ee tS acalgs ee ee te ° yt x hak Si SE NEAR ae f 3 i i, i See cnede == eee . 5 seas Pay aes lee. Seth - . se ca aba Soar a a Red ci Ee ‘a | Law 4 8 4 | , * t 4 f “Rae mat eal CS ce ms se ; " 4 Examiner office. L.oolk Read and Learn how wecan supply yeur table with nice things at very low prices. Tomato Catsup put up in pint bottles, usual price 25c, now 20c Hieinz Prepared Mustard sails, usual price SUc put up im 1 gal. | $1.25, now Essence Turkey Cofiec put up by Cross « Blackwell. in Land pint bottles, 1c and 25¢ Ginger Syrup put up in two por nd tins, Very nice on your oatmeal the morning, usual price 302, now20c SANDERSON & CO. Wholesale and Retail in Grocers. CHARLOTTETOWN Business College ——ANP —-~ Writing Academy Let the searchlight of practice illuminate the dark places of Theory. THOROUGHLY Progressive Practica! _Institution, in which young men and women are not only taught Book keeping (in allits applicationsto comnaerce) both by single and double entry, but are trained how todo business, by actual business transact- jons. The students act as buyers, sellers, traders, bankers, book-keepers and account- ants, in actual business operations, and the eurrency issued by the College Bank and the mdse issued from the FEmryorium, are used in bona fide business transactions, just the gameasin mercantileand banking nouses, Book-keeping in itself may de learned at home, but a knowledge of how to transact business, cannot be thus acquired, That our eourse system of training is eminently pract- eal write for {testimonials trom business men, and from students who aie now hold- ine lucrative a9 responsible positions, SUBJECTS: 2»0k-keeping by single and double entry ns and practicai,) Actual Business ractice, Business Penmansbip, Business Correspondence, Commercial Arithmetic, Commercial Law, Railroading, Steamboat- ing, Banking, (actual practice in the College aia Ty pewriting, Shorthand and Naviga- On. FACULTY: Principal, Teacher of Book- Business, Practice, Typevriting and L. B Miller keeping, Arithmetic, Business Correspondence, Navigation, J. W. Coulson, (Vice Principal,) Teacher of Railroading, Steamboating, Banking, Ac- counting and Actual Business Practice. J. Harry Williams, Teacher of Busines Penmanship, wm. Moran (licensed), Teacher of Short- hand. Geerge 8. Inman Esq, (Law Firm Mc-.J Donald & Inman) Lecturer on Commercial For circulars and full information, write or apply to L. B. MILLER; Principal, All tnterested’are cordially invited to cial atfhe college and inspect cur system flo zinirg, and work in general. LEGAL CARD, MATHIESON & BENTLEY Barristers, Solicitors, &. - OFFICES— : Cameron Block, Charlottetown. Main Street, Georgetown. MONEY TO LOAN. ]. A. MATHIESON. W. E. Bentvey. Geo’town. Ch’tewn. McDONALD & INMAN Barristers, Attorneys, Solicitors, Notaries, &c. QF FICE—Caneron Block, Victoria Row. MONEY TO LOAN J. A. McDONALD, G. S. INMAN. TO LET. The new double tenement house on Brighton Poad, containing 10 large rooms heated with hot water, large bath room fitted with hot and cold water, electric ight, ete.Possession given firs of Ma y Apply to 49—tf J.J. McKINNON. WANTED. | Wanted, by « lady, position as com- ion help, governess or housekeeper. i ahteation to widower’s family. Address 73—2: Farm For Sale Es An Orch- | ‘ard situated about 14 miles from town. ‘Phe above farm willbe sold ata bar- _ gain, snd on easy terms. Apply to 1 CLEM. BENOIT, Eureka Hotel. at—ptf. ~ 6@ acres on Mount Edward Roal, a. good house, fine outbuildirgs. ee THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 1, 1898 Ti aly AAMiue ISSUED EVE FROM THE OFFICE oF te Examiner Publishing Company RATES or st BSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) @ne Wear......------++: seosesecacecee ene RGR Six Months......-.--------- crecesecsesees Sel Three Months . ......---20eseseeeercseeeee nae @me Memthr........cccercecccecesesssererss e053 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or tho Cnited States THE WEEKLY EXAMINER assued every Friday morning. It is made np of matte7 which has appeared in the Daily and ie & firstelasss newspaper conteisir<c ee. EATING BEFORE GOING TO BED. A writerin Italia Termale, quoted by The National Druggist, December, is not much in favor of the theory that late sup- pers are tnjurious. “He declares, in fact,” srys the latter paper, “that many persons who remain thin and weakly, in spite of all precautions in regard to diet, etc., owe the fact largelw to habitual abstemiousness at night. He says very truly, that physology teaches us that, in sleeping as in waking there is a perpetual waste going on in the tissues of the body, and it seems but legical that nourishment should be continuous as well. The digestion of the food taken Gn at dinner time, or in the early evening, is finished, as a usual thing, before or by bedtime, yet the activity of the processes of assimilation, etc , contin- ues for hours afterward; and when one retires with an empty stomach, the result of this activity is sleeplessness and an undue wasting uf the syetem. ‘All other creatures,’ says the writer, ‘are governed by @ vatural instinct which leads those having a stomach to eat before lying down for the night.’ The infant, guided by the same instinct, ‘takes the breast’ fre- quently, in the night as well as day, and its stomach is allowed to remain empty too long. it shows iis discomfort by noisy crying. The digestive organs have no need for repose, provided, alwayr, that the quantity of nourishment taken within the twenty four hours does not co beyend the normal limit. The fact that the iutervale between meals is short worksno incon= venience, but, on the contrary, tends to the avcidance oi feebleness, which is the natural result of an interval extended to too great a length. Feeble persons, lean aad emaciated people, and, above all, those suffering from insomnia, owe it to themselves not to retire without taking some nourishment into the stomach —bread aod butter, a giass of rich milk, a few biscuits (‘crackere’), or even a bit of juicy cold meat, for instance. We quite agree with the writer in all that he saya in regard to the folly of the idea of the harm- fulness of a light lunch before retiring.” — at - e———— Finish the Hogs Properly. — Complaint is made at the cattle yard that a large share ofthe pigs that are offers ing are too fat. ‘hey weigh enough, but they have not been well grown, being over- fat from heavy feeding and lack of euffi-~ cient exercise. The high price of pork last fall and the abundance of feed no doubt leda great many farmers tg pu: up 9 lot of pigs to fred for the epribg toaiket. Many of these pigs have evidently been forced along with s:rong rich \feed with the object of getting them upto the proper weight for marketing while prieee were good. The mistake was mile of fattening them rather than growing them, i. e., the bacon market was the market for which thev were being fed. More growing food is wanted, more roots, more exercise and less meal, Of course that means a little longer time, butit means also more profit. Prepsre a clover patch for the pigs for the summer,so thatthey may have sufficient ruoand also make cheap pork, —_———————r <> + <e————__- LETTER FROM GEORGE CAR TER & CO. Sin,—A writer in this mornivg’s Guard - jan hints at a “combine” in the seed business. The idea is ridiculous. Com- petition is as keen in the sced business as any other, and the profits are really smaller than in any other leading line of business, all the jatest news, Subscription $1. aper, inthieeeeeeaee I KISSED THE COOK. I kissed the cook—ash, me,sbe was divine? Cheeks peachy, dark brown eyes, lips red 88 wine; Long apron with a bow, A cap as white as snow— By far too tempting; so I kissed the cook. I kiseed the cook, this angel from the rkies, And yet, I did not take her by eurprise. ’T was mean, | will allow. But if you'll take the vow To keep it I’il tell you how I kissed the cook. I kissed the cook—rfoor, helpless little jase, The chance so good I could not let it pasa. Her hands were in the dougb; She dare not spoil you know, My Sunday suit, and so I kissed the cook. I kissed the cook. more strong. But then I guess it wasn’t very wrong. For, just’ tween you and me. The cook my wife, is she. So I’d a right. you see, to kiss the cook. —James Courtney Challies in What to Kat. hE AB AF NOTES AND COMMENTS. ——_ ee I might have been —In breaking the Yukon Tramway contract the Senate bas performed a_ real service tothe country. It was for services such as that the Senate was established ; and it is by performing services such as this that it will be maintained. The Yukon deal is condemned by all but blind Libe- rals, —The Halifax Herald remarks that “Prince Edward Island would seen to have a@ minister at Ottawa; the total vote for harbors and rivers in the little island pro- vince amounts to $40,650, while the total vote for the like service in Nova Scotia is cooly $38,900.” Tine Herald seems to forget that P. E. Island has buy-elections on the tapis while Nova Scotia has not. —The Ottawa Journal, an independent journal friendly to the government, says of the recent grit