‘ 7 : j ‘ a re Len lS ee: me ete ae Alan Dt teat toate eit at arate a f j SENT ANYWHERE BY MAIL "MEDICINE | vepicd’ «€©O6CC There is oitr wo Skin disease wiil not = quickly > cure: jposmat Wanted —The}] Address {carol of every sufferer in ome America. THis NYASSAN MEDICINE CO., TRURO N. S. Mention this paper when you write. Look Read and Learn how wecan supply yeur table with nice things at very low prices. Tomato (atsup put up in pint bottles, usual price 25c, now 20c Heinz Prepared Mustard put up im 1 gal. pails, usual price $1.25, now 80c Essence Turkey Cofiec put up by Cross & Blackwell. in and pint bottles, 15c¢ and 25¢ Ginger Syrup put up in two pound tins, Very nice on your oatmeal in the morning, usual price 302, now20c ae SANDERSON & CO, Wholesale and Retai] Grocers, CHARLOTTETOWN Business Colle ane ANY oem we Writing Academy Let the searchlight of practice illurainate the dark places of Theory. THOROUGHLY Progressive Practica! _ Institution, in which young men and women are not only taught Book keeping (in all its applicationsto commerce) both by ingle and double entry, but are trained how todo business, by actual business transact- ne. The students act as buyers, sellers, tie bankers, book-keepers and account- ants, in actual business operations, ard the ¢urrency issued by the College Bank and tke mdse issued fromthe Emporium, are used in bona fide business transactions, just the fSemeasin mercantileand banking houses, Pook-keeping in itself may be ‘earned at home, bat a knowledge of how to transact business, cannot be thus acquired. That our course system of training Is eminently pract- jenl write for testimoniais trom business men,and from students who are now hold- ing lucrative and responsible positions, SUBJECTS: Rook-keeping by single and doib'ie entry (theoretica! and practical.) Actua! lusiness Practice, Business Penmanship, Pusiness Correspondence, Commercial Artometi , Commercial Law, Raiiroading, Steamboa_- ing, Banking, (actual practice in the College Bank,) Typewriting, Shorthand and Naviga- tion, i FACULTY: I.. B Miller, Principal, Teacher of Book- keeping, Arithmetic, Business, Practice, Business Correspondence, Typewriting and Navigation, J. W. Coulson, (Vice Principal,) Teacher ot Railroading, Steamboatinhg, Bank’ng, Ac- counting and Actual Business Practice J. Harry Williams, Teacher of Busines Penmanship. wm. Mvran (licensed), Teacher ot Short- hand. Geerge S. Inman Esq, (Law Firm Mce- Donald & Inman) Lecturer on Commercial w. For circulars and full information, write or apply to L. B. MILLER: Priaipal, All interested‘are cordially invited tu c*ai atfhe college and inspect our systero tlo sining, and work in general. See ©4666 6698 6000 It's Cedar Posts And Laths we wish to draw your at- tention to just now. They are good stock and wehave plenty. 3,000 Posts and 500 M Laths is about the quantity. It you require any, come and see us. | TeLersoxe 181 JAMES BARRETT Connolly’s Wharf. ~~ = Senet eee se nee 4 @ Oe Oe @ B4O8F Be THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MARCH 30, 1898 | Marcly {Sento fur tied fhe fri Sat ome LLitel3i4is) 6 | 748) 9 10 112) 13/1415 16 17 18 19 21 28 2324 2520 28.293031 | | bxaiuluel eyvrrcRnooNn AD « cadtnot weak ait > ae ea made t —, a ca ISSUEL FROM THE OFFICE F fhe Examiner Publishing Company KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) @ne Year Se vnssase vied badass Six Manths..... ‘2.40 Ws TAOOID oi. 6c cv cen snetheeeegereeensss 1,a¢ EE EE EE en er C nited States THE WEEKLY EXAMINER ssued every Friday morning. It ts made np ef matter which has appeared in the Dei? and is «& firstclasss newspaper contains: all the latest news. Subscription $1.0 @ year, —— THE SOAP INDUSTRY. This paper is ever ready to chronicle the success of home industries and to aid if possible providing they are deserving of success in building up and extending their trade. The exportation of material in its raw or unmanufactured state is becoming less every year. A few years ago we were large exporters of tallow and imported it again manufactured into eoap. But it was aloss to this Province and a benefit to none but the foreiga manufacturer, It is certainly fa great advantage