On nae ee ee ee se Rae atte ac aati li MA te Rott. = eta gn emery on area RT tog <e » ee Se gis sacra 2 a ee Pi gh sac pata oe a t fo ee ee teen THE PAILY en re me aoa EX AMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN APRIL 6, 18+. ee a a Wants, Lost, Found &e shop on Kent TO RENT.—A biackemith’s TO KENT.—A b acken Ist May. onor about Rt. Possession given t / i Apply to P. H. T ‘sivor, Kent St 78~6i yO LE r—A cottage on lower Prince 5. possession Ist of A rif. D. Chappell. 53 — TO LET.- One half of the three story dwel- fing bouse, -ontaining eight large rooms, 00 Prince St. Posscesion given on 20dMay n‘ xt Ww. W. Wellner 42 —_—— TO LET —The house and premises known as the “Old London House,’ situate on water ; St.. next to Government Warehouse No Re Apply to Peake nros & Co, jan28--tf eontaining about WANTED.—A house ) a desirable locality. geven or eight rooras in Apply to this office TO LET.—Thnat ;!easantly situated and eomfortable cottage on Water St, at present occupied by Mrs Erace Stewart Possession given about middle may. Apply to Peake Bros, & Co. Ch’town, 63 LOST.—$15.00 reward will be paid by Edw- erd Bayfield to any person returning &@ double gold eye glass, with long gold chain ttacheo, 66 eod $$ TO LET.—That comfortabie and pleasantly situsted house on upper quueen S1.,. being the southern half of the residence of the Chief Justice ‘Palmer, now in cecuvation of Commander Cheyne Hot and cold water in sam?, rent moderate, possession g ven Ist May vext. Apply ‘o H, JAMES PALMER, Ch’town, 6> WANTED—A competent girl for general house work Apply 'o Mrs Arthur Newbery sa WANTED.— Canvarsers to solicit orders for choice Canadian grown nursery stock; terms liberal; complete assortment. Orders received during Apri) can be filled this spring. Brown Bros’ Co., Brown’s Nurseries, Ont, 80- 3i od W ANTED.— Two gentiemen boarders or lodgers. Apply at thie office. $0—Si pd BARBERS’ CHAIRS and complete outfit for sale chesp for cash or approvea note. Ap- ply to DA Bruce, Queen St, Ch’ own 76—dyawkytf italian Ware House Beal’s Corner Cor. Grafton and Ct. Geo. Sts North side Queen Squarre jules Robin ~\Medicinal Brandy —_——_— JOY & DAVIES. Wholesale Wine Merchants. NOTICE |! Application wil] be made at the presen session of the Parliament of Canada, fo an actto incorporate the eubsiciary bigt gourt of toe Ancient Order of Foresters, in the Dominion of Canads; a friendly an Benevolent Sosiety, with all other neces- sary power, incidental thereto, to carry out the said society’s objecte, ant for other purposes. Dated 28th March, 1898. D. F. MACWATT, Solicitor for applicants. 74 9wks law TO LET. — ee store, forn erly aio suitable for Rooms in rearend of oecupied by R. Bearisio, office, possession at once ~~ ~ "7 ié ve. D. McK AY P. B. Island Railway O- and afier MONDAY, 27th Dec., 180%, jrains of this Railway will run daily, (Sun- lays excepted,) as uncer. | hos Trains Out- — ‘Trains | In ward. Read STATIONS. ward. Reed down, | 7 P M.A. MM. P.M, A. 3 10, 6 20) . Charlottetown 5) 2 301 o 3 Sv! 6 35),, Royalty junction.| 2 16 9 40 417, 7 32). .Nocth Wiltshire. | 140 8 & 4 31) 7 24). Hunte? River. 1 28) 8 42 |S 05; 7 51)... Bradaibane..... -/ 100, 8G 16 13, 7 58). .Emerald.. ...... 39 §3| 7 58 5 27| 8 O08). . Freetown ....... 119 42) 7 3 5 47) S$ 25)... Kensington...... ‘12 23; 7 iE 6 20, 8 o0) Ar. (Lv. 12 00! 6 48 7. M.\P. M* S’Side - a. ji2 50} Lv. \ Ar. 10 30 | } 11}... Miscouche ......| 10 10 } 34) :. Wellington ...... |) 47 ; 2 191,. Port Hill + eevee] 9 09; | 3 34)... O’Leary.........| 8 OD 3 58)... Bloomfield sonkail G 34 4 34... Alberton........' 6 55 Fn SD doce wees 8 09 A. M Ae M. P. 31.| ne 2 30, .. Charlottetown ... 10 3¢ 2 50, ..Royalty Junction) 10 1 Ht .. Bedford ot + ir v; oe fee | ** ar eseeaeeee 15 45 ..Georgetown .... 73 b M. A. M ,P. q. a. M. ' 4 05). .Mt, Stewart ....) 