caucus in that city: “A caucus of that kind held by either party in Great Btitain at which teveral score members of ihe Imperial parliament would rite to complain that cabinet ministers empioyed private secre- taries not eufficently partizen, or that de puty ministers in the civil service could not be satisfactory unless brand new partizans, or that appointments and promotions were not being made sufficientiy fast of recoguized partizans, would create a cry of protest from Land’s End to the Hebrides, irrespective of party. We fancy that such a demonstration at a caucus of members of the imperial] parlia~ meut would not be possible. That it is possible here isa fact which may well cause moderate citizens coneiderablé un easinese.” The St John Sun remarks that “The electors of West Prince ehould do justice to Mr. Hackett. Any insinuating threats that if he is not defeated the government will not be bound to keep its pledges to the recent Island delegation should be repelled by an indignant and independent electorate. This governmeotis sadly in needof a lesson. The voters of West Prince have an excellent opportunity to dothe country good service by returning Mr, Hackett to Parliament.” Mootreal Gazette: The psrty revolt threatened is agaiast the law as much as against the mivi:t rs. A permanent civil service develops its own pecu'air faulte, but with due s low nce therefore it is bet~ ter than the apoiia system whichinvolves a great cleaning out of officials with each change in the political complexion of the administration. Good proof of this is the fact that in Eng aed where the perman ent sy:t’m i: in ferce it is not sought to change it, wh'le inthe United States where theideas of Canadian Liberaliem have had swar, public sentiment isfforcing action to- warda the adoption of permanent appoint- ments, The Liberal revolt is, therefore, not only against the law, but the lessons of general experience. It is quite poasibie that, in face of tne demand of practically the whole Liberal party representation in Parliament, a number of the deputy ministers may haveto go. The country will understand that the moving inflnence is not the public good but partizan need.’ = not even excepting the grocery line. We have to compete with the whole Dominion, on leading lines of seeds, will prove that P. E. Island is the cheapest place in Canada today to buy seeds at retail, when onality is considered. Farmers and fellow citizens! There is no combine in seeds, or so far as we know, in any other line of business in Charlotte~ town. Instead cf thatthere is competition andrivairy. Bui beneath it ail there is av honest effort to serve you well, as this is the only passport to your favor, aod your futare dealings. For ourselves, we will eay, that we are selling the best seeds as low as possible, we are selling thew for what they are, and so jong as we are in the seed business, we will continue to do it honestly and equarely, as we have al- ways done. Weare sativfied chat the general feeling amosg our people is one of satisfaction with the manner in which we have conducted the seed busi- ness for nearly 20 years, and we Jook for- ward with confidence to the present spring’s seed trade, believing it will be satisfactory tousand to all the custo— mers who use Carter’s Seeds. Gro. Carter & Co, Call and see those pice goods tat are drawing so much attraction at the crockery and a comparison of our prices in this city { The Thing “AYER’S SARSAPARILLA has been a household companion in our family for years. I take it every Spring, be- ginning in April. It tones up my sys- tem, gives me an excellent appetite and I sleep like a top.” H. R. WILDEY, Philadelphia, Pa. For,Spring VALUABLE BUSINESS STAND FOR SALE AT MONTAGUE BRIDSE This property eonsists of a commo- dious store and dwelling, heated with hot water, and said to be the best business stand in Montague. Titse Guaranteed. Possession immediately. Apply to E. H. BEER, Ch’town. store,—W P Colwill. 