a ; Daily Examiner Bx AF TERNCON FROM THE OFFIC@e F The Examiner Publishing Company RATES OF SUBSCKIPTION (IN ADVANCE) @ne Year --» - 84.08 | puol Six W she 2.06 Three ‘lonths 5.08 | One Minth -eees s ina Q.35 \ - post paid to any part of Canada or th Unit« es THE WEEKLY EXAMINER ; | issues very Friday morning. It is made up } : . ; | of u which has appeared in the Daily | and ‘ « firstclasss newspaper containing i &@lith at news, Subscription $1.00 a year | DAILY EXAMINER | ce OCTOBER I, 1897. DAIRY PRODUCE. (Montreal Gazette, Tuesday.) There is no sign of any improvement in tle cheese market, and, so far as the bulk of the stock in the country is considered, it is « stand-off between buyers and sellers. Which party will make the first move only the future will decide. At present, with large stocks in view, the tone is unmistak ably easy, and cheese can be bought on spot for less money than a week ago. TLis vas proved by transactious in Onterio mak: *,chietly Augusts at 94c,which did not pet the seller any money. At the wharf also this morning 3,000 Quebec makes sold at Glo end 94c, the great bulk at the inside figure, so that as regaris these cheese prices are tc lower than they were last Monday. The public cable is unchanged at 45s, bat private advices give reduced limits. C. Cc. Finest Oniario cheese. ......-.---.9} to 93 Fivest Townships cheese. ....... 93 to 00 Finest Quebec cheese.............-9$ 10 9} Butter rules quiet, with a heavy tone. Factorymen, as arule, are still holding their September creamery for full figures, but exporters will not give anytbing like tke prices asked. The most theta seller could realize today on # full line of goods would be 19}c, and they would bave to be something fancy. There is quite a de- mand for western dairy at present, and shiprers are buyers at 13}c to l4c. Liver- poo! cable quotes finest unchanged at 9s, with good, 60s. c. c. Finest creamery....c.cceressereeess- 19 to 195 RN Riss acp onreteeess 00 046-0 Oe WE SUN Dairy outter .......-.0-0+ err Andrew Clement & Son, Manchester, Septen ber 17th, 1897, report: *“Butter— account of the verv low prices now raling for }»anizh, Swedish and {rish butters, we have hadaquiet time in Canadian avd American * holders, tuerefore, have been content to look on, as it would only have made matters worse had American and Canadian been cut to the some extent. In the course of the next ten days things will bave come around again, and we will have avother three weeks’ good market. So long as we get the very finest quality at aprice to enable retailers to cut up at Is per pound, we will have a healthy den and. Unfortunately, a good deal of State- butter falls short of this standard, and 11 is diffien|t to know how to place it at anything like its relative value. Choicest Danish average 110s, less four month’s discount; choicest Irish creameries, 102s, do; ordinary finest sold at irregular prices; Canadian and States boxes are held for 96s to 98s Liverpool. “Cheese—Quotations keep creeping up, and no one seems to understand the reason — erence ——————— $$$ L——$——— Do You Use lit LNA WA eh OS™ It’s the best thing for the hair under all circumstances. Just as no man by taking thought can add an inch tu his stature, so no preparation can make hair. The utmost that can be done is to pro- mote conditions favorable to growth. This is done by Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It re- moves dandruff, cleanses the scalp, nourishes the soil in which the hair grows, and, just as a desert will blossom under rain, so bald heads grow hair, when the roots are nour- ished. But the roots must be there. If you wish your hair to retain its normal color, or if you wish to restore the lost tint of gray or faded hair use | Ayer’s Hair Vigor. THR DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 1, 1897 why trade is only of a moderate character, the labor disputes making buyers hold back There may be a further advance, but it ill certainly mean a dragging trade race ifthere is. Finest white or colored 46°. A few of this week’s landing are held for 47s.” Es tt amma — - BRITISH PR¥E-EMINENCE, The average Britisher has come to the conclusion that heis the arbiter of the fate oi Kurope, and holds the balance of power, It must be coufe-sed that the changed tone ct the Continental pol'ti- cians and newspaper writers from abuse to ecaressess encourages this assumption. Even Prince Bismarck recently deprecat- ed the constant badgering and _ baiting of Great Britain by German statesmen and writers. As matters stand, in the event of war, the side securing the assistance of Great Britain must wih. in the meanwhile, itis evident from the tenor of the speechot Wolseley at Glasgow on Thursday Jast,when the freedom of conferred upon him, and that cily was from tl made by the Pariia- remarks | mentary Secretary for the War Office, the W.St. J. Broderick, the same night, Don. | that