an — | 7 =e = THE Colds Coughs Catarrh | h n Are ivls to whi a vy ‘ ner use of our « b ‘ { its faction, and w aie tance. C€ : i family us It i ‘ ; - ce asthma, abs : : mu ; ache. la & u wuscul stiff joints, tooth tousilitis aud whooping cough. tiff poinis, loulla DALLY Chaps Chafing Chilblains nelr. You can relieve a ation a EXAMINER Colic Croup Cramps »enre all of these by the free | d used it with entire satis- speedily have {iter generat , : ; ildren as a valuable inbert- worth to their c! ears except that it possesses great merit for rents att ied with inflammation; such as | forms of sore throat, earache, head- « soreness. neuralgia, scalds, stings, sprains, The great vital aud muscle nervine. Johns ons Anodyne Liniment che. every bruise. « It soothes every a e* : y , for INTERNAI swelling everywhere It : . vy Dr. A s Positive ond ' yeure B ' ow mp™ . find re fr Price 25; five #! from the using the: DODD: wer Mitts : ALWAYS CURE AFTER TEN YEARS SUFFERING oe Two Box Cure MItvenrton, 2ru Jvry, 18%. * Gentlemen, en years Thad been troubled with kiduey disease, being had at iutervals that I could not lie in } — ij at night nor stoop to the ground. — tithe remedies I could find I had tried all the remecie r without effect, but heard of Dodd's Kid- pey Fills and procured a box. fam most happy to say it for my own eake as well as for others that I am pe» fectly cured after using four boxes. JOHN RILEY. wecin s2'l you Doli’s Kidney Pills » the foliowing prices, viz.:—50c. per box six boxes for $2.50. Tothe trade—$4.0 perdozen, or three dozen at $3.75 pe For the last ten ; dosea, Sent by mai! to any address por aid 2 ~~ or - GEOR?ZE E. HUGHES, may 22 Charlottetown if? If you want to preserve apples, don’t cause a break in the skin. The germs of decay thrive rapidly there. So the germs of consump- tion find good soil for work when the lining of thethroat and lungs is bruised, made raw, or injured by coldsand coughs. Scott’s Emulsion, with hypophosphites, will heal inflamed mucus mem- branes. The time to take it is before serious damage has been done. A 5o-cent bottle is enough for an or- dinary cold. 50 cents and $1.00 Scorr & Bowna, Chemists, Ucileville, One or cold GIVES AN | IDEAL FINISH | } Smooth “and lasting The Edwardsburg Starch Co. M’f'r’s. Bonas: Canoimas, Ow. Orrices: Mowrmeat, °.@ STEAMER FASTNET. The steamer Fastuet- commences her season’s work, sailing from Halifax TUESDAY, May 5th, and will continue to sail weekly, leaving Halifax every Tuesday, calling at the following] ports Spry Bay, Sheet Harbor, Salmon River, Tsaac’s Harbor, Caso, Arichat, Port Hawkesbury Port Hi od, 8 UTIs, Charlottetown and Summerside. Low rates. W. W. CLARKE, Agent, The Canada Accident ASSURANCE CO, FRED. W. HYNDMAN, ACENT FOR P. E. L., &ccrpts Plate Glass Instrance also. May 23, 1896—law (6) Freight solicited, VICTORIA CARE The best place to get your oysters, darties wishing to Lave those beautiful baked beans left at their houses, hot, can do so by leaving order day before. JOHN P. JOY. sept21—tf. Johnson i} v Phvs “Best Liver Pill Made.’ rsons’ Pills Sold everywhere. Money Wanted, On 4 good investment. Seven or eight hundred dolars is wanted at 6 per cent., for 5 or 10 years on Real Estate. Insur- ence of sau efor $500. For further par- ticulars P.O. Box 154. octl very cramp, every irritation, every lametiess, every , as EXTERNAL use. It was originated 1. Every Mother should have it in the house, Tuse Johnson's Liniment forcatarrh. I had tried al st everything recommended for cat arth ind Johnson's Anodyne Liniment far suy rior to any I use it as you direct. j. & Wuurr_e, South Windham, Vt. 1 Our Rook “Treatment for Diseases” Matled Free. D « Sienature and Directions on every bottle, ) All Druggists. 