to have our surplus tallow manufactured here. We learn from the manager of the Charlotte~ town Soap Wooks that his factory will henceforth require every pound of taliow & produced iD this Province to meet the rapidly- increasing demand for his soap. Yet this Province still imports soap, from other parts of Canada and from Eagland. That soap made in England after paying freight and duty charges can be sold here in competition with our soap seems ex- traordinary. But upon enquiry the explanation is clear, The soap imported from England is not made from tallow. All the best soaps made in Exgland are from tallow but they are never brougit here in competition with our soaps. That would be impossible. The imported English suap is made from cocoanut oil. The Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol XXI page 203, states that Coccanut soap is u‘ca!ly prepared by the socalled cold method in which the fat heated to 89°¢ is treated with a calculated quantity of caustic soda solution of sp, gr, 1.350 the two con- Stituents being stirred together till the settling and hardening of the combination prevents further ag « tation. The property that cocoanut soap possesses of absorbeng lrage pro- portions of water and yet presenting the appearancd of a hard solid body makes the material a favorite basie for highly sophisticated compounds, in whichZwater, sulphate of soda and other alkaline solu~ tions, soluble silicates, fuller’s earth, starch, ete., play anfimyortent and bulky part. Cocoa-nut evap is litle prepared by itself, but it forme a pr-ncipal ingredi- ent in compound soaps meant to imitate curd and yetlow scaps, From this it is evident that coeoa nut soap is cap~ able of much adulteration and yet from its solid appearance be very taking with the consumer. In the soap trade, as in everything else, iu a Province such as this, there is a continual conflict between prejudice and reason. Itis by no means an imaginary fight nor is it of ordinary magnitude, Inthe art and trade of soap- making it is perhaps more csnspicucts than in any other line. Itis that magical word “imported” that causes all tue trou- ble. In th’s province we can make as good quality of soap as and in some grades much better. Yet, in spite of that fact a soap bearing a foreign name will with many have the preference, Some of our trailers have a pre ference for foreign scaps although ‘hey know little and often nothing of the real merits of the unfavored Island brands. This is simply from favor for the on2 and yrejudice against the other. trader should buy a brand of soap for less that the soap is made from pure tallow saponification of the tallow, or in soap is made from tallow and is neutral. But this, we fear, is n-ver exacted by the trader. If everyone iusisted upen using the cheapest and best article they wou'd find that the chespest and best soap for the Laundry is & pure neutral goap made from tallow. The manager of the Charlottetown Soap Works does not fear foreign competition. In fact, he claims to be able to make and sell a first-class article of soap much cheaper than it can be _ imported. But what he does fear ia competiton with adulturated imported soaps. Consumers could solve the diffi- enity by submitting samples of soap to a practical chemist and get a complete analysis which perhaps involves more trouble and expense than most consumers care to incur. There are however for- mulas which by the exercise of a little care and patience will enable anyone to do his own #0ap analysis. henner earners emmmmrapemmmcmatianiamn sn giaiinn, | sent post paid to any part of Canada or tae | is made abroad, | The sharp competition among e0ap makers for the trade and the many opportunities afforded for the introduction of adulterates in their pro- ducts, leadsus fo think some guide should be afforded traders in purchesing soaps. No than a pure sOQap can be made, and he should have a guarantee from the vendor exclusively with just enough alkali for the other words have a guarantee that the enna nel <n sont sitaneaaeataiatataatnatiinsrinet pevciaiitadasnctatatatititiainasa tamanntites THE SANCY DIAMOND. Inthe ordinary course of events Miss | | | Pauline As:or will