tm? i the Daly Exaniner ISSUED EVER AFTERNOO FROM THE OFFICE oF Me Examiner Publishing Company RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) @ne Year... fs bess .... 84.00 Six Months... ; sa 2.00 NE oo. cc conc dabtbedsed .. 1,00 | a * ocee SS Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the Cnited States. THE WEEKLY EXAMINER e@eued every Friday morning. It is made u of matter which has appeared in the Daily and ia a firstclasss newspaper containing all the latest news. Subscription $1.00 a year. THE DAILY EXAMINER JANUARY 27, 1898. SCIENTIFIC MISCELLANY. GLASS ETCHING FROM PRINTED DESIGNS— HOW TO SLICE MICROBES—A USE FOR SE- LENIUM—ACQUIRED HABITS OF WILD ANI- MALS—A RUST PREVENTING PAINS-——HU- MAN RUMINANTS — ACETYLENE AS A POWER PRODUCER —THE ZEBROID—THE LONGEST STEEL TAPE, A new method of etching on glass or porcelain bas been patented by Herr Retz- laff, of Berlin. The usual German process consists in cementing a sheet of tinfoil to the surface, which is thea uncovered for etching by askillful cutting out of the pattern in the foil, and washing away of the cement. The improved plan is to perform this operation more simply and perfectly by chemical means. The pattern is printed or s’eucilled ia grease colors on the tinfoil, which is then fastened te the glass by asphalt, and the prepared plate is placed in an acid bath thatdissol vee out the exposed parts of the foil. The asphalt is then washed off, when the glass ie ready for etcbing in the usual way. By means of the microtome, slices 0° vegetable and animal tirsues down to a thinness of about 1-10,000 of an inch are obtained for microscopic study. Prof. Elmer Gates, of Washington, has now gone further, and even slices up blood cells and microbes by cementing them in a single layer betweeu two glass elides and cutting the slides apart with @ very thin blade of copper sharpened to the highest possible degree. The fine grain Af the copper causes it §? take an edge that bd teZor Gao wpproach. The cells are sga’n cut by repeating the operation, aod it 1¢ claimed that slices heve tern made on'y 1-100 as thick asthe thianest produc ed wy the microtome. Se'enium, hitherto chiefly an iateresting curiosity of the chemist’s laboratory, has been receatly used for coloring glass. When added directly to the glats in the roelting pot, it gives a fine rose tint, vary- ing somewhat with the pur’ty of the seie- nium and bardness of the glass, and when the selenium is mixed with cadmiam sulphide a beautiful orange red is yield- ed. Sodium carbide, as described to the Parise Academy, is an inexplosive white powder, which, on slight heating. buras ip air, leaving sodium carbonate. Its chemi- cal activity ie much greater than that of calcium carbide. Civilization’s advance is responsible for a remarkable change of habits in more than one wildanimal. A familiar instance is that of the kea, the great New Zealand parrot, which was formerly esteemed as é j friend tothe farmer, but which has b come @ dreaded scourge on account of its acquired taste for the kidney fat of sheep. Dr. Schonland mentions the chacma la- boon as a Cape Colony animal that has be- come similarly transformed. It! -s tr‘cer to killing lam be forthe wk with whicl Yhey have filled their stomachs, ard it is increasing to an alarming extent on account of its warinees and the pro'ection and natural food afford:d by the fast-spread- iog prickly pear. Another South African example is the +o-callrd “wet-gat spreouw” (S3preo bicolor). This animal is now very distructive to fruit, which afew years ago it was never known to touch, its food con sisting chiefly of insects. The Maanlaar jackal seems to have partially acquired a new liking. While its ordinary food is in- sects, and Dr. Schonland has been unable to find anything else in its stomach, farm- ers in certain distri.ts—possibly where roan has reduced its food—insist thar ix is very destructive to smal! stock, The new rust-preventing paint of Dr. B. Kosemann, of Charlottenburg,Germany, 1s com posed of the perox des of earths of the cerium group. These are incorporated with linseed oi] boiled with a mixture of boric acid and the peroxides. Graphite, Campblack, heavy spar, etc., may be used for coloring. The