resident "yr ; i rade, i ‘NUE S "pose of edition present which ut the nd tar Sgings ‘NCing ‘i bed in 3 ‘a ; © ) os iia aa*re OSS went s are } LV) Y potel gu ire having . fshing from Tracadie anil ” . cK } } ' . ae ator of Cod and Mackerel. ie * : a Foat, bait and fishing + ee. é (x: ie HALL, fy’ y 6) Schse uw rgsehiil--Church N for Girls * Windsor. XovV x aiie INCORPORATED 1891. 5 ‘ 7 1}. 1) Ch * fis a2 7 : Wiss | Che Ladies ” : Ys : } 1 i ‘ M = a, I rhacipai; ergnt Resident experienced Grovernesses from Eegiane ; Hous: Keeper, Matron ai 1 Trained Nurse. goard with Tuition in English Department, Sies. Mesic Ant, Paysican Cvinvre, ete., extras Pre paracvion for the Upniver- ities Year begins Sept. Lith, 1597. Tor Calen lar apply to Dr. His ett tte 1 puns WEST INDIA lime ef tz Ce ONLY (Sc APINT = — ) t & bl PUBLIC AUCTION by private As I have at did my farm vale, I shull on, THURSDAY AUGUST 26th, at 10 o’clock a. m. =ell by auction, my stock and farming implements, con- sisting of two well bred mares, one eight years old, and ove four yeur ‘old. Also two mi ‘Ich cows; one two year old, and the other ‘four year old, also three heifers rising two year with calf, also three calves, also teu skeep, f fat, ready for the butcher. Farming implemente: :—Two carts, two wood-sleighs, two good ploughs of the old Scotch style, one principally new, one pair of good spring tooth harrows, one set of pin harrews, one scuftler, and one mould- ing ploug rh. One jauntivg sleigh of an excellent quality never have been use: d, and buffalo; one wagon and harness, also eart harness, and many other articles too numerous to mention. - JOHN CUMMISKY Gieufinnan. Pond Settlement Lot 36 Qneen’s Lo. LOL Cc, Victoria Care Scene days, Nice drinks of all kinds to refresh the tired and wears. Nice Lunches, and cream, JOHN P. JOY VicroRIA CAFE Gt George St...6- Great Georg st. of attraction during these hot beautitul strawberries For Sale or To Let Two Houses on Pleasant Street. stable and yard. Go a WiLUIAM DODD. diy 6, °97—1m sk YOUR GROCER FOR Royal Oak Soap the best lanndry Soap ou the market. One bar will doas much as two bars of ordinary imported Soap made from filthy material. CHTIWA S OAP WORKS e s i . ’ wr af if ree (as : i THR DAIVY EXAMINER, CUARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 24, 1£97 JERSEY ‘WORTH: PAVING. Yield. of Six Pee Cont Dutter Fat and a Big Calf. Here is a famous old Jersey-cow, im- ported originally froin the island which is the native home of Jerseys. She hae hever been forced for a recorti, but has been one of the best cows «straighs through her career ever owned in pri- yate life. When she was 18 years old, her milk yielde d 6 per cent butter fat to the test. A writer in The Rural New Yorker, from which paper the illustration is re- produced, says of the old herd mother: This photograph was taken when her enf was about 8 weeks old, and the cow was m king as well as usual, haying fallen away.somewhat in fle sh after @iv- rt las FIGHTEEY YEARS ing birth. to her calf, which was a very OLD. large, vigorous young fellow. At this time the mother was giving on an aver- age about 25 pounds of milk daily, test- ing 6 percent butter fat. Although very nearly 18 years old at that time, she is a valuable dairy cow even yet. The next time a man tells you that he is afraid to feed his cows heavily because he thinks that they will last only a short time under this treatment just call his atten- tion to old Cypres, who has stood heavy feeding for nearly 19 years, and today her udder and teats are in as perfect condition as when she was a heifer. As Jong as you are able to milk it out don’t be afraid to put the feed into a dairy ®0w. — Whey Calves and Other Calves. For a number of years we raised 10 to 25 calves every year. We sold our milk to the cheese factory and had our whey back. This problem of ruising good calves on whey was a serious one. We always started our calves on new milk till they were 8 or 4 weeks old, then gradually diminished the mi!k and added a little whey, and at the end of a week the whey would be substituted for the milk and no bad results from the change, as is often the case when the change is made abruptly. But to make up for the loss of the milk we boiled a kettleful of old process oilmeal, adding a little of this to each feed. They would thrive nicely on this till hot weather came on, when the whey would get too sour for calves. This dilemma confronted us several times. At last we decided the whey must go, and we adopted anew system, which proved a success. We made hay tea by taking au old washboiler and crowding it full of sweet clover hay, then pouring boiling water over it and covering up to steep. When the new milk was taken away from thera, at the age of 8 or 4 weeks, a little of this tea aud also a little of the cooked oilmeal was given each calf. By thinning with water the desired amount of drink was obtained. This was increased as they got older, and also a little bran added. At the start the quantity of oilmeal t« be used is at the rate of two table- spoonfuls to each calf. At the age of 3 