#, or ot nite signe ileal sai e pti tn le A tes, gs - 2 Se 7 Medlin ye ae @ pon the site were cut down and “junked The Dail Examine FROM THE OFFIC®@ oF The Examiner Publishing Company RATES OF STBSCRIPTION (iN ADVANCE One Year ... 4.00 Six Months... 2.00 Three Wonths 1.00 @ue Month...... O35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the U aited States THE WEEKLY EXAMINER sesued every Friday morning. It is made up h has the Daily asss newspaper containing Subseription $1.00 a year ef matier whi appe aired in and isa a first< all the latest news THE DAILY EXAMINER DECEMBER 29, 1897. CLD TIMES IN P. E- ISLAND Now that the evenings are long and the have this davs short, many of our farmers leisure to talk about eld times. Ia congenial occupation they may, perhaps, be assisted by reading the following sug- gestive paragraphs from P. E. Isiand, Li- lustrated. The pioneers of Prince Ejiward Island multiplied. There were no cover d carriages in those days. There were no | wheeled vehicles of any kin 1. But when settled upon lease—holdivg¢ in the midst of the woods. Those who were particular concerning the location of their farm- steadings were accustomed to climb te the | top of a tall tree, and eurvey the scene as best they could. The site having been selected, they proceeded, axe in band, to put up a house. To this end the trees up” into logs of equal lengths. Thbeend of each log was then notched and beveled to fit, in a rough way, atthe four corners. As soon as a sufficiently large spot of earth had been cleared, anda sufficient number logs had been thus prepared, the four walls were raised, log upon log, to the height of ao tall mav, Then the rough framework of a gabled roof was erected. Light poles were attached to this, and these were covered with a thatch of birch: bark’ Atone end of the structure a wide fire-place of sandstone or mud was placed, and this was surmounted by an ample chimney, composed of mud acd sticks. Usually the chimney wae built on the-ontside of the stracture, and carried up beyond the apex of the roof. It was traversed inits midst by a green hardwood stick, and to this stick was attached a chain,oran iron heok, from which the pots and kettles were suspended over the fire, The chinks ia the wall having been tilled with moes, tie house was considered ready for habitation, and the well-pleased pioneer family moved in. By degrees—as the settlers found oppor- | tusity—a floor of logs, flattened on the upper side, was laid and a loft was made uaderthe root, by covering the beams between the rafters In rare cases, too, when absolutely necessary, a rude parti- tron was put up. Meanwhile the sound of the woodman’s axe was heard from early moro till dewy eve. Soon there wae a clearing /arge enough for the first patch of potatoes. The seed, brought in with difficulty from the near- est port, often upon the settler’s back, was placed on the top of the burnt land, among the stumps, and covered with earth by meansota hoe. Then, if the searon were not too far advanced another bit of the forest was cut down, burnt off, and sown with wheat or oate, which was’ alse covered with aboe. The logs and bran- ches of the trees, cut dowu and remaining unburned, were rolied or carried to the outskirts of the clearing, and formed a tufficient fence ali around it. While the firstcrop was growing, our pioneer farmer continued his attack upon the forest, happy if his heavy and continu ous labors were cheered by the smiles, and his food well prepared by the loving hands, of a pioneer wife. With his gan, fishing rod,and scoop net, he had usually | not much dffiiculty in stocking the fimily larder from time to time,—for geme and fish were plentiful. Butthere are on re- cord some cases of keen privation and of Providertial evcapes from starvation. At the end of the short summer, the first little bountiful crop of wheat was cut with the primitive reaping hook, and the first potatoes dug with ahoe. Excelient mealy potatoes they invariably were; and the wheat, ground by hand, between two stones, and properly baked in the ashes on the hearth, furnished bread‘f good quality, Te labors of our pioneers .durivg win- ter were as toilsome as those of summer, Timber was needed for the ships in course of construction on the banks of convenient harbors