fhe ISSUED EVER: AFTERNOON FROM THE OFFIC®@ oF The Examiner Publishing Company KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) @ne Year ... 84.00 Six Meuths.... . 2.00 § Weeree MemGe 60 i. cd Mi viccdscet 1.00 | Cant Se, i oc kescne ce 0.35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States THE WEEKLY EXAMINER issued every Friday morning. It is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily and is a firstclaess newspaper containing all the !atest pews) § subscription $1.00 a year eee nee oneness THE DAILY EXAMINER. MAY 3, 1887. ee —Some idea of the enormous quantity of corp raised in the United States may be gathered from the fact that 69,000,000 bu-hels have been exported since the first of January. Besides what is exported to Canada the balance is shipped to Europ. Now that corn comes into Canada free for grindingand stock teeding purposes, the market should be materially increased. —Mail and Empire: A man who has a little back yard garden in which to work at thix season of the year is ove of the for:nvates of fate. Man is naturally ap agricuiturist, and the old instinct for working in the soil reasserts itself witb tbe return of every spring. I[faman has a liule soil to work ip, no matter if it is no more than twenty feet equare, it serves to eatiefy, to some degree at least, the demand of his nature. These are happy days tur the back vard farmers. Montreal Gazette: Mr Fielding’s coal oil achievement is the greatest of them all. For twenty years, the Liberale have told us, the farmers have groaned under the iniquitious coal oil duty. Mr. Fielding reduced ita cent a gallon. The farmer 1s relieved. Never did greater effect follow smaller cause. Montreal Gazette: The men who work ju the rice mills must have been very offensive partisans during the electiou. The increase of the duty on their :aw material would not have been the rate of 150 per cent., while that on finished products was unchanged, had they been friends of the powers that be. Montreal Star: Mr. Perry is an old timer, andthe Tignish breakwater will again have a friend at court. — It may be, of course, thatas the crossing of the House has destroyed Mr. Mc- Mullen’s taste for the music of the rustliug leaves of the Anditor General’s re- port. so Mr, Perry, seated as a supporter of the Government, will no longer care for the beating of the surf onthe gray old breakwater of Tignish. But power spoiis not all men, and the House may again listen tothe woes of the seawall of Mr. Perry’s constituency. == as LL ——— v Itis often difficult to convince peo- ple their blood is impure, until dread- ful czrbuncles, abscesses, boils, scrof- ula ov salt rheum, are painful proof of the fact. It is wisdom now, or when- ever there is any indication of Impure blood, to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and prevent such eruptions and suffering. “} hed a dreadful carbuncle abscess, red, fiery, fierce and sore. The doctor at- tended me over seven weeks. When the abscess broke, the pains were terrible, and I thought I should not live through it. I heard and read so much about Hood’s Sarsaparilla, that I decided to take it, and my husband, who was suffering with boils, took it also. It soon purified our Blood built me up and restored my health so that, although the doctor said I would not be able to work hard, I have since done the work for 20 people. Hood’s Sar- saparilla cured my husband of the boils, and we regard it a wonderful medicine.’ Mrs. ANNA PETERSON, Latimer, Kansas. Hoods Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1. as : cure liver ills, easy to take, tiood’s Pills easy to operate. 26 cents. SEEDS White Ruesian,White Chaff, Fyfe and Colorado Bearded Wheat, Barley, Black White, Tartarian and Norway Oats, Buck wheat, Fodder Corn; Pease, Vetchee, Tim- othy Seed, Clover Seed in variety, Turnip a Mange! seed, etc. All the above seeds are new, fresh and for sale hv F. L. MACNUTT. 92—d2aw &wlwks. 10€ Queen St ' Daily Examiner JHE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN MAY 3, 1897, A COYOTE PARTNERSHIP, | Yt Means Death to the Antelope and @ Meal For the Wolves, The prong horned antelope is the swift- est animal on the plains, and yet the coy- otes catch a good many of them just by running them down. This sounds like a paradox, yet it is quite true and is ex- plained by the cunning of the wolves and the habits of the antelope. A single coyote that undertook to run down a single antelope would get tired and - hungry before he accomplished much, but when two or three coyotes are together it is quite a different thing. The coyotes do not all run after the antelope together; they take turns, and while one runs the thers rest, and so af last they tire the an- telope out. if when it was started the antelope ran straight away, it would of course leave all the wolves bchind, those that were resting even more than the one that was chasing it, but the antelope does not run straight, away. Instead it runs in large circles, and this enallcs the wolves to take turns when chasing it. When three or four prairie wolves dc- cide that they want antclope meat for breakfast, one