The Daily Examiner a ed E.RNOON FROM THE OFFIC®@ The Cxaminer Publishing Company RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) @ne Yeu ., 84.00 Bix We is 2.00 Three Months 1.00 fae Veoth O35 st paid to ary part of Canada or th “ates THE WEEKLY EXAMINER a-ned very Friaay morning. It is made up mf in rwhich has appeared nm the Daily arvet is a firstclasss newspaper containing alith stea? news Subscription $1.00 a year THE DAILY EXAMINER NOVEMBER (9, 1897 THE MARKETS. — Cc se.— Advices from Moatreal report that tie @ueese market rules quiet and Flead Enquiry for cheanm cheese is maiuta ned and goods running from 74+ to Se fiua eady purchasers. Atthe wharf this mourning the offerings comprised 2,000 boxe: Che quality was not exceptional, and they sold at The. c c Finest Ontario Septem bers......... BF to 8 Fine-t UVatario Octobers.......... -5¢ to 34 Fine-t j!ownships...... ecwccessccsce OD GE Finest Quebec Uctobers............. Th to7 Avo: w Clement & Son. Manchester, Novew er 6th, say: Toe consumption of American and Canadian cheese in this country from lst May to 3lset October this year, has averaged as near as pos~ sible 62,900 boxes per week. If this rate of cousumption is Kept up (and it shouid be higher in winter than in summer) there wiil be money in the cheese trade for soime one before the eud of the season. Weare now practically assured of a £1 retail cut all through the season, There will be some free buying as soon ai the market shows signs of having touched bottom. We quote the market as under: fancy white and colored: 443 to 45¢; tinest, 4's t0 43s. Cheese of ‘suitable quality, round 40°, are scarce and wanted. Batter—In Montrea!, according to the Gazette, The butter market continues without new feature. Local demand for <q creamesy ranges from 18¢. to Isjc. but THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 19 1897 LIN THE WILDERNESS. SOLDIER’S GHASTLY RECOLLEC- TIONS OF AN AWFUL BATTLEFIELD. | subenien No Time to Bury the Dead, Who Lay So | Thick as to Cover Large Areas of Ground. Biue and Gray Side by Side—The Letter ' to Somebody's “Dear Jack.” i | “T have no time to bury my dead and |} €an give you none,’’ was Grant’s famous | reply to Lee, when, under a flag of truce, | a cessation of hostilities was requested long enough to bury the dead. Thus one | great and awful feature of the battle of | the Wilderness was the unburied dead, that lay for days and weeks all over that blood stained fleld, one of the most horrible | and ghastly sights ever exposed to human | vision Probably no battlefield of the civil war afforded such an opportunity for inspection as this. | Ordinarily, s'tcr a fight, burying parties | were detailed, and the long, deep trench, facommon grave, was dug, and the dead were least covered; but not so here. | Grant could not stop, and the long stretch at MODERN JOURNALISM, The Great Editor Has Given Place to the Great Business Manager. The magnitude of the financial opera- tions of the newspaper is turning journal- ism upside down. There are still great editors whose personalities make the suc cess of their organs, but, always few, the number of them has not increased with the multiplication of newspapers, and even where they dominate they have to leave to others the mass of detail that has accumulated underand about the editorial chair. If the editor is the owner and has busi.css capacities, he is attracted down stairs to the counting room. If he is defi- cient in executive ability, he has toengage a man who has dt, and the requirements are such that the business manager, if fit, } of country, overrun with Mosby's guerril- | las, that intervened between the Rappa- hannock river and the nearest | lines prevented aid from that direction in |; burying the thousands that were slain in the Wilderness and in the fight at Spottsyl- vania Court House. I sat on my horse looking over the por- tion of the fleld where the fierce and dead- ly fighting of May 4 and 5, 1864, occurred. It was four or five days after the fight, about the 9th or 10th of May. A small detachment of our regiment had been sett as an escort to a train of ambulances to gather in the wounded who were being temporarily cared for in barns and farm- houses near the battlefield, and I thus had an opportunity to view this historic scene. During the years since it has been an open question whether to be glad or sorry that I visited that battlefield. It could not be more vividly impressed upon me had I seen it yesterday. It has been a night- mare and a horrid day dream all these years. Often have I prayed that visions of those upturned faces, blackened and dis- torted, of the staring, glazed eyeballs, of the stiffened, outstretched hands, sceming- ly still grasping for support, those rigid forms wrapped in blue and gray, that had fought their last battle and now lay side by side in that great charnel field, might be blotted forever from my