ill ss ilmenite alll venectiltiiti. cat ; 4 THE RATE OF INTEREST. Sir Oliver Mowat’s bill respecting in- terest re ade:— Whereas’ on the part of some lenders of money, a practice hae been obtained of charging exorbitant rates of interest to needy or ignorant borrowers, sometimes as much as 5 per cent, per diem, or at the rate of 1-825 per cent per annum; and, whereas it is desirable that the protection ot the law should be extended to necessit- ious borrower,; Her Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada, enacts as follow-:— 1. This act may be cited as the Interest Act 1897, 2. Notwithstanding the provisions of chapter one hundred and twenty-seven of the revised Statutes of Canada, the rate of Interest reserved or payable on bonds, promis-ory potes, bills and coatracta of every kind shall not exceed eight percent. per annuum, and no promise or agret= ment to pay a higher rate of interest shall be valid, in an action hereafter brought on promissory note, bill or contract kind it appears that payments have ade thereon on account of interest in excess of eight per cent. per annum, the ju/ge may in his discretion treat such ex es-ive payments or any part thereof as payments on account of principal and ren- der judgment accordingly. t. Ti.is act applies to instruments and agreements heretofore as well as hereafver executed or made, but the second section shall not apply toany payment made be- tore the passing of th s act. 3. It a bond Of @NV heen I BI-METALLISM. Annnal Meeting of the British League Opened in Manchester, The anual meeting of the Bi-Metallic League was held in Manchester(Eng).2 nd inst. There was a large attendance, inc!ud- ing Over fifty delegates from labor associa- tions. The Lord Mayor of Manchester presided and welcomed the delegates. The report saidthe most important event of the year was the election for President in the United States,“when Bryan polled 6...00,900 vetes on the platform of national k cnet. tigm and McKinley polled 7,000,- (0. on & Matform pledging him to promote rternati>:. a! bi-metallism.” The report shen refere to snpportalleged to bave been ,.ven to international bi-metallism by M. Meline, the French Premier, ia the Chamber of Deputies, and touches upon the mission to Europe of Senator Edward O. Wolcott, of Colorado, which “was 80 successful that it led to the appointment of the special mission now in France, to which it is earnestly hoped such co-opera- tion will be accorded + leading nations that an irternational agreement will be concluded at an early date.” ~ NEWS NOTES, South Australia has not realized enough wheat from her late crop to supply bread for her population and has had to import over 500,000 bushels. Spain’s poverty interferes in no way with its national eport. During the bull fight- ing season from Apr‘! 15 to Oct. 20, 1896, there were 478 fights in Spain and 1218 bulls, valued at $300,060, and 5,730 hors-s, valued at $200,000, were killed. Mexico has 1 09votion mills and five new ones areon the way from the Unitep Stace. The Hercules cotton mille, three in number, have just resummed Operations in Queretaro after baying shut down for several months. ‘hey employ 300 per- 8008. Mies Willis, of London Sownship, Ont., was engaged to marry Mr. Scate, of Ridge- town. Just before the day named for the wedding the young lady disappeared, and it now turns out that a former lover, Mr. | Batchelor, ef Hamilton, heard of the en | gagement, telegraphed tothe young lad) | and got her to marry bim. By ihe terms of the will of the late J. fi. R. Moleon, the Unitarian church gets 5.000, Montreal General Hoepital $10,- 000; Fraser Institute $30,000, McGill University $100,000, Bishops Colleg> School, Cemetery for Crematory $100,00v. The remainder of the fortune estimated at about $2,000,000, is divided among relatives and friend, The possibility of doing away with. the smoke nuisance in some of the great Eng- lish manufacturing centres is being ser- iously discussed, At no previous time has there been such activity in the Mexican cattle trade as now. In the first fonr months of the year 825 cars have been loaded and elipped from the Deming yards, makinga total of 33,000 head. In March 10,000 head were shipped out of Mexico at this yoint. For April the Mexican cattle shipments amounted to about twenty-one thousand head. Thousands of cattle south of the Mexican border line are «till on their way to the United States markets. Tbe pros- pective duty on imported cattle is largely responsible for this