oO ta ee me 5 NN em tee ER tne: aging: FHE EXAMINER CALENDAB For April, 1898. —_ ee ee MOON’S CHANGES Full Moon, 6th, 5h., 20m. Last Quarter, 13th, 10h., 28m. New Moon, 18th, 62., 21m. First Quarter, 28th, 10h., O5m. & | High Water. Sun % Day of We’k, ——— | ——__—- Qa 'Morn.| Aft. | Rises.| Sets. 1)Friday 750 | 6 45 |5 24 6 14 2 Saturday 8 44; 8 10 22 lo 3Suanday 925'914/] 20 | 16 Monday 959 1004; 18 18 STuesday (1030 1047) 16 | 19 6 Wednesday 11 00 11 28; 14 | 20 VTharsday 11 31 8 Friday 0 10 (12 03 ii | 23 9 Saturday 0 55 12 30 | 24 10 Sunday 1 44 (12 59 7 a WMonday | 237/134; 5$ | 27 12 Tuesday 3 37 | 2 2. 3 28 13, Wednesday , 4 51 | 3 25 l | 30 i4iThursday | 610/501 4 5? 31 15 Friday 718,639 7. 2 16 Saturday $18|/810; 56 34 17 Sunday 906/921; 54 36 18 Monday 9 47'10 15 | 52 37 19, Tuesday 10 25 11101} SO | 38 20 Wednesday 11 00 ia 110 2UThursday 11 32 11 43 46 | 41 22 Friday 022 {12 01) 44 42 23Saturday | 101 112 22} 43 43 24’Snonday 1 41 112 44! 42 45 25' Monday 12221108) 40 | 4% 26 Tuesday 305; 141) 38 47 27\Wednesday , 3 52 | 225 | 36 49 WTharsday | 4 47 | 3 27 34 50 29 Friday | 548/442) 32 51 | 6 é 14 30 | $3 30, Saturday 49 Columbias and Otners There are two kinds of Wheels, COLUMBIAS and all others. Columbias are in a class by?themselves, Prices 44, 60, 85 and 140 dollars. The 60 dollar wheel is equal to thefj 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 goedse The purchaser of a bicycle from me will be taught to ride free. R. M. YOUNG, Agent for P. E. I, Sir Campana Will leave’Montreal first trip about Monday, 25th April, Send instruc- tions ‘o your shipping agents early to secure room, as there is likely to be more offered than sufficient to fill her. CARVELL BROS.,, Agents, 90 3i Fertilizer Dried Blood and Tankage Oe ee ani Phosphoric Write us for prices aud analyeis. B. & M. RATTENBURY High* in Ammonia Acid. LEGAL CARD. WARBURTON & McKINNGN Barristers, Attorney’s, Notarys Public. Commissioners for Sime of Massachusetts ac., & ¢, OFFICES——<2,, Cameron Block, Charlottetown Brennan Building, Summersice 1 Kent Street, Georgetown, A. B. Warsvrron, B,A..D,CL., 00. D. A. Mokixxon, L. & B. LEGAL CARD. MATHIESON & BENTLEY Barristers, Solicitors, ac OFFICES— Cameron Block, Charlottetown. Main Street, Georgetown. MONEY TO LOAN. 7. A. MATHIESON, W. E. BENTLEY. Geo’town, Ch'town. IMPORTANT POINTS FOR CANA- DIAN DAIRYMEN. To the Editor Farmer’s Advecate: Dear Sir,—Canvadian butter is coming more and more into favour in this country, andthe outlook for the future is most promising. What dairvmen especially require to note is that if the product is to sel! on the English market at the highest price, and in competitioa with Australian and Danish products, it must be sent for- ward regularly and while perfectly fresh. Buttershowing stale flavour is at once depreciated in value from 10s to 204 per cwt.,from top price of absolutely fresh made goods. If the butter is stent over here regularly when made, packed in equare boxes 56 pounds net, lightly salted (just sufficient to preserve the butter), and of very paie color, it wil] not require nnch time before it is at the tep of tbe market. Dealers here wi]! take the Canadian pro- ducts as readily ai they take them from other counteries, or even more readily, provided the quality is such as they desire. Upto now we find that dairymen in Cavada, iu their desire to wait for markets, hold the goods over, and then ship them when the rosy freshness is off the butter and when it must be sold as a second~class article. The British public will only have the best of goods, aud is willing t p-y for it. {he preaent value of really fresh made Canadian creamery butter is from 100 ehilliags to 105 ehillings, Australian selling at about the same fignres; but there is a scarcity of suppli: from Canada, and much larger shipraents could be handled than at present are coming to ths msrket. Care must be taken thatthe burt-r is very pale in color—«f course not deal white—and packed w'th only a sual! percentage of salt, in parchment-liped square boxes, and farmers paying attentiou to these details would voon find the result of continued shipments satisfactory to them. As to cheese, Canadian is held in higher esteem every day, buc the