nea et ee” OE CALENDAR FOR NOVEMBER, 1894. ‘ Cad v. 2m ? ' ROO! ~ , in Last Qa ‘ in. Pp. m N. | » w Ne \ ’ S ‘\ Ss | Sun | High ; sets water | — j | | } m | i 10 | . 2 . j a) 99] 1 44] < 37 2 321 : se | 4 7 ct acai } SS * : ; mat = . ane ‘| | 54 ad | J4 | ' ae | j a i ; . ied 9; F 9 | } 2 | ‘ ; ~ é 1 . ' a j 14 y : t | 15 c.g 16 | F ‘7 sa iay i i )s = ‘ a) y | ” ' 2) inv 22 i y | 7} til y | 4 ~ Av 2 pa bay i . 26 | Mouday - | ; 2 4 | | 2s ay y 44) 2 *sIAay «6 ; v 7 28 | a - pvp’ i 4 shibi A 4 ll Tux Leaprso DatLy NREWEPAPER .. E. IstannD siesued every af noon, from the office of | the EXAMINER PUBLISHING ComPayy, tn the | Loadon House Buliding, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCE) cces AMDT Sx Montes _ . 200) Tuxze Months vee 100 | Oxe Monta - 6.35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States ADVERTISING RATES For smal! advertisements which are ordered one or two weeks the charge is ineb fer the first insertion, and ¢ venta for each continuation. Rate cards are furnished on application at the office. Special contract prices at a reduced rate are quoted for advertisements feur inches in size or larger, which are to run for three months or longer. for only cents per No speciai notices Inserted Guless paid for at the rate of 10 cente per line, and under ne circumstances will such paid notices appear {n the local column. S@ecela! discounts made on all advertise- meats connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Picnics, etc. No notices will be inserted with the sam+ unless the regular rate of 10 cents per line is paid. That Tax Exa™m'ner is considered by our Merchants and Manafacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through whica to make their announcements public, is #ban ianily proved by the ‘aet that inorder o accommodate ou uuvertisers we have «<on compelled to enlarge the paper to ita pr-sent size. Tas Dar.y Examrnen ts for sale by the fol- lowing agents :— M. & T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- merside. D. Sutherland, Souris. Hon. D. Gorden, (:eorgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton A. J. McNeil Stanley Bridge. COS OS The Weekly Examiner & issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. It Is made uf of matter which has appeared in the Daily eclitions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper--interesting and full of the latest news. The subscription for Taz Weexty Exam. INER, post paid to any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for Tus DalLy EXAMINER. JOHN CALDWELL JOHN MAIR ESTABLISHED 1583. JOHN CALDWELL & 00., Fruit and Produce Commnis- sion Merchants, 187 McGILL and 131 ST. PETER STS. MONTREAL. Ma!lpeque Oysters a specialty. Corres- pondence solic ited. Telephone 1876. _Sugl4—3m _pat Tickets to Boston. Buy Your Tickets for Boston by §. §. “ FLORIDA,” (Canada Atlantic and Plant Line), FROM—— W. W. CLARKE, Ticket Agent, Corner Quesn and Water Streets. 22, June 1894 Cheri ttetowa, ccitasctititiinnneaieaiincciiieanainaniat TINWARE Creameries and Cheese Factories. The very best work guaranteed on all jobs for Creameries and Cheese Factories. fe MAKE A SPECIALTY OF THIS KIND OF WORK. M. STEVENSON, MANUFACTURER OF Tinware, Stove Pipe, &e., 53 QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. All orders promptly attended to. apI— tf Newfou adland Markets iH. T. MeCOUBRE, Genera! Commission Merchant. Oates ani Produce of all kinds. Ship- uents from P E. Island carefully attend- éd to and account #esives given promptly. Wharfaye and Stores. Correspondence POlicited ll. T. McCOUBREY, P. O. Box 307 St. John’s, N. F. tepti—dy im wy 3m TERMS : Four Dollars a Year NEW SERIES Will Be Here Soon, and every Man will want a Heavy Coat, Cap & Gloves, and the them is at OUR SHOP. right spot to get. Come and see the Bar- gains for yourselves. McKay Woolen Co. Charlottetown, Nov. 6, 1894—dy rant Gentlemen, we don’t 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. JOHN T. MCKENZIE. NOTICE. SHIPPERS