RNR nm eon Staite Ne AiR tesa cn nesinuain cease tel eee THE “ PE e*ee#*es A downright good IF YOU | WANT | A GOOD | Oe Fcc, SUNLIGHT = iS AT YOUR SERVICE AT YouR Grocers TT) ap has been in use in Windsor Castle ears,and the manufacturers y special Royal War rant SOAP MAEERS cou $82 TEE ous “SUNIL C”* bas received 11 Gold Medals for purity and excellence | Soap,so good that you i can use it for all pur- | poses without risk to j skin or fabric, no mate | ter ho ' w tender or deli- La pinted t NERVE NERVE BEAN'S are 3 new cis very that cure the worst Cast BEANS [fee Meet sit ke ~ weakness of body or mind esses of youth. This solule y iree 3 stinate cases wher TREATMENTS hove failed ev ~ —, gists at $1 per peckage, or six for $5, o 47 mail a feveipt of price by ak Teasing THE JAMES ME DICLNF ~~ Toronte, Ont Write for pamphict 5 Prod aRSOn PILLS Make New, Rich Bleod: . hem 5 Manne of | 8 od ~ - box is worth t ’ } sof a ber of ow! out about them, and ays | ful. .™2 Ls Ose | impurities m the bie eS ate w : eat benefit f using th justrated pamy ‘ very here t #ot u mail for = a wt a; five t 31% Dit POHNSON € OO.. 2 Custom How I Oo. Mes ete aa eae Though you Cough Don't Despair ! ly hopeless cases - > Many apparent have been cured by a course of Cee WINE OF BEECH TREE CREOSOTE ¢ , , AT ALL DRUGGISTS K. CAMPBELL &CO., Montreal. on7nr ras ee eee 8 OS OS ” Take care that your drafts on your physical endurance don't come back to you some day marked “no "eae Of Pure CodLiver Oil&Hypophosp hites rease your energy and so als ¢ good ur accou - bank of health. 47 CUR? CONSUMPTION, SCROFULA, BRONCHITIS, COUGHS, COLDS and all forms of Wastin ng Diseases, Almost as Palatable as Milk. Be sure you get the genuine as there are poor imi- fations. Prepared only by Seott & Bowne. Belleville, Grateful - Comforting Epps’ ppss Cocoa. BREAKFAST. : “BR : . y ura 4 dig : i ox! M } break fu ; be ve w : do I ' ’ ler H i : malad ] : ar y ‘ ‘ * a wea W : sca ‘ : fatal Sha n I y hel Dy | i and a proy el fra S Ga Mad gy wa r > i ~ trrace i } { 1MES EPPS & CO.,H ‘ I ma } gia THE PEOPLE'S HOME-GUARD! piPEMULSION ON SENTRY DuTy It will guard you securely from disease YOU Have a Very Bad Congh, Are Suffering From Lung Troubles, Have Lost Flesh Through Illness, Are Threatened With Consumptior. IT WILL Cure That Cough, Heal Your Lungs, Put Flesh On Your Bones, Prevent Consumption. SMALL & LARGE BOTTLES 50e. & $1.00. iT 1S VERY PLEASANT TO TAKE. ak for and be sure you get the" D. &L. Emulsion,” . ~ ; TRY IT! = SRM ME CARDN What DBeekerpers Say About Making Bees Hive Themselves. The self hiver question has been thor oughly discussed, and it is generally con oeded that it is practicable to make bees hive themselves. E. A. Root of Me dina, O., explained in brief, in a paper read before a beekeepers’ association, the more ijmportant points in self hiving He said that the principle of the self hiver isto ca the queen in a trap at the entrance of the hive, she foli®wing a tu f cloth ory rated zinc un- til s finds T a new hive ad joir t ld ene or placed above it T? > : ‘ ‘ een wit them return to the 1 location. Some of the bea find the old queenin the new hive and join her thus, hiving them selves. The trouble seems to be that too ma bees return to the old hive A t a year ago Mr. E. S. Prait ot Marlboro, Mass., pr ed to set the new hive ia fr f the old and compel the bees, 2s they passed to and from ths hive th 1 the new hi catch t2 ben she at- When the returned, n t fin ling anes 1een with I ey entered th * new hive through the entranc which they were accus- temed to use, an a fin lir 1g the queen in the h ned The point of iperiority is that warming bees are secured. A set of combs are kept in the new hive in readiness for the bees when they swarm Mr. Root last season gave this hive an extended trial, using some 10 or more of them, but arranging them differently from the Pratt plan, a igh the prin- ciple was retained. Instead of placi ing thenew hives in front of the old one, it was placed under it, the bees passing down thr ugh it on their way to the field. A queen excluder at the outer en- ited & e queen from leaving >, and a queen trap between the twe hives prevented the queen from returning to the old hive. A sheet of perforated metal between the two hives allowed the bees to pass up and dewn. This