taste ot the British public for stilt, close cheese is alter- ed, and whatis now required is a softer mated cheese, maturing more readily than the goods which have recently been coming to this market. Also there is a tendency now to make tbe cheese too large. There are very few districta were 85 to 95 pound cheese aresaleable. The bul of buyers preferthat cheese should not be over 75 pounds weight. If vou can induce the dairy farmers of Canada to pay attention to the points to which we have referred, we have no hesi-~ tation in saying that they would find the re-ult more than pay them for the extra trouble in putting up atirst-class article, both cheere and butter, Youra faithfully, Hopaeson Bros. Liverpool, Eng , Maren 26th, 1898. The “‘Exponents’’ of Economy. “I wish to cal] attention to this fact thatas Liberais we have the right to eay thal we are the exponents of economy. “Our opponents do not even pretend to be economists. “Their principle is to get all the money they can from the people, and distribute it among their friends,” This is an extract from the speech of Mr. Clifford Sifton at the National Liberal Convention of 1893. Now, the expenditures have jumped up from $26,000,000 under the men who did not pretend to be eccn>miste, to $39,000,000 under the “exponents of economy.” The moral is that action wind.—Mail and Empire. is better than Ai <apgmmmin —_ NOTES AND COMMENTS. —We clip from the Canadian Farmer & letrer written by Hodgson Bros, of Mon- treal, which those who are interested in our butter and cheese factories will do well to read and conedier, —The anti-war feeling io the United Sta'es is apparently very considerable, and its growth might proceed ander the imposi. tiun of burdensome war taxes. It has been pointed out that there may be formed a party of opposition to the Administration, the Portlan’? Oregonia describing the pro- epect as follows:—The military policy, the plans of campaign, the selection of commanders, the destribution of land and naval forces, the advisability of this move-~ ment and the inadvieabilty of that will be discussed by able strategists who ‘never set @ squadron in the field nor the division of a battle knew’; the contention will get into politics, we shall have it on every stump, in the very first politice} campaigo, aod it will continue till the very last gun is fired. There will be discussion of | fiuancial matters, charges of extravagance, | arraignment of the administration on | countless allegations, and @ peaceful party declaring that we ought not to bave under- taken the warat all. The advocates of base money will take the opportuuity to spreed their discontents, and even the wildest of opposing partisans will hold out ibe idea that the war would be much tet- ter conducted if they were intrusted with the conduct of affairs.” —e+Oe+e ESTEEMED EXCHANGES. i Montreal Gazette: The United States) garrisons on the Canadian frontier have | practically all been withdrawn. It was) tbe fashion for Congressmen and soldiers to dwell on the importance of these garri-~ eons aSa “efence against Canadian ag~ | gression, and on the strength of euch | representations they have been added to! of late years. The fact thai in acrisia the Government leaves the Canadian line forts empty of soldiere shows how little real feeling there was behind the reasons given for their enlargemest. Some Australian Statistics. | The value of the wool exported from Svdney during 1897 has been estimated at £6,865,536. During the last six mouths of 1897 the exports of wooi from New South Wales amounted to £413,271 bales. The New South Wales imports of furoi- ture and upholstery, mostly British during IS9T, were valued at £274,068. The presest area under wheat in New South Wales is 940,000 acres, which are estimated to produce 9,750,000 bushels. During 1897 New South Wales import- ed, chiefly trom the United Kingdom, | appared aod drapery to the value of £3,- 311,361. The mineral exports of New South Walea during 1-97 iweluded 50,513. tin ingut+. 