THE DAILY EXAMIN TERMS. Four Dollars per Year. “This is True Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evripies. Single Copies Two Cents. is An ce --- onal ptmbenslcnntt egltnescanrnmtiireenacbepeeemnpelinspats — i VOL 8: DISEASES OF TRADES. gesuLTs OF CONTINUED OCCUPA- TION OF MEN WHO WORK. 1 peguane That Each Kind of Employ- Both physical and Mental Workers Fall Un- der the Rule— Politicians Die Early. ment Has Its Peculiar Ailment It is well known that there are a pamber of dangerous trades which give rise to serious diseases; but, as a matter of fact, almost every occupation has some ailment peculiar to itself. A doe- tor can always tell if his patient isa paker, for instance, by the state of his teeth. The flour dust collects on the teeth, becomes acid and gives rise toa special kind of decay. Bakers, owing tc their bregular life, sleeping in the day and working at night, and because of the pot air and dust, are great victims tc consumption. Blacksmiths, strong as they are, very often suffer from paraly- sis of the whole right side from the con- tinnous shock of hammering, and thei eyes become weak from the glare of the _ fire. Athletes, strange to say, do not, asa rule,enjoy long life. Professional boxers, srestlers, gymnasts, cyclists, are short lived and suffer from enlargement of the heart and diseases of the lungs. Boilermakers get deaf from the contin- nal loud noise. Brewers and brewers’ drivers drink beer in such large quaniti- ties that they ruin their livers and gen- erally die young. Bricklayers and plas- terers are very healthy, and they are said to resemble asses in never dying. Butchers are very strong and healthy, but they suffer in health through eating little pieces of raw meat. Cabmen are moted for ‘‘nipping,’’ and they endure the natural consequences. The cold alsc affects their faces to such a degree that the muscles of the face become frequent- ly paralyzed. Carpenters and cabinet makers are afflicted with varicose veins in the legs, aud the action of the shoulder in sawing and planing produces a diseased condi- tion of the large artery that runs from the heart to the arm, so that there is not a carpenter living, a doctor says, in whom a curious noise may not be heard by applying the ear to that blood ves- sel. Hardly a singie china scourer lives to old age without becoming asthmatic. Clergyman’s scre throat is of course well known. It is said by some to re- sult from having the mouth open so fre- quently, the ir going in that way and drying the throat. Others say it is caused by the clerical collar. And others stil say it results from the fact that th clergyman preaches frem a pulpit anc has to bend his head downward—for ‘barristers, who talk quite as much, de | hot suffer as much as clergymen, being on the same level 2s their hearers. Mixers, from werkizg in the dark, become very irritable. Their cyes get weak, and their lungs become quite black—miners’ lung. Cooks, particular. ly male cooks working in hotels, elnbs and restaurants, get gout frem ecutin- nally tasting rich fccd, and both mal and female cooks get varicose veins ané flat feet frem long standing as well as the Well knuwn ache ef the face from the heat and dirt. Cc< pers have a lumy on the knee, which is really a Little bag of fluid put there by nature to protect the knee frem the injurious effects of pressing it against the barrel, Divers’ hearts become distended from holding their breath. nestic servants are remarkable for suffering from typheid fever, House. maids are frequently afflicted with pov- erty of blocd froma drinking tea and tunning up stairs. Dressmakers’ long hours and confinement result in con- ‘umpticn very often, but mere often in indigesticn, poverty cf blecd and im- Wants, Lost, Found &¢ Ahave dropped the prices of Oysters from fe lo2e per quart ‘these will be good and ish asthe price will ensure quick sales, Vic- Wria Cafe, Jobn P. ‘oy, Pop TO LET— House on Cumberland a oF Welsh o4 WANTED—A maid servant, apyly to Vrs Watson, Water st aa TO RE‘1.—The conveni/ nt and p'easartl Situated cottage and grounds at present «9: Supied by the Misses Wrignt, near the G4 orks. Openforinepection. Avply at th Works. 93—1li pat TO EE ue ~—One half ofa three story dwell- Mghouse on Prince St.—Apply to W. W. Giiner. 3—- i oe LET.