The Daily Examiner FROM THE OFriCce oF ; The Examiner Publishing Company RATIOS OF SUBSQZIPTION iIN ADVANCE) @Qne Year eee 84.00 Six Meuth« -- 00 Three Wenmtk: i.e G@ac Menth OS Sent pest peid to any part of Canada or th C nited States THE WEEKLY EXAMINER sasued every Friday morning. It is made ap of matter which has appeared in the Daily and is a fiwei ciasss newspa,er containing all the latest news Subscription $1.00 a year THE DAILY EXAMINER DEQOENSER 22, 1897 PUBLICARLONS One of the moet at ractive and valuable publications of the season is tae current Harjer’s Weekly, a sumptuous “double” Christmas N ansber, to be sold fer twenty five cepta, containing cuntributieus from such writere as Wary E. Wilkiae, John Fox. jr, Joba fendrick Bangs, E.S. Martin, Carl Scharz, E. F. Beweon and dloward Pyle. ‘be cover is ornamented with a beautiful desigo in colers by Maxtield Parrieh, 2nd illustratiess are fernished by F. 8. Ghurch, Howard,Pyle, W. T. Smedley, W. A. Rogers, Peter Newell, Frederic Ramington aod &, P. Upgobn. ‘The numbers of Harper's Bazaar dering December contain a «iscussion of “Zhe Village Maid,’ ber pest, preseut, and futuee, by Mrs. Joha Sherwood; a desezip- tion af the birthplace ef the poet Bunae, by Marian Harland; Christmas stories &y Mary E. Wilkins and Gertrude Smith; “The Peake sisters,” a farce, by Ruth McEoeny Stuart; an article on “Window-| gardening in December,” and suggestions: with regerdto novelties dor Curistmas | ifts. ; Harper's Magazine for January will contain the firet instalment of ‘‘Roden’s Corner,” a new novel by Eenury Seton Merriman, authcr of “The Sowers”; ao erticle on “Stattgart,”by Eiise J. Allan, peotusely illuetrated by Josepk Pennell; 8% sccount of one of the most savage of the Apeche warriors, “Maseai’s Crooked Trail,”by Frederic Remington, wich illus- trations by tLe author; and a paperon the achierments of “The New Northwest” by J. A. Wheelock, editor of the Si. Paul Pioneer Press. The War Cry is to band with Carist- mas g~setings and readings. The Christma + »amber of the Canadian Marg: z oe, already mentiore! by Tux Ex- AMINES, COntains a lengthy article on one of Canada’s greatest cstablishments—the E. B. Eddy\Company, (Limited) Ot awa. CHRISTA S MADAME DREYFUS. The Londou World’s Paris correspondent bad an interview recently with Madame Dreyfus, svife of Captain Dreyfus, now confined at Devil’e Island, She is a very handsome woman, and lives in atrict se clusion with her little boy and girl, under the protection of her father, M. Adiemar, at 53 Rue de Chateaudon. She eaid she had received a ietier from ber .husband a month ago. He is allowed to write, but his letters are scrutinized by the prison otticers. The captain is well treated. He gets up early, has workto do, and is a! owed to read prison books, but be is always separated from other convicts He is pvever allowedte go on the main land. The correspondent asked whether he knew of the efforts being made on his behalf. Madame Dreyfus replied : “Oh, perfect- ly, and Jike us he always hopes that his insocence will soon be proved.” The correspondent having referred tothe famous “bordereau’’ or memorandum upon which her husband was convicted,Madame Dreyfus exclaimed vehemently: “That forgery! There was,there could be, no other document that was not, like it, a forgery. She enquired if the reporter would like toexamine the “bordereau.” Then she went out and brougbt a broad sheet which the family had publiced recently, headed “The Key to the Dreyfus Affair.” It ex- hibite specimens of the bandwriting of Esterhazy aod of Capt. Dreyuus. Madame Dr-yfus went over all these specimens, pointing out the similarities and disim- iarities. The reporter asked how she accounted for the accusation against her husband. “| cannot sear; I cannot imagine,” she answered, “except that we are Israelites. Are they not ot jects of dislike and prej- udice in 9}] countries?” Madame Dreyfus theo paid a remarkable tribute of affection to the Captain. She eaid, as husband, father, soldier, triend, he bas always been above reproach. Honor- able, gentle, kind; his life moral, his eon- duct upright. I cannot, eannot understand it. I cannot understand why he, of all men, should have been made a mark for this frightful, odious charge.” —_ > 0 <— - THD LADIES’ HOME JOURNAL FOR 1898, To make The Ladies’ Home Journal for 1898 “the best of all the years; the most cheerful and helpful magazine that a woman cau possibly have in her bome,”’ is the purpose of its editors, as disclosed by a prospectus outliaing a few of the project- ed