months the hay tea may be Ginitted, us the calves will then be old enough to eat plenty of grass, but they shouid be on good pasture. The cooked oilme be given them all suin it as a drink with water. It should ne measured, not guessed at, anc each one fed in a pail sepsrately. We wish t' emphasize the word ‘‘cocked, ’’ for if fe«d in its raw state it is liable to scour the calves, while if cooked it will not, hence very important. ‘his hay afte? being steeped is not altogether wasted, for burses and cattle will eat it more greedily than in its ary state, though it is true much of its strength is exbaust- ed. —Exchange. Tend bran shoud mer by thisnifg Question and Answer, If I skim with separator a pound of cream from each 6 pounds of milk that tested 4 per cent butter fat, what per cent of fat should the cream show in Babcock test? Why should it not show six tismes 4 per cent, or 24 per cent? Answer.—It shouid, barring the inev- itable loss, and this is frequently larger than issupposed. A separator needs con- stant watching, just like any other high speeded machine. The loss in the skim- milk ought not to exceed one-tenth of 1 per cent, but is quite frequently more than twice that. In the case cited, if the s‘ixmmilk contained two-tenths of 1 per cent fat, the cream would not test quite 28 per cent. —Hoard’s Dairyman. Kooi] University. Montreal SESSLON 1897 95 The curriculam compris Arts, (including the Doxatpa SpEcrAL Course ror Women), AP?UIeED SCIENCE Mevicrye, Law, and VETERINARY ScrENCE Matriculation, Examination and Scholar- be held:—Arrts APPLIEP Serr es course in ship Examination will Mepicixe, 1l5tH 16érn Sept.; Vererinary Sciencr, 22xp Sept. se Copies of the Calendar containing information, may be obtaiaed on applica- on to the Secretary. Sept.; Law, Tra AND SCIENCE, } PRIMITIVE MAN, Me May Have Been Evolwed © American Continent. pon the it the Connecticut river valley reptiles left their tracks on the mud flats burns red to sandstone—and ~an have been found. Tho bodics « f @ race Of *reat reptiles that were the lords of creation of their day have been dissipated to their elements, while the chance inden- tations of their feet as they raced along the shores, mere footprints on the sands, hs Ive been preserved among the mest in rperi -SBI ECA } ¢ ’ a few sixcletons able of the memory tablets of the wor a. Of the other vertebrate fossils that have been found in the eastern portions of Aierica, among the most abwedeant and interesting are the skeletons of mastodons, Of these one of the largest and most com- plete is that which was unearthed in the bed of a drained lake near Newburg, N. Y., im 1845. This spectmen was larger than the existing elephants, and had caaie 11 feet in length. Itwas mounted and da- ecribed by Dr. John C. Warren of Loston, and has been famous for half a century As the ‘Warren suastodon,”’ But to the student of racis! davelanment ws reeotded by the fossils all these spora ic finds have but incidental interest ag eompared with the rich western fossil beds to which we have already referred. From records here unearthed the racial evolutiog of many mammals has in the past few years been made out in greater or less de- tail. Professor Cope has traced the an- cestry of the camels { Yike the rhi- noceroses, hippopotemuses and sundry other forms now spoken of as ‘‘old world,”’ seem to have had their origin here) with snuch completeness, A Jemuroid form of mammal, belleved to be of the type from which man has de- ascended, has also been found in these beds. It is thought that the descendants of this creature and of the other ‘‘old world’’ forms above referred to found their way to Asia probably, as suggested by Profess- or Marsh, across a bridge at Bering strait, te continue their evolution on the other hemisphere, becoming extinct in the land of their nativity. The ape man found fossil in the tertiary strata of the island of Java two years ago by the Dutch surgeon, Dr. Eugene Dubois, and named Pithecanthro- pus erectus, may have been a direct de- secendant of the American tribe of primi- tive lemurs, though this is only a conjec- ture.—Henry Smith Williams, M. D., in Harper's hiaguzise. e sporad- which, PPBSESOEEOESSE Se 5° GENERATIONS HAVE USED “BABY’S OWN SOAP" AND ITS SALE IS STEADILY INCREASING. Have you tried it? bs 26 2s | PEVSIGTSSS STS NITTISISTSSSSISSSHIS SS SHIH IFT OOO SH The Albert Toilet Soap Ce., Mfrs. Montreal. ROSLSS OLEH PLELTESTOL CL ELE PELL PL | SRROLSLPHSRPHSESOEHS HS SPSS SPS eeeeerre™ eres rey) ower Established is72. Chitown Business College WRITING ACADEMY. ** Let no man enter into business while he is ignorant. of the manner of regulating books.’’