eng: at ah éo - = S HORSE TALK. Frank Voorhees is to have Obadiah, : L a @:17, will be shipped to Austria ee “pa” Daly bas 20 horses in training ae 2:1214, has been bought by Gecrge Hall. : Bila T, 2:08%4, will be raced through the Montana circuit. No trotting meeting will be held at Nubois, Pa., this year. Directum IT has been purchased by F. A. Shultz of Red Bank, N. J. Stote Clark and John Koster will train at Point Breeze track this season. Marin, Jr., 2:18, will be trained in California by Pat Farrell this season. Dame Winnie's youngest foal, born iu 1893, is named Governor Pachcco. The trotting meeting at David City, Neb., occurs this year Sept. 21 to 24, Winged Fairy, which isafull sister tc Applegate and Winged Foot, is bighly spoken of. Aug. 10 to 13 are the dates claimed by the Hedrick (Ia.) association for its trotting meeting this year. W. A. Baggs of Springfield, Mass., will train the pony pacer Artful Maid, 2:13%;, by Ashland Wilkes. Nominator, 2:1714, by Stranger— Sapphire, now in Austria, will be re- turned to America at the end of this year. Itis said that Bob Kneebs will be tried on other charges as soon as his present term of imprisonment in Ger- many is ended. A mile novelty race, with money for the first horse at every quarter, is one of the attractions for ladics’ day at the Denver meeting. -_~— euiecy am penaty. A worldly father, after the style of Lord Chesterfield, was giving good ad- vice to his son, who was about to make his entrance into society. ‘“‘And, above all, avoid flirtations; but, if you must flirt or fall in love, sir, be sure it is with a pretty woman. It is always safer.’’ ‘*Why?’’ asked the young man. **Because some other fellow will be sure to be attracted and eut you out be- fore any harm has been dene. ’’—London Telegraph. Arcturus is not less than 70 and is probably more than 100 light years dis- tant from us. This star certainly sur- passes the sun in volume many thousand umes. The British government still employs foreign mercenaries in its army. The Gurkhas, fine soldiers of Nepal, are em- ployed in British India — = tO rrr Charlottetown Roller Mills HIGH GRADE FAMILY FLOUR Is more economical and makes petter bread than the im- orted. GEO. E. FULL, ITD suri That we have added an up-to-to-date Jod Printing Office to our Bookbinding busi- ness? Since doing so we have been so rushed that it has been necessarv for us to work day and night SEE THE POINT ? Patronize the men who can save You some money On your printing, J. D. TAYLOR Printer & Po KBINDER Queen St.... i NEW FRUIT In stcck and 10 arrive. 100 cases Oringes, 4]i's, oO Cases Cent ges 20°, . <0 cases Lemous, Wholesale. CARVELL BRO?, 4yril 12°97 31 135 : | | THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 14, 1897 THE WHITE HOUSE. ARRANGEMENT OF THE OFFICIAL QUARTERS OF THE EXECUTIVE. Views From the Windows of the East Koom--The “Hall of the Disappointed.” Telephone Is Almost the Only Modern Improvement In the Building. Mr. C. C. Buel writes a paper for The Century on “Our Fellow Citizen of the White House,’’ devoted to the official tares ani duties ofthe president, in the course of which he says: At 10 o'clock a hardly discernible sign Against the glass of the barrier an- nounces to the citizen who has arrived ander the grand portal that the execr- tive mansion is ‘‘open’’ to visitors. At 2 o'clock the sign is changed to ‘‘clos-_ ed.’’ The docrkeepers swing the dcors open to everybody. Within the large vestibule nothing is seen which indi- | cates the arrangement and purposes of the different parts of the mansion. It was not always so, for originally the now concealed corridor, or middle hall, with the staircase on the right, was a part of the entrance hall. Now the spaces between the middle columns are closed with colored glass partitions, and the vestibule is simply a large, square room pleasant to get out of. No way appears to open to the state apartments in the center or to the west wing, which is devoted to the private apartments. Yet glass doors are there, though as imperceptible to the stranger as a swinging panel. Tothe left there is a door which is always open. It ad- mits to a «mall hall, across which asim- ilar door is the side entrance to the great east room. About this splendid room, comprising the whole east end of | the mansion, the visitor may wander at | will before the portraits or enjoy from | the windows the bexuty of the treasury | building to