2w,dw 63 Jawkwtf, ALMONT WILKES. The well known stallion, ‘*Almont Wilkes’ by “IJernando,” 2.371-2, dam “Olive Wilkes,” 2 39 1 4, dam of “Gracie Wilkes,” 2.32 and ‘Almont Wilkes,” 2.31 5-2, by Geo. Wilkes. jr., will stand the season ol 1898 at Nicholson's Training Stables, Graftoa St, opp. Court louse, Ch’town. Almont Wilkes isa big, stylish, carriage horse; he stands over 16 hands high and weighs £200 Ibs. Ue is the sire of Montrose, 2.20 3-4, and Westle Wilkes, 2.39 1-4. Mont rose was the horse that put up such a gallant fight in the tree.for-all at Ch’town track last fall, and there is n> doult that only for the conceited action of the uther drivers, he would have won with ease. He trotted 13 heats, winning 4 first places and 5 seconds, Westle Wilkes started in the 2.40 class at green horse right off expects him to get a mark of 2.23. this year. This proves that Almont Wilkes sives speed of a high order, and being a remarkable good looker, has always been a_prize-winer in the show ring even when up against the best in the land. For terms and particulars apply to J. M. NICHOLSON, Owner. ANY COLOR => Fard Baking Frocess Hi. R. LARGE Dh. Chik treats CHRONIC DISEASES by the Salis- bury method of persistent self-help, in Ha DVing causes Irom the blood. Con- Amuous, inteligent treatmentin person or by letier insures Minimum of suffer- ingand Maximum of cure possible in each case, Avoid attempts unaided. Graduate of N.Y. University Aud the NEW YORK HOSPITAL, Trenty years practice in N. Y. City. Diplema registered in U.S. and Canada, ADDRESS: CHARLOTTETOWN, P E I, CANADA. OFFICE. Victoria Row. Accomodations reserved for patients, References on applieation, Oct 15 lyr MLEAN, Q.C. BARRISTER, &c. AA Brown’s BLOCK, Farinosa Bredklast Food “Farinosa” isa pure Cereal Food, made from the best {cleaned white wheat. The coarse Bran is entirely removed, leaving only the :erfect berry of the wheat rich in phosphates ginten and nutriment. The food is easily and qnickly pre- pared for use, requiring only 15 minutes cooking, and it is also cheap, being only 15 cents a package, GOLDEN SYRUP Weare retailtng Redpaths choice Go li Syrup, for 40 cents per gallon, or 12 cf two pound tin. It goes fiae on pancak orridge &c. BEER & GOFF SHERWOOD CEMETERY 60 The annual meeting of the Sherwood Cemetary Company will be beld in the Paricr of the Y.M.C.A. Building, on Wednesday next, the 6thday of April, 1898, for the eleciion of directors and euch other business as may come before the meeting. HENRY SMITH, Secretary. CHARLOTTETOWN, 75—3i MONTREAL & QUEBEC | —1LO~ SOURIS. The Steamship Campana will call at Souris regularly once a tortnight during the present season. Sailing from Mon- trealon or about 25th April. Merchants ordering goods would do well to have them come by this line. For rates of freight or other particulars, enquire of MATTHEW & McLEAN, Agents at Souris. | 15 —10i Summerside last fall, a the pasture, getting a mark of 2.39 1-4 ina | field of seasoned campaigners, and his owner ; a nA “ay s% ay NESE MNES < Ae | Ne ae MY. a“ x 4 our our High Class Tailoring. ATEN TORE COD I IO WRT OW RATED ae IEE WRT PR TO | Our hats give satisfaction. for the price, as is to be This is Sleepless Hall ! | It has 210 windows, yet its electric light bill is $300.00 per month. It contains 48,000 square feet of floor space, employs 600 tailors and tailoresses, cuts up 20,000 yards of cloth weekiy, and makes 5000 gentlemen's garments every six days. It has 120 electric sewing machines, and 28 elec- tric pressers, as we'll as electric cutting knives, and button hole machines, which each do the work of 28 people daily. Its tweeds and linings are bought direct from the mills in thousand yard lots, in- A i stead of in 2% yard wey lengths as the tailor wae aN . w= REFORM buys them from who- 3% o 7 lesalers. It costs “Sleepless Hall” $2.50 for the making of a dress suit which would cost a tailor $9.00 for making the coat alone. ~ This is why no tailor can sell a suit equal to a $15.00 “Fit-Reform” for less than $25.00 to $35.00 WN VkCL TS ORAND WIT? RETARPRIC SMA) STAMPED IN THE MANERS SMT 4g OR SVORTERIM BM AEA A ganwent A Ni LASS [homer _ No \ ‘ L Bp aN 1 “ ook “The Logic of Dress’ free. * SOLE LOCAL AGENCY PROWSE BROTHERS. OD OD OD ODO DBOHD’ ]@O4OO1O6OF LA sre ori LAT. We are pleased to inform the public tha‘ we have added to our cutting staff Mr. J, J. McDonald, formerly with the McKay Woolen Co. In garment cutting Mr. McDorald is a artist of many years experience. firm of the McKay Woolen Co. 9K AK AK BK SK BK AE AK Come and we will give you fits. John McLeod & € o., SARTONIAL ARTISTS OD ODWSOO DOD ODBODS 80D IBVS/BS BOD MMMM AM AR A A O~> O~<> <> OD 0453 043 OD 9D 92S VOGOOSS NESE INEM MY NL NEM NE NEN ME NES ESN ESET SSR RSAC TAS sMasleaie Me Me “AN aM Ml AN SF oa TRA We —_— 0 —_—_ Hart Hats, Soft Hats, Good Hats, Latest Styles and Colors. No manufacturer has a monopoly of making the bert We think we give as than ever for hats. a hat ad. This season we are prepared to do better customers. : Don’t buy your spring hats or caps, till you have ne stvles and prices. + Pewee HoH Ke tA Se eee ee Oe SO Ae ea a * ats, Hats and Hat. |