features forthe coming year. While the Journal «vill be more useful! and prac- tical than ever before, it is made apparent that its literary features will be etrengthen- ed and that pictoria'l, it willbe more attrac- tive and artistic than ever. A notable feature, ““The Inner Exper- iences of a Cabinet Member’s Wife, “‘a ser- ies of letters from the wife ofa Cabinet member to her sister, will, it is said, reveal some startling and graphic pen asthe of Washington eccia!l and cffizial life. They gre rorenlistic that the letters will be published anonymously end are likely to attract Nationa) a'tention. The biographies of President McKinley, Mrs. Cleveland, Mark Twair, Thomas A. Edison, and | sions: novel way by a series of anecdotes, giving the vital characteristics cf each. Rev. John Ww atson, D. dD. (> lan Maclaren,” “will contribute a series of art- icles On matters close tothe interest of every man and woman; Edward J. Bok willhave a special gage for young men, in addition to bis usual editorial discus Litian Bell will continue ber bright, crisp letters from European capitals ; Mrs. Burton Harrison will deseribe society at the beginning of the cemtery, and ex- President Harrison i¢ to write on* The Fioe in the Home.’ Two fiction issues, in all over thirty short storiee, are prominert during the year. F. Marion Crawford, Hamiro Garland, Mary E. Wilkins, Joka Macgruder, Clara Morris, Mre. A. 1). T. Whitoey and other well known authors. Rhe musical announcements for next year include Sousa’: newest oemposition, “io Lady of the White Housey” dedicated by epecial permission to Mrs. McKinley; sacred songs and hymns by Fauny Crosby, the Wind writer; [ra D. Sankey, ead others quite as prominent in their respective fields. “Inside of a Hundred Homes” will be continced and supplemeated by other articlea. upon fitting, furniehing aad beau tifying the home;and in addition to tbe Journal s “ Moderate-Cost Kouses,” churehes, echools, farm buildinge, etc., will be given—with detailed plans and apecifications. Mrs. &. T. Rorer, it is announced, wwill continue \to write exclusively for the Journal. In addition to her “Ceaking Lessons” @he will write of foods, their value and dheir healthfulness. Special articles for. children—vyoung and méddle growrx—on meediework, fashions, home entertainments, church work, etc., areal] promired. This is but a passing glance at the 1898 Ledies’ Home Journal, which is aimed to meet the literary and practical! needs of every member of the household. By the Caniie Publishing Company, Philadelphia. Ten cents per cory; one dollar per year. ec > Orrawa Decembar 19.—The funeral of Patrick Leaby and his five childrec, who were burned todeatkearly Friday morning, took place yesterday afternoon. Thousands of people assembled alang the streets to see the sad cortege pass. Be six bodies were éenveyed in separate kearses. Members of C. M.B.A., of which organization Leahy wes a member, attended w large numbers. «a Not Without Hope. “I should like toe ride a wheel, but >’m afraid I’m too heavy.”’ **I don’t believe so, aunty. At Hagen- beck’s I saw an elephant ride a bicycle.’’ —Filiegende Blatter. Reflections of a Gachelor. Some woman had probably told Go- liath that she was going to stay around just to see him do up Dayid. If a man seems to notice pretty girls that pass, his wife acts suspicious, and if he doesn’t she acts more so. Show a woman's political club a bunch of bare tees kicking up out of a baby carriage, and you can break up the meeting. Way down in her heart every woman thinks her husband loves her, but they all get lots of pleasure out of imagining they don’t.—New York Press. a — Fifty Years Ago. This is the cradle in which there crew That thought of a philanthropic brain; A remedy that would make life new lor the multitudes that were racked with pain. ‘Twas sarsaparilla, as made, you know Ly Ayer, Some 50 years ago. Ayer’s Sarsaparilia was in its infancy half a cen- tury ago. To-day it doth “be- stride the narrow world like a colossus.” What is the secret of its power? Its cures! The number of them! The wonder cf them! Imitators have fol- lowed it from the beginning of its success. They are still be- hind it. Wearing the only medal granted to sarsaparilla in the World's Fair of 1893, it points proudly to its record. Others imitate the remedy; they can’t imitate the record: vas The stories will be by Mark Twai,, | } } } Merchants fRTILK FEVER. As to the Tiest Preventive Treatmont Be- fore and After Calving. Several experienced dairymen give in The Rural New Yorker