a day by no me ans kee Ds dition, particularly if, as house in gene to rise from the rand the windows by many « corbers. tiiles that under such co gon back to fitted ets i be added, can be hy following the ap; ing them. ‘This is to the corners ral be poorly built, with dust eg} } cell More than one aba Use ' take it from the main space of al , afterward wiping it over with a « an | damp, not wet cloth. Another point | urged for the rt g system Which expe e | does not bear sut is its economy lew maids can adequately clean the heavy rugs | with which many apartmicnts are stré They demand cutside service about as fre- } quently as does the fitied carpet. A New York woman who occupied a handsom« up town apartment paid $2 a week | throughout the year t» have her rugs prop- $ erly cleaned every Friday morning, It will be the wise housekeeper who will study the limitations of her residence be- fore she decides in favor of bare floors.— New York Post. Rising From a Chair Gracefully. Some one suggests that few women eul- tivate a graceful manner of rising froma chair. Probably nine women out of ten in rising from a seat shift their weight from one foot to another in the act of ris- ing and start off upon the wrong foot. The proper way is to rest the weight upon one foot while still sitting, holding the other lightly upon the floor. Now rise by press- ing down hard upon the foot that has previously been bearing the weight, stand erect and still for a mere second to get poise and start off lightly upon the freo foot. If there is to be a turn in the walk, stop, with all the weight upon the foot that is in advance, rest only the toe of the rear foot upon the ground, then turn en- tirely upon the balls of the feet, with the heels scarcely touching the floor. A turn like this is ds rate as it is grace- ful, yet i5 can be acquired in half an hour’s practice. <A perfectly graceful woman is casita graceful in everything she dees—in the of her head, the unfolding of her hands, iz her walk, in the way she rises and sits. As to the last litile can be said, and a pretty way is casily demonstratcd. What noi to do is to fall heavily upon a | TrOSsSO seat like a badly joinced doll without nerves. A sensitive woman feels her way daintily, unbending with a smooth, slow | motion till she appears to have: settled Such a one will know how down safely. torise also, “nd can make the difiicult } transition between the chair and the door- | way without one of those awkward jerks and starts that render half of feminine | creation laurhbing stocks upon public thor- | oughfares, and especially in public convey- ances.—hxchange. ON, ee pee ee mae NNN IS WlOms PriOCOsruCDINE | The Geeat Exnmgiish Rs edy,. rey Sie Pacwages Gvarantes’ to | , oe promptiy aad permanently fs met cure a1} forins of Nervous be > cure. , | n° mn Weakness, Em: :sions,Sperm | " = atorrhe:, Imypuiencyand a’ e IN sod effects vu, Abuse or Exncesses | : w fy Vom Dient al Werry < ponree USE Beforcand After. oo neo ch to In . ants, which svon lead to In frmity, Insanity, Consumption and an eurly grave, | Mas been prescribed over 35 years fu thousands of cases; is the only Reliab’e and Ilorcst hiedicine snorvm. Ask drugzist for Wood's Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine In place of this, | “nclose price in letter, and we will seul by return jail. Price, one package, 21; six, £5. One wiil | grades, six will cure. Pamphlets free to any addresa, | Vbe Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada, Sold in Cherlottetown by (nuye EB} Hughes, Druggist eh 4h. McLEAN, 0.C. BARRISTER, &c. Brown's Bock, McDONALD & INMAN Barristers, Attorneys, Solicitors, Notaries, - “ OFFICE—Cameron Block, Vietoria Row. MONEY TO LOAN J. A. McDoxarp. G. S$. INMAN. t | Buttled JOYs Enipty bottles wanted, cheapest cash Price paid fur all kind of empry bottles. . JOHN P, JOY, Victoria Cafe Gt Geogre St. | ryt} dt CHARLOTTETOWN, 4% ’ | ? : serate Read. room cS Al “This is True Liberty, when Free Born M CHARLOTTETOWN en, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evnripripzs, P. E. ISLAND. TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1898. 