1 5. Johnson & Co., Boston, Masa — — » LOVED ADVENTURE. WILLIAM FENIMORE COOPER HAS SEEN A THING OR TWO. A Career Filled With Hairbreadth Escapes —His Fxperiences as a Cowboy and an African Explover—Greasers and African Chiefs His Game. Few men have had more hairbreadth escapes than Senor William Fenimore Cooper, who for many years lived near the extinct volcano of Zempoatepettle, in the province of Orizaba, Mexico. He made his home with the Mexican In- jians, the last of the once proud race of Aztecs who fought under Montezuma. It was his cnstorm dally to enter the crater of the volcano and look for mosaic Agate, a translucent, prismatic stone somewhat similar to the onyx. One day he went to sleep in the crater near a bed of sulphur, and the latter caught fire and came within an ace of suffocating him. His beard has been a burns umber color ever since. The acetdent caused him to quit Mex- ico for the United States, and he has been here ever since. Some of the inci- dents in his career show that he has nerve,a deadly aim and a heart for every fate. He is a native of the Tar Heel State, and when 16 years old he went to ‘Texas to become a cowboy. One night near the Rio Grande river he and ten other cowboys were surrounded by Mex- ican bandits, and a general fight follow- ed. In the melee young Cooper was shot in the head, and the bullet is still there. He was dragged from the fleld as dead, but after many weeks he recovered and began to punch cows again and practise pistol shooting. His idea was revenge upon the greaser who had shot Kim in the fight, whom he knew by sight. One hot night in July, four months after he was wounded, Cooper had his horse staked out grazing while he took his siesta under a chaparral tree on the banks of a little stream. When he awoke, he lit a shuck cigarette and casually looked down the stream. To his amazement he saw the greaser who shot him just getting up from a sierta. The greaser’s horse was also grazing some yards away. Both ran for their horses, for they knew it was a life and death race. The greaser was a sprinter, and so was Cooper. Each reached his horse almost at the same moment, and each mounted simultane- ously. Their pistols left their hostlers tcegether, and they began to fire at each other. After two shots had been ex- changed the greaser yelled out a chal- lenge of the true cowboy style—i.e., they would gallop around ina circle, shoot at each other five times apiece, and if at the expiration of the 10 shots neither was killed they would resort to the lariat. Cooper readily agreed, because he had devoted much practice to shooting from his horse at full speed. They rode a short distance from the creek and then began their circular duel. As they galloped around, the greaser shot first and put a bullet hole through the rim of Cooper's sombrero. It was a close call and showed fine markmanship on the greaser’s part. As Cooper after- ward remarked, ‘‘I could smell that bullet, for it scorched my eyebrows.’’ The first bullet from Cooper entered the greaser’s side, but he pluckily kept his seat in his saddie and put a hole through the cowboy's sleeve. At the second dis- charge from the cowboy’s pistol the greaser fell headlong from his horse. Cooper thought he was dead, but he was only badly wounded and recovered months afterward, It made a good Mexi- can out of him, and he gave up brigand- age and In time became an alcalde in the province of Chihuahua. At this period the subject of this sketch concluded he had played cow boy long enough and came north, where he married a handsome young lady, who, as subsequent events proved, had as much courage as her husband Of all places in the world he concluded to go to Africa on his wedding trip, and his wife did not object, After weeks of sea travel they tarted up the Congo river, with what ke termed the Cooper Trading Com- pany. He had a regular expedition fitted out, with elephants, Zanzibart guards an porters and a few missionaries, to help him buy ivory. For six or seven months he was absent from the coast, but when he returned he had secured enough ivory to clear $10,000 above all expe Mrs. Cooper was with him every mo- ment and carried a rifle, which she used effectually on more than one occasion. ‘This was some years before Mre. French Sheldon penetrated to the interior of the dark continent. One of the petty chiefs, who had plenty of ivory stored away, refused to sell it to Mr. Cooper. He also complained of the loss to his cattle he had sustained hy the inroads of a big lion. When the American made a @roposition to the can- tankerous, pessimistic chief to go out alone to kill the lion, the old savage smiled with delight, for he thought the conditions would be reversed, and after the beast had enjoyed a savory meal off the white man then the expedition could be looted