arrangement had worked very suc- cessfully, and it simplified matters, only cne bottom board be ing needed. Self hivers furnish a topic for con- sideration in a recent number of The Bee- keepers’ Review. Mr. Pratt very natu- rally wrote of the advantages of the self hivers. C. J. Barber, Rodney, Ia., stated that “the self hiver not only hives swarms, but discourages swarming by killing off the drones.” R. L. Taylor, Lapeer, Mich., was emphatic in assert- ing that self hivers mean too much | money, too much loss and too much risk. Improvements of the automatic hiver are announced for 1893, and the editor of Bee Gleanings pronounces favorably on the samo. The present season the great majority of beekeepers will watch and hive their bees in the usual way, while specialists will further test and report on the self hivers. trance prevé the new hive, Droadcasting Fertilizer. Many farmers do not approve of broad- casting manure and fertilizer, but prefer the food near the plants where the rocts may get at it. Sushi New Yorker, ax earnest advocate for broadcasting, has this to say on the subject: Hill manur- | ing gives decided resnits. Its effect is to stimulate an early and vigorous growth, and that is just what misleads farmers and gardeners. The older plant cuffers. The baby plant is fattened and the maturer plant starved. Many peo ple do not believe that the roots of corn | planted, let us say 2 by 4 feet apart, | meet before asct is formed. Many do not consider that the roots of potato plants set 1 by 3 feet apart meet and intermingle before the tubers are well formed. After long experience and careful ex- periments broadcasting of manure for nearly all crops is advised. Hill“ ma- | nuring is good as far as it goes, bnt it does not go far enough. The young plants are pushed forward—the old plants starved. Let ustake a young ap- ple tree set three years ago. We apply | manure liberally around it, covering a circle four feet in diameter. The tree thrives. But when this tree has become 10 yeare old how much good would such an application of manure do? Very ht- tle, because the young feeding roots now are far beyond such a circle. Feed the older plants more liberally, while giving | the younger plants all needed care. Top Dressing Clover. The best results in top dressing clover are pony obtained, says American Cul- | tivator, _— on fine, well rotted manure ectly after cutting the first ' | crop in June or earlyin July. There | Wil be likely to be rains enough to carry the manure down to the roots and ena- | ble it to produce a second and in some cases a third crop if the land is strong, and then it leaves a good strong root, which if plowed up wilkenrich the soil even more than the manure would have done if put on at the time of plowing. | Clover is one of those crops that the more you take on the more you have left. A good growth of leaf and stalk mears a large amount of nitrogé® stored up in the roots. Such treatment fits landwery well for a crop of corn or potatoes as well as many Sther crops. If not de- sired to plow it, other grass will proba- bly take the place of the clover and be fed by the decaying roots after a few years. Care For (rep Bound Fowls. Considerable complaint is heard about crop bound fowls. Here isa cure for this complaint from The Fanciers’ Mont}- ly, which is very simple and, it is claimed, ts also effective It is slippery el: bark boiled and two or three teaspoonfu!s ef Hiqu id, and aj! given three or four ti:nes aday. A correspondent who has tried it says, “I have never lost one fowl, ng tnatter hot long it had been crop bound, since I started in to use this remedy.” *harac- ther ts pro- Emul- ss pal. An utter loss of hope is no not | teristic of consur 1 ig is 80 fatal, unless of disease use f Scott's Liver O s is arrested by sion, which is Cod k a= cream made For Over Fifty Years Mrs. W used by m ren while little sufferer nsloe’s Soothing Syrnp has been illions of mothers for their child- teeth. It relieves the it produces natural, entling at once ; quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain, and the little cherub awakes as “bright as a button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It sooths the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regu lates the bowels, and is the best-known remedy for