—J OH NSON. PHE 24th Annual Term of the above insti- Institution opens on MONDAY, AUG 23rd inst. Intending Stuaents can enter at any time ducing the term. Noentrance ex- amination required. Alt Commercial Sub- jects necessary to a thoreugh business educa- liom are taught by a staff of competent and experienced teachers. Class and individual instruction given. The regular course of lectures by business and professional men, will commence in October and continue throughout the term. For purticutars ct course, ¢.rculars, testimonials, terms and app lication forms apply to L. B. MILLER Brown’s Bloc Principal yr. O. BOs su Ch,town, P. E. 1. Aug 12. pain LINE. nt i were a : SSS es -: Fa =< J ‘ ‘ES. B, ~ a = eS &S. Polino is due here from Mont- real Monday, 23rd inst. and sails for St. Johu’s, Nfla., via Sydney and North Sydney, carrying live stock on deck and produce under deck at lowest rates. For farther iuformation apply to N. RATTENBURY. Agent. | | | W. C. PITFIELD, WHAT WOMEN WEAR. Amoug the popnler belt buckles are those of oxidized silver with jewels. Veils to be fashionable must be plain, the simple length of soft Brussels net being oue of the most approved. A corn colored hat with black lace trimming is pretty, also the same color- ed hat with a very full wreath of blue corn flowers. Skirts are very full at the back and are gathered over cords and drawn close- iv, so that the back shows a pointed de- sign of one cord above another. Artificial flowers are extravagantly bexutiful. They are exceedingly natural and very rich locking, and if one buys good ones they last a long time. Novelty bats are shown in braids of every bnaginable color. Red is exceed- ingly popular and when trimmed with # profusion of soft black lace or chiffon one of the most stylish of the mil- liner’s creations. The surplice front is gaining in favor, and when carefully adjusted is becom- ing to almost all figures. For stout ladies it seems to reduce the bulk, while for slender ones it can be left slightly loose and is very pretty and graceful. The decline of the shoulder cape is said to be assured. How true this may be one can scarcely state authoritatively, but from all appearances this form of garment is too useful and has made too many friends to be given up very soon. Soft belts of silk or velvet are used, and to these some of the rich buckles are fastened. One of the novelties is a belt of yellow velvet with three very elegant cut jet buckles, oue in front and one on either side. At the back there isa large rosette bow of leather. From “=> HOWARD ‘Loronto Conservatory of Music. The Bell Organ & Piano Co.,L’d Dear Sis,—Allow me to compli- ment you on the qualites of the Piano ordered from you for the To- ronto Conservatory of Music. The tone is remarkably pure and brilliant throughout, while the bass is deep and powerful. The mechanism is appar- ently perfect. the touch elastic, and in appearance the entire Piano is a work of art Yours truly, (Signed) Epwarp Fisner Musca] Director Toronto Conser- vatory of ‘Music P. E. Island Agency, LP. Feller Opera House Building J.C. P. Yeo, Agent at Summerside. ANADA’S 7 INTERNATIONAL appetites T. JOHN, N. B. th 24th Sept 1897 OVER $12.0 000 IN PRIZES For Live Stock, Farm & Dairy Product Competition open to the world. Very Cheap Excursion Rates on ail Rail- ways and steamers. ttates and dates an- nounced later. Special Arrangements are made for the Cheap transport of Exnibits. — ‘ A splendia new Poultry Building is in course of erection, ana Amusement Hall will be enlarged and improved, In addition to Industrial, Agricultural and Live Stock Exhibits, six nights of Hand & CO’s Magniticent Fire Works and an hourly programme of Special High Class Dramatic Effect, will be given in Amuse- ment Hall, making together the best and cleanest special attraction ever brought .efore the people of the Maritime Provinces. A trip to the Sea Shore, a visit to Canada’s Wirter Port, and astay in the cleanest and healthiest city in Canada, can be combined with a visit to the I: ternational Exhibition at the very Low Rates tobe Jater advertised, Arrange Now to Come to St. John. Entry Forms will be forwardel to evep)j ne whv applies persoaaily or ,by letter to CHAS. A. EVERETT, Manager and Secretary. ST, JOHN, N. B. President wy tf In Oxford and Tan, Just the thing for this hot we ther. GORE BROS. HICH CRADE O8S4 698 fF 60630000 Landing te-day ex Steamer “Irene Morris,”,direct from Liverpool,. kn SUPERPHOSPHATES, NITFATE OF SOD§, MURIATE OF POTASH, BOWE MEAL, ETC. All genuine, and of guaranteed analysis. The only reliable, best, and at least 20 per cent the cheapest fertilizer on the market. AULD BROS. ST SZ SANZ NLS ANCES 2 Signe @hs Tighe sighs 1@Ne® © ef@e of@ re UONT FORGE That we are the only firm in-Charlettetown selling American BARS WIRE = and that we are headquarters for FARIS CREEN FEN NEL & CHANDLER shook: DRO OR ORRIN OS 4,. ROSS Paris Green Paris Green Hereere ETT NT TNPE NT? Berger's and Fergusson Alexander’s, W& WARRANT EVERY POUND WE SELL WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DODD & ROGERS alute the Colors. We make it comfortable for our patrons py seliiag them cheerful shoes. Ourr are that kind. Snug, trim looking attractive shapes .that are liked immensely as our sales show. Men's Lines of Colored Shocs for Summer wear Oxfords are marve's of beauty and good vale, Misses’ and Men’s Bicycle Shoes, a complete assortment of af Low prices. Our Ladies, Childrei’s in = styles. etaple lines, reat variety. Weelzs & Warren uanyéide Skoe Store.