: } 7 i CHARLOTTETOWN —— a a —-—-ANP -~>> dark } THOROU GHLY d Institution, ‘in women are not only taught Progressive which young men and Rx ook ke | Business College Writing Academy Let the searchhebt of prac tie ¢ illuminate the inces of Theory. Practica! ping E (iu allits applicationsto commerce) both by ions. The students act as eurrency issued by tha ‘ o.lege mdse issued from tne Emrorinu home, § i i . | business, cannot be thusacquired. Thatour | ; course system Of treining is eminently pract- Ea ical write for ftestirmmoniais trom businers ef men, and from students who are now hold- if ing lucrative aa resnonsible positions. iF SUBJECTS: ie Rook-keeping by single and double entry i (theoretical and practical,) Actual Business e Practice, Business Penmanship, Business *] Correspondence, Cormmercial Arithmetic, i Commercial Law, Railroading, Steamboat- ing, Banking, (actua! practicein the t'ollege La Bank,) Typewriting, Shorthand and Naviga- 5% | tion, if FACULTY: L.B Miller, Principal, Teacher of Book- keeving, Arithmetic, Resiness Correspondence Navigation, J. W. Coulson, (Viet of Railroading, J. Harry Williams, Pentnanship. wm. Moran (licensec), hand. George S. Inman F'sq., Law. apply to at fhe sinning, ana-work it general. Business iypevritin ar : ’ single and double entry, but are trained how F todo business, by actual business transact- buyers, traders, bamkers, book-keepers and account- ants, in actual business cpera'ions, ard the Bank and the m, sellers, e used in bona fide business transactions, just the same asin mercantileand banking : Book-keeping in iwelf may be but a knowledge of how to transact +; Ouses., learned at Practice, Principal,) T Steamboating, tanking counting and AC tual Business Practice. Teacher of } Pri Allinterssted sre cordially invited toe g avd eac her ' Ae susines Teacher of Short- (Law Firm Me- Donald & Imman) Lecturer on Commercial For circulars and full information, write or } L. B. MILLER: neipal, al college and inrpict cur system tlo leave whart every local, for Pic- tou, connecting with tran for Hali: ax &c, 4 rennet e/a ene Ha _ 6'TO PICTOU. i The Steamer ” PRINCESS will it Oh’town Steam Nav. Go. i morning at seven oO cloach, Returning about 1 p. m. train from Halifax. ae : * smn eli capitan. ata sian i, a it hae mo atrival of day By order F, i - Es ; Sec’y © ic » Ltd. ei 84 tf ‘ « aan i ~ | TO LET. y Rooms in rearend of store, formerly occupied by R. Bearisto, ruitable for an . Office, possession at once. . 77 a Oe McK AY | P. ‘B Island Ralay ! Onand after MONDAY, 27th Dec., t Hm ains of this Railway will run daily, (Sw 1 i ays excepted,) as under. rn I ! ins Out Trains ! rains Out- ; | ward. Read STATIONS, ‘ward. R poe | down. > i 4 be M.lA M, i P.M, A. | ‘ 8 10 6 20) _ Charlottetown .. i 2 3010 Hs a 8 3 Ui 6 35 . Royalty Junction. 9 16 9 40 Nt 4 V7 7 12}. .North Wiltshire. | 7 40 8 4 31) 7 24). Hunter River. --| 1 2g) 8 4) Pa 5 05, 7 5ij..Bradalbane......| 3 99! 8 G1 615 7 58). .Emerald., 12 53! 7 58 6 27) 8 09). Freetown ...... 12 42; 7 G 4%) 8 25). . Kensington...... (19 25 7 1& : 6 20) 8 ow Ar, fE*-12 00 6 4é ne ia . MIP. M’ S’Side A, ae 2 50} Lv. \ ar. 10 80 tae .«Miscouche ...... 10 10 i i .. Wellington ....., | 347 12 i .. Port Hill .......) 9 00 bo » O’Leary.....0.-.) 8 OD 4 58}. . Bloomfield ...... " 34 i! .-Alberton....cee-] 6 65 i Wi. .Tignish .... ee.) 6 OD i As Me} A. .. Charlottetown ... 10 3¢ ..Royalty Junction 10 1¢ "Bedford peneeeds ; lv a) se Stewart - 8 Se eee 7 ..Georgetown .... 73 A. NM Mt. [a. di. ’ 405). Mt. Stewart ....) 8 35 , 4 43) .Morell........06] 9 17 5 12 St. Peters eeetee q $3) } & 57), Bear River ,.eces) 7 6 40 Souris. so aeeeee 6 x Pp. M. A MM, P.M. A. Whe ’ 6 15'..Emerald ......17 S oo). Cage Traverse ..) 