8 55 443 nn a.cetent 8717 5 ° S:. Peters e¢eate q j 6 57), Bear River .scese} 7 6 se eOte eoetee a ae A. » NM. ) | 8-00) Bape eanette | 3 ‘ & M. ir Tains are_run by Eastra Standari Time late | ; ay not eoing to move /But we are selling Crockery just as cheap as we were. We are Special discounts on all Crockery China and Glass now in stock, to ' make room for sprir g importations. Also:—First class Photographs made in all the leading styles, at the old stand, C. LEWIS Exactly opposite the Nort’ Side of Market House. Grarron S?Repe......... >See $699 G8B4C 0008 It's Cedar Posts And Laths we wish to draw 4} tention to just new. are good stock and wehave plenty. 3.000 Posts an’‘l 500 M Laths They is about the quantity. It you reguire any, come and see us. TeLepsons 1S] JAMES BARRETT Connolly’s Wharf. ~A~a~y> es = o> @ *] 2 ess >> @ Ss 2S Sees & oo? . Oo? GeO Gwe aan 4m es @ ae @] 8244688 HENRY R. LORDLY C. E A.M Can. Soc, ©. E. Graduate College of Civil Engineeriag Cornel! University. Ceveulting Engineer for General Work, Specialties: Hydraulic, Sanitary Engineer- ng and Bridge Designing. Offices at Charlottetown and St Jobn {sland correspondents address to Charlottetown. TEETH WITHOUT PLATES Crown and Bridge Work. DR. J.P. MURRAY 155 Queen Street. 9 omNENS-NaNe Paint is to Building W hat clothing is to the body. It is just as im- portant, You should take as nuch care in selecting the paint to slotbe your property as you do in selecting the material to clothe your pe.son, Paint gives beauty to the Luilding, Ifyou are thinking of peinting your build- ing, We can give you the best paint made “Tiger” White Lead, English Oil, Brushes etc. ZEFa>9 DUD & RUGERD Wholesale and Rstail. “ENES VANDERBILT'S RIDE. HIS HORSE FRIGHTENED BY THE GIRL | WHO BECAME HIS WIFE. | How the Commoedore’s Son Met Miss Biis- | sam-—He Proposed at a Picnic—Inscrip- tion which William H. Cut Into a Tre: to See How It Would Look, ’ | It must have been more than €0 years } ago at Jeast that a young man mow a his bay horse early one evening for a gal | jop through the streets of Albany. ‘The | horse waS in fine fettle, and the ride was | begun with a dash that attracted the atten tion of all bebolders. Some who hastened to get out of the way predicted disaster if the pace was con. | tinued, but the rider smiled at their looks | of apprehension as he passed, settled him- | self a little more firmly in the saddle and | increased the speed. Heknewa few things | about horseback riding himself, and the notion that he could meet with an acci- | dent never entered his bead. | As he rode the moon arose, creating | high lights here and there that contrasted strongly with the darkening shadows Eventually, perhaps,the young man’s sense | of delight in rapid motion began to giv: way to appreciation of the evening’s beau- | ties. At all events he slackened the reins | a bitas the horse swung round a corner | into a side street. Just ahead in the moonlight he saw a girl upon a crosswalk. At the sudden sound of hoofs she stepped quickly to th: | shaded fcotpath. There was a fiutter oi white drapery, and the horse sturted vio. | lently. A moment later the dashing ride: lay prone upon the ground, his clothes torn and himself apparently suffering se verely from the sudden contact of his head against a jagged pile of stones. The girl screamed, but in spite of her fright she hastened to the fallen horse man's aid. She had hardly reached him when he rose nimbly, brushed the dirt from his clothes and stood smiling before her. ‘*Are you—are you badly burt?’’ asked the girl. “Why, no; notatall. It was awkward in me to take such a tumble from my horse,’’ said the young man, ‘I hope I didn’t give you too much of a start. though, Miss—-Miss’’~ ‘*Miss Kissam,’’ said the girl, demurely finishing his sentence, while her face turned rosy red in the moonlight. a 2 “a 4 Sy ps SICK HEADAGHE Positively cured by theso Little Pilis, They also relieve Distress from Dysnepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drows!