and riveis,as well as to furnish freight for the ships that sailed away to the English market. Lumber was re- quired for the construction of a neighbor PRESENTS = ing mill; or to be sawn at the pits for use io the erection of houses for the Gover - ment Officials and the men in trade, + ho| Nov. 29 15 wk td : came with money in their pockets. supply of these wants furnished ample employment throughout the months of frost and enow; and the land was, st the same time, relieved of its burden of forest. By the return of spring our ploneer settlers had, in this way, earned enough to purchase besides the necessary supply of tea, tobaceo, and rum, a cow or, perhaps, for added to a horse or apairof oxen; and, the shelter of these, a log barn was the farm steading. Then the work of cutting down and clearing away the woods was continued avd was not infrequen‘ly accompanied by fires, Year after year, the great forest seed, 1n wheat and oats, barley and pot- ‘ } lig atoes, and a iit ever-widen tle flax, was committed to the ing area, brought by | continuous labor under the dominion of | the hoe, and year after yesr the fertile soil | vielded tothe slow reapingshook aud hoe the grain and potatoes required for the sustenance of those by whom it was tilled With equal pace the pioneer’s family and hia stock of few sheep and pigs were added, increased and cattle, to which a the pionrer farmer had to goto the town oz the mill, he took two long, strong, light poles, attached them as shafts, on either the straw horse, or the wooden voke of his ox or heifer» fastened the hind ends together by means of a hardwood stick anda couple of hard. attached a small platiorm, side, to collar of his wood pins, placed upon this his bag of grain or other product, and proceeded along the path marked by blazed trees, to the nearest shipyard or other centre of trade. @+6+e ->-e Mr. Davies, of London, Eng., who is now on his way to the Klondike with seventy Flemish draught dogs, was in Ottawa recently and laid certain proposals as to the getting of supplies into the Yukon dis trict before Hon. Clifford Sifton. Mr. Davies’ dog train outfit ‘appears to be ‘the best available at the present time. The dogs are in good condition, and e- pecialiy trained for draught purposes, some of them being able to draw half a ton. Mr. Davies, who returned to Mont- real last evening, intends going to Dyea and thence into the Yukon. Speaking to the Star correspondent, he eaid, “The United States are making gigantic efforts to enable people to enter the Klondike district, and if Canada does not wish to be left behind in the race she mast make efforts alro. My propoza!s to the Minister are in this connection, but as long as he has my scheme under consideration 1 do pot feel at liberty to make it public.” Should be in every family ee v iT invaluable when the stomach S medicine chest and every is out of order; cure headache, biliousness, and traveller’s grip. They are ali liver troubles. Mild and efficient. 2 cents. FOR THE PRESENT AND FUTURE if YOU want to present your friend with something that will last, come and see our large assort- ment of gold and silver goods, suit- able for Holiday or Birthday gifts. BW. TAYLOR CAMERON BLOCK, CHARLOTTETOWN. DIVIDEND NOTICE Mer-hants Bank of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown Nov. 29th 1897, Notice is hereby given, that a half yearly dividend, at the rate of 8 per cent per annum on the capital stock of this Bank has been declared payable at its a House, on and after January 3rd, 898. Transfer book wil] be closed from December 20th I897, tothe 3rd of Jan- uary 1898, both dates inclusive. By order of the Board, J.M. DAVISON, The ! Cashier. Instinct afd Knowledge In Animals, A cat carried 100 miles in a basket, © fog taken perhaps 500 miles by rail, in a few days way have found their way back to the startiag point. So we have often been told, and no doubt the thing has happened. We have been astonished a the wonderful intelligence displayed, Magic, I should call it. Last week [ heard of a captain who sailed from Ab- erdeen to Arbroath. He left behind him a dog which, according to the story, had | never been in Arbroath, but when he ar- rived there the dog was waiting on tho quay. I was expécted to believe that the dog had known his master’s