the Government is preparing to intro, duce a scheme for a considerable increase in the strength of the army, which will probably call for the formation of a dozen additional battalious of infantry and «a proportionate addition of cavalry and artillery, during the next sessicn of Parliament. The warnings have not been sounded too socn. A telling in- stance of the military weakuess of Freat Britain was aitorded at Aldershot on Thursday, when the 2nd Battalion of the Rifle Brigade left that camp for a tour of colonial service, including a sojourn at Vancouver. Tbough pnomiva'ly a tull battalion, there were only slightly more than 400 men,and the detachment will bave to be reinforced from the lst Batta- lion of the Rifle Brigade, wich is now on its way. Scrofula Cured ‘* When three months old my boy was troubled with scrofula. There were sore places on his hands and body as large as & man’s hand, and sometimes the blood wouldrun. We began giving him Hood’s Sarsaparilla and it soon took effect. When he had taken three bottles he was cured.” W. H. GARNER, West Earl, Penneylvania, a oods Sarsa- parilla Is the Best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Hood’s Pills cure Sick Headache. 25c. GASPEREAUX Potato digging is engaging the attention ofthe farmers in this section of the country. Our school is progressing favorably under the efficient management of Mr. Archie C. McMillan who is acareful and painstaking teacher. The almost total failure of the mackerel fishing here will be quite a lose to fisher- men and others engaged in the business. Our genial and enterprising merchant, Mr. Henry Dunn, is doing a rushing busi- ness. He has lately completed a fine building to be used as a staole aud coach house. Extensive repairs have been made in the Roman Catholic Cemetery. Mr. A. J Donnelly, of this place, left last week for Montreal, where he will re- sume his studies at the McGill Medical College. Mr. Micheel Mahar, Sturgeon, has late- ly purchased a tine mare from Mr. William H Prowse, Murray Harbor. Mr. Josenh McDonald, Panmure Islaod is busily engaged hauling lumber for a pew dwelliny house which he intends to erect in the oear future. Gaspereaux, Sept. 27th, 1897, NOTES. R. K. “My Own Notes.” I have made in a number of years of ardent collection quite a library of my own notes, and the fact that I have al- ready lived two-thirds of my probable tether of life and am a ‘‘buccaneer’’ of the newspaper world by stress of cir- cumstances sometimes gives me # pang. I recognize the ludicronsness of my col- lection for an impossible future of com- fort and leisure, for even one possible posthumous work. I have never had leisure to produce one whole or com- plete piece of literature and probably never shall have a day’s leisure in my life, but this irony of fate does not de- ter me. I am like a collector of specimens of butterflies. He will never learn to fly, or the secret of it, or anything’ in par- ticular, but he goes on collecting. I shall never write the books of the sketch skeletons in my imagination, but I shall certainly continue to make end- less preparations for a posthumcus li- brary of, according to my schemes and plots and themes, some 1,000 sturdy volumes. The world of readers may thank God perhaps that these books will not ap- pear in print, but I am jast mad enough to get some zest in life out of making, in imagination, these schemes for books that can never be written. Perhaps it is as sane an occupation as old china collecting, stamp collecting, button collecting and, te jump to the extreme of Philistinism, the collection of dubious old masters, mostly daubs. I confess this speculation seems to me to be a fadnowiser. Looking a% it from my point of view, as a book lover, I think what a library these daubs would buy. —Lotus. Another lot of new jackets opened tovey, at Paton’s, A cure For Snake Poisoning. It is very noteworthy ‘hat many na- tions, races and castes lovwest in civiliza- tion have for a lorg time protected them- selves against poisoning from spake bites by a method which never until the present time, the twentieth century, has been dis- covered by European scientists. The races of Psyller in Africa, Morser in Italy and Guner in India, ago possessed a means to insure themselves against poison - ing from snake bites, and today there are people whoare not harmed by snake poi- son, if we may believe the descriptions of travelers. Such aro the negroes on the Guinea coasts, the race of Eisower in Bar- bary, some fakirs and snake charmers in India, the inbabitants of Mozambique and some Kaffirs in South Africa. The means used by all these peoples to secure immu- nity from snake venom consists in taking as medicine the venom, either fresh or dried, from the venom giands of snakes. The majority eat the venom, but in Mo- zambique same result is gained by in- oculating with it. That these peoples real- ly do make themselves proof against snake bites in this way seems to be sure beyond a doubt. Although this method was made known long ago in Europe by travelers, nobody seemed to take any notice of it until the experiments of Pasteur and his school had demonstrated the possibility of utilizing it. ‘hen scholars began to study the effects on animals of feeding snake venom and of inoculating with it and to convert into scientific capital the avowals of these fakirs.