See NC ie TRE seat BABY’S OWN SOAP is made articularly for littlefolks. It is the purest soap in the world. Really and truly the purest. It looks good ; smells good; IS good ; and does good to the pink and tender skin of infants. Thousands of men and women use BABy’s Own Soap—be- cause they like it—but for Babies it is indispensable. 76 THe AcBert Toicet Soar Co., MONTREAL. Unprincipled makers are offering an inferior soap the same in color and shape RE We are not going to move But we are selling Crockery just as cheap as we were. Special discounts on all Cro-kery 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 \xactly opposite the North Side of Market House. Grarron SRERT....+...- RT | NOTICE. Having leased the privilege of fishing trout cn ihe stream known as Sherry’s Creek, to parties iv Ch’towa you will please take notice that no person will be allowed to fish but them. P, & T. SHERRY. Rr i eal 101 lmo—eod Pure Spiccs are Profitable But bad «pice is abominable. | This is a truism that no competent : houskeeeper should forget. Half the trouble of coo ing is past if you get the right brand of Spice, and while there are many that are fairly good, it is always safest to take one which is invariably uni- That one is form. Columbias and Others There are two kinds of Wheels, COLUMBIAS and all others. Columbias are in a class by themselves, Prices 44, 60, 85 and 140 dollara. The 60 dollar wheel is equal to the best high grade bi- cycle on the market of any other make, Each wheel guar- anteed by a company who do not know how to make slop goeds. The purchaser of a bicycle from me will be taught to ride free. R. M. YOUNG, SUMMER COTTAGE FOR SALE, ® For Sale, a comfortable cottage with plot of land, beautifully eituated at Kep- —_ with a delightful view of the straits bathing, convenient to town, and a Jeatant holiday resort. Apply to pis JUDGE McLEOD, 8. Side, ear al Oe ade eee — BEWARE! | THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 12 1898. SE’S SIIOES. - oe oe ; . a4 HOW OFTEN THEY NEED REPLEN- ISHING AND WHAT THEY COST. | | i Resetting Old Shoes Costs About Half as Much as New Ones—The Use of Rubber Pads—Carriage Horses’ Shoes Cost More Than Those of Work Horses. 1 | A work horse’s shoes cost a good deal more than its driver's ahoes do. Truck horses, delivery wagon borses and the great number of horses used for various working purposes, ineleding many horses driven to hacks and other public carriages, are ordinarily shod once & month at a cost of $2.50, so that the work horse’s shoes are likely to cost $30 a year anyway, and there may be gome additional expense for sharpening and resetting. Sharpening costs $1.50. Whether this is necessary or not depends, of course, primarily upon the weather. It may de- pend much upon the time of day the horse is driven. There may be seasons in which sharpening is not necessary. Not all drivers get the shoes of their | horses sharpened even when the going | is slippery. Such going may come about | suddenly aud unexpectedly, and it may | be of brief duration, and then there are | drivers who under ordinary circum- | “stances take the risk of the greater cost of a broken shaft or an injured animal | to save the cost of sharpening. Of work | horses in general probably something | more than half have their shoes sharp- | , ened when the going is slippery. There | are some, however, whose shoes are al- most all kept sharpened at such times, these being the horses that work at night and in the early morning before the sun has softened the ice or melted it away. These include horses driven to milk wagons, bakers’ horses, and so on, how often the shoes are sharpened depending on the going. Usually when a horse is shod he is shod all around. Sometimes there is oc- casion to put on a single shoe, as when a horse throws ashoe. The cost cf a single new shoe is one-fourth the cost of a set—in the case of a work borse 63 cents. The charge for resetting the old shoe would be 85 cents. Resetting in general, from one shoe up, costs cbout one-half, or a little more than half, as much as fitting a horse with new shces. | In putting on a single shoe an old shce would commonly be used, to make it match those remaining on. If it is not | too much worn, the shoe the horse has cast would be put back if the driver picked it up. It is suitable and it fits. | If it has not been picked up, then a | slipper is put on from the pile in the shop, slipper being the shop name of the worn shoe taken off and thrown aside when a horse is reshod. Horses have peculiarities in wearing their shoes, just as men do. Some wear them off more at the toe, some more at the heel, and some wear them more cn one side than on the otier. Horses’ shoes wear off more quickly on granite pavements than they do on asphalt, aud the greatly increased use of asphalt pavement has led to a correspondingly increased uso of rubber pads in horses’ shoes to give the horses a_ better foot- hold. Rubber pads, as well as the shoes, are fitted to the horse’s foot and nailed on with Shoes with rubber pads of this kind for wurk horses, cost, put