condition of affgirs, Mexigay cattleowners baye felt it was now OF DEVFF, ! Sovereign Cocoa Wine is pleasant to take, is certain and gratifying in its effect in cases of loss of sleep and enervation. nt Get the Best The public are too intelligent to pur chase a worthless article a second time, 02 the contrary they want the best ! sian are virtually unanimous in sayir; Scott's Emulsion is the beet form of Cod Liver Oil, 7 a Miss Aitnee Cecil Jones will terminate the childreb’s class with » party at Kin- dergaiten Hall on Tuesday evening, June Sth, ffom 8 to 10 o'clock. Parents and friends of the children are eordially invited to attend. Admiesion 15 cents. Physi | A PRESBYTERIAN CLERGYMAN Takes up & Popular Subject. HE WRITES ABOUT PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND. Strongly Recommends it Like scores of other clergymen who have been made hearty, vigorons and strong by the use of Paine’s Celery Compound the Rev. J. D Leishman, of Angus, Ont.,with al hon stv and candor ecknowledges the ble-sings that the great medicine on tho-e who make use of it, Such testimony ast e following shou d prove hel ptul and encouraging weak,ailing and broken woman. tev. Mr. Leishman save: “have alwa s found Compound and exJeilent nerve tonic, and have frequently rec amended it to persons suffering from nervous debility and = sleep- coufers tO every dowu an and Paine’s Celerv lessmess: I believe it to be a most power: ful medicine. It also purifies the blood and revives the svetem. Give ica fair trial! and it will in these cases be found he!p ful,” Wnaling at Amagansett. Away out on the eastern end of Long Is- land, almost as much at sea as though it were an island by itself, is the little fish- ing village of Amagansett. It lies directly on the ocean, and has neither harbor nor wharfs nor ships, yet it is known far up and down the coast as a whaling town, for it is at this point, strange to say, that the whales come nearest ta the land. They are sighted first within a few wiles of Ama- gansett. The weather seasoned surfmen, who fish through the breakers for food fish, will give you a dozen reasons why this is so and why their little navy is unique among the fishing fleets of the north Atlantic coast. But they are mostly guesses, and we only know that the whales have fay- ored Amagansett thus for many years. During all the summer and fall the hardy fishermen who live in the gray cottages among the dunes set their nets for blue and weak fish, but from the end of winter to early suramer they become fishermen of more heroic cast, and chase and take and land the biggest ‘‘fish’’ that swims—the whale. Nearly every season whales are sighted by the life savers who patrol the beach, or by the lookeut at the life saving station, and when one or more of them are taken, the occasion is one to be marked with a white stone in the history of the eleepy little village.—Harper’s Weekly. Between Carthage and Stislingville in Jefferson county, N. Y., there isa stretch of country where the sand drifts like snow, making great banks and blinding the eyes of those who look up wind. It isa desolate, barren region, where the soil is only as deep as the roots of the grass. Boil ~ Itis often difficult to convince peo- ple their blood is impure, until dread- ful carbuncles, abscesses, boils, scrof- ula or salt rheum, are painful proof of the fact. It is wisdom now, or when- ever there is any indication of impure blood, to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and prevent such eruptions and suffering. *“‘I] had a dreadfui carbuncle abscess, red, fiery, fierce and sore. The doctor at- tended me over seven weeks. When the abscess broke, the pains were terribie, and I thought I should not live through it. I heard and read so much about Hood’s Sarsaparilla, that I decided to take it, and my husband, who was suffering with boils, took it also. It soon purified our Blood built me up and restored my health so that, although the doctor said I would not be able to work hard, I have since done the work for 20 people. Hood’s Sar- saparilla cured my husband of the boils, and we regard it a wonderful medicine.’ Mrs. ANNA PETERSON, Latimer, Kansas. Hoods Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1. ° liver ills, to tak Hood’s Pills tasy to operate. 