en i - -- - nas ~ - -—— _~ ’ : 2, ; Wants, Lost, Pound &e Ww ANTED.—An apprentice to learn a e blacksmith business. Apply to G. H. Foster, Powna! W bart. dy eod “WANTED—A fmart steady boy about 15 years of age, te work tn a store x boy with some experienc. Apply at this office 87 TO KENT.—A St. Possession zyiven onor about Apply to P. H. Trainor, Kent St a ist May. TS—61 sl TO LE}.- One half ofthe three story dwele ling house, sontal/ning eight lerge rooms. on Prince St. Poss ssion given on 2ndMay next W. W. Wellner. 42 les epeilailicemmeineiet rinse TO LET —-The house and premises known as the “Old London House,’ situateon water St., nextto Government Warehouse No 1. Appl” to Peake Bros & Co, jan2s--1 WANTED.—A house seven or eight reoms in Apply to this offic». TrO LET.—That } leasa comfortable cottage on Wat oceupied by Mra Sruce Stewart Possession given about middie may. Apply to Peake Bros, & Co. Ch’town A3 tf containinz about adesirable locality. “ituated ania . at ht rSt, av pre ‘en ntly TO LET. That com/fortiaine acd ple santly situated house op upper Queen St.. being the southern half of the residence of the late Chief Jastice Pa rm< r new in secunation of Commander Cheyne. Hot and cold water in sam?, rent moterate, possession g ven {st May next. Apply to H, JAMES PALMER, Ch’town, 6) BARBERS’ CHAIRS and ecemplete outfil for sale cheap for cash or approyeo note. Ap- ply to DA Bruce, (yueen St, Ch\own §--dyawkytt ‘A By-law amending the By-law respecting Theatres and Public Shows. eee Be it enacted by the City Council, of The City of Charlottetown, that section one of the said Eylaw, be amended by adding the following words. “Provided never the Jess, that it shal] be lawful for the City Council, upon the application of the owners Or managers of anyOpera House,Music Hall or other Pub lic Hall of any kind, to grant a yearly license for such sum as may he deter~ mined upon, by resolution of said Council. JAMES WARBURTON, M.D. Mayor. H. M. DAVISON, City Clerk. 82—2 wks A Bye-law Respecting the Sale of Meat. | Be it enacted by the City Council of the City of Charlottetown as follows: — 1. Every person publicly selling meat fresh, salted or corned) by retail within this city in any store, shop, house, warehouse or other building or in the public market build ing Or in or from any meat waggon, cart, car- riage, sleigh or other vehicle upon the public streets or highways of the said City by retail or in Jess quantities than by the carcass, shall ybtain from the Mayor thereof a License as a meat Vendor, and the Mayor is hereby author red to issue such License upon receiving the License fee hereinafter mentioned. 2. The License fee si be Twenty-tive dollars per annum. 3. No person shall expose for sale or pub licly sell fresh, salted or corned meat by re tail or in les$.quantities than by the carcass in any store, house, shop, warehouse or other ouilding or place or inthe public market li ,idaAlL building, or in or from any meat wagon, cart, ‘arriage; sleig) ther vehicle within the Ca age, S$ gh or os nicie wnin the said City, without having first obtained a Licence therefor in manner above mentioned. 4. Any person or persons guilty of any in- fraction of any of the Provisions of this Bye- law, shall, upon conviction before the Stipen- diary Magistrate on the oath or affirmation of any credible witness, forfeit and pay at the dis- cretion of the Stipenciary Magistrate a penal- ty not exceeding the sum of Thirty Dollars for each offence, exclusive of costs, and in de- fault of payment thereo: it shall and may be lawful for the said Stiperndiary Magistrate to commit the offender tothe Common Jail of the County of Queen’s County for any period not exceeding thirty days, unless the said pen- ilty and costs be sooner paid. Provided al- ways that nothing in this Bye-law contained shall be construed to prevent per- sons from selling meat by the quarter on the public or market square adjoining the market building without such license, but all persons shall have the right thereon to sell meat of all kinds by the quarter on payment of the usual market t lls as at present or at any time here- ufter ma; be provided. «And Provided fur- ther that nothing herein contained shall be onstrued to require persons selling tinnea or ‘anned meats poultry or game to take-out the License above mentioned, JAMES WARBURTON, M. D., Mayor. H. M. DAVISON, City Clerk. e > See treats CHRONIC DISEASHs by the Salis- bury method of persistent self-help, u rem Iving causes from the blood. Cca- tinuous, inteligent treatrnentin person or by letter insures Minimum of su ffer- ingand Maximum of «ure possibie in each exse, Avoid attempts anaiced. > Graduate of N.Y. University : And the NEW YORK HOSPITAL. Twenty years practice in N. Y.. City. Diploma registered in U.