7 baer The debtors of “Mckay Wool-t len Company” are hereby noti- fied to make immediate pay- ment of their re.pective debts at the office of tne Company, in Charlottetown; at which place due acquitiances can be given. Debtors failing to act on this notice will be sued, without resoect to persons, after the expiration of one week from cate _ Since the Christmas moring when you received your knife, how many have you lost ? We Have a Beautiful Assortment at remarkablv k the Germany. GOODS of black and biue Worsteds. We were right out are opening to-day one thousand These goods have beon black and blue worsteds,. entered under the new tariff, and than anything we have ever p Inspection solicited. MERCHANT muanulacturers, ODD bought from England and OGEAS yw prices, in es AND We dollars’ worth ure better value laced before the public. JOHN MACLEOD & CO TAILORS. jo Yo —————— of Tea? Try ee Forsale by please you. * : a ae is 0h ake a ll Mi I Ret ik lileaaleailad tienen sas ciliated lithe pa nr a ge u Want Empire Rlend—it Ww. SERRA NN As. ALE AN tai eeatnemetith sieaioladlaaial waee.. wd — 3 { | extensive experience in the intricate a Italian Ware House Beals’ Co Cor. Grafton and Ct, Geo. Sts North side Queen Square Opening To-day 1 Jules Robin Medicinal Branay ———— JOY & DAVIES, Wholesaic Wine Merchants. - a TO LET i PEAKE’ WHARF (ITO 1) Wharfage storage and yard- age, ub reasonable rates. Arthur &. Peake. Nov. 4 anata 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE Trave Marks DESIGNS CopyvricuTs &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may guickly ascertain our opinion free w ether an invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents, Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scicntific Fimericait. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir- eniation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 4 ear: four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers, UNN & Ug,s618roncwes, New York branch Office. 62% ¥ St.. Washington, D.C. EPPS'S GOGOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS er DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homcopataic Chemists, London, Englan Oysters aa | FPROMPTLY SECURED GET RicH GUICKLY. Write to-day fora free copy of our big Book on Patents. ee ’ lawsof 50 foreign countries, Send pote, model il T. J. MORRIS |. free advice, rts, Temple Building, Montreal, cx photo for SYON, Expe FOR SALE. An excellent farm, sitaated on the south side of Murray River. Lt contsias 78 acres of Jand, about 25 of which are cleared, and four acres of the best alder mnd. Also upwards of $100 worth of fence poles aud scantling Jogs. The whole will be sold for the sum of $250.00. For further informaticn apply to JOSEPH DICKS, Charlottetown. ee + Oysters ba i _e fa Aine 2 rma des Single Copies two cents, N POT ETE “me 50 Seen. 4 Children and Their Teeth. Why are children’s teeth neglected as wesee them every day? The first set of centals which come to a youngster are articularly apt to be undervalued. It’s areal mistake to negiect these on the supposition that they are unimportant because temporary. The character of per- manent teeth is largely determined by the c) ter of earlier arrivals, which are main in good condition un- d set are in readiness to take up the Worse, About the fifth or sixth year a child’s first permanent molars make their appear- ance. ‘These are never replaced and should have izamediate attention and care, being very liable to decay. There are four of these molars—one on each side ef the up- per and lower jaws. Loss of them will throw other teeth out of place and alter more or less the plan of ghe mouth. Every child should be taught to keep his teeth in good condition, the mouth fresh and sweet. Dental floss silk should be used religiously nights and morning. Brushing the teeth and rinsing are neces- sary after each meal. Any one of the vari- ous good dental powders on the market should be used in the night and morning brushing. Castile soap rubbed upon the brush twice a day refreshes wonderfully. If any liquid medicine contaixing fron, acid, etc., is taken into the mouth, brush the teeth afterward and rinse well. Luke- warm water only should be employed in washing