2 cents: Ae ip in-Killer. } aln-ALIGr. (PERRY D* yg.) : Sure and Safe ~Lemedy in sve: : a end every kine, of Bowel case Complaint is ee - a apne in-Ailie ac fi-Vel Or. This is a true statement and it can't bo m<ce te Strong or too emphatic. It is a simple, safe and quick cure for ; Cramps, Cough, Rheumatism, ’ Cole, Colds, Neuralgia, Bietriicea, Croup, Toothache. . etee _ ‘TWO SIZES, 25c. and Se. Ww oVweNIWereEe M Whe IR WHAT WOMEN WEAR. The use of sun plaiting is an impor tunt feature of fashion this season. Some Parisian authority is responsi- ble for the announcement that gloves embroidered with black are considered out of date. Bright red silk parasols will be very popular this season, and the old Victo- rian styles with fringe around the edge have come back ugain. Black grenadines, in various conven- tional patterns, made over colored silk, are very fashionable gowns this season, and the variety of fancy grenadines has uo limit. Something called astrakhan lace is set forth as a novelty, and it is made of silk, very airy and light like old fash- ioned honiton, with a pattern prettily defined by close loops of silk. It seems that ears are decidedly out of faskion fer women in Paris except for hearing purposes, as the hair is | drawn to cover them so completely that | there is no trace of their existence left. Very desirable hats of Java and Pana- ma straw, trimmed with plain bands of ribbon and stiff quills, are now in evi- dence in the shops. They are to be worn for cycling and all other outdoor sports and are very stylish with the simple tailor made gown. Pouched bodices have vigorously re- rnewed their popularity, and some of the latest models are pouched at the back as well as the front. A wide fold- ed belt is the usual accompaniment, and it should be made of black satin if you would look slender. ‘The English tailor made coat has no gathers at the top of the sleeve. It has a little fullness, which is arranged in small dart seams covered with fancy braiding. Many of the coats are elabo- rately braided, and several different kinds of braid are used on one garment. —New York Sun. HORSE TALK. Afrite, 2:07%4, has been jogged all winter and is looking well this spring. There will be a wide difference in the free for all trotting classes of this and last year. Owing to the bad financial results of last year’s meetings there will be fair or racing meetings held in 1897 at Hel- ena, Mon. Game little Sir Walter, who is ex- N pected by Rollins to capture a great many races this year, appears to be im- proving every day. There is nothing uncertain about the warmth of the welcome given the en- trance of the Glens Falls association im- to the grand circuit. The big trotting stallion J. 8., 2:16, exported last year, is doing well in Al- bion, and already several very fine colts by him have been foaled. Julia Patckhen, the dam of Ses Girl, 2:18%4, and Shadeland Leona, 2:28%, is dead. She is also the grandam of Shadeland Bellewood, 2:5444. Payne & Proctor, Boston, have add- ed to their stable the bay horse Le Sim- mons, 2:1514, that Joe Thayer had out last year and gave his present record. The reported accident to Kd Geers proves” to be all too true. The broken arm and injured ankle did not keep him indoors but a couple of days, how- ever. The great brood mare Cricket, by Mambrino Abdallah, dam of Vera Ca- pel, 2:071¢, pacing, and Jim Young, 2:2614, died recently at the farm of her owner, Richard Curtis, Lexington, Ky. — Horseman. OO MURRAY & LANMAN’S \ FLORIDA WATER f° sweetest ~~ MOST FRAGRANT “SS LO Most REFRESHING ™ < AND ENDURING OP ALLS PERFUMES FOR THE _-@ HANDKERCHIEF, _% TOILET OR G& BATH. - ! , ALL DAUGGISTS, PERFUMERS 4X0 GENERAL DEALERS. —AT THE--- DENTAL PARLORS Nerth Side Queen Square. You can have your teeth extracted free of pain by the means of either general or local ansesthesia, All kinds*of work done eatiefactorily. DR. J. H. AYERS CLES PY sdk Death Through # Tarantula, One of the quickest and most com- plete and justifiable killings that ever I saw came about through a tarantula. It was at a mine camp, and the camp bully had a tarantula impaled on a stick. A man newly arrived from the east stood gazing, fascinated with hor- ror, at the squirming reptile, working its black fangs in the effort to reach something that it could fusten them into. Suddenly, without warning, the bully thrust the tarantula straight into the tenderfoot’s face. His whiskers saved him from the fangs, but he let out a yell as if he had actually been bitten and jumped back, I fully believe, ten feet. Then, as the fellow came pok- ing the tarantula toward him again, the tenderfoot drew his revolver and turned Joose on his tormentor. His first shot would have been enough, as it went straight