some day become | possessor of the most famous and mag- nificent diamond owned outside of a crown treasure. The gem in question is the world famous Sancy diamond, owned by her father, and were it to appear among the jewels worn at any court function or royal drawing room it would entirely throw into the shade every oth- er gem there except the Kohinoor, which the queen always wears on state occasions as a brooch. The Sancy is a stcne which is pos- sessed of a remarkable history. Weigh- ing about 54 carats, it at one time formed part of the crown jewels of Duke Charles the Bold of Burgundy, and on his death in battle m Switzer- land was found set either in his helmet or sword hilt. The Swiss sold it to the French king of the day, and from that time forth it became oue of the crown jewels of France. i¢ disappeared at the time of the revo- Intion, reappeared at the restoration TY Aas and at the time of the second reyolu- ticn in 1830 passed by purchase into the possessicn of Anatole Demidoff, the Muscovite millionaire. It was worn for @ time by Demidoff’s wife, Princess Mathilde Bonaparte, but he took it from her before their separation and then bequeathed it to his nephew, Paul Demidoff. The latter sold it in the six- ties for the sum of $200,000, a ridicu- small price, to the late Sir anisetjce Jejeehobhoy, the Parsee mil- lionaire and philanthropist of Bombay. After his demise his heirs put it once nore in the market, and it was pur- chased by William Waldorf Astor by private contract, uo mention being made cf the price paid. —Philadelphia Limes. ik i Case Lousiy 7 «pheumatism crippled me for years. I could not walk. I tried many physicians with- out benefit. On the advice of a friend I tried your medicine. [| was completely cured by three bottles of Ayer’s Sarsaparina.” G. F. BOWEN, Horton Summit, Pa. _ | 7 FEO ELOUSE Cleaning Painting is part of it just as muchas xoaping and scrubbing. There are water cannot discolor- ations that scouring will not take away. Use the paint brush in such We have the finest Paint that 1s made. Ali shades and Kalsomine. spots remove. and cases mixed of Alabastme SOE WUD & nUGERD NENge- ENG McDONALD & INMAN Barristers, Attorneys, Solicitors, Notaries, &c. 37 FICE—Caneron Block, Victoria Row. MONEY TO LOAN J. A: McDONALD. G. S. Inman. SENT TO SWFAR AGAINST PA. He was a mere stripling of a lad. He might have been 7 years of age or he might have been 9. Nobody could tell by looking at his face. The only mark of certainty about the youthful counte- nance was the sure sign that some of his ancestors had come from old Ire- land. The little fellow walked hastily into the office of the warrant clerk of Recorder Finnegan’s court. He did not | notice the four persons standing in line waiting to get affidavits made out against some bothersome relatives, but the y..uth pushed through the crowd and d:sengaged the attention of the | clerk with this odd demand: ‘“‘T want to make an affidavit against my pa,’’ said be and pushed his little red head around the side of the desk. ‘*You want what?’’ queried the clerk. “I want to swear against pa,’’ said the boy again. **What bas your pa done?’ ‘‘He has just been in a prizefight with ma.’’ ‘*Well, why don’t your ma swear ont the warrant against pa? My boy, you are too young; you won’t fill the bill.’”’ ‘“‘My ma can’t come, and she wanted nie to fix it up for her.’’ ‘*Why could she not come?’’ asked the clerk, getting interested in the youngster’s story. He conJd not imag- ine why the wife would not be only too willing to swear out the warrant. ‘“My pa and ma they got in the fight in the kitchen. That is how it hap- pened. My pa made a drive for her, but didn’t land, and then my ma sbe grabbed up the rolling pin and floored the old man. She is vow setting on him, holding him down, and that is why she couldn’t come to sweur against him. She sent me.’’