and a bushel of heads secured A goat was tied in an open space in the forest, and the cowboy, with his elephant rifte, secreted himself near by. Ail night long he waited. The goat bleated, and yet the lion came net. Just as the aun was rising a large male lion, with a ter- rific roar, sprang into the open space and upon the goat. Tro quick reports from the rifle were heard, and the king nses, of beasts rolled over dead, almost at the feet of the intrepid hunter. The patives cut open the lion after Mr. Cooper set up its bely to assure them that life was extinct, and then occurred & curious ceremony. It seems that in the southern states when aisan kills a deer for the first tine he is baptized in its blood, to initiate him into the Ancient Order of Nimroda. TLe senor requested to have the ceremony performed upon himself with the body xf the lion. After the viscera had been noved from the beast Mr. Cooper, with his clothes on, was literaily dragged sncough the place it had occavied, They made asvab of him, and his clothes wire all stained with blood. This cere- mony tickled the chief, and when it was *xplained to him that the white man, after wallowing in the beast’s blood, cuvid never be killed by an animal (it was a little fiction to impress the chief), he wished to know whether the palefaces had gone through a similar ceremony. When answered in the affirmative, with the additional information tnat the ceremony had been enacted with deceased men of every color, he almost bowed down and worshiped the lion slayer. Tiere was nothing too good for the sonor, and he purchased a large quantity of ivery from the chief.—Rocky Moun- tain News. A pre of eighty persons can sit down comfortably in the dining room of the Czar’s yacht. There is alszoa library, a music room and a billiard room, and all the kitchen arrangements are most elab- ~~ and complete, tt ll — a a nl ee THROWING RICE. A Practice That One Railroad is Trying to Stop. “Showering newly-married couples is a very old-time custom and will probably continue for all time to come and it is a harmless custom. It is fun for the friends of the bride and groom doing the showering, and not harinful to the showered, but in some places it is a decided annoyance to others,” said a traveling man. “On railroad trains for instance, where friends follow the the couple into the car and in their haste to do their work before the train starts not only shower the newly-mar- ried, but everybody who chances to sit within two or three seats of them (and I am one of the victims), to suy noting of covering the floor and cushions with rice. At some stations the friends are not allowed to pass out of the depot waiting-room and the rice is thrown asthe couple leave, and others going out at the same time receive a liberal share. The floor is also covered with rice. The New York Central railroad sometime ago issued an order prohibit- ing the throwing of rice in or about the cars or about the depots, but little attention has been paid to it, and the throwing is done so suddenly that the depot attaches are unable to prevent it. Yet it does not oceur as often now as formerly, and the railroad people are in hopes that it will cease entiyely in the near futu:s.” H. J. Lisle, representing Ganong Bros., St. Ste , N.B., says: * Chase's Ointment cured me avery stubborn case of Itching Eczema. everything advertised, soveral’ physicians’ pre- seriptions without manent , af several cases of I 4 @ Piles it bas cured.” BRaDrorb, JULY 4,1894.—I consider Dr, Chase's Sanat od-send to onesee —— from , ttehing scrotum or any itc desnae. foeteiie "Gece ame fel p, t first ‘ from sation.