on, $4 or 85 aset. They are likely to wear longer thun sboes without pads, but they are commonly replaced or re- set at the end of a month. The necessi- ty for reshocing the horse at intervals of about a month is due in a considera- ble degree to the natural growth of the horse’s hoofs, which require trimming or other attention about once in &© ! often. In the case of iron shoes, at the } end of a month, when they are taken off, they are likely to be too much worn to go anotber month, aad new shoes are put on. In the case of rubber pad shoes, the shoe. WOOD'S PITOSPHODIN FE. The Great English Remedy. Six Packages Guaranteed to promptly and permanently cure cll forms of Nervous Weakness, Ervissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotencyand all effects of Abuse or Excesses, : “s. \eagw = Men‘al Worry, cxcessive use i £1, Of Tobacco, Oviumor Stimu- Before and Aj ““** lants, which soon lead to In- firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an carly grave. Has been prescribed over 35 yecrs in thousands of |} cases; is the only Iecliable and Honest Medicine known, Ask drugsistfor Wood's Phosphedine; if he offers some worthless mecicine in piace of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, £1; six, $5. One will please, siz wil cure. Pamph'ets free to any address, The Wood Company, Windsor, Out., Canada. Sold in Charlottetown Ly Gcorge E Hughes, Drugzgist Y.M.C. A. The baths in the Association Building have been refittd. and are now in strictly first class condition. They will be open Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, from 2to 10 p.m. Members are invited to patronise them; non members will be charged a smal! fee for their use. The Assembly Hal! is now in good order, and will be let at reasonable rates Apply to tne Secretary. ' réset, wuu t tf they are net tco mrvh worn, they are bos tuny Le uvue iu perbups 4) or 50 per cent of the cases. Some- times the old shoes may be put back with new pads, sometimes the old pads with new shoes. It depends a good deal on the manner in which the borse wears them. So that while the first cost of rubber pad shoes is considerably greater than that of plain shoes the net cost 1s not so much greater. The price charged for shoeing 4 pri- vate coach or carriage horse is $1 more than for shceizng a work horse, or $3.50, and rubber pad shoes, such as those de- scribed, for carriage horses cost $5 or $6 a set. Such horses are reenod ordinarily, like most horses, once a month, and as a rule their shoes are also reset in the middle of the month. And the shoes of private carriage horses are more com- monly kept sharpened in slippery weath- er than are those of work horses. Wom- en are more likely to be disturbed by the slipping of a horse than a man would be, end the carriage horses are msually more valuable than work horses, and less risk of injury is taken. In some cases it might be that the charge for shoeing a horse, either a car- riage horse or a work horse, would be according to the time required rather than by the job, as, for example, in the case of a lame horse, in shoeing which more than the usual time would be needed. Shoes are made and fitted to meet any requirement, and the cost might be, according to the amount of work and time expended, from $1 to $5 for a single shoe.—New York Si... He takes it with him everywhere he goes, It keeps off those little ills Grippe, Fever, Rheumatism, Skin Z and Kidney Complaints, etc, THE SENSIBLE TRAVELLER starting out on a journey, prepares for any emergency. Being jolted along in stufiy cars is very apt to cause Sick Headache, Biliousness, Loss of Appetite, Sleeplessness, etc The much travelled man is prepared for all these—he expects them, and guards against them. In a promin ent place in his most handy valise, you'll find a bottle of Abbey’s of travel and the many greater ills “ka from which the traveller oiten suffers, Here is what The Canadias Phar- maceutical Journal says: Effervescent Salt. 8a suc> as Constipation, Neuralgia, La “We have tried Abbey's Efferves- Sa cent Salt, and find it an excelient ABcompound. It was most favorably commented upon by the medica! pro- fession at the recent meeting in Montreal of the British Medical Asso- J ciation, The Company was not afraid of submitting it to the criticism of medical men. All were invited to sample and pass judgment upon it. This was invariably favorable, some expressing the opinion that it was superior in points to any other on the market, A morning draught of this stimulating preparation will send a man to his daily occupation & invigorated and ready for any task.”’ This excellent English preparation is for sale by all druggists. Price 2/6 or Go cents a bottle, Trial size, 25 cents. L-We will send a sample bottle free to any one applving for same. d vrs & THE ABDEY EFFCAVESCENT SALT CO,, LimrreD. AF ARRAPAAAARARARE nye Peserreorereresbocperreserseneyceerereeeosenenronecensesnse prensiniinmigennmnsemas PICKFORD & BLACK LINE. . HALIFAX & CHARLOTTETOWN. SEASON OF 1898. S. S. City of Ghent will sale from Halifax for Ch’town about 25th April Importers and ship, ers will please order their freight by above line. This steamer has excellent passen- ger accommodation. Saloon amid— ships. Special freight rates wili be given this season. W. W. CLARKE, Agent. 