to BOSTON THE steamer “FLORIDA” will make her last trip from Charlottetown to Boston for this season, on FRIDAY, THE 16th INST. F. W. HALES. nov2 tl dte TO HIRE. A first-clase Horse and Buggy, also a Double-seated Phaeton. Enquire at G. G. JURY’S Jewelry Store, north side Queen Square, opposite Post Office, Charlotte- town. 2aw (w f) 3m—may25 REVERE HOTEL, (Formerly Rocklin Hoase ) This centrally located Hotel, which is within five minutes’ walk of Railwa Depot, has been thoroughly cleaned, painted and renovated. Is fitted with hot water, and possesses the finest bath rooms in an} Hotel in the city. Terms moder ate. Coach mects ail trains. P. 8. BROWN, Proprietor. _septlI—dy 6m wy l yr : What's the time? If you have a Cough it ia time you were taking GRAY’S ,, RED SYRUP ° SPRUCE GUM THE OLD STANDARD CURE FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS. Gray’ Syrup has been on trial for more than ceemaneuad ae verdict of the people is that it is the best remedy known. 2c. and He. per bottle. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Paormerese mow wards. Painlese ex- TEETHE:"22: £ DR. J, P. MURRAY, Office, 145 Queen St., Charlottetown, P. B. 1. $10 per ect. Tartial sets $2.00 and up- oct — = —_— “This is true Liberty, when Free — ie me ENON NIE ING RING! TI CHARLOTTETOWN, P. fareaey fos em = oro nm PILES, made crudely, sold eheaply. Used Internally and Externally. Genuine is strong and pure. K. “Gi THIS IS THE GENUINE. Owr trade-mark on Buff Wrapper around every bottle. THE WONDER OF HEALINC. - : FOR RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, Viste i WOUNDS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, VYEMALE COMPLAINTS, Refuse Substitutes, INFLAMMATIONS, CATARRH, HEMORRHAGES, and ALL PAIN. SOLD BY ALL ORUGGISTS, Prices, 50c., Cheap. Gi, Cheaper, &G1.76, Cheapest. can be diluted with water, Gols Mowiacturers POND'S EXTRACT CO.. 76 FIFTH AVE., REW YURK MINE, and a full Winter trade. supply ot namely :— Lady Speedwell, Springbird, Hilda, Tartar. Charlottetown, November 7. 1894-tf OU will find that it will do what no other soap can do, and will please you every way. It is Easy, Clean, and Economical to wash with this soap. IN ALL with or without Hay Carriers; ALSO Plow Repairs, Mould sides and Shares for all Plows Island. | GCh’town, Oct 10, 1894—-tt s & wy af oe as i — pel m OAL ! FROM ALL THE before the streets are muddy. genuine “ Sydney Coal.” Charlottetown, October 1,51894 - 6m dy & wy Coai! Coal: Gi N SHEDS, LANDING, AND TO ARRIVE FROM ALSO—— The following Schooners discharging and to arrive, Dominion Goal Co's. Mines in G. B. We have now‘our Sheds full of SCREENED RUN OF SLACK COAL, for our Lady Franklin, Kate McKinnon, Hope, Maggie Blanche, Advance, George P. Trigg, | Telephone. ' Lizzie C. We have sold a large quantity of Coal from the above Compuny’s Mines this season, which has given entire satis- faction, and are now prepared to sell at very lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO. Seliing Agents for Domiaion Coal Co., Ltd. Dowr Ler AnorHer Wasu-vay Go By Wirtrour Usine Seeton and Mitchell, Halifax, agents for Nova Scotia and P. KE. Isiand. Ensilage and Hay Cutters, SIZES, Turnip Slicers, cheap, $8.00; I. X. L. Feed Mills, only $8.00. Boards in Steel or Metal, Leud- in general use on the D. W. FINLAYSON, H. T. LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. 'Y ft Fw . fumed. it is t..o , chin wt bie rer- nocent and fect Soap you can buy. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. OAL |! ON HAND AND DAILY ARRIVING: Round, Nut and Slack, LEADING Also, HARD COAL and WOOD. Leave your orders MINES. R. McMILLAN. N. B.