of them creeps as close 4s possible to the one they have selected and then makes a rush for it, running as fast as he possibly can so as to push the ante- lope to his best speed and to tire it out. Meantime his companions spread out on either side of the runner and get upon lit- tle hills or knolls so as to keep the chase in sight. They trot from point to point, and pretty soon, when the anielope turns and begins to work back toward one of them, this one tries to get as nearly as pos- sible in its path, and as it flies by the wolf dashes out at it and runs after it at the top of its speed, while the one that had keen chasing the antelope stops running and trots off to some nearby hill, where, while the water drips off his lolling tongue, he watches the race and gets his breath again. After a little the antelope passes near another coyote, which in turn takes up the pursuit. Ana so the chase is kept up until the poor antelope is exhausted, when it is overtaken and pulled down by one or more of the hungry brutes. Of course the coyotes do not catth every ante- lope they start. Sometimes the game runs such a course that it does not pass near any of the waiting wolves, and only the one that starts it has any running to do. In such a case the pursuit is at once aban- concd. Sometimes the antelope isso stout und strong that it tires out all its pursu- ers. It is a common thing for a coyote to chase an old doe, with her kids, just after the little ones have begun to run about. At that time they are very swift for short Gistances, but have not the strength to stand a long chase. In such a case a moth- er will oiten stay behind her young and will try to fight off the coyote, butting him with her head and striking him with her fore feet. He pays little attention to her, except to snap at her, and keeps on after the kids. Several times I have scen a mother antelope lead her little ones into the midst of a bed of cactus, where the wolf could not go without getting his {cet full of thorns. Mf the bed is small, the wolf will make ferocious dashes up to its border, trying to frighten the little ones so that they will run out on the other side and he can start atser them again, but usually the mother hzs no trouble in hold- ing them.—George Bird Grinnell in Forest and Stream. Attention to the Feet. It is utterly impossible to get well or keep well unless the feet are kept dry and warm all the time. If they are for the most part cold, there is cough, or sore throat, or hoarseness, orsick headache, or some other annoyance. If cold and dry, the fcet should be soaked in hot water for ten minutes every night, and when wiped and dried rub into them well 10 or 15 drops of sweet oil. Do this paticnily with the hands, rubbing the oil into the soles of the feet particularly. On getting up in the morning dip beth feet at once into water as eold as the air in the room, half ankle deep, for a minute in sumunucr, half a minute or less in winter, rubbing one foot with the other, then wipe dry, and if convenient hold them to the fire, rubbing them with the hands until perfectly dry and warm in every part. If the fect are damp and cold, attend only toe the morning washings, but always at night remove the stockings and hold the feet to the fire, rubbing them with the hands for 15 minutes, and get immediately into bed. Under any circumstances, as often ag the feet are cold enough to attract atten- tion, draw off the stockings and hold them to the fire. If the feet are much inclined to dampness, put on a pair of dry stockings. Some persons’ feet are more comfortable even in winter in cotton, others in woolen stackings. Each must be guided by his own feelings. Sometimes two pairs of thin stockings keep the feet warmer than one pair which is thicker than both. The thin pair may be of the same or of different materials, and that which is best next the feet should be determined by the feelings of the person. Persons who walk a great deal during the day should on coming home for the night remove their shoes and stockings, hold the feet to the fire until perfectly dry, put on adry pair of stockings and wear different shoes for the remainder of the evening. ‘To change to slippers is danger- ous, @s one is likely to catch cold.—New York Ledger. —————eemll For Thirty Days I have decided to sell my stock of Cloc Watches, Jewelry. Spectacles, &c., &.,t a big discount for.cash for thirty days. A persons buying ten dollars worth of goods i that time will receive a present worth one dol lar or have it deducted off the article they purchase, Any person having watches or clocks out of order will do weli to have them repaired and put in good running order by me, and regulated by Town Time. The articles entrusted to me will receive my pesonal at tentio. Store open from 8 a. m. to 8 p. m. G. G. JURY, North Side Queen Square, Opposite Post Office, 72 2aw &w Om. Bargains Given The Heman Body's Tircless Organs. Man has within him a stationary engine calicd his heart, which, with its veins and arterics, constitutes a perfect system of hy- draulics, compared with which man’s best work is clumsy, intricate and wasteful. The lungs ere a working bellows, the most perfect method of sanitary ventilation. ‘he stomach is a working vat of marvel- ous jerfection. ‘he brain is a wondrous condenser, and the skin is a great working evaporator, With reserve automatic appli- ances, ready for extra work in moments of need All these are in action at all times, day and night, tireless, unceasing, sclf Winding and repairing, for 70 yeurs or more.