84 guar MEN'S BICYCLE BOOTS Just received, boots in Chocolate and Black Just the thing for wheel- ing. Call and see them. R. K. JOST Stamper’s Corner. bicycle if you are ill you need a) | doctor in whom you have | confidence. If you need a remedy you ' want one that has been tested | for years; not an obscure, un- tried thing that is urged upon | you, or on which you save a | few cents—that is no consid- | eration as against health, For wasting in children 'or adults, Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo- ‘phosphites has been the | recognized remedy for twen- _ty-five years. soc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists. Toronta. GOooDpD—. valre for money expended, is what we give in ail goode in our line, to which we attribnte our steady increase io business. We are showing a nice assortment of Ladies and Gentlemens WATCHES this season, which are all thoroughly tested before leaving ocr siore. W- guarapice every watch sold by us to give ratisfactioun, by buying now you can procure @ good time piece VERY LOW as our goods are bonght low for spo | cach, i Call and ece for yourself, at— ! oQ@ ea W. N. TANTON Opposite Crahbe’s Hardwre Store, A--=- Gharice If You Need a Watch Article of Jewelry p Si verware | There is ac} ance o! a bargain if you buy this weck, as | | take stock May Ist., and wish to reduce stock before them, and close out suue lines. ify WALL Vicoia dcwelly ftore. 1? A BP aOR NOW OPEN ==" A large assortment of Amer- ' ican and Caradian Wall Pa: | per All the latest designs and patterns at lowest prices. F, J, HORNSBY Bookseller & Stationer. Window Shades from 25c up. _ Weke e commenced burn 12g, 4nG an supply any quan tity of b-st quality ot Lime, for fermi: g and building pur- poses. C. LYONS & Co 86—pat. cuar. 1 mo WANTED. Coat and Vest makers, at D. A. BAUCES oD EW.TAYLOR, be are used in manufecturieg the nonpareil ord > ts goods. te. Thev have heen ewarded 10 Gold | Eres Call in and see the latest arrivals. “se sae + > as > + ry vvyY ser ve" 'We cannot afford to be wrong. IT COSTS MONEY. 44d wre wey AL ‘AOJIAT | (Kes You go to a tailor, leave your order, then wait. After a wearying wait your clothes come, perhaps they do not fit, or when made-up, do not look as you thought they ‘T$ A MONTH SINCE / ORDERED THAT SUIT, PLEASE CANCEL MY ORDER,1] HAVE BOUGHT A SUIT OF SHOREYS READY-TO- WEAR CLOTHING AT HALF YOUR PRICE Shorey’ s would when in the piece, But if you buy Ready-to-wear Clothing of your money. But are your clothes as good? The makers say they are. If they are wrong the dealer is authorized by them to refund your money, Consequently the makers cannot afford to be wrong, | See that Shorey’s Guarantce Card is in the pocket of every garment. Jas. Paton & Co, Selling Ce eT ee eee eee Quer wn. PFULIAMS PAINT is “1ace by the largest paint mane f in the world, in the “Aes i ; ct {2ctory in existence. These cre fects, that have re- sulted from cimply making a re liab ciclo ct ihe beginning, a quar- eae ter « cent ovo, and maintain- ; et ing its quality clways. By giving the best pris: valac t:2% 10s possibls to give, and the best ai iv 2: purpose. By giving cttention to ome thing Se iz Well—bevier 1 *¢ else. m buy The Shervin-Williams Pairt you get in c ior you ey, your rT y's worth, and more Liv wt battc., print booklet on paint free, V6 SHERMER ViLLIARIS CO., PAINT AND COLOR (MAAKERS, ' M3 + Been toast 2629 Stewart Avonue, Chicago, 7 pistzdt, .. a0 ene 21 GL nioine Street, Montreal, you are fitted in a jiffy and save from 25 to 50 per cent ; ‘ ‘ 7 wre ‘ . ‘ Tre eae ae ve sss ere aaa Tre ; ; ‘ vr" ory a= ‘ ; $44 comme $4¢-cmsEe $4 ry Sarmeet. cies ‘gents for Cl’tewn, —_ 7 - - = = ; ——— : _ SS STG CREEL Som temorcrcen . Pgh OD Var rylt Vi yi we +p ' 2s Sa : Sal “e r ee ~ ’ * 3 ve by ay i ye bi my. aes ray) Lady fv’ The ce’ebratcd P, D, Corsets are absolniely without rivale, and ccceury the FIRST PO- * SITION in the world’s corset trade. SOR IN . ye Tint a i P. D. Corsets wre tailor ent and hang finished, endonly the very test materials Medals, and received sgain the Highest Prizes in Brussels 1897, wwich shows the merits of the corsets: To be obtained at all leading Dry Good Stores, ‘rcm $1 to $30. per prir., Ce Omer: Pl wad oti aay awe . aadiod, Lagi Tot BPE I ee the Efcintzman & Co. Fiano eee FROM MADAM ALBANI. Queen Evtel, Toronto, Feb, 23, 1899. Messrs Heintzman & Co., Toronto. GENTLEMEN, supplied to my rooms, as also for the grand pianoforte u my concerts here. It is really an excellent instrument, the tone and and quality of the instrument eminently saue} factory in every way. Yours sincere] (Signed). AUBANI. a Tue Prince Epwarp Istanp Music House.j Sole agents for P. E. Island. SONNOLLY BUILDING “= FRENCH P. D CORSETS & 7 Posteo : ; The Createst “ Axtiots Endorse| [ must thank you .ery much for the Piant) sed rh 5 ~~ counted MM Tala ERE apa Se Fe ee ee tk wa