—_—— THE DAILY EXAM ———— "a INER, ~ —-——— — rece sesresenemenseeeetbeetnnssieene ts ». “This is True Libcriy, when Frce Born Men, having to advis3 the Pablic, may speax free.”——Evripipes. Single Copies Two Cents. TERMS: Four Dollars per Y ear. a - VOL 3i. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. tSLAND, SATURDAY, APRIL 38, 1897. ai Nid TD mignty FP. ogressive. “Js Scrymser progressive?” ‘Progressive? Why, that fellow can tell when his wife is going to make mince pie. He always has the night- mare the night before. ’'—Chicago Ree- ord. Where the Bike Fails, “Was the eclopement carried out as it had been planned?”’ “No; it was postponed. You see, it rained aud was so muddy wheeling was impossible. ’’—Brooklyn Life. His Status. Uncie—Bobby, I suppose you've been a good little boy. Bobby—No, I haven't. Tncle—Why, I hope you haven't been very bad. Bobby—Oh, no; just comfortable.— Truth. — a i, So Unkind. “Everybody says my daughter got her beauty from me. What do you say to that?’ ‘*That it was unkind of her to take it from you. '’-—Flicgende Blatter. Truc Chivalry. “What is the age of chivalry, Aunt Penelope?’ “Those good old times when men feil in love with women over 40.’’—Chicago Record. a” A Call. I saw her flush. In each blue eye a dai:cing light, Her red lips pouting with delicht: Her round cheeks were roses bright. I saw her flush. I saw her flush. “My handis best!’ she cried in glee. “Mine all are red—yours, aces three! The pot, the pot belongs to me!’’ I saw her blush. I saw her flush. “Your hand is best, Maude,’’ then I gayi “May I not hold it, love, alway?’’ Her eyes quick to the carpet stray. I see her blush. I watch her blush. ‘Let us trade hands,’’ I softly plead. “One queen for life is all I need.’’ “Yoa sro my king,’’ my love agreed, i saw her 4ush! —Town Topica —_ TS RY ie 90000 3939860090908 slielief for LUNG eLrowbles <ul EMULSION: Inu CONSUMPTION and all LUNG © DISEASES, SPITTING OF BLOOD, @ > COUGH, LOSS OF APPETITE, @ DEBILITY, the benefits of this > article are most manifest. © By the aid of The “D. & 1." Emulsion, I have got @ rid ora ha: king aa which had troubled me for @ over @ year, and have guined considerably in 9 Weight. lliked this Frmnision so weil I was glad zg Wen the thue came around to take it. 8 eg T. H. WINGHAM, C.E., Montreal 50c. and $1 per Bottle © Davis & LAWRENCE CO., Lro., Monrrea. @ ®eeodo For Sale. The Steel. Sheathed with Elm, Paddle Steamer «Mirami- chi.”’ 727 Tons. lf bot previously os disposed of b y private ceuits the well known passenger Steamer, x ahi. w'il be sold by Auction, at 1€ Office of the Quebec Steamsbip Com- ar paonen on Tuesday, 4th May, next, Oclock,a.m. For all iculars apply to ) particular ARTHUR AHERN, Secretary Quebec Steamship Co., Quebec. °06—~sat td | ' a goods; but they must be sold, Charlottetown. Not in it with our Great Marked Down Sale. Our stock all Read our price list below, they represent the best values ever shown in Marked Down Prices Say nice, new, fresh Men’s Suits Youths’ Wort! — Worth Ds i scavunnad Waele ae Pe oe tee aS 450° 4S 64600. .55%. Deed son Bae ao 6 SOU, so tlinis BO OOS hot licd ‘o's cb ccs | Gee Bac cde ts TEC icc ks ccovcsda.. Cae FR. + ccd is Reels sees ee SB0... acgaees BOREL Gh i ib cadcckecs. 1000 O50. . <sctive ds i ea $0.00...4.-4 6. Boys & Worth. Suits oe sbec cee G0.00 Py isl. oo 0 gk ween sca sevenestor 4.00 DO ieskén bh wknss cance aD o vkeen toe: 4.00 SORE A 6c hdd dc db 00 vo ee ee ssuna, f0OP OD OO io cciwebedsed bier saheine, 200 ele Deva cs setae canes awe ere eckeus; Tor CO BSGi sows &48 Sa bea eee Coates Sena LAM an tvs otaedetehesnene ee a ae. Children’s Suits .for $1.00 place to buy your clothing is the See samples of our values in our big window. Compare them with anything you can see, and then be satisfled that “FROM ANCIENT INDIA ano SWEET CZCVLON.*? Are not injurious to nerves or stomach because early pickings only are used in blending. Older leaves contain strong acids that are not found in those we use. Delicate or Nervous Women Should Drink Tetley’s. In lead Packets to preserve their Fragrance. 47. 50Gs GOc. TOc. Pen Lo D All bt But the lowest quality starts at good and goes up. We have all prices, of course, but lay the goods down and lay the prices beside them, and you'll see them pan out exactly. 