diarrhoea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for “Mrs- Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup,” and take no other kind, — oC Days of Agony is the experience of thousan: is of ane from piles Hawker’s Pile Cure is a tive and painless cure. Sold everyw a. Price 50 cents, If afflicted, try it, DAILY EXAMIN YER, n the Valley of Death | A Marvellous Escape! A Member of a Schoel Board Save A Sta‘eme:t Enderse! by Two Promineo: Clergymen! | “MW |Z ZB : | ZZ Z | 2a ge | wes | i } ‘a wry ti | Mr. J Nixon, N I ¢ t? ~ rT il i prominent men | i {sa member of the al s I ] Ss attentin na irud-working: a° a chur h meni ber he ix st, levout and sincere; as a i | ghibor s kindly, urteous and aii in the Ccommupity. For a considerable time Mr. Rolstor wa t i with dyspepsia, which be " : re i produced nervot } tra } Tr} eufferer’s re f fie Its F . 3 wna ¥ ' t : i strengtl } i he eft = were var 1 fruitiess Under the g i aire n « ercif P jence the us f Paine’s Celery (¢ uy iw suggested to M Rolston, and he was persua ied to give ita tria Shortly after using the Compound L marve = chanvge was ¢ X pe rience i; ith L word ip! i was affected aft the use . 4% = f nature’s reat iife-giver Mr. Rolston, for the benefit of suffering humanity, writes as follows :— “It gives me great pleasure to add my known as which is ever It Is bow a vear attack of ner- chronie dys ould not sleep at testimony ta vour Paine’s Celery C 1rd preparation ompound, n populs Pil I had a severe ous prostratior pepsia, and for a reasing past Since 1 caused by vear I « night. This condition of sleeplessness brought on delirium. I was attended by four of the best decters of the country, and took a great quantity of medicine, but all failed to do me any good. Having . : been persuaded to read your books | thought [I would try your Paine’s Celery had used four and dyspep-ia left more work since ex ‘el- myself completely Compound; and after I bottis ethe nervousness me, and I have done than for years past. | lent health and consider now enjoy cured I hay e highly recommen led your Paine’s Celery Compound to others, and I know of several persons who are now using it JOSEPH ROLSTON, Nixon, Ont. I know Mr. Rolston, as I visited him uring his illness, and can testify to the T. R. CLARKE, Delhi, I am one of Mr. Rolston’s nearest neigh- bors, and have been acquannte d with him fur many years. I can testify to his ill- and believe the above statements to be correct D. WILLIAMS, Methodist Minister, Ont Nixon, Ont. The following tlemen. neighbors of Mr. Rolston, also vouch fur his state ments :-—E i Weir, Alex. Weir, Chris- topher Johnzon, B. C. Williams and Wm Lind-ay A SPLENDID RECORD. A Provincial Industry Trebles its Pusiness in the Last Ihree Muaths, Some three mont formed its readers that a ndustry, that of the Company, of St. John, had first qurrter’s busines-, and that howed a development of trade and a cord of sales that was not only but really a-tonishing Another thir and the c -Ounts for the new } Tevincial re- gratifying € montis has now } mpany bave six monthe. balanced their ac The staff and werk has been carried on in the order to fill order claimed to t Indeed, this last might Great Britain | and will act sently extend their operations there, as well as more extensively to About the patenting their remedies in the middle of this who so Success United States month Thomas Rankine, fully introduced the Hawker remedies in Newfoundland last spring, will start and traver-e the western part of Canada, from Montreal to Vancouver in the interests of the company. With such a record as that of their first six months closed, the Hawker Medicine Co. are evidently destined now to achieve a great success. The ¥ control n lard re medies, which have received fia rsation of leading physicians the United States, as well as rvent praise of sorely afflicted people restored to kk ia an ur he ferv who have by their means ‘been health Their place of business is at 104 Prince Will liam Street, St. John, N. Z. where they have the most extensive and elabor Lower Pri William Haw ker, the original inventor of the remedies. has been a druggist in St. John for 30 vears, and had long pare the value of the different Coli pany was pleasure that this com pany s »vinces Sociale before > present organized. It is with journal records the SUCCESS. The Test of Time. William Holder, sailmaker, St. John, “This is to certify that for nearly a year I suffered with dyspepsia, indiges- tion and severe bilious headaches. I lost | flest. and became very weak. I was re- commended to use Hawker’s Tonic and writes: completely cured me I gained flesh very fast, and became hearty and stronger than I had ever been, and have never suffered | since, now over one vear.” 4 7“e7fr Everyone is pleased with our low prices in boots. We are selling boots lower than ever.