Pc ha eet a PS? 5 ly ss Seaalt es a i oer Saenee : ; ohh. 8 : * a °° ' © ch le ey THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN APRIL 11, 1898, Ane Wants, Lest, Found &e TO KENT.—A blacks mi'th’s shop on Kent St. Possession given onor about Ist May. Apply to P. H. Trainor, Kent St 78—6i ating : ‘ i as TO LE) - One half ofthe three story dwel- ling bouec, containing eight Jarge rooms, on Prince St. Pores ssion given on 2ndMay rext W. W. Wellner 42 TO LEFT —The hovse and premises known as the “Old London Hous,’ situnteaon water St... next?» Government Warehouse No 1. Appir to Peake bros & Co jJan2e--tf WANTED.—A house seven or eight rooms in Apply to this office. TO LET.—That }/’eacantis situated and comfortable cottaegeon Water St, at prewut cecupied by Mrs Bruce Stewert Possession given about middie may. Apply to Peake Bres, & Co. Ch’town 63 tf ae TO LET.—That comfortabie ard ple santly containing ndesirable locality situated house on upper Queen St... being the southern half of the resicence of the late Chief Justice Pelmer, new in cecunration of fommaender ¢ heyr e Hot ard ecold water rent mocerate. possession g ven Ist Ayply to H, JAMES PALMER, oO» im so m?, May next. Ch’town, BARBFRS’ CHAIRS and complete outfit fer sale cherp for cash or approvea note Ap- ply toDA Bruce, Queen #, Ch’town 76—dyawkytf fialian Ware House Beal’s Corner Cor. Grafton and Ct. Geo. Sts North side Queen Squarre Jules Robin Medicinal Branay ee a JOY & DAVIES. (Wholesale Wine Merchants. Prowse Bros. .- Have notified us to mova from our old stand, till they build ns \ new brick store: We will on the lst of April meve to Great George Street, opposite Joh Joy’s Restaurant, and forthe nest thirty days, we will give the biggest bargains in the history of the Jewel- lery trade of Charlottetown, to clear out our stock of Clocks, watches and Jewellery. Repairing of Clocks, Watches and Jewellery, given specia! attention. C. C.JORT ae aah we Rooms in rear end of store, formerly occupied by R. Beariswo, suitable for an office, possession at once 77 W. D. McKAY a Island Railway O- and after MONDAY, 27th Dee., 180%, brains of this Railway will run daily, (Sun: Ways excepted,) as under. Trains Out. ‘Trains Inu cae Readl STATIONS, ward. Read down, | ba Pp BJA BM. P.M, A. M ‘8 ) 6 20) _ Charlottetowa ...! 2 2010 ¢ 8 20! 6 35)... Royalty Junction.| 2 316 8 40 4 17) 7 32). .North Wiltshire. | 1 49 § 8 4 31, 7 24)... Hunter River. ../ 1 99) 8 4) 5 05 7 SL|..Bradalbane......) 2 09 8 @ 6 13, 7 58). .Emerald.. ......139 53 7 58 6.27) 8 00). .Frectown ....... (112 42\ 7 aS 6 47) 8 25). .Kensington......;j9 94) 7 18 6 20, 8 war.) fLv.32 oo 6 4g M,'P. M’ + S’Side -, } i (12 SOL. } (Ar. 119 30! ¥ 11]..Miscouche ...... 10 10 1 37)... Wellington......) 3 47 | 2 19).. Port BRUP ecivecel 9D | 8 SA Ar OP ccceseces| & OD 3 58. . Bloomfield ......1 7 84 4 34)... Alberton.... ec...) 6 55 5 JO) ..Tignish .... .--.! 6 OO la. A. M4. a. | ‘Ae M, 30, . Charlottetown ... 10 3¢ 2 50, ..Royalty Junction 10 1¢ $4 ‘ rd eae °* i v . 22; . Cardigan... a 45) ..Georgetown eevee ‘ 1 t M. Ae Ma P. M. A. M. 4 05). Mt, Stewart ....1 8 4 eRERUEEE . cc ceccees 817 5 ’ S:, Peters aeeeee 7 6 57|,.Bear River ...<s. q 6 a seen ewroerh 8 Pp. M. NM. P. Me ; oH + eeebes | be Traverse 7 a Mw. : about a= x ments te ‘anata tala atia mice ne MEDIC £ SENT ANYWHERE BY MAIL Meni’ «6 There is He Ginense NY-AS-SAN wiil not Ce quickly cure. Wanted —-The Address of every sufferer in America. tHw NYASSAN MEDICINE CO., TRURO N.S. Mention this paper when yon write iene For Coughs, Colds, Bron- chitis, Sore throat, ete. Spruce Guin KERRY, WATSOM @ CC., Proraicrons, MONTREAL, §lecececerececacaneosososc: SBEeees 94028684 0060 It's Cedar Posts And Laths we wish to draw your at tention to just new. They are good stock and wehave plenty. 3,000 Posts an‘l 500 M Laths is about the quantity. It you reyuire any, come and see us, TeLernons 1S] JAMES BARRETT Connolly’a Wharf. Sees 2028 . 