the east or the impressive landscape to the south, including the | towering shaft of the Washington mon- | ument and beyond the ever charming | Potomac, spreading with enlarging curves toward Mount Vernon, and in the private garden under the windows he may chauce to see a merry band of little ones. From the small hall between the ves- | tibule and the east rcom a stairway as- cends toward the medial line of the building to a wide middle hall, on each side of which are the offices of the pres- ident. The arrangement is simple, and in the floor plan covers the space occu- pied below by the east room and the green room, the latter being the coun- terpart of the small hall with the public stairway just mentioned. At the head of these stairs, over the green room, is the cabinet room, which is the first apartment in the south side of the hall, a jog of two steps, at the private door into the president’s room, marking the raised ceiling of the east room below. The president reaches his office through the cabinet room, entering the latter from the library, which corresponds on the second floor with the blue room of the state apartments. President Arthur indeed used the library as his office and the cabinet chamber for an anteroom, while his private secretary was domi- ciled in the traditional office of the pres- ident. During his first term Mr. Cleve- land preserved the same arrangement. But General Harrison went back to the office hallowed by Lincoln’s occupancy, and Mr. Cleveland, on his return, found the arrangement s0 satisfactory that he continued it. Beyond the president’s large, square office is the corner room where Private Secretary Thurber is always either wrestling with the details of executive business or standing with his shoulder braced against the crowd struggling to see the president. It is a narrow apart- ment and might be called appropriately the ‘‘hall of the disappointed, ’’ the sug- gestion being emphasized by portraits of the greatest of presidential aspirants, Clay and Webster, to which Mr. Thurber added, as his private property, an en- graving of the closest contestant for the office, Governor Tilden. On the north side of the hall there are two rooms which correspond to those on the south side just described, the small one being cecupied by Mr. QO. L. Pruden, the assistant secretary since Gen- eral Grant’s time and the custodian of the office bcoks as well as of the tradi- tions which govern the public social routine of the executive mansion. In his room sits the telegraph clerk at his instrument, and by the window is a tel- ephone, which saves a great amount of messenger service between the president and the departments. Occasionally a congressman, With less ceremony than discretion, attempts to get an appoint- ment with the cur of the president over the telephone, and there is a record of a stage earthquake produced in the private secretary’s room by a furious congress- man who found the telephone ineffect- ive and his Olympian style even less so. Notwithstanding that it is almost the sole modern improvement in the White liouse, President Cleveland was seen at the telephone but once, and then, needless to say, not on call. LO LET. The western half of a honse on Sredney Street, formerly owned by Captain Kick~ ham, opposite the Meihodist Church, con- taining eight rooms in first clacs order, with good cel’ar and stable. This isa desirable residence for a smal] family. Apply to Michael ‘ rainor or Tnomas Me- Quaid, Lower Queen St., or to the owner at Southport. Possessicn given first of Mav neat, 76. EDWARD KELLY. STAGE GLINTS. Thomas Leary has suceceded Jefferson De Angelis in “Brian Ecru.”’ Bram Stoker, Sir Henry Irving’s man- ager, has written another novel, - The engagement of marriage between Marguerite Sylva and Gerald Da l.au- rier has been broken, ’ Jordan and Williamson have signed with Hoyt & McKee for next season with ‘‘A S’ranger In New York.’’ William Bechtel is now successfully playing Ikey Eisenstein in ‘‘An Ameri- can Beauty,’’ with Lillian Russell. Carlton Wells has secured the rights for ‘‘Face to Face,’’ a new romantic play, in which he will star, opening in a short time. Manager Edward E. Rice took with him to England the book and score of “Wang,’’ which he will endeavor to place on the other side. Carrie Turner, who underwent a se- vere surgical operation this winter, has in view aspring tour in a new play written for her by Clyde Fitch. A company headed by Henry Bagge and including Harrington Reynolds, Miss Dean and Miss Willard has sailed Sor Kingston, Jamaica, where it will present a repertory of successes. Announcement is made that Julia Arthur, who is now a member of the London Lycenm company, will star next season in the title part of Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett’s play, ‘‘A Lady of Quality.’’ NOVELTIES. —— Pie dishes show antique silver monnts and china linings. Reeded glass jugs with silver lip and cover are used for claret. Crystal marmalade pots, resting on silver trays, please the eye. A rabbit’s foot mounted in gold is evidently = popular charm with both | Sexes. Hand engraved trays, with pierced borders, are in demand and come in sev- eral sizes. Enamel work in the Byzantine style is used for a variety of purposes, such as frames for photographs, handles i¢ paper knives, etc.—Jewelers’ Circular. 0 at a> Ceres ~ a> nema ARE YOU A B00 CouK Ifso you will appreciate the fra- granve and flavor which our Extrazts impart to your cooking. Why lose time and patience experi- menting with worthless and unreliable goods, when yeu can get the best from your grocer by asking for the “Sovereign” Brand. SOVEREIGN FLAVORING EXTRACTS Have stood the test of years, anu their increasing sale proves their superiority. Ask your Grocer for them. Simson Bros. & Co. Mavufecturers vou GAN AVE THEN Unless they fit you. What? Why our spee t-clesand eyeg!a-ses. Our object is not merely to make a sale, We consider our customers Interests as weil and make sure that their eyes are properly fitted. Satisfied customers come. agaln. G oF. HUTCGESGN Jeweler and Optician. Opposite J. D. McLeod’s. Big Bargain Given For Thirty ‘Days I have decided to sell my stock of Clocks, Watches, Jewelry. Spectacles, Kc. Ke., at a big discount for cash for thirty days. All persons baying ten dollars worth of goods in that time will receive a present worth one do.- lar or have it deducted off the article they purchase. Any person having watches or clocks out of order will do weli to have them repaired and put in good running order“ y, ™*, and regulated by Town Time. The: iticl s entrusted to me will feceive my perscrala tention. Store open from 8a. m, to 8 p. m. » v G. G. JURY, North Side Queen Square, Opposite Post Office, 72 2aw Kw 6m. ‘ WHAT WOMEN WEAR. There is an excellent demand for linen duck, cunvas and picne. The best cuslitice cf Cuck and the heavier fabrics cf (iis cls are made up in tailor style. There is no dress mere economics] cr useful than one made of a tolerably good quality of india silk. There are many striped fabrics in cot- ton, some of them evidently modeled after the Dresden ribbon idea. According to all appearances, we are going into a period of trimming the like of which the present ‘generation has never dreamed of. The woman who likes polka dots can scarcely go amiss. They never go out of fashion, and merchants find them among their most reliable purchases. A novelty hat is made of lappets of embroidery set up around the front of a frame to form a coronet. The crown is of embroidery and velvet, the trimming is of large aigrets and ostrich plumes. English lace over yery close frills of silk muslin, and these over « closely plaited flounce of taffeta, is the trim- ming on some of the new petticoats. Above the lace is a soft ruche of white silk muslin. An evening waist is shirred at the top of the low corsage and the belt. Over the shoulders are flouncings of lace gathered full and caught up at intervals with very large rosette bows of ribbon. The trimming is cf wistaria blossoms, and the effect is exceedingly pretty. It is said that taffetas are to be sim- ply arage. They are exceedingly hand- some and not very expensive, unless one chooses to run into the extreme of high novelty. Besides this they are dressy, stylish and reasonably durable, and ev- ery wcman wants one.