—old here before, at the Dominion Boot and Shoe Store. al9 6i staat USE SKODA’S DISGO VERY ,the grea Blood and Nerve Remedy, Methodist Minister, | he age this journal in- | Hawker Medic'ne | completed its | tss book | results | show that in the last three months they | have trebled the bu -iness of the first three: they have about doubled their working yackers room till 11 o’clock every night in | I ; * promptly. From all | ately fitted up premises of the kind in the | wonderful | Pills, and am pleased to say that they | i { feb 9—t t« am RARAIRIRIRIR PRICIER LOIS OP SPL E CSIC ars: Ps Site. Co es fee = 7 »- ROGERS. AMiE ERST, N: &., May 27, 1893. THE GRODER DYSPEPSIA CURE CO é é é GENTLENEN:~I am é é 71 years of az Hive boea alicted with sick headache most al] my life, which developed into Dyspepsia of a mild type about twenty years ago, aud has continuel to grow worse uatil during the past seven y or eight years [ have not been ab » take a uring Oo we water or milk, as f they would produce severe prius and s times vomiting. I have been subject ig to severe pains in the chest, with dizz 3, W 1 have been more frequent dur- ing the past throe or four years. M, vas furred up in the mornings, accompanied with bal breath My case was yearly growing worse. During all this I mg periol I have tried ma 1y popular medicines, as well as prescriptions from the regular medical practitioners, but without producing any improvment. In the fall of °92 I coacluled to try a bottle or two of your medicine and such were its effects that I continued it and nov I can drink cold water or milk Those your me dizzy pains are all gone and my mouth is as eweet asa baby’s. In short, licine has cured me and I am sure that all Dyspeptics can be cufed by its use. (Signed) W. H. ROGER Late inspector of Fisheries for Nova Scotia, é without any inconvenience. ” u es AE SE RE BP SES SE BEES OBE BSP EFIOPGXL_EPA E-LIBRARY Castoria is Dr. Sa and Ciildron. lt contzins neither Opium, Morphine ner amtiel Pitcher’s prescription for Infants other Nea substa {5 is s harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, foothing Syrups, and Castor Oih It is Pie is thirty ycars’ use by Millions of Mothers, Casteria destroys Worms and allays foverishness. Castorian prevents vomiting four Curd, cures Diarrhea and Wind Colle. Castoria relieves tecihinug tronbics, curcs constipation and flatulency. Castori.: as: rechiates the stomach treotic nce. corn ~sible Its guarantce similates tho foo, | end bowels, giving health; aud natural sicep. Case | toria is tho Children’s Panacea—thoe Mother’s Fricnd, so astcz ia. ! Gastorh, “ Castoria is an cocellcnt sydieine for chit. | * Cactoria is 80 well adapted toc.f tren thal Qra, Motucrs have repostely toid me of iis T recommend it as superior toany prescription } » 203 elect upow their ch lire x known to me.” i D... G. C. Oraoonr, TI. A, Arcnenr, Of D., | Lowell, Mass. 111 So, Orford St., Lruoxlyn, N.Y. Our physicians ia the ch Tent hoy eace in as wnecy for chilin a Log at od. lhe=nt. cay fur distant wbon mothers willcon. i.! erty at of ta-ir chillren, an | use Cusceriai.- variousquack notrums Wuich ore h ir toved ones, by forcins cpi:im, e, sxthing syrup and other firtful Lire:.’s depart e epokea highly of tho'r experi- eir outside practice with Castoria, and althouzh we only hare among our taedicul supplies what is kuown as reruir products, yet we are fre: to confers that the morphin merits of Castoria has won us to look with } ageuts down thcir throats, thereby scad_ug favor upon it.” | {acca to premacure graves.” i Usirsp Hosprrat and Dieprvaaay, Da. J. 7. Bosicn, Masa . Krvcneres, Couway, A: The Coutaur en Ti Murray Street, Now , : Acizn C. Surra, Pres., t lapsed ; 20,000 saan RED CAP BINDER TWINE. a ee PURE PARIS GREEN, 4T LOWEST