paint is claimed to falfill all requirements, having sufficient oxygen to insure hardening of the linseed varnish, with freedom from any metallic s_- - _ _ —V— SOPCS. “Running sores appeared on my leg and spread over the entire lower portion of the limb. I got no help from medicine till I tried yours, I was cured by one bottle of Ager’s psaparitia.” \_—s« ISAAC ACKER, Cowans, Va. Die: YHE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JANUARY 26, 1898 SL = base capable of causing rust by setting up an electrical action with iron. Rumination or cud-chewing in man, according to N. Nattan-Larrier, is not known to be, as has been stated, chiefly found in males. It may be hereditary, and wheo involuntary is especially preval- ent among nervous dyepeptics. It is not aesocisted with epecial chemical change of saliva or malformation or lesion of stomach or oesophagus. When volun- tary, it usually occurs in the weak-mind- ed, but in children it may be imitative. Some idiots bring vbeir food up at will for rechewing after retaining it for bours. From experiments by M. Ravel, it ap- pears that 6 35 cubic feet of acetylene gas gencrates in the gas engine one horse- power per hour, which 1s a reduction in fuel of two-thirds as compared with petroleum, The mixture of air with acetylene begins to be explosive when the preportion reaches 1.35 parte of gas tol of a'r, while the explosive force reaches its maximum with 12 volumes of air to 1 of gas,and disappears at20tol. The flashing pointis about 900° F., moat other gases used for power requiring a ternperature of J,100° to ignitethem. The temp°rature of combustion i¢ much higher than that of other gases, (reat rapidity of the transmission of flame, low ignition temperature and extraordinary energy of explosion are therefore the special charac- teristics of this gas. Since the domestication cf the zebra, it has Leen suggested that mixture with the horse woula give a half breed combining the qual:t-es of the two animale, as the mule combines the horse and the ass. The new hybrid ia announced py the Baron de Porana, the animal being nowin the second half of the first year. The “zébroid” as it iscalled, isa male of a bay color, with zebra-like ttripes, which are hidden oa the body by the thick winter coat. The black mane resembles that of the zebra, the tail being) ke a muk’s, The baunch is large and weil rounded, the chest long and high, the eyes and nostrils are large, the lips and head small, the legs muscular tut delicate, and the hoofs small, black and hard. The creature is very lively but gentle, ? TLe high quality of Swedish steel was strikingly illustrated at the Scandinavian Exhibition. A steel ribbons, cold-rolled, was twined like a silken band about one of the pavilions, the Jength of this monster tape being 2354 feet, its width 8 inches, and its weight 1146 pounds. The Borchardt automatic pistol is cited asan example of rapiditv io complicated mec! axical movemen s. Ae 8 tho's have been fired in one-third ofa second, one* twenty—fourih of a second must suffice for advancing the firing bolt, exploding the charge, extracting the cartridge, and re- loading and cocking for the aext shot. Can Now Walk Laid Up for Three Years With a Scrofula Sore, ‘‘T was laid up three years with a run- ning sore on one of my limbs. I could not put my foot on the floor when my husband got a bottle of Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla. I have taken four bottles and I am now a well woman.’’ Mrs. CLARA THOMP- SON, Malega Mines, Nova Scotia. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Hood’s Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents. BDATENTS [PROMPTLY SECURED. GBT KICH QUICKLY. Write to-day fora frea copy of our big Book on Patents. We have xtensive experience in the invricateypatent iwso/ 50 foreign conntries, Send sketch, mode ~hotg for free odivice, MARION & MA.