7 09 A. Beal’s Corner | ‘ 1 ; «ni bi i\* ‘snsuiidenie ‘whole Wine Merchants. — talian Ware House "tor. Grafton and Ct. Geo. Sts North side Queen Squarre jules Robin edicinal Brandy i JOY & DAVIES. co? euaiia eee at THE DAILY EXAMIN!R, CHARLOTTETOWN APRIL 15 1898 MEDICINE SENT ANYWHERE BY MAIL mebica’ «60 here is ate no Skin ors NS disease will not ree quickly Se cure. osm) Wanted —The Address /Arol of every sufilerer in | /RPOKLET. America. THR NYASSAN MEDICINE CO., TRURO N. 8. Mention this paper when you write. =, ALMONT WILKES, —— The well-kaown stallion, “Almont Wilkes’ by ‘“‘IJernando,” 2.374-2, dam “Olive Wilkes,” 2.39 14, dam of “Gracie Wilkes, 2.30 and ‘**Almont Wilkes,” 2.30 2-2, by Geo. Wilkes. ijr., will stand the season a! 1%98 at Ni Ison’s Training Stables, Grafton st. Court Ilouse, Ch'town. Almont Wil! IS a — carriace horse; he stands over 16 ha high and weighs 120 ys. He is the sis al Montrose, 2.20 3-4, and Westle Wilkes, 2.39 t-4. Mont rose was the Aorse that put up such a gallan fieht in the free.for-all at Ch’town track Ja,’ fail, and there is no 4 t that only for th conceited action of the uther drivers, he would have won with ease [le trotted §3 heats, Winaing 4 first places and § seconds, vee le Wilkes started in the 2.40 class at Summerside last fall, a green horse right off the pasture, getting a mark of 2.39 1-4 ma ? ve ’? : field a of seasoned campaigners, expects him to get amark of 1d his owner 23 this vear. | ” This proves that Almont Wilkes sires speed of a high ooder, and being a remarkable good looker, has always been a_ prize-win ier in the show ring even when up gainst the best in the 1a and. For terms and particulars apply to j. M. NICHOLSON, Owner. NOTICE The property on in heel eorner of King and » ownal Ste, belonging tothe estate of the late Catherine MeKenna, (subject to a % years unexpired lease, from May lat, 1898), will be sold by Public Auction on Tuesday, May 3rd, 1898, at 12 o’clock, nc on, This property is now krewn as the Finlay Honee, Terms Cash. M. P. HOGAN, PATRICK BLAKE, Executor anl2wtilstapril,y2swid 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trace MarRKs DESIGNS CoprricuTs &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strictly confidential. Handbook en Patents sent free, Oldest avency for securing patents, Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a ear; four months, $L Sold byall aeueleniors. UN & [9,3618roadwey, New York ___ Branch Office. St.. Washington, D. C. Fat is dastteaty neces- sary as an article of diet. If it is not of the right kind it may not be digested. Then the body will not get enough of it. In this event there is fat-starvation. Scott’s Emulsion supplies this needed fat, of the right kind, in the right quantity, and in the form already partly digested. As a result all the organs and tissues take on activity. soc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronta een NOTICE! Application will be mede at the presen session of the Parliament of Canada, fo an actto incorporate the subsiciary bigt eourt of tbe Ancient Order of Foresters, in the Dominion of Canads; afriendly an Bevevolent Society, with all other neces- fary power, incidental thereto, to carry ont the said eociety’s oljects, ani for Other purposes. Dated 28th Mareh,” 1898. . F, MACWATT, for applicants. 3 , 74 lawSwks ‘HE Is THE PEAR VL KING. How Samuel Hatris of Cali‘ornia Won this Title. It ia not generally ‘known that one single merchant, a young Californian, 82 years of age, controls the pearl and pearl shell market of America and Enu- rope. This monarch of ‘the perrl] trade is Samuel Harris. He operates in the Pacific ocean, and he has built up an gstounding commercial reputation in the course of eight years. There are plenty of cattle kings in the west and wheat kings in the east and money kings everywhere, but there ig on!y « pearl king, and that is Harris. Thou- sands of rare, translucent gems are brought to this country and shipped to Ecrope by his agents. He deals in mother of pearl shells by the ton, and the magnitude of his transactions has made the private mark of Harris— namely, a diamond inclosing a large H —a seal of international importance and a guarantee of genuine kingship. Harris gathers this gems exclusively in the Society islands. For eight years he has made these Pacific land spots the field of his interesting business. It was Ww 39 on the shores of Tahiti that first he earned his title of kimg. After repeated transactions with the natives whom he employed in pearl fishing he stimulated them from passivity to great activity, gaining their confidence and trust by honest and reliable barter. made promises to them that he did not keep.. He paid them in full the price which they demanded. Himself a fin- ished critic, u connoisseur, he never permitted them to overvalue a pile of shells, and they grew to admire