FRICES. DODD & ROGERS, WHOLESALE AND REAIL HAY DWARE. wh, August 3, 1593—t parts of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia afid P. E. Island, from Newfoundland and parts of the United States, the orders have rolled in. The business is now firmly es- tablished Phe experimental stage ‘s past. Repeat orders come in constantly, showing that where once the temedies are intro- duced, they win permanent favors with | the people, who ktiiow as soon as they | have given any of them atria] that these standard remedies are all that they are readily be assumed without a trial, and judging solely from the character of the | gentlemen who form the Hawker Medi- cine Co., as they are numbered among the leading citizens and most honorable and snecessful business men of St. John. The Hawker Medicine « mpany are now Charlottets 2 th sat ASK YOUR CROCER FOR The Celebrated CHOCOLAT MENIER Annual Sales Exceed 33 MILLION Lbs. For Samples sent Free write to C. ALFRED CHOUILLOU, MONTREAL. Would you Likes to go Shopping in MONTREAL ‘COLONIAL HOUSE, PHILIPS SQUARE, MONTREAL. ‘Special Attention Given to Mail Orders Dry Goods, € Carpets, Curtains, Furniture, China and Glass- ware, Kitchen Utensils, Silverware, Lamps, Japanese Goods, | Ladies’ and Children’s Boots, Shoes and Slippers, Mantles | and Millinery. A full Stoek in Trial orders solicited. EENRY MORGAN & Co.. MONTREAL. ach department. 1893. TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 5, aily Examiner ‘THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. ' One Year, -- - an Months, - $I : Six Months, - $2/One Month, - - 35c¢ Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : McCLURE’ S MAGAZINE FREE subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months ut 35 cenis a mouth. By special arrangement with the publishers, we are enabled to make a most exceptional offer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZINE to evervone FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fills out the following blank ferm, | subec ribing fur THE DAILY EX AMINER for 12 months at 35 cents : month | CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. | 1 | MICU CGE EEC Cgqqequen secccccnrqnacwennnccececre | i sd le . | Tue Exasixer Publishing Co., i ; ’ Charlottetown, P. E. Island. You will please send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 errr months from date, for which I agree to pay 35 cents a month, it being understood that you are to have sent to my address fur one year, without } 1% extra charge, McULURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current num ber. | TB cicc.cicacciiasinintitiebecls | | eS eieeeesomiees. ieee = Ib bel bobble bb bh beh be > blob » ty baby bb hb bb bby bb bbb tb bb bb bb > bb by bh bb bb by > bbbdd-SDLSSESSSSEDDSE‘DA CALL AT OUR OFFICE and see the entertaining and finely illustrated Me- CLURE’S MAG AZINE, which has among its contributors the most famous authors in America and England, including R. L. Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, A. Conan Doyle, Octave Thanet, W ill iam Dean Howells, Bret Harte, Clark Russell, Joel Chandler Har- ric, Thomas Hardy, J. T. Trowbridge, Jerome K. Jerome, Frances Hodgson Burnett. Theodore Roosevelt, Joaquin Miller, Gilbe ert Parker, John Burroughs, Hamlin Gar- land, Prof. E. S. Holden, Prof. C. Young, H. H. Boyesen, Ro hert Barr, Henry M. Stanley, Archibald Forbes, Andrew ae. and m: any others. Each number of McCLURE’S MAGAZINE contains two illustrated interviews with famons people. Jules Verne, F rances Hodgson Burnett, Tissandier, the famous French Balloonist, Archdeacon Farrar, Thomas A. Edison, F. Hopkinson Smith, H. H. Boyesen, Alphonse Dan Jet, Camille Flammarion, Edward Everett Hale, Professor Graham Bell and many others, have furnished material for especially prepared inter- views, which will appear fully illustrated in this magazine. HENRY M. STANLEY wil! contribute, especially for young readers, a story |of AFRICAN ADVENTURE. | NATURAL HISTORY AND ADVENTURE —There will be written hy Raymond Blathwayt, who has been called hy Be. WY. F. interviewer in England, from ‘material furnished him by Carl Hagenhack, of Hamburg, the great animal importer and trainer. These articles deal with the C apture of Wild Beasts, the Training of Wild Beasts, the Transportation of Wild Beasts, the