- ta. 7" S2xports, Teinple Building, Montreal. KLONBIKE BAR. Iraportant Announcem e Great Interestto Farmers. The management of the Charlicttetown Seap works, announce to the farmers ol Prince Edward Island, that they have pur- chased at a very low figure for a term ot years allthe grease by product of the Charlotte- town Pork Packing Factory, accumulating from time to time, end areip a prsition to sapply farmers and others with a cheap toap far superior in quality to the home-made article, anu ata price so low, a8 10 make it scarce y worth while tv worry abcut scap supplies hereafter KCONDYK# BAR will be for sale in a few days by all dealers, at the low price of ten cents ver bar of three pounds, THINK OF iT.—A first-class laundry and scouring soav only 10 cents for3 Ibs, It will be a waste of (ime and money ior farmers to bother about soap making now. The grease he has sold to the Pork Faciory for5 cents perlb, will be returned to hina, maaufact- ured into a first class article of soap at a cost of a fractioa over 3 cent per Ib. JAS D LAP THORN €C), bei, en Ask your dealer for K aad take nv other, =e 2° 22 47 at, ee ee 18125 A PAIR of mens light Dongola laced boots, suitable for wearing vnoder rubbers and overshoes. 00 for your choice of a lot of adies and girls fine boots. 60 & THe Lots of ladies’ slippers, Moos e- hide Moccasins, from 50c a pair up. RR. . Jost =a , ~~s2 222 226 © ©2423 83 e @ 4 Stamper’sCorner. YY 208,20 e@ @ @ 8228 22 82 O38 2S ¢ ( ~-»e 2.24 2424 4 © © 22. = qe An Old Woman's Care For Dyspepsia. “Tne most remarkable thing that has ever occurred to me in my earthly ca- reer,” said Eugene McKelsey, ‘‘occurred some years ago when | was afflicted with dyspepsia. I had a bad case, I assure you. Oh, I was all broke up. Food was disgusting. I had no appetite, and i just walked around looking for some place to lay down and die. Some time passed, and I grew worse, I saw myself a physical wreck, and try as I might I simply couldn't revive appetite nor am- bition. Finally I ran intoan old woman, a kind of witch I guess—old women are always witches when they dress in faded garments and predict to you—who said that I would get well if I should go to s certain farm and three times a day cast anear of corn to a white pig and then listen to it eat. I.do not believe in such rites; but, dear me, I was so sick that I was willing to try anything. ‘So I boughta white pig, secureda pen for it within the mentioned farm limits, and daily made three journeys with an ear of corn that I threw in and then watched the pigeat. Well, do you know the sound of that pig crunching and suck- ing those corn grains made me hungry. Oh, I enjoyed the sensation se much. It made me ravenous. When I returned from my walk I wanted to eat. So I continued visiting the white pig and eat- ing three good meals a day until I was myself again and as healthy as I am now. I don’t care to understand the whyness of it now. I am only too glad to be well.”—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A man’s health is the rope by which he climbe to succese. If hecan keep hie health he will go on to euccess. Yet his health is the very thing he neglects more than anythingelee. It is easier to keep health than it istoregainit. When a man feels himself running down, when he realizes a joss of vitality and energy, he must calla halt. The strands of his rope are parting rapidly. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery bas helped thoueunds of men in justthiscoidit n. It makes health, it makes pure, rich blood, it forces out impurities ard kills germs. It doesn’t make any “difference what name you cal your trouble by—dyspepsia—kidney dis~ case—rbeuwatism — consumption — skin disease, the “Golden Medical Discovery will cure it absolutely. None of these diseases can retain bold on the Lody when it is full of rich, pure blood, Send 31 one-cent stamps to cover cost of mailing only, and receive free a copy of Dr. Pierce’s Med cal Adviser. Addreve, World’s Dispensary Medica] Associaticn Buftalo, N. Y. LOAVAPLTA TE Nories j YD | NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tha an application will be made to the Parlia- ment of Canada at its next session upon bebalf of The Maoufactnrer’s Guarantee and Accident Insurance Company, for an Act to change the name of tle said Comp any to “The Guarantee and Accident In- surance 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, Biacksrock, Nessirr, Cuapwick & KippeEL, Solicitors fur the Applicante. Dated at Toronto, 4th November, 1897 _—— rn ER New ‘ears Goods Opal Rings, Carbuncle