—J No. ExGGan. has :tely advanced by leaps and bounds '! rough Jewish immigration. The Ency- clopedia Britannica, although giving no recent statistics, says: In 1872 the popn- lation was estimated at 20,800. uumbering 10.660 Jews, 5,300 Christians aud 5,000 Moslems. The number of Jews is said to be increasing at the rate of 1,200 to 1,500 souls per avnum, chiefly through fresh arrivals from Russia and Poland.” Hazel’s Cyclopedia for 1896 says the number of Jews in Jerusalem is estimated at 42,900. Evidently there ix an extraordinary Hebrew movement to Jerusalem going on, and that ancient city is from that cause rivalling the boom towus of the west in its growth. —The population of Jerusa’em Balld Up. When the system is run down a person comes a1 easy prey to Consumptioa or- Scrofula. Many valuable lives are saved by using Scott’s Emulsion as soon as a de cline in health is observed. ' According to the St. Petersburg journal Novoe Vremya, Russia, with 119,000,000 inhabitants, has only 18,334 physicians, or one to about 6,000 inhabitants, whereas ‘n Germany, France and England the figures are one to 3,000, 1,800 and 1,600 respcctively. Completely Lnocked Out. “ | was so much run down I had tegive up work, and I felt as if life was not worth iving,” writes Wm. W. Thompson, Zephyr, Ont. “I took Scott’s Sareaparilla ind am now feeling asI did years ago.” “cotw’s Sarsaparilla tones up the entire ~ystem, purifies the blood, and eradicates rheumatic and scrofulous poisons. Ask tor Scott’s and get it. Advices from London state that the immigration returns just issued show that during the month of October 2001 persons sailed for Canada, against 1769 in the pre- ceding October. For the ten months of the year the number was 21,316, for the same period last yeer it was 21,181, 25 cents cures Catarrhal Headache, = “ Incipient Catarrb, ” ” Hay Fever, = ” Catarrhal Deafness, a - Cold in the bead in 10 mip. oe “ Fou] breath caused by catarrh 25 cents secures Chase’s Catarrh Cure with perfect blower enclosed in each box. Solé by all dealers. five hundred public works in Manitoba and the Northwest. If two cases of liquor are required in the inspection of each one of them, the Tarte tour will cost us a pretty peony, and the Minister a large collection of headuches. It Saved Our Child. “My little daughter, three ‘and a half gear old, suffered three years with Eczema. Her little body was covered with the itch- ing rash, and doctors did no good. Four boxes of Chase’s Ointment _ entirely cured and saved our child. Her skin is clearand notasign of rash is to be seen.” Andrew Aiton, Hartland, N. B. Mr. Aiton is one of thousands benefitted by this unfailing cure for piles and skin dis eases, —Montreal Gazette: “While Mr. Bryan depended most on speeches, the Republi- can managers used the printing press, The distribution of literature by the Mc- Kinley workers was on an extraordinary scale, and the result justified the men who put their faith in printer’s ink. Advertis- ing ® good cause, like advertising a good thing, is bound to pay. —__—-- ene Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, Chase’s Pills have gained popularity be-- canse they are a specific for the uric acid condition, prevent Bright’s disease, cure Rheumatism and all Catarrhal conditions of the Kidneys and Bladder. They do this because they possess reinarkable alterative, tonic and deuretic properities, exerting a wonderfully sovihing influence on irritated or inflamed mucos membrance of the kid-- neys or bladder. One pill a dose. 25 a box. The cheapest mediciaein the world. SHIP NEWS, Port of Charlottetown. - ENTERED. Nov 9 — Albatross, Chalmers, Port Granville; Leveret, Garcin, Pictou; Flor- ence May, Anderson, Chatham; Restive, Cain, Newcastle; Omega. Miller, Pictou; Frank Newton, Tutty, Louisburg. CLEARED, Nov 9—Lettie, Mountain, Cape Tormen- tine; P Walsh, Hal!, Glace Bay; Unior, LeBlanc, Arichat; Agility, Porrer, Shel- burne; Florence May, Anderso:, Chat- ham; Beluga, Corkum, Halifax, —Mzi! and Empire: There are four or |. Fen 7 ol & Highland Ranges «Made in Boston —SOLD ONLY BY— Chandler Charlottetown,J uly 22, 1896—246 & wy VOL SCLOCSVOCILVS YI LOLSECLS =~ (D ® 2 ey) 7: @ e to B eathe. t the OLO84°/3OS I'very pore of your skin is trying o breathe —trying to throw out im- purities and to bring in pure oxygen. Entirely close two thirds of the pores and you will die. ¢ inferior underwear and it’s unheal- thy—very. Partially lose nearly all of them by wearing The finest article to wear next skin is Health Brand” SPSS EBDLGLDLWILGLOLOLe ‘Ladies Underwear Thousands cf ladies wear Canada to-day, who cannot be induced to buy anything else for themselves or their children, it in “of Ee, EE Royal Insurance Company ASSETS, $50,000,000. LOWEST RATES PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES J. MACEACHERN, AGENT. Fenecesennes - — Wholesale Wine & 243 Hollis and 48 P.O Box 475. H. STANWAY &Co Liquor Merchants ITALIAN ‘WAREHOUSE Upper Water Street HALIFAX, N. S. y 14) if You ons Going to BOSTON Or any part of the United States, The Cheapest and Best Route is via the PLANT LINE, The Popular Route. Direct Service From Charlottetown The 8. 