—The scuthern half of the late hief Justice Palmer's hovse on Queen Street, 80 be inspected at any time, Apply to Mrs E, Palmer, or at office of H. James Palmer. oo - ae LET—On Kent st, a three story hous “ Pply to Mrs Yourker, on the premises ee St~-eod tf te Lit — Olage ou Upper criuce bt con LuiDé Y rooms, anjoining the premises of A © Sudge Hensley, Possession given May 1. Apply to W Leitch x7—eod UEEN Viviokia: mbm bie AND REIGN; great historic work,se!ls on trod sightto thousands. Lord Dofferin in- Jees it to Canadians jn glowing werds aay to make $2) 0) a week some make twice Gavin 4 make more in spare time than are Cay at regular employment. This teat “eXagenary Celebrations are loca ng \t. Bookson time. Prospectus free Bvarsers, Territory coing fast THE BRADLEY GakRETSON Co Itd Toronto, Can * ER CHARLOTTETOWN, P. KE. ISLAND, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1897. WATERPROOF COATS. : $7.00 buys a heavy tweed Waterproof Coat; good size cape, extra long ) sewed seams and edges, at. y y ’ 4 : 5 , 4h ' : mY Ly } 4% as ) / | 4 i iF - , 9 e = ‘~ i | } ) Ti i, S.C ee |} a oF SS —— =— “ eS = $7.00 will also get you a heavy twill black Waterproof Coat, sewed seams, and edges, at “ THE BARGAIN CORNER Our Cashmere Waterproof Coats at $10, $12. $14, $15 and $16 comprise a lot of the finest and most stylish goods ever imported here HATS AND CAP: We are the Fashionable Hatters. Pick up the latest fashion plates, select style, and come and get it at The Bargain Corner, Our Hats, whether of ordinary grade or fine quality, all have the unmistak ~ able stamp of style. Our Caps, too, are noveltys gems, Try for your next Hat, oolen Comp THE BARCAIN CORNER, palied eyesight. ‘ine rumes of nitric acid make goldsmiths’ eyes sore, and } they get cramps in their fingers from | | catching small screws. Nearly all the | 2 human beings who suffer from that ; awful disease, glanders, are grooms. 2 India rubber workers have very bad ; > > ’ or Cap The Ba: gain Cori er, worn THAT’S A" NICE JOB eeAND THE.. PRICE IS ALL RIGHT ¢ ( | That is what my custo ‘ ( zre sifting clay interferes so much with 9 ‘ . - mers tell. We will give 3 you satisfaction, or we } ‘ their breathing that ‘‘potter’s asthma’”’ | , is a well known disease. Compositors | | : get cracks and fissures in the lips and | | ( small tumors in their mouths from the | j ' won't do the job. Will habit of putting type in the mouth, and | , a SO p” A ! Dyspepsia Is completely y banished from the sys- tem bythe use of Adams 7 Tutti Frutti. Save coupons inside of wrappers for latest books and prizes, Allow no imitations to be palmed offon Jae BABY’S SKIN NEEDS headaches and great mental depression. Painters are poisoned by the lead they use so much, and all their muscles, but especially their wrist muscles, become very weak. Photographers get poisoned by cyanide of potassium. The dust that enters the lungs of potters when they ORDER for JOB PRINTING J. D. TAYLOR, PrintER & BookBINDER | Queen St.... you try us on YOUR NEXT consumption attacks them frequently because of the stooping posture and the confined, sedentary life. Politicians are greatest sufferers of all, the constant dram drinking giving them indigestion, jaundice and nervous diseases, killing them at an earlier age than members of any other profession. Sailors, very sin- vow <p gularly, suffer greatly from consump- tion, owing to the cold and damp and the bad air of the forecastle. Salesmen and saleswomen in shops do a lot of standing, which gives them varicose veins and pains in the feet. Cloth scour- ers, who inhale benzine and turpentine, suffer from headache, lassitude and nervousness. Shoemakers get their chest pressed in by the last, lose their appetite and strength and have headaches. Stone- cutters’ eyes are often injured by the flying stone. ea tasters, although they only take the tea into the mouth and do not swal- low it, beceme so nervous that they can follow their employment for only a pe- riod of eight toten years. The sedentary life of lawyers, artists, students and literary men gives rise to gout, which ts said to kill more wise men than fools; dyspepsia, which made Carlyle’s life such a torture, and apoplexy, which carries off hosts of great men.—Pall Mall Gazette. Not News, “We heard some of the strangest, most outlandish things last night,’’ be- gan the woman who gossips. ‘*Yes,’’ replied the woman who doesn’t, ‘‘so a friend who attended your musicale was telling me. Exchange, NONE BETTER | # & FOR ot ot | DELICATE SKINS | { { The Albert Toilet Soap Co., Mfrs. Montreal. SOO w | asE. &D. ‘None as Geod Notice to Contractors, a Packing House in Charlottetown. office of the undersigned. April 15th, A. D., 1897. B. & M. RATTENBURY, 87—2aw 25 tl may 1. Sealed Tenders addressed to the un- dersigned will be received until the first of May, 1897, for the erection of Plans and specification can be seen after Saturday, the 17th inst, at the Victoria's Diamond Jubilee Will be held this year, and those who visit Ch’town this year will not do themselves justice if they fail to get their Lunches a Victoria Cafe, and drink the health of Her Majesty the Queen in a glass of Joy’s famous But- termilk JOHN P. JOY iGt George St..... VICTORIA CAFE EPPS'S COCOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED. in Quarter-Pound Tins and Packets only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd., @ Homeopathic Chemists, London, England. STEAMER ‘CAMPANA." 