their opinions on the cause and prevention of milk fe- ver. They are generaliy in favor of 1g the. cow to some extent. Mr. M. Winslow writes: I have found at the safest way to prevent milk fe- ver is to keep the cow on short diet for about ten days before calving, and for the last two or three days before calv- ing to give her but very little to eat, and after calving gradually get her back on her feed. The cow has too muc’. blood at the time of calving if she isa large milker and in fine condition, and nature cannot change the working of the system quickly enough to prevent derangement of the system. Reducing it a little at that time is a help, and I like a natural way better than to give salts. Mr. J. W. Newton: Though we have kept cows for many years we have nev- er, so far as I can remember, had a case of milk fever @ any other trouble at calving time except retention of the afterbirth, which, I suppose, can hard- ly be called a disease. As to the treat- ment, we simply have not fed them any meal or grain except bran, neither be- fore nor after calvixg, for two or three weeks. The ideal treatment of a cow soon coming ia is to turn her into a pasture where there is plenty of feed and water, with shditered and secluded nooks in bushes. Theu the cow can take care of herself far better than any num- ber of men. Many :imes, when cur cows were coming in in September and later, a cow would be ygnissing at night, .and in the morning wedld appear with :@ fine calf. There is no treatment about iit. Of course, when it is cold or wet sxbe cows should be kept in a warm sta- ‘tiie, and when such was fhe case we al- ‘ways gave plenty of warm water to the «ow, but no medicine of any kind. I have immense faith in natnre, or rather in nature's God, and very little faith in medic nes. Mr. Albert B. Bellwood: Milk ever results as a penalty for develeping the cow's productive capacity beyond the point nature intended. It is usually the best cows that suffer, and generally when in aflesby and plethorie aondi- tion. With such cows I find it safer to use preventive measures against milk fever than to riak its development ustil parturition. If milk fever is feared, I put the cow on a Jow diet for two weeks before she is expected to calve, keeping from her food that would tend to enrich or thicken the blood and retard its free circulation. During this time she is in- duced to take all the water she will. About ten days before calving I give one to one and a half pounds of epsom salts and as often afterward as is neces- sary to keep her bowels lax. This, to- gether with spare feeding, is continued for three or four days after calving. If the udder is much engorged, she is milked frequently before calving, and her calf is allowed to assist in softening the udder afterward. This starving treatment has a tendency to diminish the flow of milk for a time, after which liberal feeding may be safely resumed. To lose one of the best cows, however, would much more disconcert the dairy- ai ‘ st: ©. th inan than this temporary diminution in quite a number of his cows. If garget or congestion of the udder follows par- turition, I give the udder a good rub- bing twice a cay with linseed oil and camphor, milk two or three times a day and if a hungrv calf is handy give it @ chance. Cure sick headache, bad & taste in the mouth, coated > f tongue, gas in the stomach, 5 $ S distress and indigestion. Do not weaken, but have tonic effect. 25 cents. The only Fills to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilia Bank of Prince Edward Isiand, Charlottetown Nov. 29th 1897. Notice is hereby given, that a half yearly dividend, at the rate of 8 per cent per enpum onthe capital stock of this Bank has been declared payable at its Banking House, on and after January 3rd, 1898. Transfer book will be closed from December 2(th I897, tothe 3rd of Jan- uary 1&98, both dates inclusive. By order of the Board, J.M. DAVISON, Cashier. Nov. 29 15 wk td ANNUAL MEETING MERCHANTS BANK OF P. E. | The Annual General Meeting of the shareholders of the Merchants’ Bank of P. E. Island, will be held at its Banking House, Gt. George Street, on Tuesday, the 11th day cf January, next, 1898, at the hour of 11 o’clock a.m. Proxies must be left with the cashier at least one day previous to the meeting. J. M. DAVISON, Cashier. | nov29—15 &wtd HENRY FP, LORDLY C, E A.M Can. Soc. ©. E. Graduate College of Civil Engineering Cornel! University. Conrultiog Engineer for General Work, Specialties: Hydraulic, Sanitary Engineer- ng and Bridge Designing. Offices at