8. HALIFAX will leave Char lottetown for Boston every Friday at 1 p- m., arriving at Boston Mondays 7 am., returning leave Boston Tuesdays at noon, calling at Hawkesburyand Hal: fax each way. Last Sailing of season from Charlottetown Friday, Noy, 13th. Via Pictou and Halifax. Passengers leaving Charlottetown on Saturday, morning, via Pictou, make close connection at Halifax with 8. 8. Halifax sailing Saturday Light, For further particulars apply to Char- lottetown Steam Navigation Co., Chur- lottetown, or to H. L. CHIPMAN, Can. Att. N.S. ay? Halirax, TO LET That beautifully situated two story dwelling on Prince St, now occupied by Mr. Thos. R. Brooks. Possession given about lst November. Apply to PEAKE BROS. & CO, sept26t—tf FOR SALE. “ f.11 that plessantly situated freehold prop- erty on the eorner of Richmond St. extendin on Rochfort St, over two bundred feet, wit adwelling house on part thereon, Will be sold in the block or division, there being four building iots, ‘i his affords & rare opportunity to persons of smal) means intending t> build in 4 commodious part of the city. Same will be seld at a reasonable price. For jurther ticulars apply to eg <cord J, D. MASON, Ch’town,octl5—246, Ee sD AYOU G3ING RETO BOSTON —BY THE— FAST LINE P Buy your tickets by the SS HALIFAX errivirg at Charlottetow every Friday p. la, W. W. CLARKE, Ticket Agent THE MUTUAL LIFE fusurance Company OF NEW YORK. RICHARD A. McCURDY, PRESIDENT. Statement for the year ending December 31, 1895 :— APO siséih tld sé'nctccen ee BES T8125 Lee Di ibe, 52355055585. bEBin 194,347,157.5§ Surplusé.....cccoccscecccccecere $26,866,563.75 Total [ncome.......ceeeeeeeeee-$48,597,430.51 (Company’s total income is about $10,- 000,000 more than the annual revenue of Canada). Lota] Paid Policy-holders De LOD xij vdicisadadeesanbiies $23,126,728.45 a Insurance and Annuities Bi SID O Dui skh coumonciearies .--$899,074,453.78 Net gain in 1895...... dlihove $61,647,645.36 —_ Norg—Insurauce merely written is dis carded from this Statement as wholly mis- leading, and only insurance actually issued and paid for in cash is included. Paid to Policy-holders since OTZANIZALION....+-..00000-+- $411,567 ,625.79 Robert A. Granniss, Vice-President. Walter A. Gillette, General Manager Isaac F. Lloyd, 2d Vice-Precilent Frederic Cromwell, Treasurer Emory McClintock Actuary JOHN MACEACHERN, Resident Agent, Charlottetown, P. E. I. J. A. JOHNSON, General Agent, 87 Hollis Street, Halifax, N.S. may 8 d&w tf Why He Talked to Himself, There is an irish porter employed in a large commission house in New York, one of the kind that will makea witty reply to any sort of question, He is very fond of expressing his views in general, and has great admiration of his argu- ments. If he fails to get a listener he will talk to himself in lieu of something better. A member of the firm, being an- noyed one day at his constant muttering, which he was unfortunate enough to hear, sent for him, ‘‘See here, John, did it ever occur to you that your constant talk and mut- tering isa great annoyance to people that happen to be around? Why on earth do you chatter away to yourself, any- how?’’ “‘Shure, I have two reasons fer doin’ that.’’ “Two reasons! Well, what are they?’’ ‘“‘One of them is that I loike ter talk te a sinsible man, and the other is that I loike ter hear a sinsible man talk.’’ Menhaden Oll, The oily character of the menhaden is familiar; it is caught for its oil, which is tried out in factories, Menhaden fisher- len use purse nets, which are tarred to preserve them, To keep their hands fron sticking to the tarred nets they rut them on a freshly caught menhaden, handling it sometiing as they would a cake of soap. So oily is the menhaden that the simple pressure thus applied is enough to bring through the scales oil sufficient for the purpose. To Cateh Them Poth, “T think I shall try the two volume system with my next novel,” said Tim- mins, ‘Isn’t that sort of thing out of date?” asked Simmons. “But this is a new scheme. I’m going to marry them off happily at the end of the first volume in the good old style, youknow. That wilicatch the inothers. In the second volume the villain, the elopement and the divorce appear. That will catch the daugh- ters, Isn't that great?”