Adven- tures and Escapes of Carl 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 tield, will contribute to the Magazine. Of interest to both Young and Old will be PROF. R. L. GARNER’S AFRICAN EXPEDITION TO THE GORIL LAS. Arrangements have been made, in connec tion with a leading English review, to publish Professor Garner’s letters desc riptive of his present exper dition 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 September for the purpose of further pursuing his studies in th native haunts of the gorilla. The illustrations of these articles will be from photo- graphs taken by Prof. Garner in Africa. McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under the heads The Eize of the Fatare,” “Newest Knowledge,” “ Knowledge of Inimediate Value, | The Present Hour,” “ Stranger than Fiction,” ete. i We are offeriag this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for ovly $4.00 a year, payable ip advance or in monthly instalments ef 35¢. as desired We make this exceptional offer in order that we may secure a large number o1 new eubscribers, but all who are alrea: ly subse rilers may avail of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popuiar Magazine. several articles Stead the best themselves Address ; The Examiner Publishing Co, CHARLOTTETOWN, P — ---AND—— 1B ‘School Supplies OF EVERY DESCRIPTION CHFAP AT . ISLAND. IL HASZARD & MOORE ei ta Charicttetown, August 26, 1893—tu th sat Bisquit DuBouche & Co. © COGNAC. ‘THE SECOND LARGEST SHIPPERS OF BRANDY FROM FRA\CE, THEIR BRANDIES UNSURPASSED IN AGE AND QUALITY, ' Ask Your Wine Merchant for Them. oe ARE | 1893. eae oat | Every AWFUL | Ke peed rt i tine use, of Tivertar ¥. 8. ea ye: Fo ls my . ta ks of bil one, wi awe about ever bhaclawmfel headack s and the * f 2 sick. I became weak end nereons ; no ambi r st eth t & fs ad many eleeplens nigh ~~ s we ahd Dat retam h« DY strane le red in tense!y with 7 med hives, and t ie was @ constant Gagte “are? ¢. lbecam weak the, my frien’* gac wpa'lihopes overs. My brother t ‘ 7 " HEWKER'S NERVE AD STOMACH peta ERS LIVER Fil 7h me T had t a * t Came gictely « owwed, ¥ grew trong does ous, My Sppriite r ‘ IL step? aell as 1 tn a few months gai > weight. be OuSLess sit Bow as Son and Avarty as any maa ; ¥ firm.y believe tha: ™ AIAWKERMSNERTVE ND 8T< MACH TONIC AND LIVER PIzrt ec. ’ Saved My L I hereby certify the s ton tect in every porticalar. . om. Sold by all Drurwista en rm TONIC &h4s.3 FILTS Sek Manuf HAWKER & S ED 1 if Ale & Stout XY cnd AXX, ; : Ah Ke Caco ; part of ‘ : i &. 1 Dp. SON & CO \\ ~ ‘ fere Are No Flies like the flies that fishermen can obtain at the St. Ge e Pharinacy. There is no Seda like that traveller which the thirsty at fountain.” obtain our can a cool refreshing ¥. deC. Davies. Pharmacy, Wis ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR Wooden Butter Bishes and Bee Cases, St. George Victoria Row We also carry a lar ge stock of WAXED PAPERS for covering Butter and Lard. WRAPPING PAPER, PAPER BAGS and TWINE description SCHOFE) LD BROS., Paper Dealers of every Importers and Wholesale ST. JOHN, N. Bt P. O. Farm Por THE subscriber Box 435 Bale. fers for sale his farm on tthe Mount Edward Road, aboat one mile and a half from the eity, well and favorably known as the “Welsh Pavm.” The farm cousists of sixty acres, and con tains a good Dwelling House aad five Outbuildings, all in good condition. There good orchard in tion. AP ly to C. BENOIT, Water Street is AInO 8 Cothet Terms easy July 3, 1693 .. 7 Lin Ye | 7 JT rit ny if: ns Fetching the Docto At night is always a trouble, and it is often an entirely unnecessary trouble if Perry Davis’ PAIN SILLER fs xept in the ho no trope of this old remedy in a ‘tile sweet. ened water or mil! :, brings prompt relief. Sold everywhere. Have you seen the New BIG BOTTLE Old Price 25 Cexts. STEAMER <aeiee CARTIER. IS93. ‘ artier. ~ ahs Me Ly follows Will leave Orw | town eves T Th alay Halliday’s W Will leave ¢ Orwell Brus o'clock. rx Tuesday Thars : ‘ ry for i Hagearty’s W hari, mek . mm aving al Hayggurt and for Hick s and ne , re . ' rag alternate Fr to Meant Mewart Bridg On Saturdays w ior Char- kiktetow uT Oo <x will ate Charlotteiown for Crapaud, at § o'clock, P. wi, and return to Charlottetown, afriving shout § oc. ock, LC, OWEN, . Agen. Ch’towa. - - eee et ee a ee ee. +