—Robert von Lenderfeld in Chau- tauqusn. aces ages the French Sentiment. The French parricide who slew his fa- ther and mother and was asked, upon con- demnation, what he had to say and why sen- tence should not be pronounced upon him, entreated the court to have mercy upon a poor orphan. This tale is green with the mess of ages and may not be true, but something like it is true of a woman named Marie Celvet, recently sentenced by a Paris tribunal to 20 years’ imprisonment at hard labor for the murder of her sister. While in court she constantly wore a long erape veil. '‘Why do your wear this veil?’’ asked one of the officials, to which she re- plied that she was in mourning for her sis- ter, showing an affectionate sensibility, the earlier exhibition of which, however, would have been more becoming to her qven than the garment.—New York Trib- une. Curious Coincidences. A Viennese journal, the Neues Wiener Tageblatt, calls attention to the curious fact that when the Ring theater, in Vienna, was burned, with great loss of life, one of fhe other playhouses of the Austrian capi- tal was playing Pailleron’s ‘‘Le Monde ou l'on S’Ennuie;’’ that when the Stadt thea- ter, in Vienna, was burned another theater in the city was playing ‘‘Le Monde ou I’on S'Kanuie,’’ and that on the evening of the day when the fire in the charity bazaar in Paris took place the Theatre Francais was announced to play ‘‘Le Monde ou I’on §’Ennuie."’ Excused. “You wish to be reMeved from jury duty,’’ said a judge quoted by The Green Bag, ‘‘but you haven't given a good rea- son.’’ ‘‘Itis to save money for the people,”’ replied the unwilling talesman. ‘‘I have dyspepsia, judge, and [ never agree with anybody. If 1 goon this jury, there will be a disagreement, and the county will have to go to the expense of a new trial.’”’ ‘*Excused,’’ said the judge. Mica when reduced iv a powder form Is now used asa lubricant for high speed mackinery. It keeps the bearings free from dast and resists cold anc dampness. Every woman should realize that her health is like a bank account. At the out- set she has so much deposited to her credit in the bank of health. If she draws out more than she puts in she will soon over- draw her account. _An over-drawn account in the bank @f health means one of two things, a life of hopeless suffering or an early death. The woman who neglects her health in a womanly way is making big drafts on her account with the bank of health and will soon be a physical bankrupt. Disorders of this description wreck a woman’s general health quicker than anything else in the world. They soon transform a healthy, happy, amiable woman into a weak, sickly, fretful and despondent invalid. They ut- terly unfit a woman for wifehood or mother- hood. For all disorders of this nature Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the best of all medicines. It acts directly on the delicate and important organs concerned in maternity, giving them health, strength, vigor and elasticity. It relieves pain, allays inflammation, checks debilitating drains, and quickly subdues all other symp- toms, It at once stops the dragging pains and sinking spells, the nervousness, the digestive disturbances and other complica- tions that arise from the same cause. Taken during the months of expectant maternity, it banishes the usual discomforts and makes baby’s advent easy and almost pain- less. It insures the new-comer’s health and a plentiful supply of sourishment. Thousands of women have testified to its marvelous merits. An honest dealer will not suggest an inferior substitute for the sake of extra profit. ? BETH Teeth Extracted Skiilully. No Fictitious Method, inate use Cocaine, Eiects. No Indiscrim- No Injurious After BR. J. F MURRSIY, 145 Qveen Street. Broke the Spell. Upto the time of Cleveland's election it was a popular superstition with poli- ticians that no candidate whose name began with the letter C could be elected to the presidency. The idea arose from the fact that no man whose surname presented this peculiarity, no matter how strong he was with the people, had ever been successful at the polls. There were two Clintons, George and DeWitt, William H. Crawford, Henry Clay, Lewis Cass and a number of others, who, though their prospects seemed bright indeed, met with a defeat when it came to the test. Several of the C’s, George Clinton and Henry Clay, for in- stance, were strong candidates several times, but never could ‘‘make the rifte.’’