—Indianapolis Journal. BREACHES IN THE |WALL, The Weak Spot, the Kiidneys—Thay must be Guarded as Life Advances—Defen:e Strengthened by Dodd's’ Kidney Pills. Port Hore, Oct. 26 (Special)—Citizens called on bere to vouch for correctness of the foliowing statement without an ex- ception endorsed jt as true. Mr. Chas. Gilchrist, Chief of Police and government Fishery overseer of hie own case said :— ‘For ten years my distress increased un- til the doctor called it Diabetes. At times my suffering was intense, and mediciae t ken did no good. At lasta faiend as- ~ured me that Dodd’s Kidney Pills would cure me. A few boxes have kept that promise, and I thank these pills for a per- feot and I believe permanent cure.” Cp enna Perey W. Carver, LLB. Formerly with Davies & Haszard, Ch’town, P. E. I, Attorney & Counsellor-at-law Com missioner fir ihe Provinces. Tremcut Building, Reem 629 BOSTON, MASS. New Prices in Watches We have lately received a nice assortment of Silver Watches fer Ladie’s and Gentlemen, which were bought rigit, and can- not; fail to please in price. Call and inspect them. W. N. TANTON'S Great George Street, NEAR QUEEN SQUARE. a. — 2 — Wants, Lost, Found, &« sateen ae chargec \ ILCH COW FOR SALE—Apply to P. K. J Jost. novl0—d3in wlin, T Y 7 WANTED around home, ary for pushers, T. H. LINSCOTT, 49 Richmond St. W. Toronto, Ont septli—dy& wky Icanemploy five men and three ladies to wcrk at and A good thing with good sal- \ JANTED.—A general servant in a small family. Middle aged i;erson preierreu. Apply to Robt, Crane, one door below Pow- n St, on Grafton St. noyv7—ti OST.—Within two weeks, a flat key, No 4 4, Finder will kindly ;eturn to this office and receive reward nov;—3in eod \ JANTED.---Girl for General Housework Apply to Mis F Perkins, Brighton a novi 0 _LET—The Shep on Grafton St epposite Law Courts, now occupied by W A Hut- cueson as a Fruit and Confectionery Store tosse-sion given early in Nov Apply to D May septil—dy awky-tf Atonce, a few good men to WA NTE whom $10,% or 312.00 a week would be an opject. Send Reference. The Bradley Garretson Co. Litd., 49 Richmond St W., Toronto Ont LET.—That beautifully situated dwel'- ing on Prince street, now occupied by Capt Murchison. Possession given about 2th October,—Appy to Peake Bros & Co,—17tf. $1] 8 A WEEK EASY — You work right «PLO around home, a brand new thing, no trouble to make $18 per week easy; write to us quick; you will be surprised how easy it can be done; send us your addres« anyway; it will be ior your interest to investigate; write to- day; you can positively make $!8 a week easy. Address, Imperial Silverware Co,, Box C. U., Windsor, Ont. sep29—Im O TEI—A Cottage situated on Pleasant St containing 7 rooms in good order, with a first class cellar under the whole nouse Ais»? inclosed yard with stable, and is at present occupied by Mrs John A. McInnis, who is about to leave the Island Apply to Mr Thomas McQuaid, Lower Queen street, or to the owner at Southport Epwarp KELLY /vne 19,18 es three story dwelling house on ag St., a eight rooms and pantry, ‘ossession given Oct, Ist, Apply to Ww, Ww. Weliner- ” cos 0 Ler.—The store and occupied by Hasza rinting office now & Mome in the -rown Biock. Possession given 1st. Novem- Br Appiy to James Paton. june 11246. LET.—A ple.santly situated dwelling house facing south and west on Brighton Road, at present oceapied by Harrison Car- vell, eq. heated with hot air furnace, and lighted by electricity, and having hot and cold » ater fittings in bath room and kitchen. Containing parior, dining room, office, kit- chen and ran'ry, On ground floor, four bed- rooms and bath room on first floor, and two attic rooms, and having ‘iawthorne hedge and grass lawn infront. ‘Ten minutes’ walk from Post Office, five minutes from tennis G-tf round and bathing house in Victoria Park— Seely tow. C, Harris, Jr, se The St. new, On hand. a lower temperature ti an any other in use, on band, direct to Farmers. AEEEOUTEU ETAT LETTS READER BRO Np tet iite tae Joo Drors ON is rvetetdieaty, THAT THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE —or— JSP Thee jut Is ON THE stiri I [ol iit nie TI AVege fable Preparation for As- Similating the Food and Reg ula - ling the Stomachs and Bowels of —— Promotes Digestion, Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither 1um,Morphine nor Mineral. oT NARCOTIC. mccrnemamee |’ WRAPPER Focal Sola - Fi. an (ere he BOTTLE OF Aperfect Remedy for Consti tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms Convulsions, Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. zc Simile Signature of NEW YORK. At6 months old 3. DOSES —35 CENTS (GASTORIA | Castorla is prt up in one-size bottles only, Ig is not sold in bulk. Don't allow anyoue to pel] you anything else on the plea or promise that it is just as good” and “will answer every pur. pose.” #9 Sco that you get O-A-8-T-0-R-1. The fac- is og rat Lex GEE -t cipnature y miei ; af LSS L2 an : EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. fap yeaa It is no wonder that rub- bers, which are not the same shape as the boot, should be uncomfortable. It costs mo- ney to employ skilled pattern =e reg aos: Granby Rubbers makers but the result is a satisfactory fit, Each year new patterns are added, to fit a!! the latest shoe shapes, and Granby Rubbers are always “ up-to-date.” ; They are honestly made of pure Don’t Draw the Feet They Fit the Boot rubber, thin, light, elastic, durable, ™ extra thick at ball and heel. — Laboratory of Inland Revenue, Office of Official Analyst, ‘ Montreal, April 8th, 1895 “T beret y certify that 1 have drawn, by my own hand, ten samples of the ST. LAWRENCE SUGA R REFINING CO’S EXTRA STANDARD GRANULATED SUGAR, indiscriminately taken from ten lots of about 150 barrels each. avalysed same, and find them unifurmly to contain: I Lave 99 3°} to 100 per cent. of Pure Cane Sugar. with no impurities whatever.’ (Signed) JOHN BAKER EDWARDS, Ph D., C. L. Prot. of Chemistery and Pub. Analyst, Montrea N RATTENBURY, AGENT emmen e Engines aud Balers Far Sa 135 Horse Power PORTABLE ENGINE and BOILER, Locomotive pattern, Hor zontal Engine on top of Builer. 0 Horse Power, same nattern 12 1 25°Horse Power STATIONARY ENGINE and; BOILER, al! ia first-class order Price ‘ow. Terms easy. NEW DAIRY ENGINES io stock, Abegweit™pattern. DAIRY BOILERS Also, DAIRY SUPPLIES of any kind furnished on application ocluding the celebrated ALPA DE LAVAL SEPERATOR. It skims closer ard + 24 Bottle BABCOCK TESTERS alway Steam, Water, Soil and Sewer PIPES and FITTINGS in stock. FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY and PORTLAND CEMENT at competition prices, Our goods are all of the best, inc!uding our STEEL DISK HARROW, which we have ready for use. Our SEED BOXES will be"sold (20 per cent. Telephone communication. McKINNON & McLUAN. Charlottetown, April 16, 1896—dy & wy lower than any in this market) —_ Good Herring ! 300 half barrels choice No. 1 Fat Herring. 150 quarter barrels extra choice Cape Breton Herring Also a lot of large Codfish for sale wholesale or retail. W. CRANT & CO. QUEEN STREET...... RIPANS ONE GIVES RELIEF. —— 2a almost hopeless—cases that had been treated by the most talented physi- cians—cases tottering over the grave—but with the continued and persevering use of Wood's Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were restored to manly vigor and health—Reader you need not despair—no mat- ter who has given you up as incurabdle—the remedy is now within your reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulpess and happiness. Wood's Phosphodi N€@,.—7%e Great Engiish Remedy. Is the result of over 35 years treating thousands of cases with a!! known drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment—a combination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stages of Sexual Debility, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Mental Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Wood's Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed that were on the verge of despair and insanity—cases that were one package, §1; six packages, $5; by mail free of postage. One will please, cx guaranteed to cure, Pamphlet free to any address. The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Wood’s Phosphodine is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominion. |