—New York Ledger. M <{S3AGE TO MEN, Proving that True Honesty and T:;ue Phil antrophy Still Exist, If anv man who is weak, rervovs and debilitated, or who is suffering fiom any of the varions troubies resulting from yoothfn! flv, exee-ses or overwoi:k, will take le rt an! write to me, I wiil send him copfid n= ally and free of charn,e tbe plan pur: ued by which I was compictely restored to,erfect health and manhood, afer years of suffering from Nervous De- bility, Luss of Viger and Organic Weak ness, Ih ve nothing to sell, and _ therefore want no money, but as I knowthrouzh my own experience how to tympathize with such suffi'rers, lam glad to be able to assist any fellow-beings toacure. I am well aware of the prevalence of quackery, for I myself was deceived and imposed upon until I nearly Jost faith ia mank’.d but P rejoice tosay that I am now perfevily well and happy once more and am desirons therefore to make this certain means of cure known toall. If vou will write to me you can rely upon being cured and the proud sat‘sfaction «f hiving been of great service toone in neeu w'!l be sufficient rew: rd for my t.ou,'e. Absolute secrecy astured. Send du silver iv cover porteg and address Mr. Geo. G. Strong, Nor Rock wood, Mich 135&w. A Snap in Boneless Kish Having a Jarge stock of Boneless Fish oa band, and wishing to reduce it atonce, we nave decided to make a big reduction in the price. For a few days we wi'l offer a 30 Ih. Box Boneless Fish for 35¢ This is rst—class stock. put up only a few weeks azo by one ef our best pack - rs. and we guarantee every box of it. em ey £ ine ae? Sead Wheat For Sale Whie Russian and Campbeli’s White Chatf. grown from imported ceed one year on the Warren Farm. On the testimony of thousands durin» the last 15 vears, this seed las viven great satisfaction it all parts of the I-land. JOHN NEWSON. Charlottetown, Meb }7—Imd&w FO LET A centrally situated dwelling house on Derchester St., now occupied by Mrs. Stephen Whitty. Also, “Warehouse A,” situated near Peake’s Wharf. Fer particulars apply to ARTHUR G. PEAKE, Office at residence, Euston &St., till ist April. §2—1309 tf TOUPEUETEOOEUUET ERED TEE EEE Ee n LT irre re PEELE rit og tLe it ty UD UOT earn tte eS eS i HOU et ee Negctable Preparation for As- similating the Food and Regula- Bowels of ! ting the Stomachs and Promotes Digestion Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither Oprum,Morphine nor Mineral. Nor NARCOTIC. N| Zecy7e of Old Dr SUEZ ETO Pumphin Seed - ; Alx.Senna + Rochelle Sclis - Anise Seed + vimnl ~ Carbonct Soda ¢ Harm Seed - (iaarprecr Fe VO Aperfect Remedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms Convulsions ,Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. eR kui Cee ZI DOSES = 35 CONT G3 — EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. De witb SEE THAT THE FAC-SIMILE | SIGNATURE — LE ? IS ON THE WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTLE OF CASTORIA Castoria is put up in one-size bottles only, It is not sold ia bulk. Don't allow anycne to sell you anything else on the plea or promise that it: : is ‘just as good” and “will answer every pur- pose.” a> ce that you get C-A-8-T-0-R-I-A, “auto t en every 7 AI Tedd wn, Ld ~er ey Look for this Print in the Snow a zxeereeewnxeerereraenene se 21 ot oe ot ob oe oe Be oe oe Oe Oe OC OG 26 OE Be 06 00 De Oe OF OD It is the pattern of the heel of the Granby Rubber and Overshoe. The next time you buy a pair of rubbers or overshoes ask for Granby’s and look for this pattern on the heel. There is no need to take a Granby that is not the same shape as your boot, because they are made to fit every shape of shoe. A rubber that does not fit the boot will draw the foot. Granby Rubbers ere thin, light, elastic and . fit perfectly. oe Se Se Se Se Se Se 2 ee ee J i ae oe | They wear like Iron. See RR EERE EER MR ORS EERE RRR RE RRR eRe ee Sell you a Spring fuit. goods in — => We have achoice lot of spring Chesioets, Tweeds, Our Cutters and workmen are A 1—always giving satisfaetion. D. A. BeOUGe, FINE TAILORING Are Z on ‘ os ——= et cu Going To Build a House ? Or put up a structure of any kind. see the undersig Would Like to Quote you Prices, and, if you Wish. Furnish yon With Plans and Specifications. ; Have the latest and best lities ng — ed with steam power, and alljobbing work is done promptly. ’ * ‘ aS ats Lot sei ° kar GRAVEL ROOKESG A SPECIALTY. Careful ‘attention given to all work and 11 e4 asonavle pri ™ i ned before completing all your arrangements. ces charged. ‘ If you are considering such a thing, you had better . > ' ole ' ~ > : “et 7 : 7 facilities for'turning out first-class work. Factory 1s equipp, WM. W. HARPER, Contractor and Builder. Factory on Fitzroy St. east, between Weymouth and Cumberland Mts. _———_ NOW @ ® @ WD @ @ O& BW Ladies Hats, Flowers, Blouses, lr, O. Box 218 anne NEw STOCK OPHNING Shirt Waists. T. J HARRIS LE EE LE LIE LOREAL NEALE SOLS CELE» SO NEERCC m, UE Ps AO AONE EOE BI. 20 Sig