380.058 copper ingute, and 19,734 tov of shale. Nearly six million dezen oranges were produced in New South Wales during the year 1896 97 ; 2,885 tons of tuble grapes The valued of the coined and uneoined gold experted from New South Wales during the year 1897 was £4,786,890; and of slver £44,551. No less than 25 874,377 lbs of butter; 4,019 Ibs. of cherse, and 5,303,773 ibs. of ham and bacon were produced in New South Wales during the year 1896-97. | Among the food exports of New South Wales during 1897 were 140,772 cases of | mest, $00,710 carcases ¢f frozen mutton, 19,529 pieces of frozen beef, and 101,740 boxes of bu ter. Among the articles, chiefly British, im- | ported by New South Wales duriog 1897, were: hardware. £973,604; machin-ry, £332,437; agriculturs] implemente, £95,~ 594; aud jewellerv, £249,740. ln J897 the New South Wales imports of wheat smounted to 909,696 bushele, and the exports 1,370,700 bashels, The colony, during 'he same period, imporied 56,028 tons ot flour, the exports amounting to 44,378 tons. TO ASSIST THE NAVY. The Department Orders Ten Blockad- ing Vessels. Wasuinetox, Acril 25.—The growth of the auxiliary navy to proportions which regaiar fleet of cruicers and gunboats took anewtura when authority was given for the purchase of ten light-draught fast yachte, which were called tor by the strategy board to be used in ma‘staining an effective blockade of Cuban ports. The seven yachts so far selected are the Thespia, the Restlees, the Viking, and the Hiawatha, vow at New York, the I!lawara and the Ituna, nt Boaicn, and the Au Re- voir, at Washington, Del. The ‘1 hespia is 500 tons, and wae built two years ago by Cramps in Philadelphia; the Restless is 160 tons, built in 1887, and now owned in Rochester, N, Y.; the Viking is 230 tous, built in 1883, at Chester; the Hiawatha i» 350 tons, built last year and owned in Cincinnat'; the Illawara is 200 tons, and was built at Bath two years ago: the Ituna already surpass numerically the unarmored | was desigoed by G. L. Watson, Valkyrie fame, and = = was built by A. and J, Inglis, cf Giasgow, in 1886, the An R-voir is 575 tonsa, aad was built at Wilmington in 1893. These vesse|s draw twelve feet of water as a maximum. and can, therefore enter harbors inaccessible to naval veneels. They will be equipped with machine guna and rapid-fire ® pounders. “hey start south as soon as possible, and uatil Cuban occupation ix complete will act as scout and despatchsboats for the Key Weet squadron, aferwirds entering into the egalar work of Cuban work patrol. Suryeon-Gerera) Sternberg, of the army, is negotiating for a large merchaut verse) to be used as a floating army hovpital, to be stationed in the harbor seleced as the base of supplies for the army operating in Cuba. This vessel is to be equipped with five hundred beds and many of the contri - vanees now b-ing installed in the naval ambulance ship Solage. Unlike the Solace she will be stationary most of te time,, except when it may be necessary to trans~ port the wounded to American ports. ~ FACTS ABOUT HEALTH | It is Easy to Keep Well if We Know How—Some of the Co: ditions Neces- sary to Perfect Health. The importance of maintaining good health is easily understood, md it is really a simple matter if we tace a cor- rect view of the conditions required. In perfect health the stomach promptly digests food, and thus prepares nourish- ment. The blood is employe< to carry this nourishment to the orgam, nerveS, muscles and tissues whicl wéélit. The first great essential for good heath, there- | fore, is pure, rich blood. Nowit is cer- | tainly a fact that no medicinehas such a record of cures as Hood’s Salsaparilla. It is literally true that there arehundreds | of people alive and well today who would have been in their graves hadthey not taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It is lepended upon as a family medicine anc generai regulator of the system by tensof thon- sands of people. This is becaum Hood’s Sarsaparilla makes the blood pure. This is the secret of its great succes. Kegp your system in ¢g health by keeping your blood pure with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which absolutely cures when other medi- cines fail to do any good whatever. ; . are the only pills to tke Hood Ss Pills with Hood's Sarsaparila. Erinting in all its branches at the Exim- InER office, one of the best equip- ped Job Printing Egtablishment, on P. B. Island, * ~ x 3 i ty SN gs SBBAL VAS SF: ms SBL- HAL e y Gx SS: ww < We have fine brussels squares, three pieces of yds yd. As we do not intend to keep clear them out at a big reduction. x RAK, , @ BEsasssassssaswssessssss soso >h tS 2G 6 2004 2008 1 Brussels Square 3x3} yds, $12.50, now 1 Brussel Sqnare 3x4 vds, $13,50, now 1 Brussel Square 3x4 yds, $13.75, now 1 Brussels Square 33x4 yds.