through the fellow’s body, but the tenderfoot had his excitement tuo work off, and he never stopped shooting antil his revolver hed been emptied and the man with the tarantula was a sieve. ‘*Served him right,’’ was the verdict of the coroner’s jury, and the case never went to court for trial. —New York Sun. Wesley Is There. One of the most beautiful English church edifices is Barnet church, Herts. In this church, according to The Meth- odist Times of London, are groined uiches in which respectively are appro- priateiy placed well considered and tleverly modeled statuettes of England’s six greatest preachers. The list is as fol- lows: St. Angustin of Canterbury, the apostle of England; St. Aiden, bishop of Lindisfarne; St. Huzh of Lincoln; Latimer, the martyr; John Wesley and Janon Liddon. So far as we are aware, this is the first time John Wesley has yeen placed in an Episcopal church ou a evel with such goodly comnanv. SH CARTERS Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. <A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. _ Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, 1, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's Little. Liver Pills. IF YOU CANT COME . Write for an appointment, and have your work done by us; guaran- teed Painless Dentistry and modern methods appliances. and Berlin Dental Parlors, ] Over store of Prowse Bros. Office Hours:—-8 a. m to 8 p. m. 92.2 © 9,0 902 228 “omy | MENTHOL aL puste I have prescribed Menthol Plaster ia a numa ber of cages of neuralgic aud rheumatic pcins, and & @ @ e 8 am very pen eet with the elfecte and e ® 9 e leasantnezs appiication.—W, H. CAk&EN- — M_D., Hotel 0 Boston. Lhave used our Piece in several rheumatism, ofm any Musoular Pains. Price | Davis & Lawrence Co., Ltd, 25c.| Sole Proprietors, Monteeac. Sree eceeeeeee THE DAILY EXAMIVER, (HARLOTTETOWN JUNE 8, 1897. ETTORE. fe ve ODYNE aH INIMENT Cures Every Form of Inflammation. It was originated in 1810, by the Jate dos. ed Phreician, W care ail eiluscue ah “ Dr. A. Johnson, an old fashioned, noble hearted Fa A est at are the result of irritation and inflammation: asthma, abscesses, bites, burus, bruises, bronchitis. colds coughs aa 1On; such gs chilblains, colic, cramps, cholera-morbus, diphtheria and all forms of one threat’ re : : » Catac fractures, gout, headache influenza, 1s i . ts ° a Pome Pa, 4a Krippe, tame back ic ¢ soreness, nervous headache, pimples, pain anywh ack, SSe, Sen, See Muscular ete gi ; 7 ere, rhe is sti ai 963 . toothache, tonsilitis, wind colic and whooping cough cumatisin, UBS. sprains, stiff joints The great vital and muscle nerving. Have used it for colds. coughs, sore then, . Positively cure Biliousness and Sick Headache, liver | iy. Maine. ‘cc : . ar eenenaitin Best Liver Pill Made.” | Ihave used your Johnson's Anodyan matt! | yne Linj. stiugs, cramps, sore stomach, rheummas lameness, colic, toothache, nevralgia, =, and bowel complaints. They expel all impurities | THOMAS CLELAND ‘Souti Robbixston, from the bloed, | Our Book “Treat inet eS usiug them, Yrice 25c; five Zi. Soid everywhere. 1A. Druggists. ‘La het ee Baalled Free, , » Maas co 5 2 c | nent for more than fifty years in my fami. | and found it always good in every wo Delicate women find relief from | i Se SES Ses SO SMe SSIES Mg i @ ofa °° “> © fee > /?> °fa’ @: “@ bl il grows slowly ; when secured, it is a treasure without price, to be care fully guarded and judiciously fostered ; therefore we keep constant guard on goods aid prices, and see to it that our ads are always in accordance with facts. ASK TO SHE our high back cane seat and brace armhairc for 75e. JOHN NEWSON oye onbys ovbys subye ovbye ode orbye ordye 01 ee ee se BREE BREESE eee Npring Specialties. Retrigerators, Lawn Mowers, Ice Cream Freezers, Green Wire Net. Spring Door Hinges, Garden Trowels, Gold Paint, Rubber Hose. SIMON YW CRABBE STOVES HARDWARE ee aes oe ~—- Walker’s Corner A — — _—_ ——— Men's Straw Hats WE SHOW A NICE STOCK A442 2244 —_ <a T. J. HARRIS. “LONDON HOUSE GOOD MORNING . 4 % Have you purchased your new spring shoes yet’? If not, you cant de without them much longer, light Summer Shoes wiil soon be an abso ute mecessity. See our Oxfords at 68. 75, 100, and upwards. W. H. STEWART & CO,, London House Bldg 4 = Se ee ee Dont Ask for Credit ——AT THE—— CITY HARDWARE S1Uh But buy cheap for cash. Doing business «ll for cash with smail expen@ we can do with a small profit; consequently you can buy cheap for cash. R 8. NORTON & 09. = —_ J. F. NORTON, PROPRIETOB