—Lhe 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 R. McMILLAN. MANY CURIOUS NOTES. INTERESTING THINGS WHICH ARE WELL WORTH KNOWING. Great Thinge of the World—Witches and Plante—Lord’s Prayer in Thirty-Two Languaeges—And Other Matters of Con- siderabie Interest. The largest nugget of gold ever found was taken out of the Byer & Haltman mine at Hill End, New South Wales, on May 10, 1872. It weighed an ounce or two over 640 pounds. It was slatpshaped, 4 feet 9 inches long and about 3 feet 2 inches in thickness. The flader sold it for #148,- OO The larvest advertisement in the world is in the shape of immense flower beds on the side of a hill near Argeulee, “cotland. ‘he beds are each gigantic leriers, 40 feet in length, the whole forming the words “Glasgow News.” The total length of the liue is 123 feet; area covered by the letters, 14,845 feet. The letters cau be distinctly seen from s distanee of four and one-half miles. The organ in the old Morr-on Temple at Salt Lake City is one of the iargest, if not the very largest, ever constructed in this country. It has 2,704 pipes, each 32 feet | long aud large enough to admit the body | of a man of ordinary size. it ulso has two towers at either side which rise to a height of 42 feet The largest painting ever produced (not including panoramic views) is now in the Grand Salon of the Doges at Venice. It is Ly the renowned Jacopa Robusti, and is 84 feet long and 34 feet wide. A panoramic view. called the “Frost King,’ now in Westminster, London, covers 20,000 square feet of canvas. The laygest hammer and anvil in the world are in use at the Krupp Gun Works, Essen, Germany. The hammer, which was made in 1886, weighs 150 tons, and the anvil and block 191 1-2 tons. In 18%, before being reduced to its pres- ent proportions, Custer County, Montana, was the largest county in the United States. Its areaat that time was 36,000 square miles, being greater than the com- bined areas of New Hampshire, Massachu- setts, Connecticut, Delaware and Rhode Island. The three tallest trees in the world are believed to be a sequoia near Stockton, Cal., (325 feet) and two eucalypti in Aus- tralia, estimated at 435 and 450 feet, re spectively. a : Witches and Plants. In all countries in which the witchcraft delusion now exists, or in which it pre- vailed in former times, we find folk lore stories connecting those mysterious bogies with the plants of those particular regions. Even the great Shakespeare causes his witches to discourse learnedly ou the dia- bolical properties of “hemlock digg’d i’ dark” and of “slips of yew silvered in the moon’s eclipse.” They are supposed to have nad their favorite flowers as well as plants, and in England at the present time foxglove is spoken of as ‘‘witch bells” and herebells a “witches’ thimbles.’’ The com- mon ragwort is well known as the “w tches horse,” the tradition being that th v mounted rank growths of that species of weed and “rode the skies,’ just as the dame with the painted hat rides the broom in the familiar picture. In Germany and throughout Northern Europe it is the belief that witches flont from place to place on beds of Lay, composed largely of witches’ blossoms and “‘devil spikes,” this last being a species of dwarfed slough grass. St. John’s wort, which {s now so popular for shoulder and button-hole bouquets on St. Jobn’s Eve, was formerly worn for the express purpose of averting the crafts and subtleties of the witches, bogies, ghosts and spirits, which the European peasantry believed walked abroad on “that night of witching mysteries.” Lord’s Prayer in 33 Languages. The Russians now have possession of the Mount of Olives, the spot where the Lord’s Prayer was first uttered. The apex of the mount is nearly 200 feet above the hill upon which Jerusalem is built, 2,700 feet above the level of the Mediterranean and about 8,900 feet above the sluggish waters of the Dead Sea. On this elevation, upon the exact spot which tradition says the Prayer was first spoken, the Carmelite Sister. i.e. through the kindness of Mme. de la Tour d’Auvergne, who furnished the necessary funds, buiit a large convent The exact. or what is claimed to be the exact, spot pressed by our Saviour’s feet on that celebrated occasion, is marked by a pure white polished marbel cross, aud the walls of