$16.00, now $ 1 Brussels Square 16 yds, $19.00 now 5 SBOS8TVOVSIGDSISEBVASGS E*. Perkins & Co., SUNNYSIDE. CACARAARAARAAAASAAAASAASSRA - A wee drappie o Pattison's * ac. 2 es, 2 % t, 7 %, a mt, x, = x x =, x, ae, 0S ee EES CUUNE REY ee saspuiademgieiieaiinidaan atintonaettn dameeincineniai aunaeeneen a5, ADDREss— sD & | Rare Old Whisky The best and safest stimulant for Medicinal and beverage use, Patti- son’s Whisky has e+tablished iteelf in favor with leading Physicians and Therapeutics in Great Britain ard the Colonies, whose te stimonials baar witness to its action as 9 speedy, safe and gentle stimulant. Pattison’s Whisky is remarkatly and exceptionally uniform in age, quality and flaver, and is free from the injurious defects incidental to Lhe many inverior brands upon the market, which are largely made up of newly distilled whiskies and raw grain spirits For Invalids an adultrated Whisky is Dangerous For sideboard use it is abuminable. Ask your wine merchant for a wee drappie o’ Pattison’s Whisky. For sale by ali authorized vendors, and wholesele by WYP Y PEE eS ee FEY For Sale By All Licensed Vendors > P. E. ISLAND-- Illustrated : ‘ == —— SOs A COPY At all bookstores and at this office. GBBESSEEBGGIGEGGLLG G GAS SLEAGES SO" Ad wide, one piece of Scoteh Oileloth 4 yds wiae, one piece of Scotch Linoleum 9 a stock of the above, we have decided tg 2% per cent. discount on Gilcloth and Linoleum. ) Bppiy.tog Scotch Linoleum 4 yds 5 f i 4 $ : fs 3 : ; ef : & 3 i 3 CHARLOTTETOWA Business College} Writing Academy Let the search!.ghi of practice illuminate the dark places of Th THOROUGHLY P rogrenve Proctical Institution, in which young men and women are not only taught Book s fin all its applications to com pg single and double encry, but are trained how todo business, by a tual business transath The students act as buyers, sellers traders, bankers, book-keepera and atewi+ ants, in actual business jona, acd the eurrency issued by the (o Bank anc the mdse. issued from the Emporium, are amd in bona fide business transaccons, jas te same asin mercantile and banking n00%s Book-keeping in itself may be learped # home, but a knowledge of how to transatt = 2 business, cannot be thas arquired, T cpurse system of training is eminently ifal write for testimoniais trom men, and from siudents who are now responsible post . et SUBJE Mo ‘ ook-keeping br single aa 2,e0relical apd practical,» Actual ractice, Business Penm* Correspondence, Commercial Commercial Law, Railroading, ing, Banking, (actual practice in the ¢ Bank,) Ty pewriting, Sh tion. FACULTY: L. B Miller, Principal, Teacherof Bow keeping, Arithmetic, Bustress Business Correspondence, ‘ Navigation, J. W. Coulson, (Vice Principal) of Railroading, Steamboating, a connting and Actual Basiness Prachee. ne: Harry Williams, of -enmanship, wm. eran (licensed), Teacher of Short hand. Me George 8 Inman Esq, (Law Firm Donald & Inman) Lecturer on Commend Law. For circulars and ful! information, write L. B. MILLER, ui ; img lucrative aa billie pie ly All interested are cordially invited wed Mailed, post paid,on receipt of price, ee Examiner Pub. Co. | Charlottetown. | THE — is the latest addition to| SCIENTIFIC REYETESTING in- struments, heartily endorsed ! bo the medicial prufe-sion, all over the United States. We use it. =>eo G. F. HUTSHESON ; wetthe college and ipepect Cur tinorg. @ a0 work is geperel We are noi going to move But we are selling Crocker just as cheap as we W Special discounts on all Gots China and Glass now in 90% make rooni for sprirg importations Also:—First class Phong made in all the leading styles, # old stand, C LEWIS Exactly opposite the North Side of Market House. SPREBT cooreeees GRaFTon a § ; x , ‘ut ly ; 5 Ta 4 PROMPTLY SEC GT 1c QUICKLY. Ldn ree copy of our big Best cs atemeate enka ‘ tarcign countries Send