- ress, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Toncue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable, Smaili Pil, Smail Dose, Smail Price. Substitution the fraud of tho day. ~~ > ? + - , Sce you get Carter's, “Sk lor Carter's, Insist and demand “~ . + Tiver Pills. CH RLOTTETO Business College —— ANP ammeae Wriffug Academy Let the search) ght of practic? illuminate the dark places of Theory. THOROUGHLY Progressive Practical ¢&%. Institution, in which .oung men and women are pol only taught Book keeping {in allits applications to commerce) both by Single and double entry, but are trained how todo business, %y actual pusinpess transact- ions. The siudents act as buyers, sellers, | traders, bankers, book-keepers and account- ants,ig actual business operations, and the eurrerncy iesued by tha ‘allege Bank and the mdse. issued from the Fmrorium, are used in bona fide business transactions, just the same asin mercantile and banking i ouses. Book-keeping in itself may be learned at home, but a kuowledge of how to transact business, cannot be thas acquired. That our course system Of training is eminently pract- ital write for ?testimoniais from business men, andfrom siudents who are now hold- lpg lucrative a) responsible positions. : UBJE 18: Book-keeping by single and double entry (theoretica' and practical,) Actual Business Practice, Business Penmansbip, Business Correspondence, Commercial Arithmetic, Cummercial Law, Railroading, Steampoat- ing, Banking, (actual practicein ihe «oliege Bank,) Typewriting, Shorthand and Naviga- tion. FACULTY: L. B Miller, Principal, Teacher of Book- Recving, oe Business Practice. usiness Correspondence, ‘| C 5 Navigation, = ypevriting ard i - Coulson, (Vice Principal, : of Railroading, Str@mboating, idee” ae counting and Actual Business Practice. Harry Walliams, Teacher of Busines Penmanship. wm. Moran (licensed), Teacher of Short- 7 _ yeorge nman Esq, (Law Firm Me- a & Inman) Lecturer on Commercial Ww. For circulars and full informat'on, write or apply to L. B. MILLER; bs Principal, All interested are eordially invited atthe college and inapeeh eter cas siping, and work in general. , } girl, again blushing vividly. | the Rey. Mi“ uXissam, at that time a wen | known Lutheran clergyman of the state capital The minister received his guest | tled about to make some simple applica- | derbilt and the minister engaged in con- and | decided sooner or Jater to ask a particular- | ly important qui As the young Man gazea upon her pretty foatures he suddenly grew faint. ‘TI don’t know but Lama bit more shaken up than I thought I was,’ he smmered, “‘but—I'll be all right in a moment.”’ ‘‘T do hope it is not serious,’’ said the “It was ali my fault too. My home is in the next house, and Iam sure it would be best for you togo in and resta little, Mr.—Mr.’’— **Vanderbilt,’’ responded the youth, in turn finishing an interrogatory sentence; “William H. Vanderbilt—and—possibly it would be well for me to accept your ina vitation.’’ So the vonng man entered the home of hospitably, of course, when the accident was explained, and the girl’s mother bus- tions te the horseman’s hurts. While his bruises were being attended to young Van- versation on some topic of the day, in which the mother and the daughter joined, and, all forgetful of his horse, the unex- pected guest remained the evening through. When at last he tore himself away, be thought he had never been en- tertained more pleasantly in his life. Of course he was invited to call again, of course he accepted the invitation. In fact his calls at the modest parsonage were exceedingly frequent from that time on, and it was not many weeks before he tion of the girl who had frightened ‘his horse, and then another of her father. It was not until the following July, however, that he was able to muster up enough courage to put these interroga- tions. He may not have been a worker in that field before he met Miss Kissam, but it is of record that the following July he acted as superintendent of the Sunday school connected with her father’s church, and that the entire school went somewhere on a picnic in that month. Miss Kissam was a teacher, and both the young folk were naturally kept pretty busy all day long. But some time before the close of the day they found it possible to take a quiet stroll together afar in the grove where the picnic was held. When they had got away from the others, young Vanderbilt stam- mered out his story and asked his ques- tion. After the