the convent have the Prayer in- scribed upon them in 32 different langu- ages. In some instances, the letters form- ing the prayer are engraved in marble panels; in others, they are letters of wood, glued to backgrounds suitable to their colors. The Russian portion of this won- derful collection of inscriptions is said to be in letters of pure gold, each capital stem being six and a fourth inches long and four-fifths ofan inchin width. Among the languages which one would hardly ex- pect to find represented are the Hebrew, the Chinese, the Coptic, the Tartarian, and the Japanese. The Arabian, as it had been atask to relinquish Mohammedism, ends with ‘Great is Christ.”’ A Bridge 636 Feet High. The highest bridge of any kind im the world is the Loe River viaduct, on the An- tofagasta Railway, in Bolivia, South America. The place where this highest railway structure has been erected is over uhe Melo rapids in the Upper Andes, and between the two sides of a canon, which is situated 1,000 feet above the level of the Pac fic. Counting from the surface of the stream to the level of the rails, this cele- brated bridge is exactly 5361-2 feet in height. The length of the principal span is 80 feet, and the distance between abut- ments (total length of bridge) is S02 feet. The largest column is 314 feet 2 inches Jong, and the batter of the pier, what is known to bridge-builders as ‘‘one in three.”’ The gauge of the road is 2 feet 6 inches, and trains cross the bridge at a speed ef 30 miles an hour. Sporting Spurts. Why do most Rugby foot-ball players wear long hair? and how is it that barbers are disgusted when the Rugby season opens, while surgeons are delighted? The answer to the last question is obvious, but I have never heard the first satisfactorily replied to. “| want to give brother Tom some little gift before he leaves for college, What would you get?” ‘Florence—“I saw some lovely hair brushes with silver monogram, and——”’ ‘You silly girl; don’t you know he belongs to « football team?” The first sportsmen’s exposition ever held in America will take place at Mad- ison Square Garden next spring. This ex- position will embrace every department of field sport and will illustrate not only present conditions but the history of sport. Canada will be well represented, no do - el [ hE STRONC POINT about the cures by Hood's Sarsaparilla is that they are permanent. They start from ae + For tne next fortnight, Gay a pon will sell good large winter-keeping celery, at 25c per doz. A plan to keep celery through the winter given away free toeach rchaser. Call at our stall in the mar an Charlottetown, or address orders (with cash) to J. J. Gay & Son, Pownal, dy 2 wk m & th & wk. ISLAND, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, i894. PROFESSOR CHARLES FAUTEL, MLD, ONE OF THE MOST DISTINGUISHED , SPECIALISTS IN DISASES OF THE THROAT AND NOSE.—FOUNDER OF A LARGE FREE DISPEN- SARY IN PARIS. Professor Fauvel was born in 1880, at Amiens, and now resides in Paris. For his high attainments in his pro- fession he has received almost every mark of distinction that could be conferred upon him by his country or his confreres in medicine. These are his words, ‘Of all the tonics, none equal “Vin Mariani.’ I use it person- ally and for my family, and have prescribed it for more than twenty years with unvarying satisfaction to myself and patients.’ Vin Mariani is the only tonic-stimulant without any unpleasant reaction and which may be taken indefinitely. If.you are tired, weak, nervous, irritable, if you fecl a want of energy and have not a good appetite, just try ‘Vin Mari- ani.’ Surely a remedy recommended by thousands of eminent people the world over is worth a single trial. Send stamp to Lawrence A8Wilson & Co., Montreal, the Canadian agents, and receive, gratis, a beautiful little album eontaining the photographs of many celebrities who have testified to the excellence of ‘Vin Mariani.’ - Gratetn!