*. and Canada, DRESS: CHARLOTTETOWN, P EI, | ere OFFICE. Victoria Row. Accomodations reserves for patients. References on application, a} — ee ee —_— she O RG CONE Naat enereceas i Uress Line of | Steamers. S. S. Halifax City sailsjfrom Halifax 2ist April, for Great Britain. This steamer has beex fitted up with Cold Storage. Shippers of perish- able uce should apply early. W, W. CLARKE, Agent, blacksmith’s shop on Kent & THR DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN APRIL 16, 1898. LIVING IN CITIES. The Apartment Horse Is Breaking Up Americana Homes, I have no mind to harrow up the minds of my readers with any explica- tion of the taiseries and mysteries that sonfront the average housekeeper in the tdaily maintenancg of a simple but com- fortable existence for her family. As for herself, an existence at all seems a struggle which at times she would glad- ly give over. One might define a here- ine as the average American woman who does her own housekeeping. But some hint of the unnatural and unhappy state of affairs existing at present may be deduced from the consideration of two economic facts. First, woman is by nature a home founder and a homemaker. This is not intended as an assertion of personal be- lief, but as a statement of scientific fact. It was woman—not man—who opened the industrial warld. It was woman who made the first rade dwellings and dressed skins and wove textiles for clothing. It was woman and not man who made the first fire and the first utensils for cooking and the first rude tools for industrial ends. All her activi- ties clustered about the hearth and min- istered to the home. If the woman and the work had not reacted upon each oth- er so that today women should be by nature homemakers and home lovers, there are still depths for the scientists to sound in the working of heredity aud of natural selection. And yet—here is my second fact—the enormous piles of stone and brick rapid- ly filling the choice plots of ground in ocr large cities and shutting out the light of heaven with their gabled tops are mute if not magnificent witnesses to the fact that the investment of capital is all against the perpetuation of the separate home. The shrewd modern in- vestor is willivg to put hundreds ef thousands against hundreds of dollars that (for his lifetime at least) women are going to prefer the ease of the apart- ment hotel to the separate house with its privacy, its own table, and—alas— its own service. — Helen Watterson Moody in Scribner’s ee re tA ete LONGING FOR SOMETHING. Are you troubled with a longing for something, you know not what? A longing that comes between thirst and hunger, but is unsatisfied by food or drink, That is only one of the symptoms of Indigestion, It will become chronic dyspepsia if you let it runitscourse, Stopit now, Every time you feel that uncomfortable sensation, take, according to direct- ious, a dose of *s Abbey’s = Effervescent Salt . It will cure you, “= 2 a & A teaspoonful of BRARR! t; Abbey's Effervescent Salt, taken ina << tumbler of water every morning before breakfast, wil! keep your sys- BC tem ina healthful condition, ready & < to repel all disease. As a cooling ie beverage it is unequalled. It is in- : vigorating, and pleasant to take as TS well, Abbey's Effervescent Salt is" endorsed by eminent physicians, te a world over, as a sure cure and pre- =” ventative of many of the common 4 ills that humanity is heir to, Price 2/6 or 60 cts, a bottle, Sold by Druggists everywhere, Send for our little booklet “ An Invitation to Health,’’ Sent free TAARAAA ° As Ana THE ABBEY EFFERVESCENT SALT CO., Luerran, MONTREAL, CANADA. JAAARARARABARBAIARAARISS Valuable Proverty BY AUCTION I am instructed by 8, Geo. Thorne to sel] at auction, on TUESDAY, May 3rd, at 12 o’clook, that very desirable property, situsted on the Lower Spring Park Road—head of Pownal Street. The house is in excellent condition, contains fine large shop, dining room, k’tchen and pantry, and thirteen spacious and well finished room3. Large frost-proof cellar, together with barn. The halls and rooms are al! painted—with two exceptions. In fact everythiag is iv firet class condition, and affords an excelient chance for some one to do business; as it is an old established stand. A portion of the purchase money may remain secured on the premises. Terms at sale. eee eave yee dy E.H. NORTON, Auctioneer PHIL SHERIDAN’S FLASK. A Funny Story About the Little Hero of Winchester. Captain Irving M. Bean of Milwaukee tells the following story about General Sheridan, which he says has never ap- peared in print: When stationed in Chi- eago General Sheridan hked very much to , get away to North lake in Waukesha coun- ty fora fishing trip now and then and passed many pleasant dayson the lake. On one visit the genere! went out early in the morning in the poat, and after staying out for several hours with no luck decided to return. Rowing in, he landed near a field where a farmer was plowing. Sheridan stopped and watched the plow turning the furrow so even and straight, the fresh earth rolling away from the steel shoe like a brown wave running on the shingle. Leaning on the rail fence, he waited until the farmer came up, and, speaking to him, produced a flask of anti- dote for snake bite and asked the farmer to join him in a nip. The invitation was instantly accepted, and the farmer took what might be de- scribed by an expert as “three fingers.” Wiping his mouth, the agriculturist broke the silence by asking, ‘‘Stranger, what might your name be?’’ ‘*Phil Sheridan,’’ was the reply. “Why, that’s the same name as the great general.”’ ‘“Yes,’’ said General Sheridan modestly, “and, by the way, I am the general.”’ With this he started to move away. The farmer was dazed for a moment, and then, gathering himself together, and the liquor adding somewhat to his loquac- ity, he cried: ‘‘Say, stranger, that liquor of yours is almighty good, but 1 don’t think as much of your stories. Yon Gen- eral Sheridan!’’ with a scornful glance at the little man in the rough fishing suit. ‘““Why, General Sheridan was a man 7 feet high. Stranger, I just think you are the blankest liar I ever met.’’ Sheridan walked off down the road bursting with laughter over the farmer’s description. He related the encounter to his friends with great gusto, and it be- came one of his favorite stories.—New York Commercial Advertiser. Why He Cut the Wires. The person who wrote that electricity was one of the ‘‘mighty agents of nature enchained by the ingenuity of man’’ can scarcely have contemplated in his wildest dreams the full extent of that ingenuity. For instance, he is scarcely likely to have prophesied that a sick man, far from the habitations of civilization, would have cut a telegraph wire in order to obtain assist- ance. And yet such has really occurred, according to a London contemporary. The whole of the vast continent of Australia | was practically cnt off from European news for nearly 24 hours in the middle of September, 1597, in consequence of an in- terruption on the line between Adelaide and Port Darwin. Inquiries were made, and it was found that the wire had been cut by a cyclist who was taken ill while ona journey across the continent. It is not related how he set about it, but he had the satisfaction at any rate of getting what he wanted. It is not desired to estab- lish this as a precedent of summoning help under inconvenient circumstances. —Eleo- trical Review. The Secret of Success. “‘T have never forgotten,” said Mr. Nog- gleby, ‘‘the wise remark thata young man once made to me, years ago. It was this, ‘One thing leads to another.’ This was apropos of a further advantage that I had brought into view by a step I had just taken. The moral of this is—it has been set forth often (1 may have mentioned it inyself), but it will bear endless repetition —that if we would eucceed we must keep stirring!’’"—New York Sun. ae WONT Far Te buy drinks for the boys—it don’t pay to buy drinks for yourself. It will pay to quit, but the tronble has been tv do this. The Dixon Vege- table Cure will absolutely remove all desire fur liquor in a couple of davs, so you can quit withont any self-denial, and nobody need know you are taking medicine, which ws perfectly harmless, pleasant to taste, and produces good appetite. refresh ing sleep, steady nerves, and does not in‘erfere with business duties. You’ll save money and ga’nin health and self- respect from the start. Full particulars sealed. The Dxon Cure Co., No 40 Park avenue, (near Milton St.), Montreal. 4 _—-- His Decision. A Missouri justice of the peace at the close of a case announced with great dig: nity, “I will hold this case under advise. ment until next Monday morning, at which time I will render judgment for the plaintiff.’’—Case and Comment. The Japanese begin building their houses at the top. ‘The roof is first built and elevated ona skeleton frame. Then it affords shelter to the workmen from storms. The Russian peasant never touches food or drink without making the sign of the cross. _ THE WHOLE system feels the effect of Hood’s Sarsaparilla—stom- ach, liver, kidneys, heart, nerves are strengthened and SUSTAINED. 6 (a ee Valuabie Property For Sale By Auction. I A instructed by the Executors of the Estate ofthe late Hon Henry J. Caibeck, to sell by Auction,on the premises, Sydney Street, on TU ESDAY, the lth day of APREL iustant at 12 o’clock poon:— The property formerly occupied by the late Hon HJ. Calbeck, as a store and residence, situate on the North side of Sydney Street. This propertv will be sold without reserve to close the Estate, offers a rare opportunity or investment, ow rented for $150;00 ALso at thesame timeand place,a Town Tat n» Georgetwn, fronting $4 feet on George Street, ‘tecuas Cash, R. BEARIST)O, Auctioncer, Ch’town, Apri_l0, 98-2 46ts i ™ . iit ee Auctralian Fever Cure, ‘‘What’s that fired grave for?’’ asked the recruit. ‘Fella all sick; weather bad and bud- gery no good down ’bout Womba. Plenty rain one time, fella catch cold; plenty fe- ver this time; by’m by fetch ‘im longa that place,’’ explained Warrigul, as a litter emerged from a wurley of the camp, aud the sick man was borne to the curious grave. The doctor walked in the rear. Yhrusting his hand into the long ditch, to test its warmth, the doctor signaled to lower the patient into it. He was then covered from neck to foot, feet and all. His head alone rested above the dirt. Ser- geant Dalton explained: “The blacks put fever patients in the > ground like that and steam the fever out. They say the earth wiil draw off the evil spirit, and then fill him with life.’’ ‘*Electric currents, by Jove!’’ The next day the late patient was bob- bing around like a 3-year-old.—Orvting. Making Him Useful. Applicant—I aim an ex-convict, sir, but I want to lead an honest life. I know you by reputation, andI thought you might help me. Eminent Author--What were you in prison for? Applicant— Forgery. Eminent Author—Gocd! You're the very man I want. You can come along and write autographs for me.—London Fun. By asimple rule the length of the day and night, any time of the year, may be ascertained by simply doubling the time of the sun’s rising, which will give the length of the night, and doubling the time of setting will give the length of the day. The first entry on the books of the New York subtreasury was a credit to Lieuten- ant W. §. Rosecrans as a government dis- buraing affisar. (5 PAT NTN Pee ar PR SHIP NEWS. Port of Charlottetown. ENTERED. April 15.— wallow. Finlayson, Pinetie es Wm Bitken, Batt, New Glasgow. CLEARED, April 15.—ss Wm Aitken, Batt, wath. April 16 —Etoil du Matin, [Daviee, Pie~ tou; Kohinoor, Cameron, Pictou Pug- ney ere ee ee Babys Own ) a whe s G. H j a i f “WHAT WE HAVE ‘ ? WE'LL HOLD.” } | —— ¢, Daby when he hes once been treated \ Eto with “ JABY’S OWN SOAP" 3 ¢ Wants no etncr—because he knows 1 r 9 other mak ; him focl so nice, 2 t Many imitations of Daby’s Own Soap, i ¢ (ook like it, but baby feels the difference, 4 : on > T'k- Albert Toilet Soap Co., Mfrs. ° ' 2 : Montreal. 714 he rtlrallartn. tncllrcnallded me WALL PAPMRE NOW OPEN——=7 A large assortment of Amer- ican and Canadian Wall Pa: per, All the latest designs anc patterns at lowest prices. r.J, HORNSBY Bookseller & Stationer. Window Shades from 25c PICKFORD & BLACK LINE HALIFAX & CHARLOTTELOWN. SEASON OF 1898. S. 8. City of Ghent will sale from Halifax for Ch’town about 25th April Importers and shippers will please order their freight by above line. This steamer has excellent passen- ger accommodation. Saloon amid— ships. Special freight rates will be given this season. W. W. CLARKE, Agent. 84 guar ' om i ‘This is the Tade Mark of the King ; 4 } j <n aes ta IT W URKED LI SE ee ee Paine’s Celery Compound, the Wordfamy KE A KE A CHARI Spring Medicine, Gives Mr. Ducharme a New Lease of Life, LL TE eee aa Cures—Look for the Name “PAINPY GenrLemey:—For along time I was subject tc spel's of weakness that rendered me quite unfit for work. At such times my nervous condition was very alarming, aud I felt as if my life was coming to an end. My sufferings were increased owing to violent attacks of rheumatism, and al- together I was as helpless as a child. Friends strongly advised me to use Paine’s Celery Compound, as they had seen such grand results from its use. I used the Compound, and the results were astonish- 2 — MB and the Stalk of Celery---Refase al] Nubsiifutes and imitations ~ ing and happy. Paine’s Celery hes done for me what the dociors to do. It bas made me active and strong, able to work every day, and has given me a new lease of lite. Every sick, weak and broken-down man and wouwan should ug Paine’s Celery Compounc; there is nothing like it in the world, Yours truly, A.Lrrep Dvcnagne, 317 Beaudry St., Moutresl, a ee ee —_—— & Glorious Vee on easter morn, f oe CJ Crown or Bridge work, perfect satisfaction. same day. give special attention to Open evenings 7 to 8. eee2eee — WITH A— Toothache ie would surely be a dismal day, one could not feel peaceful; good, or Lappy with aching teeth. Make yourself an Easter gift by having the ach- ing or decayed teeth filled or crowned, have it done now so you can enjoy your ham and eggs If you have lost some of your teeth hare them replaced, either by our now well known choice of our several other systems of artificial teeth, natural to life. and gvaranteed to give You can call in the mora ingand have eithera Bridge or Plate inserte All work done by specialists. our work is painless and reliable, BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS, Over Store of Prowse Bros. P . flac or you can have your We yg ft and the saving of teeth, tiie aoe reek abe a eeecee eeeane | SHOES, London House Building AN EASTER HAT will not be gqnite itself without a pair of If you have forgotten to get the in ana see our new spring stock, they ate Nice Shoe at 90c, $1, $1.25, upwards. W. H. STEWART & % i. ‘ iC pete se & ons a -s fn x. Gene €¢eank