Kings, Jeweled Watches, Musical Chime Clocks, Musical Alarm Clocks, Solid silver Ceffee Spoons, Child’s Spoons and Fork Cheese Scoops, Salt Cellars, Wedding Rings, any quality desired. Rings any size, style or stone made to order. BW.TAYLUR, Cameron Block. City. janl4d135&w Printing’ in all its branches at the Exaw- INER Office, one cf the best equip- ped Job Printing Establishment, en P. E. Island, THE TATTLER. “Mille. Mark Twain"’ is what Figaro of Paris calls the daughter of Samuel L. Clemens. Mary Anderson Navarro is not going to sing on the stage professionally. Never- theless she is going to Paris for the pur- pose of cultivating her voice. Mrs. Kate KE. Johnson of Norton, Kan., has been elected county treasurer on the Republican ticket. She owns two good farmins and manages them profitably. Miss Nellie Salome Thomas of Boston | while in England went to Malvern, and, after decorating the grave of Jenny Lind, started a fund for a memorial window in the abbey. Mrs. Lon V. Stephens, the wife of the governor of Missouri, has published ina newspaper the diary she kept when a schoolgirl and since her husband's polit- ical elevation. Miss Susan B. Anthony, while in St. Paul not long ago, was given a flower for each year of her life. Seventy-eight chil- | dren filed before her, and each one dropped a full blown rose into the suffragist’s lap. The Boston Advertiser tells of two wom- en, Mrs. Nellie Kimball and Mrs. Emma Hamilton, who own coal and wood yards, Both women are prospering and both at- tend personally to the details of the busi- ness. Mme. Josefa Humpal Zeman of Chicago isthe only Bohemian newspaper woman in this country, and she was recently hon- ored by the male members of the National Slavic Press association by being elected secretary of that organization. Miss Augusta Main of New Berlin, Conn., charged with an assault with in- tent to kill, declared in court that there were two things in the world she hated, and they were men and dogs. ‘‘I never see either,’’ she said, ‘‘but what I ache to kill them.’’ Countess Hermann Zichy is about tc open a tobacconist’s shop at Budapest. Her husband was obliged to resign from the Hungarian parliament on account of his debts and for a time edited a Hun- garian newspaper in New York. The countess has sung on the music hall stage, Lady Marcus Beresford had a recent ex- hibition of cats at the Crystal palace cat show. It is said that she has the most re- markable collection of tabbies in the world. All the cats are named and know when they are called. They are devoted to their indulgent mistress, who has a man specially to care for them. It is a fact worthy of note that Mrs. C. B. Lincoln of Plattsburg, Mo., who has won so many medals for her wholesome bread, as exhibited at several fairs, exposi- tions, etc., is not a graduate of any ccok- ing school. Her mother taught her te make bread when she was about 12 years of age, and she in turn has taught her lit- tle daughters, - - SENS Skates The balance of our eS — ACGME CLUB SKATES at reduted prices. Hockey Sticks from 20c up. 2jOoD8 WUD & nUGERS NEN & Ban A MOLASSES 100 puns. Bright Porto Rico 80 puns, “ Barbadoes. 55 puns.[L]“ Demarara. 175 puns. “ Antigua. N. Ratrensury? Jan25, 98—eod 4 wks—pat. : RUBBERS « OVERSHOES 60 «»» VERDICT::. All the leading dealers in the principal towns of the Dominion agree that Gé THE CANADIAN RuBBER Co's RUBBERS ARE THE BEST IN THE MARKET.” 411 Doalers... . "Oey Thaw STANDAPN TY ladie The balance of our siock of above all new: this fall’s importation with the exception Come in and see us. top of the building. You Cannot Miss It. Seas $ Jac them at clear T. J. HARRIS, SS ee Queen Street Where we have more rvom and better facilities thon ever for he carrying on of our large and Hiver Increasing Business Sole Agents for P. E. L Walker s Corner SRATES HOCKEY and Genuine Acme Club 9OSO SvOe 19000900 at 20 per cent. off. Hockey Sticks at same discount. ee ee SIMON VF CRASESE STOVES & EARDWARE RVER LOWERED, a We offer sacrifice prices to at once It will pay any buyer vo see them ondon House z — ees REMOVAL. Miller Brothers, the P. E. Island Music House, have removed their business to Owen Connolly's Old Stand, Statue oflate Owen Connolly oa