—Comiorting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowleige of the nat aral laws which govern the operations o! jigestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the properties of well-select- Cocoa, Mr. Epps hus provided for breakfast aud supper a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors’ 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 8 tacal shaft by keeping ourseives well! forti fied 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 thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Lid, Homecepathic Chemiste. London, England. LANDING TO-DAY, EX S S. THAMES. 2,000 barrels Beaver Flour, oo. CU Pome * 150 “ Fine Rose Flour, 1100 “ Qnions, 100 “ Winter Apples, 600 cases Canned Goods, 250 bags Rice, 1 car Fine Salt (table use), 200 barrels Rolied Oats, 500 Granulated and Yellow Sugar. N. RATTENBURY. nov9—4i eod NOTICE Money Wanted. All persons indebted to us by note of hand, book account or otherwise must make immediate payment. All accounts not settled or arranged for on or before December Ist will be sued for without further notice. POOLE & LEW:S, nov8—d Li w 4i Lumber Dealers. AT CRAPAUD. A. H. WADMAN, of Charlottetown, started the Undertaking at Crapaud last spring. All kinds of _ la arge and small, and all small prices. Ladies’ and Gents’ Robes at small prices. A first-class Hearse aud Horses. Draped Stools 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 atonce by A. H. Wadman, Charlottetown. dy sat wy ly—oct26 THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. CAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000. A Society established with a view to disseminate the taste for arts, to encourage and help artists. Incorporated by Letters Patent of the Government 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, moat! from the French school, the leading moa- ern school. Eminent Artists, such as Francais Roch se, Aublet, Baron, Pezant, Petit- jean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a — many others, are men:bers of this iety. 68 members of this Society are exhibitors in the Salon in Paris. Sale of Paintings at easy terms, and distribution by lot every week. Price of tickets, 25cts. Ask for our Catalogues and Circulars. aug29—mwf tf DR .CONROY Has 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 octl 1—tf VOL 34.—NO. 118 “THE AUTOCRAT.”, Oliver Wendell Holmes. Born 189. Died Oct. 7, 1804. “The Last Leaf!" Can it be true, We have turned it, and on :ou, Friend of all? That the years at last have power? That's life's foliage and its flower Fade and fall? Was there one who ever took From its shelf by chance, a book Penned by you, But was fast your friend for life, With one refuge from its strife Safe and true? Even gentle Elia’s self Might be prond to share that shelf, Leaf to leaf, With a soul of kindred sort, Who could bind strong sense and sport In one sheaf From that Boston breakfast table, Wit and wisdom, fun and fable, Radiated Through all English-speaking places. When were Science and the Graces So well mated ? Of sweet singers the most sane, Of keen wits the most humane, Wide, yet clear. Like the blue, above us, bent; Giving sense and sentiment Each iis sphere. yd With a many breadth of soul, With a fancy quaint and droll; Ripe and mellow, With a virile power of “hit:” Finished scholar, poct, wit, And good fellow! Sturdy patriot, and yet True worid's citizen! Regret Dims our eyes As we turn each well-thumbed leaf; Yet aglory ‘midst our grief Will arise. Years your spirit could not tame, é..d they will not dim your fame; england joys In your songs. all strength and ease, And the “dreams” you “wrote to please Gray-haired boys.” And of such were you not one? Age chilled not your fire of fun, Heart alive Makes a boy of a gray bard, Though: his years be, “by the card,” Eighty-five! London Paneh. Where Potatoes Can't Be Boiled. When the barometer stands at thirt: inches sea level, showing an atmosphet pressure of fifteen pounds to the square inch, the boiling point of water is 2/2 