the teeth. Both very hot and very cold fluids are injurious. If at any time the mouth becomes acid andthe enamel of the teeth shows igns of wearing away rinse with water con- taining a little bicarbonate of soda. : A Help to Homemaking, ‘*Each housekeeper and homemaker can add her efforts to the progress of the age in the right direction’’ is asolution given by Lydia Hoyt Farmer for the complexi- ties of our domestic life in an article on ‘‘Domestic Science Clubs’’ in The Wom- an’s Home Companion. ‘‘Women cf the present day may help to clear the way by promoting every enterprise which shal! encourage skilled labor in domestic depart- ments, such as kitchen gardens for the children of the laboring classes, who are to grow up into the servants of the next generation; also training schools for do- mestic Jabor, where young girls shall be taught thoroughly all the departments of housework ard cookery. Thus doing, the time will come when no servant will be hired without a diploma from some train- ing school and a girl will as much expect to fit herself for housemaid or cook as for dressmaker or any trade. ‘* «The art of selection is the art of true lying. A woman can ecocomplish litie whose life is a series of crises, a kaleido- scopic rush, a glimpse of dissolving views.’ 1t is this want of selection which makes of too many persons mental dudes, attired in the outward adornments of a smattering of fashionable information, but in reality not possessed of any practically useful ideas. After a proper selection comes economy of time. The investment of time must be as wisely undertaken by women as are paying financial investments by men. Then comes system. Actions must be governed by plans fully marked out, not left for the haphazard moment to sug- gest.’’ Children’s Parties. A word of warning on the subject of children's parties may not be amiss. It ts impossible not to recognize that the so called plersure of a children's party in- volves a large measure of excitement both before and after the event, 30 that, apart from the exposure to the chances of chill and improper food and drink on the occa- sion, there is an amount of wear and tear and waste attending these partics which ought to be estimated, and the estimate can scarcely be alow one. It may seem ungracious to strive to put a limit on the pleasures of the young, but it must not be forgotten that early youth is the period of growth and development and that any- thing and everything that causes special waste of organized material without a compensatory stimulus to nutrition ought to be avoided. Turning from the physical dangers to the mental and nerve injuries inflicted upon the growing organism, these are cer- tainly not to be disregarded. Excitement rages in the littie brain from the moment the invitation has been received until after the evening. Sleep is disturbed by dreams, and afterward the excitement does net subside unti] days have elapsed. All the amusements of young children should be unexciting and as free as possible from barmful influences.—New York Ledger. s° ROFULA in its worst form yields to the blood cleansing poweg oi Hood’s Sarsaparille. Thousands of | Oyster Joy! Joy! ay! no Victoria Cafe, Great | George Street. Oysters served in every styl Lunches and dinners with despatch As usual, I am prepared to delive Oysters in any quantity to customer to any part of tne city. Telephone Connection, JOHN P. JOY Victoria CAFE Gt George St.. ea | = cases have been perfectly CURED. LEGAL CARD WARBURTON & McKINNON Barristers, Attorney’s, Notarys Public. Commisrsioners for State of Massachusetts ac., & C, OFFICES a, Cameron Block, Charlottetown Brennan Building, Summerside 1 Kent Street, Georgetown, \. B. Warsvrros, B,A., D,C. L.,Q C. ). A- McKinnon, L, L. B, | Sh’to wn Dee, 1,1897— law& wim nee viper eee ea ee ee A ee oe See Sod ee eee a ie ee eo OE ik Ce ne ee a eee ’ nai alain nny Per era ener saa dieaaineini eae As SA“ ate go terpenes PS f 3 a i 3s) ‘ Py nab - . ; Q : - sali “4 EPPO ROARS aCe cemeenerirs out F saan ined A a aaeiel Sadie bubtih smbainaaanel ail cial anadiiadiaia didi report pre ane cae “ * erate — & ne a A or haan tin ce dhtca cin ecco een n nl nalaiedl Ui