destina- tion and been able to inquire the way »verland to Arbroath. Truly marvelous! But really it is time to inquire more care- fully as to what these stories do mean. We must cease to ascribe our intelligence to animals and learn that it is we that often possess their instinct. A cat on a farm will wander many miles in search of prey and will there- fore be well acquainted with the coun- try for miles around. It is taken 50 miles away. Again it wanders and comes across a bit of country it knew before. What more natural than that it should ro toits old home? Carrier pigeons are taught “homing” by taking them gradu- ally longer flights from home, so that they may learn the look of the country. We cannot always discover that a dog actually wus acquainted with the route by which it wanders home, but it is quite absurd to imagine, as most people at once do, that it was a perfect stranger to the lay of the land.—A. J. Mackintosh in London Spectator. Trees In French Cittes. One of the chief beauties of the larger French cities and second only to their edifices and monuments are the trees. The almost interminable vistas of chest- nuts and acacias stretching along thé broad and well paved avenues as‘far as the eye can reach, their bending branches almost touching one another in an end- less arch of verdure, form not only a Jelightful perspective for the eye, but serve to add beauty to cities already beautiful and grace and symmetry to whatever might be harsh and forbid- ling. This, however, is not the result of na- ture’s handiwork alone, for science and art have lent their aid. The planting, as well as the maintenance of the trees in French cities, is an item of no little importance in the annual budget pre- pared by the municipal council, which joes not look upon their preservation as of less consequence than the repairing of the roadways or the lighting of the streets.—London Times. ‘ A Want. Wanted—A burglar who does not ‘‘ef- fect an entrance” and who does not “overturn a’ chair, waking the inmates, whose loud cries cause him to beat a Lasty retreat, making good his escape.” Apply to most any newspaper reporter, —Silver Outburst. 0OS6 0600604000 5900860 C008 . : s MONEY TO LEND $ ° eae ae e 20.0. JSORNSTON ¢ e Barrister at Law, > 3 Stamper Block, Charlottetown. : SOE VOGE OESOSC*ESOSESsOG*: OG€eSE ‘de ood Fine Display of PEANDS ORGANS AT FLETCHER’S Warerooms, Opera House Building, | How Plue Paper Was Discovered. It was by the purest accident that the simple process of tinting white paper wus discovered. It was the result of sheer carelessness in a woman, The wife of an English paper maker named Wil- liam East, accidentally dropped the *‘blue- bag,” a small bag full of bluing with which she was about to blue her washing, into a vat of pulp, where it lay long enough to give the entire mass a bluish tinge before, to her consternation, she re- covered it. So terrified was she at the result of her gross carelessness and its disastrous result that she dared not men- tion the fact to her husband, whose dis- may at whet he considered the discolora- tion and destruction of the entire lot of paper made from the mass was his worry for months, He considered the paper spoiled and an entire loss, but suffered it to remain in an out of the way place as unsalable stock for four years, when, in order to get it out of the way and to make room for better stock, he sent it to his agent in London, asking him to get rid of it at any price. To the paper maker's utter surprise, in a short time he received from his agent an order for a great quantity of the bluish paper and found upon in- quiry concerning the sanity of the agent that the bluish paver being a novelty had taken wonderfully with the public. But East was in a dilemma, for he had no idea as to how to give the blue tinge to the paper ordered by his agent and wearily tried without result for many days and nights. Mentioning his trouble to his wife one day she admitted her carelessness and told of the way in which the pulp hap- ned to become spoiled by the bag of bluing. The paper maker was overjoyed at the revelation, found it an easy task to give the tinge to his white paper and until the time of his death, which oc- curred many years after, he was unable to supply the great demand for blue pa per, so acceptable and relieving to the eye of the writer.