ck grees Fahrenheit. When part of this pres sure is removed by ascending to high levels, water will boil before coming to heat of 212 degrees, or if a descent is ma into a level below the level of the sea 1 boiling point will rise accordingly. TT! it is piain to see that in highly elevated 1 gions, where there is less atmospheric pre sure upon the water, the boiling point much lower than at sea level—in o words, it will boil before it is sufficic: hezted to cook potatoes, beans, etc. A elevation of but 510 feet makes a dimin tion of one degree in the boiling peint the City of Mexico, where the elevation i 7,471 feet above sea level, water will boil a 198 1-2 degrees; at Quito, which is 0,54 feet, the boiling point is reached at 194 « grees. It will be seen, therefore, t! boiling is not always equally hot. Att! places mentioned and in several localiti in our own country, many articles of foo cannot be cooked at all by boiling: or, i they can, it takes several hours, where : few minutes should suffice.—St. Louis Re- public. largest Family on Record, In the Harlein Manuscipt, Nos. 080 and 78, in the library of the British Museum mention is made of the most extraordina family that has ever been known i world’s history. The parties were a Scotc! weaver and his wife (not wives), who wer the father and mother of sixty-two child ren. The majority of the offsprings of this prolific pair were boys, (exactly how man of each sex is not known) for the recor mentions the fact that forty-six of 1) male children lived to reach manhood estate, and only four of the dau lived to be grown-up women. Thirty-ni of the sons were still living in the ye 1630, the majority of them then residir in and New-Castle on-T'yne. It i recorded in one of the old histories « Newcastle that “a certyne gentleman « large estaytes” rode “thirty and miles beyond the Tyne to prove this wo: derful story.” It is further related tha! Sir J. Bowers adopted ten ot t! that three other “landed gentiemen”’ took ten each. The remaining members of this extraordinary family were brought up by the parents. rhiiet ti about thre sons, ant The Marth in Miniature. Four leading French scientists, Villard, Cotard, Seyriz and Tissandier, have suc ceeded in making a wonderful model oi the earth. It is a huge sphere, 42 feet in diameter, and has painted upon its outside all the details of the earth’s geography At Paris, where this pigmy world is being exhibited, an iron and glass dome has been erected over the globe. The building is . eight-sided and is well provided with ele vators and stairways, which make it an easy task for the visitor to thorougily ex amine “all parts of the world.”’ The lol weighs 13 tons, but is so nicely balanced that it can be easily rotated by a smal! handwheel. The entire surface area is * feet which is sufficient to exhibit all the mountains, rivers, islands, cities, etc., even to the principal thoroughfares the latter The Jenkins’ Three-Eyed Cat, The Jenkins family, who resides at Lees ville, a village south of Massillon, are in possession of a cat which has three distinct eyes. The cat is near a year old anda great pet People visit the Jenkins hom« daily out of curiosity, aud the cat is th centre of attraction. The two eyes are i: their usual places, but the addittonal one is directly back of the cat’s left ear. The éat has perfect use of the three organs and blinks all at once. The cat is invaluable as a mouse catcher, for it can see before and in the rear at the same time.—Cleve land Leader. The Care of the Hair. Do not use such mineral oil products as vaseline and petroleum jelly for the hair Only good animal oils will improve the quality and supply the natriment needed to quicken hair growth. The reason for this is obvious, since the natural oil of the scalp is of the animal nature liow to Clean Oily Bottles. To cleanse glass bottles that have held oil, place ashes in each bottie and immmers¢ in cold water, then heat the water gradua ly until it boils; after boiling an hour let them remain till cold. Then wash the bottles in soapsuds and rinse in clear water. A Desperate Effort. ea Cobble—I put my best suit on last night and called on my girl’s father Stone—Did he seemed pleased? Cobble—He seemed pleased with the suit. He tried his best to get a sample from it.