recollection. Then, again, I have been giad that I krow 60 well how that battlefield apjpc:.red, and how barbarous, brutal and inhuman it made war seem; glad that I knew how ehipper- are hot buyers exceDt at @ Con- cession ut fc to 4 from that range. There is little dowsg in dairy stock; which is scarce, aud fine to flaest goud- of this kind find arcady sale. ee * Finest creamery..s...............18 to 184 eG a cccccctdenbosecsencacens svooel ii to 174 Dairy Utter ..cccrrccrcccereceseees 16 to 164 English advice states that supplies ot butter are diminishing, consumption is greatly increasing, and an equilibrium of supp!) and demand wiil shortiy be resum- ed. A feature that is most favoraLle to the batter trade is the fall in the price.of read, The alarm about the supplies of wheal sciune mouth or iwo ago féut up bread w penny @four-pound Joaf. During the last few days bread bas fallen to nearly its furmer level, and the workingman need pot spend as much of his wages on this necessity of life, and conacquently wil) be able tc devote more to sucn luxuries as butter. Canadian butter is still going to England in large quantities, and is said to be much better in quality than it was two) months ago. Pork.—The market in this province continues to be very quiet and the packing house ot the Messrs Kattenbury being still incompletethere is yet no movement in live hogs, The price of pork in the Charlottetowm market on ‘Jueeday last ranged from 44 to 5} cts per Ib by the carcass. In Montreal there is no material change to note. We qaote Canadian pork, $15 io $16 per br!.; pure Canadian lard in pails, a Te to T4e; and compound refined a’ 5c w She per lv.; hams, lle to 13e; bacon, We to 12c per Ib. There was weak feeling in the Chicago provision market aod prices for pork declined 12}c to l5e, closiag $7.20 November; $7.224 Deventer: $8.20, Jaonary. Lard dropped 5c to 10 , closing at $4.12. Oatr.—In *Toronto, according to the Mai! «nd Ewpire,tbere is av active move- ment in oats aod a higher tendency, prices ranging from 234:. per bushel to 24}e. Here+ats are telling now at 26c per busbel. Potatoes.—With the advent of colder weather the priee of potatoes in this city ha- goue down to 22¢ per bushel. Egg-.—There is no change to notein the egg market, 124c per dozen being the ruling priee, Vapors From Metals. That metals will throw off vapors is eyi- dent even to the housewife, who can smell the raging fire in her kitchen range, even though she may be up two flights of stairs. ‘It is said that zinc will give off sufficient vapor even at a low temperature to pro- @uce chemical changes in . and that this occurs in a vacuum as well as in the open air. Experimenters that the lowest known temperature at which metal vaporizes in 184 degrees F.— ew York Ledger. Half a Cent for a baby! The cost of the few drops of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral that will cure croup, whooping cough and any other cough, if administered in time is perhaps halfacent. It may prolong baby’s life, PAZI CLL FFI LIZZ 10,000 dead heroes looked, who had faced “and met death amid the wild, frenzied scenes of one of the greatest battles in the history of the world. ~ One of the mog¢ striking features to us that day and the one most thoroughly fixed in our memories was that all over that battlefield, or at least that part we visited, there lay three boys in blue to one in gray. It will be remembered that all through the Wilderness fight the rebels were pro- tected by a system of Carthworks and has- tily constructed fortifications and abatises, while the Union troops were compelled to fight largely in the open and assail the Confederates in their strongholdg. From these it was utterly impossible to dislodge the enemy except by the masterly series of flank movements so successfully planned by General Grant. * At this point the Union dead lay thick- est. I believe I could have dismounted atid Walked a distance as great as two or- dinary city blocks and never once have stepped upon the ground—walking on dead bodies all the way. Indeed had I undertaken the ghastly journey I would have been compelled in seme places to climb over heaps of the dead. ‘ There was a slight growth of under- brush at this point, with a few trees re- maining. I made acareful examination and could not see a limb or a twig ora bush but was marked by a bullet, and some of them in several places. The wonder seemcd not that there were co many dead, but that any lived. Officers and privates all made a common cause here and rank was forever obliterated, for among the dead we noticed the shining shoulder straps of commissioned officers mingled with the ordinary blue uniform of the common soldier. The trees were torn and shattered, the fearful work of shot and shell being shown on every side. Mus- kets, canteens, haversacks, knapsacks—in fact, nearly all that makes up the aceouter- ments of the soldier—were