him. He controlled the situation at Tahiti. He was easily king. It is said that Harris'‘has been a lover of these delicate gems since his boy- hood. Pearls have always. been to him the most mysterious, the most wonder- ful, the most beautiful handiwork of nature. To him, gifted with an artistic, idealistic temperament, they appealed in a romantic, poetic way. To him each translucent globule seemed like a tear from the weird eyes of an earth be- witched mermaid. They were silent to- kens of the water maid's grief, she who perhaps pined for a terrestrial Jover. Finally young Harris took:a pleasure vuyage to the distant Society isles and saw what made his enthusiastic eyes bulge in their sockets. He saw native children playing along the sands with the richest pearls he had ever seen; he saw the native belles passing by with ropes of pearly gems about their throats, such treasures as would have made a society queen turn pale withenvy. Then Harris made his first business trip to Tahiti, and he took with him $3,000 worth of merchandise. His burden con- sisted mainly of tobacco, knives, rope, fishbocks and articles of clothing. These were luxuries to the native Tahi- tite, and the pearl trader brought back that yeer in exchange for his merchan- dise fully $40,000 worth of pearls and pearl shells. He did not consider ita bad bargain, and he has been back very year since, Formerly only the lowest grade pearls were brought to the American market. The fincr ones were retained abroad and rarely ever found their way this side of the water. Harris hasturned the tables and now brings to the San Francisco market the most perfect pearls found anywhere. The perfect stones are orient and of translucent whiteness or glim- mering irideseence. They are finely symmetrical in form, and the best are generally pear shaped, like a falling star. The hunt for these beauties of the deep goes on incessantly. The same ex- citement and uncertainty attend the fishing as surround the tireless chase for gold or the determined digging in a diamond mine. There is the same labor and the oft repeated disappointment. Now and then @ great surprise is brought up by the fearless pearl diver. That compensates for allthe rest. Lately it was an im- mense black pearl, the handsoimest of ite kind ever snatched from the fathom- less ocean. Harris broughtit on his last recent voyage to San Francisco. After careful examination it was found to be absolutely perfect, having a weight of six carats. It is valued in the London market at £150. Since 1894 Harris has revolutionized the trade in pearl shells. Only one grade ever found its way to the mauu- facturers of pearl shell ornaments and gewgaws. It was generally shell that was thin, flaky and colorless and sold for $800 aton. This energetic young pearl king now exports four different grades or varieties, ranging in value from $600 to $1,200 a ton. All shells are purchased in bulk from the native fishers. They bring down their hauls of shell to the young king's schooner as it lies in port, fretting rest- lessly against the side of the rnde piers. They bring down their find here for the ‘ing’s inspection. He sits in state and passes judgment. Harris can tell ata giance what a pile of shells is worth. .He is an expert at determining value, and he is a shrewd buyer as well and has never permitted the native experts ‘to outdistance him in judgment. When a pile of shells is dropped before him, he picks up one or two and runs his arm carelessly through the heap and in & moment can determine the grade, for the natives are clever at assortment. No ‘uncommon shells are ever found among -yhe poor ones. They have «ot learned yet the trick of decepticn by mingling the good and the bad.