—Cloak Review i The best is Pond’s Extract, because it ie the pene, Bese and mo-t uniform ar ticle made. Note bottles with buff wrap- pers. a 2+e +e +e Tom—The management seem to have spared no expense in the production of this play. Kitty—No, indeed; they have given each chorus gir! at least three coats of paint. For childrens coughs and colds Hawk er’s balsam of tolu and wild cherry is un- equalled. Itis the children’s favorite. ne Toronto, Ontario. As Well as Ever After Taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cured of a Serious Disease. “I was suffering from what is known as Bright's disease for five years, and for days ata time I have been unable to straighten myself up. Iwas in bed for three weeks; during that time I had leeches applied and derived no bene- fit. Seeing Hood’s Sarsaparilla advertised im the papers I decided to try a bottle. I found HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES relief before I had finished taking half of a bot- tle. I gotso much help from taking the first bottle that I deciaed to try another, and since taking the second bottle [ feel as well ss ever I did in my life.” Gro. MERRETT, Toronto, Hood’s Pills are prom >t and efficient, yet easy of action. Sold by alld uggists. 25c. NAAR i Os OA | | me Pe CASS | — ADAMS’ TUTTI FRUTTI Is the best thing in the world for Athletes. uvigorates the system. © palmed off on you IX aliays this Allow no imitations t an : HURRAH?! EARA RAY MAA EE Sf = - oo => 9R, 5 Really ' Equat to any Imported >», ‘Take my Advice and Insist on Getting this /10 Cent Smoke for D5} ot an } Crane © BENOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, &c. @The subscriber is now prepared t make surveys of Land. run Boundary and Divist np Lines, furnish Plans, ete.; also, Mechanic aj and Architectural Drawings, Plans, Speci fie cations and Estimates, 3. Pe Nira, nd Surveyor Pownal Street. Charlottetown, Aug. 25, 1s04—dy & wy Anzemic Women wiih pale or sallow complexions, or suffering from skin eruptions or scrofulous blood,will find quick relief in Scott’s Emulsion. All of the stages of Emaciation, and a general decline of health, are speedily cured. Scott's Emulsion takes away the pale, haggard look that comes with General Debility. It enriches the blood, stimulates the appetite, creates healthy flesh and brings back strength and vitality. ForCoughs,Colds,Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consumption and Wasting Diseases of Children. Send for our pamphlet. Mailed FREE, Scott & Bowne, Belleville. All Druggists. 60c. & 1. CANADA ATLANTIC ——AND—— Plant Steamship Line. TO BOSTON. Fast Direct Line, Not Calling at Halifax. CHARLOTTETOWN SERVICE. The SS. “FLORIDA” will leave Navigation Co’s. Wharf, Charlottetown, FRIDAY, 9 28 (and every Friday thereafter until further notice), at 7 p. m., Hawkesbury, Saturday, 10 a m., arriving at Boston early Monday morning. Returning from Boston every Tuesday atjl0 a. m. HALIFAX SERVICE’ The favorite steamships “ OLIVETTK” or “ BALIFAX ” will leave Plant Wharf Halifax, every Wednesday at 8 a. m., for Boston direct. Returning, will leave north side Lewis Wharf, Boston, every & DOOD. Passengers arriving in Halifax evening trains can go directly on board steamer. Through Tickets for | sale and ba checked at Prince Edward Island Railway stations and Charlottetown Navigation Ce. H. L. CHIPMAN, Agent for Canada. Plaat Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents, North Side Lewis’ Wharf, Boston. septs! et at eemenaiel lly, hd st nes on saaal eR ow - mn Be we V7 4 yi ee ee ee ed i eT ne, ait a gpa interes eames i ‘ ‘ a ot ceatnatiectiantel ee oe Oe Fad " ’ A a val net Ce oe we See me