—New Oricaus Times-Demoerat. GERYVAN EDUCATION. The Germans are the most thoroughly educated people in the world. What they know they know well. A fellow traveler had taken his de- gree of B. A. in the University of Penn- sylvania and goue to that of Berlin, where he spent three years. Subse- quently traveling in Switzerland, he met a young German whose range and accuracy of knowledge weee simply be- yond that of any man of the same age he had ever met. In many walks and talks the German had absolutely pumped | the American dry, while his own store of knowledge had only been touched. **Ach,’’ said the German student one day, ‘‘I shall never get my degree, it is 80 difficult, it is so much, so hard, so long! I must have patience. I used to see you at the University of Berlin, and, forgive me the question, how did you get into the university?’’ ‘“‘Why, I was admitted on my B. A. from the University of Pennsylyania,’’ replied the American. ‘‘Mein Gott!’ gasped the German scholar. ‘‘I knew it must be some way like that.’’ No better comment on the relative standards of knowledge and the thor- oughness of the method by which it is pursued could be asked.—Philadelphia Times. —— TE © ii © aa We are after you for boots. Come and see our new sock, bonght for cash, will be sold for cash at very low prices.—J B Macdonald & Co. 72 3i. NT WILKES, | 2 — ~— AL * a The weil known stallion, “Almont Wilk: by ‘‘ilern 2.2712, sam "CN Wilkes.” 2.3914, dam of **Gracie Wilkes, 2.30 and Aimont Will 2.38 9-2, by Geo. Wilkes. jr., will stand the season «! i&9§ at Nichol ty Stables, Graf ee op». Court ( wh. Almont Wilk isa tylish, carriage horse: he stands over 16 hands high and weighs 1200 Ibs the sire of Montrose, 2.20 3-4, and WW e Wilkes, 2.39 1-4. Mont rose was the horse that put up such a gallar fight in the free.fur-all at Ch’town’ track k fall, and there is no that only for th: conceited action of the uther drivers, he would have won with ea Ile trotted £3 heats, winning 4 first p! nd 5 second Westie Will in the 2.40 class at Summerside last fall, a green horse right off the pasture, getting a mark of 2.39 1-4 in a field of seasoned campaigners, and his owner i | this year. } spec i > ft et ] tk ot @expecis nim to 2g this of a high order, > 9? ~--) proves that Alm Wilkes sives . er eS } being a remark 10:e€ good I and looker, has always been a_prize-winver in the wow rr 7 even when up against the best in the land. For terms and | articulars apply t9 1. M. NICHIOLSON, Owner. SRUCHK ROW DAIRY FARM. Farmers wishing to purchase pure- bred Ayrshire Calves, or heifers, can be supplied with good milking stock, as we arein the dairy business, and breed from the best milkers. Calves of both sexes always on hand. Also B. P Rocks, for hatching from imp. stock, Address— EASTON BROS. Ch’town Royalty. Feb 24 1 mo s WHY IT N EVE @ R LOSES SHAPE < The invisible sta ‘ ” is its bone and musele, Best cloths stretch and “bag” fom weight in pockets, mois. ture, wear and tear, Stout linen strips brace and bind every pocket in “ Fit-Reform” Coats, re- sisting strain,and swing} weight direct from shoul. ders. | Soft finished shrunken canvas interlines the fronts, being moultled round by the needle (not merely pressed) into form of chest and shoulders, A linen tape stitched “short” along edge of coat gives that inward curve cf best ta‘lored garments, No cheap “Custom Made” nor other “ready made” has these hidden merits of -_ > v * ° ‘ y eEts = + 5% “Fit-Reform.” 7 Sy, Brand and makers price Ae” Sy sewn in left» breast EEE <7 (tee pocket. noe FIT ss o REFORM Wyte $10, $12, $15, $18, CLOTHING bu $20 Per Suit. a” ihe ; toot S ue names nema liv Catalogue from iS bd pomons Mi | Fit-Reform Clothing Co., oe AE cel Montreal. en | S28 B8ER* BEBE SETR TESTE AR SOLE LOCAL AGENCY PROWSE BROTHERS. PERCOLONIAL COAL MINING CO. Ui (Drummond Colliery) Westville, N. 8. DRA The undersigned has been appointed agent of the above 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. HYNDMAA- eee nantes a Clear Them Out BUT—and a great big BUT, it must be for cash, Whaat! Our Hay Bale Ties, the best in the market, 10} fee gauge 14, at cost fcr spot cish, at the CITY - HARDWARE - STORE emma tn R.B. NORTON & CO, LTD 1 00060006660 66000000 00000000089 |} A HINT FOR —=" P SPRING To Be Forewarned is to be Forearmed Just received._New 1 of Boots and Sho2s for spring and summer trade. Good s and reliable we:rer-. NEW STOCK OF RUBBERS NOW OPENING Prices and quality to suit everybody. Weeks & Wrarre -Nortb Side Mark Squsre, 5 Cs