scattered in all directions. None of us felt like performing any act of ghoulish vandalism; though, as I saw a letter extending from the pocket of a dead Confederate soldier, I dismounted, and, some of the boys gathering around, we looked it over. It was torn and partly il- legible, but we made out that it was from the town of Hamlet, in the state of North Carolina. It was in a lady’s handwriting, and the portion that we were able to read was as follows: My Deax Jacx—We hope that you can soon return and help us with the tobacco crop, but if not we do hope and pray to God that our dear Jack will not be harmed by those terrible Yankees. As we looked at the letter and then at the upturned face of poor Jack, turning black from exposure to the sun, and then thought of that poor wife or mother or sister who was waiting and watching for She return of the dead and mangled soldier at our feet, and of the other 10,000 homes from which dear ones had gone out who were now among that host of dead around us, we began te comprehend something of the brutal, barbarous nature of war.—Cy- rus G. Shepard in New York Post. Face Treatment. Here are directions for a good face bath, or ‘“‘shampoo,’’ the effect on the skin be- ing most gratifying, it is said: Rub pure, fine soap on a sponge, adding several drops of best toilet glycerin. Previously dip the sponge in hot water. Rub the face and neck softly with the sponge until the skin is covered with the soothing lather. Then take almond meal and rub it in wn- til face and neck are perfectly dry. Wash off at once in hot water that .has had a teaspoonful of powdered borax dissolved in it. Neat bathe or spray with cold wa- ter until the flesh feels cold and firm, finally drying by burying the face in a soft damask towel. A teaspoonful of good ; cologne should be in the cold spray. Union | —— ee is likely to have a }*rsonality of his own so strong indeed that he will demand a share in the property and the profits and the policy. Then, too, the old editors die. Their heirs, seldom inheriting the brains with the business, turn it over to a financial manager to maintain it for the income ke can produce. property is sold, the price is so high that business men who have become capitalists in other businesses, not writers, are best able to acquire control. J. Lincoln Stef- fens in Scribner's. Prond of His Part. A respectably dressed man on meeting a distinguished actor claimed his ac- quuintance on professional grounds. “TL don’t remember you, my good sir,”’ said the actor. ‘**Nevertheless we have often played to- gether in ‘Hamlet.’ You remember Ho- ratio?”’ ‘*You have never played Horatio to my Hamlet.’’ ‘*Certainly not. But you remember that Horatio, describing the ghost’s disappear- ance, says, ‘But even then the morning cock crew aloud, and at the sound it shrunk in haste away and vanished from our sight?’ ”’ ‘“*Well, what then?’’ “The ghost at the close of his interview with Hamlet says, The glowworm shows the matin to be near and ‘gins to pale his ineffectual fire—adieu, adieu, Hamlet— remember me!’ ”’ ‘**Yes, to be sure. And then?’’ ‘Why, then, you know, as we could not make much of the glowworm on the stage, it was agreed to introduce the cock crow.”’ *‘But your part in the tragedy?’ “It was I who played the cock!’’— Strane Magazine rouse the liver, cure bilious- etc. Price 25 cents. Sold by all druggists, has just been received of a consider have a large stock on hand bought be- G. Hh. TAYLOR ness, neadache, dizziness, The only Pills to take with Hood’s Sarsapaerilla able advance in the prices of Waltham fore the rise, which we will sell at Jeweler and Optician, Stimulate the stomach, - 2s sour stomach, constipation, ills and Elgin watch movements. We old prices while they last. orth Side Queen Square. Farm For Sale. Ce ee ee The undersigned offers for sale hi: farm at Souris River, Lot 45, in King’s County, consisting of 74 acres, 50 of which are clear, and in a good state of cultivation; the remainder is covered with hardwood, the property is within a shortce distant of churches, school, mills and cheese factory. There are on the premises a good dwelling house, barn, and other outbuildings. For further particulars apply to the owner on the premises. JOHN McCORMACK. Souris, November 9th 1897. dy 2 aw 1 4 and wk. WANTED! 