—Beston Herald. If men would only realize that ill-health robs them not only of life, but of their fortune as well, there would be fewer penni- less widows and orphans to drag out cheerless lives. When @ man holds a dol- lar close up to om his eyes, it shuts out the light of good judgment, and looks bigger than life or death, or wife or child. The facts are that ill-health very soon puts a stop to a man’s money-making powers and turns them into money-losing dis- abilities. When a man’s digestion is out of order end his liver sluggish, his brain gets dull, his muscles sluggish, his blood impure and every organ in the body—brain, lungs, heart, stomach, liver and kidneys—becomes crippled. A man with a eo lung, liver, heart, brain or kidney, is a worse cripple ten times over, than a ~uan who is minus a leg or an arm. The man who is crippled ontside may live a long life but the man who is cyippled inside is taking a short cut to the grave. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med- ical Discovery cures indigestion, makes the app¢ttite keen, the liver active, the blood pure, and every organ healthy and vigorous, It makes blood and builds flesh up to the healthy standard. Honest deaiers don’t recommend substitutes. ‘‘ I wish to say to those who suffer from kidn asd biadder trouble—‘akte Dr. R. V. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery,’’ writes Dr. Anderson, of Carthage, Jasper Co.. Mo. ‘A patient of mine savs it is worth $50 per bottie to any one who is afilictea as he was. Three bottles cured him en- tirelv. Perfectly miserabie he was, before taking the *@iscovery and now is one of the happiest men inthis County. Prof. Chreine would gladly sign! this if he were in town. He requested me to write a testimonial and make it as strong eas the Engtish language could make tt.” A $1.50 home doctor-book FREE. Fora paper-covered copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser send 31 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of customs and mail- ing on/y. Cloth binding 50 stamps. Ad- dress Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N: Y. PROFESSIONAL CARD McDONALD & INMWAN Attorneys at Law, Commissioners. etc OFFICE cas Cameron Block, Victoria Row J. A. McDonaLp. G. S. Inmax. Ch’town, dec7 —eod3mwlawaw. Oris, NOTICE JS HEREBY GIVEN tha an application will be made to the Parlia- ment of Canada at its next session vpon behalf of The Macufacturer’s Guarantee and Accident Insurance Company, for an Act to change the name of the said Com any to “The Guarantee and Accident In- eurance Company of Canada,” or such other name as the Parliament of Canada will permit, and the Directors may ap- prove of, and to ratify and confirm the By-law passed by the said Company pro- viding for the issue of Preference Shares in the said Company. Beatty, BLacksrock, Nessirr, Cuapwick & RippeL, Solicitors for the Applicants. Dated at Toronto, 4th November, 1897. 2 lb. tinsof English plum pndding for ale at Beer& Goff’s, £ PPP YTPTDDTPEPT PED EDTTPHND TT FED PERT TE PPE PEET: PFT ET I Topp t0nnennnvynereys nei nenapeneneniprnensineneninnerrsserneee: ages LONDON BOUSE Boy s Over- COAaAtS in 26 and 28 inch size, a lot we are clearing out. T. J. HARRIS A> UANAUUAAAUAULAAAASLALAAAASAULA4AAASAUUAAABU oultry Wante d 300 to 500 Turkeys, Geese Ducks, for which we will pay the highes} price, a CRANT & CO,, Queen Strect, Charlottetown eee) Examine Our Stock of all Wool _ Beaver Overcoating - All well made and first class trimmings. Prices Sid, SI6: S18 and up- Those in need ’of a winter overcoat, should call andi these wonderful values before purchasing: | MERCHANT ‘TATLORS. 200 Bicycles Wanted To be stored (free of charge) for the winter, and eles repaired, nickeled or enameled, thoroughly renewed, for spring. ENAMELING We use the highest grade Enamel (black or colors) money can buy in New York, and éa%e it on in a manners the most fastidiovs cannot criticize, and the cost is the as others charge for ordinary paint, See sample at shop. W P. DOULL, Kent She L CHEAP FOR SPOT CAy iz TONS BET QUALITY HAY BALE WIRE Cut 10} feet; gauge 14, at the CITY - HARDWARE - &TO! esesQUEEN STREET.... Pronounced best quality by all who have used it. R, B. NORT! e ‘ J. F. Norton Propvietor.