7ESTRA YALUE ai{{] at}{| aii «ii att] «itll asi ‘ «tf «til -t{| ail «il «ill «il «il Just now in Wire Cots and Mattrasses from 2.£0 up, and Wool Top and Flock Mattrasses from $2.75 up. JOHN NEWSON THE BARGAIN GIVER Newson Block, Victoria Row. I» {»- KITCHEN RUN. BY CITY. At Grenoble, France, an Association Serves Good Food at Cost. Housewives who think the co-opera- tive kitchen is so far in the future that it would be absurd to look forward to it for relief from daily drudgery will be interested to hear that a kitchen with the same end in view as the co-operative has been in successful operation for nearly 50 years. The Association Ali- mentaire of Grenoble, France, is a pure- ly municipal affair. The city owns it and supplies meals at cost in its own restaurant or delivers them at private homes. Everything at the Asscciation Ali- mentaire is as good as money van buy. The cooks are as clever as ary in France, which is saying a great deal. The pro- visions are bought in the best markets and are carefully selected. The service is excellent. The dining rooms are of several grades, according to the furnish- ings and the attendance, so that all tastes may be accommodated. One may dine there for 3 cents on bread and soup and be satisfied or one may pay 12 cents and have a full course dinner. In the best rooms, which are marble floored and decorated with much elegance, there are waiters who look for tips as natu- rally as though they were in the swellest of Parisian cafes. Pure wines, which have been proper- ly aged, are served at about 8 centsa liter. There is no financial profit to the city in running this huge restaurant, which serves some 15,000 meals a day. The charges are based on the cost of the materials used, the employment of help and the amount spent in keeping the utensils, machinery and building in re- pair.—New York Press. That Banshee's Wail. There is considerable discussion in the English papers about the wail of the banshee which was said to have been heard in East Kerry before the fa- tal bog moved. A correspondent writes that the late Archdeacon Whately, the celebrated archbishop’s son, told him of a certain instance of the banshee’s cry. The archdeacon said that he distinctly heard the wail while in an Irish coun- try parish administering the holy com- munion to a dying man. IT STRIKES HOME! Chase’s Ointment Cures All Skin Irrita tions. Of the many skin diseases, eczema is ane of the worst and most commcnm The one effective remedy so far dise eovered for it is Dr. Chase's Ointment. It oe” ’ yf has never been Pay cyl’ known to fail. Mr. Andrew Aiton, of mermanen er eet Hartland, N.B., says: “My little daughter, Grace Ella, aged three and a half, was a dreadful suf- ferer from ecsema for three years. We tried a number of alleged cures and sev+ eral doctors, but all witout effect. Her's was indeed a bad cas*. Her little body was entirely covered with rash. One day our lecal druggist, Mr. Wm. RB. Thistle. recommended me to try Dr. Chase’s Ointment. I did so, and four boxes effected a complete cure and saved our ¢ehld.” Dr Chase's Ointment is just ns effee- tive for piles, salt rhewm and sores of ell deseriptions. For sale by all dealers and Edmanson, Bates & Co., manufactur- ers, Toronto ; price 60 cents. There is nothing to equa] Chase's Lin- seed and Turpeutime for severe colds and lung troubles. Large bottle 25 cents. Dak Wendiich-tosikdeaschimcast elias celebs T am pleased to testify to the ex- cellent qualities of your Pepsin Tutti ‘rutti as an aid to digestion and as a thirst allayer. In taking a spin through the coun- try on my “‘ bike’ I always takea supply of Tutti Frutti with me. G. T. PENDRITH, Manufacturer Sun Bicycle, Toronto, Ont. Save coupons inside of FRUTT! wrappers for latest Books —< ‘ prizes. S TUTTI ; A A Te ED —_— Renal Estate Values In New York. Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselacr has a pa- per on ‘‘ Places In New York’’ in The Cen- tury. Speaking of the rapid increase of value of real estate in that city, Mrs. Van Rensselaer says: Two miles from the city hall? Very much farther away than this stands the new Herald bailding, where Broadway and Sixth avenue intersect. In 1845 the city owned its site and sold it for $9.930. The Herald now pays sent for it — forthe land alone—at the rate of $60,960: ayear. Atthe same sale 50 years agoa corner lot on Fifth avenue and Forty-sec- ond street brought $1,400, and in 1840 400 lots on Fifth avenue above Twentieth street were sold at prices ranging from’ $200 to $400. Within 20 years some of these were resold for $15,000 each, and! you may guess their present worth for yourselves, remembering that business and: business values have now moved into this region also. Less than 20 years ago a much —— northerly district, between Fifty-ninth’ and One Hundred and Tenth streets, west! of Eighth avenue, would have shown you' little but rocks and puddles and predatory | goats and boys. Now much more than half its surface is covered with buildings, all of a very good class, and their estimat- ed cost has been $170,000,000. Land up) here is more precious than was land two! miles from the city hall in the days of Philip Hone. And itis just as easy now as then to grow greatly richer in New York! if you are already rich enough to buy litdle' bits of its soil and to hold on to them for’ a little while. “Bar” and “Keow” the Watchwords, ‘‘Many people are unaware,’’ said Rep- resentative Curtis of Kansas, ‘‘that Kansas had a shibboleth in border state times. In 1854, when the first tide of New England settlers began to drift into the southwest, it is related that the Missourians tied a’ cow at each crossing of the Missouri river. When an emigrant arrived at the crossing, | he was certain to make some remark about! the animal. If he said ‘cow,’ he was suf-’ fered to cross, but if he said ‘keow’ he! was hustled out of the country as a bloody minded abolitionist. In retaliation for this! the Kansans tied a bear on their side of; the river, and when an emigrant c who called it ‘bear’ he was welcomed with open arms, but if he pronounced it ‘b’ar’ ke was ecooted .back into Missouri as unwelcome slavery advocate,’ Washing ton Post. ' . Hard on the Victim. Some very funny things sometimes creep’ into the schoolroom. <A few days ago the! class in physiology had the subject ‘‘as-' phyxia’’ for its morning lesson. Wishin to impress upon the pupils the necessity of being ready for an emergency, the teacher asked one of the members of the class to’ state what she would do in case some one! was brought in who was supposed to be drowned. The young lady very promptly answered, ‘‘ Lay the person flat on his back, with his face downward.’’ It is necdless to say that closed the recitation for that’ day.—Washington Pathfinder. ' Dreamers. **Don’t forget, Philip,’’ said Mr. Grate- Sar, ‘‘that a man cannot live in castles in the air. If he spends too much time in dreaming, he is likely to find himself with but a poor shelter when storms come on, If a man would have a house of his own, he must build it himself, and he can de this only by faithful, unremitting labor. In fact, the greater part of life, Philip, is spent in carrying the hod. And he is hap- piest and likely to have the finest house who recognizes this fact and takes his hod up early.’’—New York Sun. Womanly Sympathy. ‘George Maitland left his wife a widew this morning.”’ ‘*Poor dear, I am so sorry for her!’’ ‘*But they say George didn’t treat her very well.’’ ‘*Oh, 1t {sn’t that! With her sallow face she’ll look just horrid in black. ’’—Cleve- land Plain Dealer. In Mexico it has been discovered that the administration of honey to smallpox pa- tients banishes the pustules and decreases the fever immediately. Crete @' VERY FAMILY SHOULD KNOW THAT LSI RW Ect ye A Is a very remarkable remedy, both for IN- TERNAL and EXTERNAL use, and won- derfulinits quick action to relieve distress, is % sure cure for Sore PAIN-KILLER Throat, Coughs, Chills, Diarrhea, Dysente Cra: Tholera, and all Bowel Complaints. we oe PAIN-KILLER “7m Best rem. edy known for Sene Sickness, Sick Headache, Pain in the Back or Side, Rheumatism end Neuralgia, PAIN-KILLER syorepevnr ime BEST LINIMENT MADE, It brings sPprFEDY AND PERMANENT EELIEF in all eases of Bruises, Cuts, Sprains, Severe Burns, ete. PAIN-KILLER '.2% gotten trusted friemd of the Mechanic, Farmer, Planter, Sailor, and in fac‘all ci wanting @ medicine «lways at band, and SAFE TO USE imternally or extermally with certainty of relief. Beware of imitations. Take none but the cenuins “PERRY DAVIS.” Soild everywhere; .dc. big botue Very large bottles 50 cents. —— SES Ae + seer Tee Reman maconemameececne semen om i Pe ere LE A ON ES AEN I STEIN MIT a EE ae a “a Son Rico ee ee i. cone SO AO a A gn : mm i ee