6%" ]O68es Gwst* Oe ~ae Oe @ OS? en OO OS OO SG OO OOD OD OS | | | | | CHARLOTTETOWN Business College Writing Academy Let the searchlight of practice illuminate the dark places of Theory. THOROUGHLY Progressive Practica} & Inctitution, in which voung men and women are pot only taught Book keeping (in allits appiicationsto commerce) bo'h by single and double entry, but are trained how todo business, °y artual business transact- ions, The students act as buyers, sellers traders, bunkers, book-keepers and aceonnt- ants, in actual business operations, ard the eurrency irsued by the College Bank and the mdse issued frm the Fmiorium, are used in bona fide business transactions, just the game nsin mercantile aud banking nouses, Fook-keeping in itself may be learned at home, but a knowledge of how to transact busin .s,cannot be thus acquired. That our cours -ystem of training is eminently praci- fal write for ‘testimonials trom business men, and from students who are now hold- lug lucralive aa" reenonsible positions. SUBRJE “Ts: Book-keeping by single and dowble entry (*heoretica! aud practical.) Actual Business Practice, Busiress Penmanship, Business Correspondence, Commercial Arithmetie, Commercial Law, Railroading, Steamboat- ing, Banking, (actual practice mihe ‘'ollege Bank,) Ty pewriting, Shorthand and Naviga- tion. FACULTY: L. B Miller, Principal, Teacher of Book- keeping, Arithmetic, Business Practice Business Cortesponcence, Lypevriting a:d Navigation. J. W. Conlson, (Vice Principal,) Teacher of Railroading, Steam boating, ranking, Ac- counting and Actaal Basiness Practice. J. Harry Williams, Teacher of Busines Penmanship wm. Moran (licensed), Teacher of Short- hand. George S. Inman Erq, (Law Firm Me- re & Inman) Lecturer on Commercial sae. For circulars and full information, write or apply to L. B, MIT. LER: Principal, Allinuterested are cordia'ly invited toc al atthe college and inspect our system tlu ?j2ring, ana work i. general. FOR SALE That valuable 10 acre lot situated op- posite the Quarrie, on Mt. bd. Road. Apply to the office of L. L. BEER. ¢i— TEETH WITHOUT PLATES Crown and Bridge Work. DR. J.P. MORRAY 155 Queen Street. fort or convenicnce. Marrying For Love and For Mouey. In the marriages of the present day young men ywarry for love, but sentiment would appear to enter less into the calculation of a wan of mature years, and yet no union based upon anything but love can be a per- wmeanently happy one. In this degenerate aze men frequently marry for money, po- sition or in order to undd to personal com- As rezards women, a dreadful old cynic once obgerved that at 16 a woman marries for love, at 20 for posi- tion, at 25 for money and at 80 neither money, love nor position enters into the | matter, the only question then being, Where is the man? This cynic evidently saw with jaundiced e¢yes the world of to- day, and understood society as it is, with all its artificiality, hypocrisy and selfish- ness. In olden times parents were only too glad to have their daughters marry the man they loved, and money, show and po- sition were quite secondary considerations. It is a sad and regrettable condition of af- fairs when marriage becomes a mere con- tract in which the man seeks for wealth, position or advancement, and in which the woman recognizes her helpless and de- pendent condition, accepts the situation, marries for love when she can, but marries for anything else sooner than become an old maid.—New York Ledger. Mints For Young Photographers. To squilgee prints toa ferrotype plate in order to makea gloss finish have the plate perfectly clean and free from grease. It is better to wash it with soap and warm water each time it is used. Turn a little benzine on the surface of the piateand rub it thoroughly with a soft cloth, repeating the operation if the plate looks stresked. Let cold water run over the suiface of the plate, and then lay the wet prints face down upon it and roll them down with a rubber roller until all moisture has been forced out. <A picce of blotter should be placed over the picture to absorb the wa- ter. Becfure the prints are toned they can be trimined, and before they are removed from the plate a coat of thin paste can be applied to the back, and they can be taken from the plate and mounted atonce. If they are mounted dry, a thin coat of paste should be applied to the back of the pic- ture, but if they are to be burnished after mounting they may be damp when mounted.—Harper’s Round Table. ————-s ea — a Naae 5 9 OE a IGK HEAL Positively exred by these Litilo Pilis, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsfa, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. <A per. ~ fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drows!