—Ladics’ Home Journal, Looking on It Profcssionally, Young Lady—Do you admire Miss Rol- ingicn’s dancing? Horsy Young Man—Yes, very much. Young Lady—Aud she dresses so well too! Horsy Young Man—Ch, I’m no judge of the harness, but I can answer for the actionu.—London Answers. Dr. Dohrman claims that he has proved that a photographic negative protected from the light receives an impression from the rays of the moon, while it is absolute- ly unaifected by sunlight. The Scotch fit yields its timber for mak- ing fences and props for coal pits, but its leaves also produce an oil which is used as an inhalation in consumption and as a liniment in rheumatism. MESSAGE TO MEN, Proving that Tiue Honesty and True Phil antrophy Still Exist. If any man who is weak, nervous and debilitated, or who is suffering from any of the various troubles resulting from youthful follv, excesses or overwoik, will take heart and write to me, I will send him confidentially and free of charge the plan pursued by which I was completely restored to perfect health and manhood, affer years of suffering from Nervous De- bility, Loss of Vigor and Organic Weak- ness, Ih ve nothing to sell, and therefore want no money, but as I know through my own experience how to sympathize with such sufferers, 1 am glad to be able to assist any fellow-beings toacure. I am well aware of the prevalence of quackery, for I myself was deceived and imposed upon until Ienearly Jost faith in mankind but I rejoice tosay that I am now perfectly well and happy once more and am desirous therefore to make this certain means of cure known toall. If you will write to me you can rely upon being cured and the proud satisfaction of having been of great service toone in need will be sufficient reward for my trouble. Absolute secrecy assured. Send 5c silver to cover po*tage and address Mr. Geo. G. Strong, North Rock wood, Mich. 135p&w. All the nerve giving and vitalizing pro- perties of the Cocoa Piant are concentrated in a palatable form in Sovereign Cocoa Wine. Ask you druggis: for it. Aspinall’s Enamel, all colors’ at Wat- son’s Drug Store. BLANC-MANGE oe, “ed “Sy ‘ if : oree's % r ( MADE WITH BENSON’S CANADA PREPARED Is an exquisite dish for the table and invailuabie tor invalids, RECIPE. BLANC-MANGE. Four or five tablespoonsful of Pre- pared Cory to ove quart of milk: dis- q wolve the Prepared Corn in some of the milk ; heat the remainder of the milk, and when boiling «dd the dissolved KN Prepared Corn; boil fifteen minutes, javor to taste, and aHow it tocoolina nould. Serve with milk sud jeily or milk and sugar. fhe Edwardsburg Starch Co., Ltd. WORKS: Ca®DINAL, ONT. OfFiCaGS: MONTREAL, P.Q. YOU CAN T HAVE THEM Unless they fit yva. What? Why our spec tacles and eyeglasses. Our object is not merely to make a sale, we consider our customers interests as well and make sure that their eyes are properly fitted. Satisfied customers come again. G. F. HUTCHESON Jeweler and Optician. Opposite J. D. McLeod’s $ lA Ccecremmennetottaataineectertareaaateae THACKERAY’S BIRTHPLACE, Failure of Efforts to Find the Exact Houses In India, Sir Williarn Hunter’s book on ‘‘The Thackerays In India’’ calls out in The Atheneum from W. F. Prideau an inter- esting letter relative to the house in which the novelist was born and his ineffectual efforts to find it: ‘‘The publication of Sir William Hunt- er’s delightful book reminds me that about ten years ago, being then resident in Cal- cutta, I made a vigorous effort to discover the house which had been honored by the birth of the greatest writer who has shed luster on the Anglo-Indian body, in view toa commemorative tablet being placed upon the building by public subscription. In this effort I was warmly seconded by the late Mr. Robert Knight, the editor of The Statesman, who in the issue of that paper for Sept. 2, 1887, devoted a leader to the subject, and by sevcral other friends. ‘Notwithstanding onr exertions we failed to discover the house in question, the records neither of the secretariat nor of the municipality affording any clew. I ascertained that the assessment papers of the house tax did not extend further back than 1836, while the first Calcutta daily, the Calcutta Journal, was not established dy J. Silk Buckingham till four years aft- er Richmond Thackeray’s death. My re- searches, however, enabled me to collect some interesting information in connection with the novelist and his father, and among my notes I find an exact record of the dates on which Richmond Thackeray entered on his various public employments. ‘Thackeray was christened in St. John’s church, the old eathedral, and I give below a copy of the baptisinal register, which has not, I think, hitherto appeared in print: ***Date of Baptisms.