari Hagenbeck. The series wil! be illustrated by an English artist of great skill in drawing animals. JOHN BURROUGHS, C. F. HOLDER, DR. C. C. ABBOTT, and other writers famous for their work in this field, will contribute to the Magazine. Of interest to both Young and Old will be PROF. R. L. GARNER’S AFRICAN EXPEDITION TO THE GORILLAS. Arrangements have been made, in connec- tion with a leading English review, to publish Professor Garner’s letters descriptive ot hie present expedition to Africa. Professor Garner is noted the world over for the curious and interesting investigations he is making in the speech of monkeys. He sailed for Africa last graphs taken by Prof. Garner in Africa. McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under the heads: The Edge of the Future,” “ Neweat Knowledge,” “ Knowledge of Immediate Value,” The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” ete. We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for only $4.60 a year, payable in advance or in monthly instalments of 35c. as desired. . oes . oe We make this exceptional offer in order that we may secure a large number ot new subscribers, but all who are already subscribers may avai! themselves of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magazine. Address : The Examiner Publishing Co., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. —— 7 “—~ as —— - We Ask Our Patrons TO GIVE THEIR KIND ATTENTION -—TO OUR—— September Accounts. HASZARD & MOORE. - Charlottetown’ Oct. 17, 1893. FIRST-CLASS MLVER & GOLD WATCHE AND OTHER GOODS b. W. TAYLOR, CAMERON BLOCE. Charlettetowa, September 14, 1993, lls" ln Llp Wo hn Lb Sb Nie Sb» No No Nos Ube Sm She No» "> “> Ue Sn Se ln Se be LL Lo iv bp Snip Ln bp Sn bp Sn bp Sp Sn Ly Lo Sn ny Sip Ln Sip Lo Ln Si bp Lo Lo Sb Lp Si Sn bp Sin dp ‘op Ln Ln I ln Se be Sn Sen ‘ mber for the purpose of further pursuing his studies in the native haunts of the gorilla. The illustrations of these articles will be from photo- f } j 1893. ASTLAR AND We Never! y NG OY FOR? < THE “408 E , COLDS,CROUP,|: HOARSENESS, INFLUENZA ett) Le bah AND ALL THROATAND LUNG TROUBLES PLEASANY e SAFE ANDO tant - SUP cut PRICE 26 AND CO CENTS MANUFACTURED SY THE HAWKER MEDICINE CO., Lro, Pa # ST. JOHN, NB. a ia. : yt Sealed Teaders a@lressed to the undersigued, and endorsed “ender ier Wood Islands Work,” will be received at this office untii TUESDAY,the ith day of November next, inclusively, for tie reconstruction and repair of works at Wood Islands, Queer’s County, Prinee Edward Isiand, aceording to a plan and specification to be seen at the Post Office, Charfotictown, and at the Department of Public Works, Ot awa Tenders wiii not be considered uniess made on the form supplied, and signed with the actual * gnatares of tenderers, An aceepiid bank cheque, payable to the order of the Minister of Public Works. equal to five per cent of the amount of tender, rust accompany each tender. This cheque will be forteited if the party deciine the contract or fai] to complete the work contracted for, and will be returned in case of non-accertauce of tender. The Department does not bind itself to cept the lowest or any tender. By order, ac- E. F. E. ROY, Secre ary. Department of Public Works, } Uttawa, 7th October, 863. 4 act2Z3—3i PE. so. RAILWAY . ‘ ' . Until Further Notice the trains of this Rall way wiiliun daily (Sundays excepted) as follows :— Trains will leave Charlottetown: Express for Summerside and Tignish.6 0 am Accommodation for Mount Stewart, Georgetown and Souris . eae Accommodation for Summerside .2« pm Express for Mount Stewart, Geonge- town and Souris. indeeiieke 30“ Passengers for the West can leave Char- jottetown até a.m., arriving at Summerside at8&.l5 and Tignish at 11.55 a m., returnin same day, reaching Summerside at 4.05 an Charlottetown at6.20 p. m. Expres Trains make close connection at Summerside with Steamer to and from Point du Chene. Pew sengers going East can leave Charlotietown at 6.30 a.m., arriving at Souris at 10.5, or Georgetown at ld a. m.. retarning te Char- lottetown same day, arriving at 5.5, p.m. Trains will arrive at Charlottetown: Express from Georgetown, Souris and Mount Stewart > 9 Dam Accommodation from Summerside... .9 40 Accommodation trom Georgetown, Souris and Mount Stewart ... 0% pm Express from Tignish and Summer- side non i iLhedacveekde « All Trains are run by Eastern Standarc Time. D. POTTINGER Generai Menager. Moncton, J. UNSWORTH Superintendent. Ch’town, Farm For Sale. THE subscriber offers for sale Lis farm on the Mount Edward Read, about one mile and a half from the city, well and favorably known as the “Weish Farm.” The farm consists of sixty acres, and con tains a good Dwelling House aud five Outbuildings, all in good condition. There is also a orchard in connection. Terms easy. Apply to C. BENOIT, Water Street. r good July 3, 1893. WE ARE HEADQUARTEAS FOR Wooden Buiter Dishes and Keg Cases, We also carry a large stock of WAXED PAPERS for covering Butter and Lard. WRAPPING PAPER, PAPER BAGS and TWINE of every description. SCHOFIELD BROS, Importers and Wholesale Paper Dealers ST. JOHN, N. B. P. O. Box 435. oS es mrercae Petree ae eee ae. tr ~ ” " bons “ a Pickford & Black. Halifax & P. B, Island S.S. Line. STEAMER FASTNET Leaves Halifax, N. 8., for Charlottetown every Monday, 6 p. m. Arrives Charlottetown from Halifax about 6 a. m., Wednesday, | Leaves Charlottetown for Summerside about 1} a. m., Wednesday. Arrives Chartoutetown from about 4 a. m., Thursday. Leaves Charlottetown for 4p. m., Thursday, For Freight or Passage apply to W. W. CLARKE A + Summerside Halifax, N. &., ' enh Charlottetown, July 12, 1893. STEAMER JACQUES CARTIER. i893. ‘sak i893. Until Further Notice the Steamer “J acque Cartier, Hugh McLean, Master, wil! run a follows :— Will leave Orwell Brush Wharf for Charlotte- town every Tu sday, Wednesday and Thursday mornings at 7 o'clock, calling at Halliday’s Wharf. Will leave Charlottetown for Halliday’s and Orwell Brush Wharves same evenings at 3 o'clock, remaining at Brush Wharf every Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, and on Thursdays will return io Chaflottetown, arriving there abeut & o’elock Will go up to Vernon River Bridge alternate Wednesday. On Fridays will leave Charlottetown for Cranberry Wharfand Haggarty’s W hart, East River, st 5 o’clock, a. m ; leaving Cranberry Wharf for Charlottetown at 7.30 a m., calling at Haggarty’s and Hickey’s Wharf. Will leave Charlottetown for Hickey’s and Cranberry W harves at $ o’clock, p. m., re- turning to Charlottetown same evening. Every alternate Friday Mount Stewart Bridge On Saturdays will leave Crapaud or Char- lottetown at7 o'clock, a m.; will leave Charlottetown for Crapaud, at 3 o'clock, p. m., and return to Charlottetown, arriving about 9 o’cjock. every will go ww LC, OwEM, . eh Ch town, . A