—Pittsburg Dispatch. Sections of a Kentucky Pedigree. Bob Jolly of Cave City has a hand- gaw purchased in 1796 in Virginia. It was bought in that year by the grand- father of the Otter brothers, the well xnown Lonisville merchants, who are po spring chickens at this writing themselves. Mr. Otter, the grandfather, shortly after moved to Kentucky and brought the saw with him. Mr. Jolly has owned the saw for 43 years. The rear wheels of the wagon in which Mr. Otter made his trip to Kentucky from Virginia are still to be seen on the place of Mrs. Caleb Freeman in the Cave City country. These are about 100 years old. —Glasgow Times. « a2 4 SICK HEADAGHE Positively cured by these They aiso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, {Indigestion and Too Mlearty Eating. A per- fect remeay for Dizziness, Nausea, Dr wsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Smail Pill. Small Bose. ‘ _ Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand carter's Little Liver Pills. DR CLIFT treats Chronic Diseases by the Salisbury method of persistent seif-help in overcom- ing past errors and Removing causes from the blood. Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma, Shortness of Breath, Pleurisy, Tuberculosis Consumption of Lungs or Bowels, Indiges- tion, Dyspepsia, Gasiritis, Ulcer, Cancer, Dropsy, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Constipa- tion, Piles, Fissures, Fistula. Diseases of Heart— Valvular, Fatty Enlargement, Palpitation. Of Liver—Jaundice, Diabetes Cirrhosis, etc. Of Kidneys—Albuminuria Bright’s Disease, etc. Of Spleen and Bladder—Cystitis. Of the Blood—Anae- mia, Chlorosis, Scrofula, Malaria, Rheu- matism, Gout, SciaticaScurvy, Purpura. OfFe male Organs—Inflammations and Displace ments of Womb, Ovaries, Bladder or Bow- els. Menstrual irregularities of Sexual Organs. Of Nerves andSpine,—Nervous Prostration, Sleeplessness. Decline, Hy- steria, Tremors, St. Vitus’ Dance, Chorea, Epilepsy, Convulsions, Paralysis, Loco- - motor Ataxia. Paralysis, Agitans, Soften ing of Brain, Some forms of Insanity Dementia, Mania, Hypochondria, Melan- chulia. Failure of Vision and Voice, 1. ness. Of Skin— Eczema, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Syphilis. Tumors, Giandular Fatty, Fibroid, Uterine, Ovarian and C:n cer, Goitre, Cretinism, Obesity, Corpul- ency. Drug and Liquor Habits—Opium, Mor»hine, Chloral, Cocaine, Tobacco, Stimulants. Of Bones and Joints—De- formities, Curvatures, and Pott’s Disease of Spine, Paralysis, Hip Disease, Knock- knee, Bow Legs, Club and Flat Foot, Wry Neck, Rickets Scrofula, Sore Legs, Var- icose Ulcers, etc. Continuous intelli’ gent treatment insures Minimum of suffer- ing and Maximum of Cure,possible in each case. Avoid attempts unaided or under blind leaders. DR. CLIFT Graduate of N Y University ard the W Y Hospital. 20 years’ practice in N Y City. Diploma registered in U S and Canada, Address :—Charlottetown, P. E. I. Office :—Victoria Row. Telephone Call. Accommodations Reserved for patents References on application. 94—d&w lyr, | Buy your tickets for Boston by the | fast Steamer Halifax. W.W. CLARK, Ticket Agent OHARLOTTETOWN | riect... Wood Furnace ¢+ -OUR.¥. “FAMOUS MASHET” ~ Made in 8 sizes, using 2 a feet wood. Will heat ete 100,00@ cubic feet, Heavy fire-box with corrugations, increasing the heating surface. Extra large firin » door and ash pit. ; Heavy steel flues with east heals that will expand without crackin Bolts on outside away from nian of the fire, Instant direct or indirect draft, las Firing, regulating and cleaning all done from th front. . Dampers cen be operated = from rooms 2love. Made for brick or galvanized casings, You Can keep your house warm from cellar to garret and = Do it Cheapiy. a HIGHEST TESTIMONIALS FROM ALL DEALERS ANO Users. ® in e Mi cCla ry Mfg. | Co., LONDON, MONTREAL, TORONTO, Mm —_ 20 WINNIPEG and VANCOUVER, If your local dezler cannot supply, writes our nearest house, CVBEOVTIGOTSEEBOOOOOS What a hutn there would be onthe streets about the wonderful way in which uickheal -- cures Scratches, Galls and Sores. Every man who owns a horse should try it. SOLD ZYERY WHERE May.Do ‘For SOME PEOPLE You Can Rely on Good Work at our tailoring establishment. Not one stitch put in a garment by an apprentice, or an unexperienced hand. We employ none of that kind. We could easily boast of 50 workmen if we did. We are bound to hold the reputation we have made as high-class tailors. AB 2222s MeKay Woolen Co., High Grade Tailors. ee aD = ees Yes We Want your Help We'll pay yon well ‘or it, we want a lift toward getting quick room. That’s what the present prices means, we want you to help us to move this stock of FURNITURE. Old friends will, once they know what’s on here. Parlour and Bedrooin Suits, marked low to make room “We Furnish Homes.” JOHN NEWSON. Newson Block, Victoria Row 7 ert Ln, imate Scie NEMS Gy OM NE erage bh. BPE ia bi > aia eR AMS.