story had been listened to and the question answered in the way he wished he took from his pocket a keen bladed penknife and with it carved an in- scription in the smooth bark of a maple tree. This inscription read: ‘‘Mr. and Mrs. William H. Vanderbilt.” He had cut it just to see how it would lock, and its appearance was so gratifying to both the young folk that they remained to gaze upon it long enough to worry the other picnickers about their absence and cause the sending of messengers to find them. The question that yet had to be put to the clergyman, too, was answered as the young man desired, though perhaps with some hesitancy. Possibly this was in part because of the young man’s rather slender financial prospects, for, though his father, the commedore, was already quite well to do, William H. had his own way to make in the world and was known to be some- what in disfavor at home. Asallthe world knows, the young bride- groom's subsequent career was such that the bride’s father had no cause to regret tho match because his daughter had mar- ried a poor man, for he became the richest man of his time. But the pleasantest fen- ture of jt all was that, no matter how much William H. Vanderbilt may have merited some of the criticisms showered upon him, his Jong married life with the clergyman’s daughter was not marred by a single dis- } cordant note.—New York Press. Abandoned at Sea On a Waterlogged Brig. Andrew Kilgour, the hero of our new serial, At Love’s ommand a ~ _ —— Was the sport of unpropitious | fortune for many months in the | far east 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. ‘First Chapter Appeared Saturday o" ongenst ‘eoryes n*4 ae in cach or stamips, wre Wil minil you, cl chacrns $ “~ mectcl box, : ut s lone, > wide end x “ort Tv 7 Tv. . ean . . with Termey’s DLE ra > Inpo-Crevrox ° — . ° 4% . at ‘ a » cuciit Th lone is worth the money—the Tea } 12102 t ; It's offcred es an inducement to make yon sequaimtal as ‘@ wr ag er “SO th 4 2 9. 8 ’ wnt Ds o7" 1 g-ee-, arte *l as ¢ with ao Cl2ssCiOUs Asi nM. deltas 4 . | awoke LO £ -C Witere exg advan TPAS5 - ASS Trootitya tin 3 Oud GY feud Packet, 1 con be had from mst 11 Canads ee OO: i reach Picket (25 gonty ) they cre Consicencd té Dente Best of Tea V JOSEPH TETLEY & CG AOINC ‘STREET, 14 Ler (AMRAARAASAARAAS AA dee HAVE YOU TRIED oe, “A Wee Drappie 0 Pattison’s Whisky? The bert and safest stimulant for Medicinal and beverage use, Patti-, son’s Whisky has established iteelf in favor with leading Physicians and Therapeatics in Great Britain and the Colonies, whose te stimonials bear witness fo its action es a speedy, safe and gentle stimulant. ed Pattison’s Whisky is remarkatly and exceptionally uniform @ age, quality and flavor, and 18 free from the injurious defects incidentalieg the many inferior brands upon the market, which are largely made up of newly distilled whiskies and raw grain spirits. For Invalids an adultrated Whisky is Dangerous For sideboard use it is abominable. Ask your wine merchant for a wee drappie o’ Pattison’s Whisky. For sale by ali authorized vendors, and wholesale by ve or Sale By All Licensed Ven EFRFS ESS FSFE SS SS SES AAAAAAACHARSARARANARA a { a to bea for the money a “sn ? nm JRattray §@. Mo Rea. ae PAINLESS DENTISTRY @) SKILFUL DENTISTRY { <* MODERN DENTISTRY § Dentistry by Specialists All the above are found at our office. SAVE THAT TOOTH We alwavs advise to have a toothsaved. We have ertabr) lished our business on the fact that we save tects © it it is necessary thata tooth must come out, We extract | without pain, by use of the famous } BERLIN METNOD Q) Teeth filled absolutely without pain, by use “f ELECTRICITY, Our Crown and Brivce Worx is modes. Call aad #? s specimen’, Our ArriyicaL Teer. ds, oni guarasit® 4 them in every way. We use best materials, and have moders m thing 10 with. We put gold filling in Artifical teeth, every make them look natural. Our prices are low, #? guaranteed, BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS, Over Store of Prowse Bros. We make al! kin achinery © work | Open evenings 7 to 8. ae fe ae Peer Fa eo a a a a oe . Aan