—Chicago Times- ee ee He never | ; A Mild Mannered Pirate. —— ‘The Buccaneers of Our Chast” is the title of a series of narrative sketches that Frank R. Stockton is writing for St. Nicholas. In speaking of John Es- quemeling, who joined the buccaneers and became their historian, Mr. Stock- ton says: It must have been a strange thing for a man accustomed to pens and ink, to yardsticks and scales, to offer to enroll himself in a company of bloody, big bearded pirates, but a man must eat, and buccaneering was the only profes- sion open to our ex-clerk. For some rea- son or other, certainly not on account of his bravery and daring, Esquemeling was very well received by the pirates of Tortuga. Perhaps they liked him be- cause he was a mild mannered man and 80 different from themselves. As for Esquemeling himself, he soon came to entertain the highest opinions of his pirate companions. He looked upon the buccaneers who had distin- guished themselves as great heroes, and it must have been extremely gratifying | to those savage fellows to tell Esque- meling all the wonderful things they had done. Esquemeling might have earned a salary as a listener. It was not long before his intense ad- miration of the buccaneers and their per- formances began to produce in him the feeling that these great exploits should not be lost to the world, and so he set about writing their lives and adventures. He remained with the pirates for sev- eral years and during that time worked very industriously getting together ma- terial for his history. When lie returned to bis own country in 1672, ha there completed a book which he called ‘‘The Buccaneers of America; or, The True Account of the Most Remarkable As- saults Committed of Late Years Upon the Coasts 6f the West Indies by the Buccaneers, etc. By John Esquemeling, One of the Buccaneers, Who Was Pres- ent at Those Tragedies.’’ From this title it is probable that in the capacity of reporter our literary pi- rate accompanied his comrades on their yarious voyages and assaults, and al- though he states e was present at many of ‘‘those tragedics’’ he makes no refer- ence to any deeds of valor or cruelty performed by himself, which shows him to have been a wonderfully conscien- tious historian. There are persons, how- ever, who doubt his impartiality, be- cause, as he liked the French, he al- ways gave the pirates of that nationality the credit for most of the bravery dis- played on their expeditions, and all of the magnanimity and courtesy, if there happened to beany, while the surliness, brutality and extraordinary wickedness were all ascribed to the English. BEE 8 fie oe PPA SICK | Positively cured by these Litile Pills, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, AGHE 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, Regulate the Bowels. Small Pill, They Pure ~ Vegetable, mall Bose, Supstitution the fray 1d of the day. Sec you ge S& et Carter's, isk tor Carter's, I Carter's emand Tittle Liver Pills, st and d nsi SOO 99SEOOO0O8O90080085009 Give the Baby $Chance Martin’s ; Cardinal Food $a simple, scientific and highly nutritive preparation for infants, delicate children and invalids. KERRY WATSON 4 COC., aad MONTREAL. ooo The only food $ that will build up a wezk cons- titution gradu- ally but surely is + OfSOOtS ~ e SOSPSSSSSISOOSO EOP OS Bottled Joy. pty — ae oa = —_ aid for all kind of oa ar JOHN. JOY. Victoria Cafe Gt Se St. a C393 IA Py ates | A man like this * ‘ ™ i —Should wea ssi r Fit-Reform” suit, which conceals cals corpulence, Made full at waist line, loose and straight at back, with large soft rolling collar, and cut away front. His best business coat, is this four buiton sack, or the Shooting coat—for half dress, the Morning coat. If he will trust nis own eyes rather than a tailor’s promise se he can Ais before he 1¢ buys just how such suits will make him him look, by sy choosing from ready-to-wear “Fit-Reform” garments, Equal in fit and service to best ‘Custom made,’ athalfitsprice. { Makers brand and price gh in left breast pocket. oP = $10, $12, $15, $18, $20 per suit. wil re | THUS BRAMD WITH RETRL the ey sel 1 STAMPED By THE aie A Catalogue from Fit-Reform Clothing Co., Montrcal. Yi aa talib che 1 a. . SOLE LOCAL AGENCY PROWSE BROTEERS. ea BLATCHFORD’S CALF - MEAL. THS PERFROT MILK SUBSTITUTE ee SNE their calves om You will Thousands of Farmers are raising Bratcurorp’s Carry Mean Why don’t you. They say it saves money, time and trouble, suy the same aiter a trial. Ask your dealer for it. eerie — arnt stent AULD BROS al for the money J. ane MonTREAL. Seen aah INTERCOLONTAL COAL MINING C0. Ui (Drummond Colliery) Westville, N.S. nt of the above The undersigned has been appointed age Company for P. E. Island. All orders for Coal will be issued and payment therefor received at my office. —- Prices and further information furnished on application FRED. W. HYNDM4*