- oe in on . me “a sess, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongus Pain in the Side. 3C I LIVER. They Regulate the Dowels. Furely Vegetable. e ™ 720 4 e . Smal Ps. Small Dass, Qarnal? Poe! >. as i} 2 2.8 ¥«" a ae ‘ ouvstitution ihe fraud of tho day. San 771i cre f° rte Wlu yVu 35¢* Carters, clu peat el De _ lasist and deman d v . iver Pills. ie . BD / . HENRY Kk. LOROLY ©. x A.M Can. Soc. ©. E. Graduate College of Civil Engine eriay Carnell University. Ceneulting Eagineer for General Wor’, Specialiies: Hydraulic, Sanitary Engineer- ng and Bridve Designing. Offices at Charlottetown and St {sland corres; ondents Charlottetown. Cc. hae Joha address to ‘For Sale. Toe subscriber offers for sale the fol- lowing preperties, formerly owned by the late Richard Pillman, at French | River, New London, 1. A farm containing 25 acres, al] cleared and in a good state of cultivation, sloping to the south. 2. A plot containing 2 acres, with good dwelling house covtaining 11 rooms vad a pew barn and wagon shed, thereon There is aleo theron a store, complete with shelving, etc., and a granary. 3. One acre of land, across ibe road, opposiie the store, and building lot at the cross roads, near the store. These properties are well situated in one of the finest localities in Prince Ed- ward Island tor business or farming purnoses. The subscriber also cfifers forsale a dwelliag house and lot at Kensington. The house contains 11 rooms, and is ip good repair. For further particulars apply to Measre, McLeod, Morsou & McQuarrie, Solicitors, Charlottetown, or to the owner, LAVINIA J. PILLMAN. un 20 s. j.3mo Aver, Ma-s FOR SALE JR TO LET That most desirable business stand, si‘ nated on Kent Sireet, between rrince and Great George, This prop rty was occupied for rome years pest by the late J.A. Cameron. es Aa watch and jewele stors inane 2 art and dwelling. D. STEWART, . Stree Kent — MODEST FIRE HEROES. What They Think About When They Are Periiing Their Lives For Others, ‘‘tJeroos Who Fight Fires’’ is the title of an article by Jacob A. Riis in The Cen- tury, in the series of ‘‘Heroes of Peace.” Mr. Riir says: I once asked Fireman Martin M. Cole- man after one of those exhibitions of cool- ness and courage that thrust him con- stantly upon the notice of the newspaper man what be thought of when he stood — upon the ladder with this thing before him to do that might mean life or death the next moment. He looked at me in some perplexity. “Think?” he said slowly. ‘* Why, I don’t think. There ain't any timeto. If I'd stopped to think, them five people would | ‘a’ been burnt. No, I don't think of dan- | ger. If it is anything, it is that up there | Iam boss. The rest are not in it. Only I wish,’ be added, rubbing his arm rue- fully at the recollection, ‘‘that she hadn’t fai gted. It’s hard when they faint. They’re juet so much dead weight. We get no help at all from them heavy women.” And that was all I could get out of him. I never had much better luck with Chief Benjamin A. Giequel, who is tho oldest ; wearer of the Bennett medal, just as Cole- | man is the youngest, or the one who re- ceived it Jast. He was willing enough to talk about the science of putting G of Departinent Chief Bonner, the ‘man of | few words,’’ who he thinks has mastered tho art beyond any man living; of the back draft and almost anything else pcr- trining to the business, but when I insist- ed upon his telling me the story of the rescue of the Schsefer family cf five from a burning tenement down in Cherry street, in which he earned his rank and reward, he laughed a good humored little laugh and said it was ‘‘the old man’’—meaning Schaefer—who should have had the medal. “It was a grand thing in him to let the little ones come out first.’’ I have some- times wished that firemen were not so modest. It would be much easier, if not so satisfactory, to record their gallant deeds. But I am not sure that it is, after all, modesty so much as a wholly different point of view. Itis business with them, the work of their lives. The one feeling that is allowed to rise beyond this is the feeling of exultation in the face of peril conquered by courage, which Coleman ex- pressed. On the Jadderhe was boss! It was the fancy of a masterful man, and none but a masterful man would have got upon the ladder at all. — ee ut Ores, , Italian, French, Spanish Confections. It was not from either Italy or France that we got the best confectioners in the earlier days of English cookery. Spain, notably Toledo, furnished England with the most celebrated pastry cooks, or paste- leros as they are called, though we have since looked most to France for these art- ists. Under the patronage of ‘ Bloody Mary” and of Queen Henrietta Maria Spenish methods flourished apace in the court cuisine. We read that when Mary ent-rtained the Princess Elizabeth at Rich- mond in the summer of 1557 a sumptuous banguet was served, in which there was introduced as an ornament a pomegranate tree in confectionery work bearing tha arms of Spain, showing Mary’s Spanish leaningsin a rather ostentatious fashion. These Spanish and Portuguese confection- ers were very skillful. In the comedy of ** The Sun’s Darling, by Ford and Deckcr (first acted 1623-4), the ‘‘Spaniard’’ whois one of the dramatic persons declares himself ‘ta confecciana- dor, which in your tongue is a comfit maker, of Toledo.’’ He says, ‘‘I can teach sugar to slip down your throat in a mil- lion ways,’’ and he professes himself skill- ful in ‘‘conserves, candies, marmalades, sinkadoes, ponadoes, marablane, berga- moto, aranxues muria, limons, berengenas of Toledo, oriones, potatoes of Malaga and ten millions more.’’—Gentileman’s Maga- zine. On a Waterlogged Brig. Andrew Kilgour, the hero of our new serial, At Love's ommand rates SOUVENIR OF VIGTORIA’s 4 - 5 REIGN, @ On a , There is ro better. tea : 4 oc, than the tea gold i, at : > tea sold in TLEYe | SUBILEE CANISTERS SEYS & 7 hese were made ag a souvent} her Majesty's illustroys rej are: decorated with SS jist saae prece OL col r wes “% us hes ce bees ; : oe bee @¢° ” seen fn Canada. Her Maier tie lifelil aa =) iS Te. ; MACRO COLO, at most noted 7 eriods of her life « 5 3538, 1807; in panels, accurate te. presentations of Her Majesty's Anny Eo * , Sh ON V4 NHresent a ; } ‘ Sy A i vies ora A af: A _— ‘ oe std NS ees a RS i) 4 “> eee own), > & 4 . ww FAHEY Set gate: 9) Jkt a . “< \ ‘ay 818 CONEeNNe4 tha see wxelt - 4 . 18 Consus tie tin will be useful as a handsome tea or cake caddy The ten te wArtis Anc e 4° ' 2 fne tea is worth oc. The tin is surely worth soc. ~old by most dealers at 6oc.;: if yours canuot supply you send direct te 3. TETLEY & CO., 7 BEDFORD ROW, HALIFAX, WS. Or 14 LEMOINE STREET, MONTREAL. 5 — é OUT THE > and Navy are to be fo, th ra 4 bate &% When j9 oot sae, RING Hear what Madame Albani’s special uccompanist has to say about the BELL PIANOS ~ Tue Quegy’s, Toronto, Feby. 22nd, 1897 To Wuom 1T MAY CONCERN: In connection with my visit to Canada as Pianist te Madame Albani, [ have had occasion to observe Various makes of pianos, and bave been much impressed with the advances which are being made in the art of piano construe tion in this young and flourishing country. One of the most recent instruments to arrest my atteution—and I might say one of the best ~is the wel] known “Bell” Piano. Its tone is :dmirable throughout, and the touch firm and 1esponsive— just what we musicians like—in fact, an excellent piauo in every respect. The new Orchestral Attachment (whieh I understand can be obtained on “Bell” pianos only) is also an excellent feature, and one which will doubtless exeite inter- est with all classes. I do not besitate to say that I consider ihe “Beli” piano a good, honest instrument, and so recom. mend it to any intending purchaser. (Sgd.) ARMANDO SEPPILLL. (Conductor, Koyal Italian Opera, Covent Garden,) Pianist to Madame Albani, Canadian tour, 1896-7, For sale only at Piano Warerooms, Upera House Building, T. C. P. Yeo. Agent at Summerside. seeeene a2eaet @ Glorious - Haste 2 — WITH A— Toothache would surely be a dismal day, one could not feel peaceful; good, ot lappy with aching teeth Make yourrelf an Easter gift by having the ach- ing or decayed teeth filled or crowned, have tt done now s> you can enjoy your ham and eggs on easter mora, If you have lost some of your teeth save them replaced, either by our now well known Crown cr Bridge work, or you can have your choice of our several other systems of artificial teeth, natural to life. and gvaranteed to give perfect satisfaction. You can call in the m ra ing and have either a Bridge or Plate inserted same day. All work dona by speeialists. e give special attention to the saving of teeth, and Was the sport of unpropitions fortune for many months in ti.» fareast and had many adven- tures that are full of intense human interest, Don’t miss a. single chapter of this story. It is! Copyrighted and Illustrated. irst Char io r ef our work is paialess and reliable. BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS, Over Store of Prowse Bros. Open evenings 7 to 8. A Comal Yom woe le Ye : Ce Sd hd el Foal ae | Reaeied eae , ai Gy “Gut, Cee ' cS