5,000 men, women and children te to call and inspect my New Goods. Compare prices with othor stores,ahd be convinced by buying from me your watches, clocks, jewelry, silverware, spectacles, eye glasses, etc, you will save woney, and the goods bought from me will be warranted to give satisfaction. Cc. C.JORY Cperative and Prosthetic DENTISTRY DR J. p. MURRAY, If there is no heir and the 145 Queen St. NY -AS. SAN CONCENTRATED MINERAL WATER AX\\\h 1 /////Z MEDICAL FOR BODY BRAIN AND NERVES The Saline Jonstituents of ‘the most potent mineral waters in the world dry but quickly soluble in water A convenient bev- CERTAINTY Is ; erage for the RCONOMY. rm sick or convalescent Spe- Wittid cific action on Kidneys and mai 9) Liver, making rich red blood [ts nature’s way of curing SF qiseases at home. THE NYASSAN MEDICINE CO., TRURO N.S. Mention this paper when you _ write, Nov. 131719 &w © OOO 2008280828 2828 2080688 29-09 Ge eree > ~eS Cre a Nn AGS Spruce Guin itis, Sore throat, etc. KERRY, WATSON & co., PROPRIETORS, ; MONTREAL. ADEE CDMOMOMOSDOOSCEOMOEN ED POPOROONSI WEN” 9089808 96 O98 08 0506 - CORUE & 808 * 9O> SOD 0 OCB O EOE BORO ROF 4 “RC OCHL0OL8_5 * Oysters Oysters Oysters JOY! JOY! JOY!" Victoria Cafe, Great ~ George Street. Qysters served in every style Lunches and dinners with despatch. As usual, I am prepared to deliver Oysters in any quantity to customers to any part of tne city. Telephone Connection, JOHN P. JOY Vicrorra CAFE Gt. George St..... NIGHT SCHCOL The Evening Session —OF THE— Charlottetown Business College and | Writing Academy OPENS ON OCTOBER 18TH INST. This Session affords an excellent opportunity for thore why cannot attend during the ozyto acquire a business education. Ite object is to assist those in needof help; and the work,is so arranged that no one, however deficient, need feel any embarassment. INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION SUBJ ECTS—Practical Arithmetic, Writ- ing, easy and rapid) Business Cor: espondence Book keeping by single ard Double Entry Actual Business Practise, not copying short hand and Typewriting. The Penmanship Department is conducted by Mr J. Harry illiams; for specimens of his students’ work, see Geo. Carter & Co’s window, Shorthand by Mr Wm Moran, the only licensed public teacher in this Proyv- ince. Five sessions per week; hours 7 30 to 9 30p m Forrates and full information call at the C, B. C. or write to L B MILLER, Princi; a’ ?-=z-Intending students may take up any branches desired. oct 8 dif FOR SALE. RARE CHANCE The property occupied by J.J, Gay and son situate in the village of Pownal,7 miles from wharlottetown, is offered for sale. The pro- prietors have carried op a large market gar- den nursery, and seed business for thirty years, and the purchaser will no doubt retain a large share of the }ocal trade. The, prem- ises comprise a large dwelling house, s‘ore warehouse, barn, shed, orchard, and about 15 acres of the most ferti:e land on the Island This land hasbeen manured year after year. for so long that as an vid man said the other day.; “It isall abed of manure and could be hauled for top-dressing.” This would be an ideal spot for @ country merch- ant, or it would be admirabie fora summer resort, The situation is one of the most beautiful on the Island. Good bathing, a boating, eee and within easy churches, ey Office school tejephone and sbops all at the door, e For terms and furthér particulars, apply to Von Clure Gay, J J Gert £0n or y JOHN T SH Solicitor Charlottetown d&v" oct 7 Printing in all its branches at the Exam- INER Office, one cf the bese equip- ped Job Printing Establishments IF YOU Ch’town, Wholesale & Retail ait thinking of buying any kind ofa This fall we can do better for you than uny one in T . We have the largest variety, lowest DOG) & ROGERS Prices the A GLANCE AT OUR SHOES will convince all who want style, comfort and durability that our stock comprises the best that shoemaker’s art can produce. 4 — eee Women’s Felt Laced Boots Women’s Buttoned Felt Boots. Women’s Elastic Side {Felt Boots, from 85c and upwards, Felt Slippers. Cloth Slippers. WH Stewart & Co — STOVES. —~ ———————— Assortment Large, Quality away up Prices away down. Walker s Corner —— Mate Lie OF Nay YORE SIMON WW CRABBE STOVES & EARDWARE a ni i te es te tt | insure Ub RICHARD A. McCURDY, anany ther company in the world, Total Assets, - Invested in Canada, - - Total Surplus, nearly : Insurance-in force, . - Income in 1896, han any other company, and is greates. company ir the world, in unrepresented districts, $49,702,695: more than the total Revenue of the Dominion of Canada, Presidea (THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPANY), Has more insurance in force, a greater annual income and more asseté It is the oldest active American Ce ‘ $234,744,148.42 ‘ . 4,257,520 75 : : 30,000,000,00 ; - 918,698,358,00 27, being TWELVE MILLONES Issues the most liberal policies and pays larger dividends, or. all policies beyond donbt,, the wealthiest and All policies payable in gold, Agents wan JOHN MACEACHERN., Agent for P.E. Island — for spring. on P. E. Island, ee 2 a 200 Bicycles Wanted To be stored (free of charge) for the winter, and cleaned § repaired, nickeled or enameled, thoroughly renewed, ready ENAMELING We use the highest grade Enamel (black or colors) that money can buy in New York, and éa%e it on in a manner that the most fastidiovs cannot criticize, and the cost is the same as others charge for ordinary paint, WP. DOULL, Kent Steet. See sample at shop. 7