1897. Will leave Montreal for Charlotte- town, Monday, 26th April. Freight Solicited. CARVELL BROS., Ch’town, apr 13—eod tl 26 Agents , NO 93 ODD CHARACTERS. Some of the People Who Seek Fame Through Uncommon Channels. ‘*T think if all the cranks in this coun- try were corralled,’’ remarked the clerk jin the treasury department, ‘‘and put under a shed somewhere it would re- quire one bigger than ali the buildings at the World’s fair.’’ ‘Would there really be anybody to do the corralling?’’ inquired a pessimistic old party, who thinks there is none good —no, not one. ‘‘As I was saying,’’ continued the treasury clerk, ‘‘it would take the big- gest shed on earth, and still there isa new kind. This time it is a man or wo- man who has been sencing in 10 cents at a time as a contribution to the con- science fund, with a name signed in full, and there is no such name on the treasury books and never has been. I suppose it ir merely some crank who thinks he or che will get that name in the papers and have that much fame out of it.’’ ‘‘That’s silly enough,’’ chipped ina postoffice inspector, ‘‘but I heard of the oddest chap on my last trip down south. You may not know, or, if you do, don’t pay much attention to the fact, that there is a fine of $10 for sending written matter through the mails under any rate except 2 cents an ounce. Very like- ly you have sent enough stuff written on papers, books and so on to bankrupt you if you had the fines to pay, but Un- cle Sam is easy, and I don’t know of a case where anybody ever had to pay the fine. In this instance a man came into a certain office down south and gave the postmaster $500, being the amount of fines he owed the government fer viola- tion of postage laws as far as he could recall them. He was a young man, and he stated that he had violated the law while in love with a girl to whom he sent papers and books occasionally, and, though he wrote to her every day, he couldn’t jet the others go without writ- ing something on them. The postmaster didn’t know how to act in the premises, and just what he would have done final- ly nobody knows, but the next day the young man’s father came to the post- master and told him that his son had been jilted by his sweetheart, and it had r crazed him. This was an explanation’ which satisfied the official, and the mon- ey Was returned. ’’ ‘*Ugh!”’ grunted the pessimistic old party, in no wise affected by the pathos of the little story. ‘‘Only a crazy person or an idiot would ever think of settling square with Uncle Sam for a little bun- ko game like that.’’—Washington Star. MARCH HAS ITS VIOLETS. And There Is a Bright and Cheerful Side to Everything. Edward W. Bok, under the title of “The Odor of Spring Violets,’’ writes most forcibly in The Ladies’ Home Journal on the theme that there isa bright side to everything—even to March, the most disagreeable month of the year, for it has its spring violets. “It is true,’’ he writes, “that it is diffi- cult sometimes to see the bright side of sorrow, sickness and death. And yet there is distinctly a bright side. No sor- row comes to us without areason. We never know our friends until sorrow or illness comes to us. We never know what loving kindness and thoughtful- ness mean until we stand in need of them, and our hearts seem to beat against the walls of a cold, merciless world. Ws learn something from every grief and from each pain which comes tous. We learn to distinguish between friends, and what more priceless posses- sion is there in the whole range of knowledge than this? What develops us more than trouble? Virtues of heart, which we never dreamed of as existing within us, reveal themselves when we are sorely tried. That is why sorrow and trials are given us—not to give pain, but to develop us, to better equip us for scmething unknown which lies in the future, and which we could not mect or understand unless we had first gone through certain experiences. ‘*We are far too apt to regard actual blessings as calamities, to look upon the dark side of things. Some sorrow ccmecs to us, end we rebel. It never oc- curs to us that perhaps we need the ex- perience which sorrow alone can give. Illness comes, and we fret. But we can- not always be well. Ailments are very oftcn given to us to make our apprecia- tion of good health the keener. Ged has an iim, a direct purpose, in everything he docs. His blessings come in different forms. Nor are these forms always such 28 we would choose. Lessons can be mcre cficctively taught in innumerable cases through sorrew than through plees- ure. We should never know what a pure, beautiful coler white is if we did not have black to bring out the ccntrast. We wantonly pleasure in our lives. Whcn serrow comes, we rebel and re- fuse to reccgnize it for what it so often is—a bicssing in disguise. We cannot always kave it June. There must be March. Yet March bas its spring vio- Ye ¢q 9? 3° ‘ i. t- * ¢ ' en ee LET SI on erent “NIM Teme RE NNR TS POUR RRR Yee gemER SE onpR sem Or RMON SEER EIT Mee ee ae oe et de some ae SE Ri AN EN AMO ITE OP EL RR RM CTO LTE A Ek RE 5 OCR AL SE en Nm "I MN Bm a 5 ee