—1812, January 3d. ***Name and Age of the Baptized.—N. B. 8S. Son, D. Daughter.—William Make- peace, born 18th July, 1811. S. ‘**Name and Situation of Parents.— Richmond Thackeray, Esqr., of the Civil Service, and Anne his wife. ‘**By Whom and Where Baptized.—The Revd. J. Ward, D. D.’ “Seeing that Richmond Thackeray ap- parently held the appointment of judge of Midnapore at the date of his son’s birth, and that a period of nearly six months elapsed between that date and the baptism, we are almost led to the conclusion that the boy was born not at Calcutta, but at Midnapore, and that his baptism was de- ferred until his father received his Alipore appointment. Tradition has, however, so persistently declared that the birth took place in Calcutta that I do not feel ven- turesome enough to dispute it. It is quite possible that the records do not give the date on which the father’s deputation to Midnapore ended.’’ Experience Has Proved it, A triumph in medicine was atained when experience proved that Scott’s kmul- sion would not only stop the progress of Pulmonary Consumption, but by its cou- tinued use, health aud viger could be fully restored, An Op Anp WELL TrRiev REMEDY.— Mrs. Winslow’s Seothing Syrup bas been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain,cures wind colic, and is the bent remedy forDiarrhoea. Is pleasant to the taste. Soid by Druggists in every psrtof the worl’. Twenty-five cents a Wuitie. Its value is incaiculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow’s Sooth iug Syrup, and take no uther kind 1 3 dw TO LET. The house on Richmond St. west, at present occupied by Mr. J. M. McLeod. This house is beautifully situated on th- harbor front, with splendid view. Is fite ted with all the modern improvements. Apply to Mr. Thos Campbell. TT MEN AND WOMEN Everywhere toconpuct business at home No eanvassirg; work is simple writing and eopy- ing lists oi addresses received from local ad- vertising, to be forwarded to us daily No previous experience required, but plain writers preferred Permanent work to those cont2nt to earn $6 or more weekiy *" spare time Appiy to Puhlishers, co A B Box 65, Ch’town 8¥- 6i eod & wky OOOO SOSO SOOOCOOOL cOSCSS800 Spectacles Just received another lot, selling at 50 aud 70ca pair,case included. Also the newest in gold frame OPERA GLASSES TO LOAN. EW. TAYLOR CAMERON BLOCK We Dont. Claim To be able to suit all who are suffering with their eyes, but we know of a good many people who have sfiffered in- cessant headache, pain in the eyes. etc, who attribute their relief to the wearing of prop- erly fitted glasses. We aie here to help you if possible. G. Hh. TAYLOR Jeweler and Optician, ~~ North Side Queen Square. Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment It is the original. It is the best in use. It is unlike any other. It is the oldest on earth. It is superior to all others. It is the great vital and muscle nervine. It is for internal as much as external use. It is used and endorsed by all athletes. It is a soothing, healing, penetrating Anodyne. It is wk % every mcther should have in the house. It is used and recommended by many physicians everywhere, It is the Universal Household Remedy from infancy to old age. It is safe to trust that which has satisfied generation after generation. It is made from the favorite prescription of a good old family physician It is marvellous how many ailments it will quickly relieve, heal and oe Our Book “Treatment for Diseases and Care of Sick Room,” Mailed Free, Sold by all Druggists. 1. 5. JOHNSON & CO., 22 Custom House Street, Reston, May Wall Papers! Wall Papers! 24422242 SS 2S 22. —_——_ SS == 7T~rTryVyT Vv? A fine,assortment of American and Canadian Wall Papere now in stock. For Prices and quality we will not be beaten, Have a look at our stock before purchasing elsewhere, McMILLAN & HORNSBY | QUEEN STREET HIGH GRADE “== Kngish Manures S4AL44444 Superphosphate. Nitrate of Soda, Muriat: of Potash Kainit, Bone Meal, etc.. ete. These we guarantee to be the BEST and MUCH THE § CHEAPEST Fertilizers ou the market, rnd challenge com- § petitors to a test- and “Principals of Profit- Pamphlet, “Food tor Plants,” able Farming’’ free on application. AULD BROS. | se —— NEW SEED STORE $000 O000 09000000 We have opened up a Seed and Farm Implement Store on the corner of Queen and Kent Streets, opposite City Hail. o ht’sere you can purchase fresh and pure SEED, and trae 0 name, as this is our opening year, we car be depended on ; sell at the right prices. IN STOCK AND TO ARRIVE—Harrows, Seed Sowst Ploughs, Road Carts, Carriages,’ Daisy Churns, Wringers aué Washers. Double Seed Boxes, (Grain and Seed), at bargain, $14.0 We guarantee repairs for all Ploughs sold by us. ~ -FINLAYSON & MCKINNOR | TERLIZZICK'S CORNER STEEL DISK HARROWS. And Seed Sowers, to go on Wheel Rakes, sold direct to farm ers at prices that will surprise the buyer. ———— Pumps! Pumps! We are making a full line of pumps; and fit them up t9 order to suit any depth of well, free cf cost for fitting. are determined to keep some of the money on the Island. T A. MacLEAN, Successor to McK. & McL.