Charlottetown and St. Jobn. IsJauu correspondents address to Joseph J<flerson will be presented ina 50 Years of Cures. harlottetown. oct 14 d&w a airy and Creamers. There is nothing more useful.on the farm than a deep well, even when it is not worth much for the water it con- tains. It takes the place of a refrigera- tor and icehouse in farmhouses where those conveniences are lacking. For ' eooling milk, cream and butter in its dark, clear depths it is worth tans ol ice every year. The same power that runs the sepa- rator can at the same time run the churn. Some cows make as much butter fat from 25 pounds of milk as others do from 45, and only the Babcock test can determine which cow is which. In a dairy where as many as eight or ten cows are kept the work pertaining to it ought not to be left entirely to the women unless strong armed dairymaids are hired on purpose for that, as in Den- mark and Sweden. Where the farm we- men have all their household work %o do and the milk of ten cows to make into butter it is too much. A baby sep- arator, machine churn and a man’s helping hand are wanted in such a case. A cow f.d on corn fodder and corn alone will not begin to do her best asa milker, and dairymen ought to have this fact pounded into them till it be- comes stuck fast in their brains. Wheat bran or gluten meal should in all cases be added, with a small quantity of lin- seed meal a day. Gluten meal is corn with the starch taken out and is a yal- uable cow feed unless the dealer adul- terates it with chaff or corn bran or even things worse than this, or unless too much starch is left init. The nutri- tive value of gluten meal such as is purchased at the mills varies as much as 30 per cent, according as more or less starch has been left in it. When much starch remains, the nutritive value is lessened. We do not think the home dairy and the creamery are opposed to each other. In localities where there are not cows enough to keep a creamery going the home dairy, with its clean, sweet smell- ing milkhouse and delicious golden yel- low butter and cream, finds its appro- priate place. A home dairy that hasa reputation always secures a high price for its products. Many dairy bulls are now among the beef animals in the large city stock- yards, showing that farmers are going into beef raising. All the same, even if the dairy business in the north is get- ting to be overdone, there is plenty of rcoom for it in the south. Saving a Husbard’s Life. Only the other day the newspapers told the story of a plucky woman >, who saved her hus- “band from drown- , ing on the rock | \ bound Atlantic act ° ° ea umes tte coast. There are - ‘ other dangers be- side that of drown- ing from which a shrewd woman may, oy a liitié diplomacy, save her hus- vac. Mier ure preverbially reckless about chevy he “ih. «They do not think it worth whki'> tc p.or sny hecd to a slight indiges- fins. a trifling biliou. attack, a little nerv- ousness of sieeplessness, or a small loss of appeiite. The iirst they know they have Use eepsic, liver complaint, malaria, rheu- taat sic, Net Tow. prostration or deadly con- smistion. Even then they are prone to veglect their trouble until it is too late. A wise wiit will assume guardianship of @éei husbaudl’s tealth. She will always tive uf Land a Sottle of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Mefical '¥-covery. When her husband feels out of sorts she will see that he takes it. 't makes the appetite keen, the diges- tio pexicer. tue liver active, the blood pure and Use ‘terves steady. It builds firm flesh. ‘irony muscles, and healthy nerve tissues. It cures dyspepsia. liver complaint, malaria, rhenimatism and nervous prostration. It cures o8 per cent. of all cases of consump- ici. Ai honest dealer will always give sun whet you ask for. I was: a sufferer from malaria,’ writes Mr. R }). Hil!, of Zanto, Loyisa Co., Va. ‘ Two doctors failed to cure me. 1 took three bottles of Dr. Pierce's Goiden Medical Discovery in connection ita hic ‘ Pileesant Pellets,’ and was cured. I can now do as good a day's work as any man.” Constination often causes sickness. Dr. Pierce’s Fiexsant Pellets cure constipation. One iitse “ Yellet’’ isagentle laxative and - taild cathartic. They never gripe. are tiny, engar coated, anti-bilious in little vals. Druggists sell ‘hem and have notaing else ‘‘just as good.’ They regulat’ the Stomach, Liver enc: feiyrels EVERY DAY A BARGAIN DAY AT LEWIS’ From now unti! the end of the year, every day will be bargain day at our store All_ kinds of fancy goods, in Chiaa, Celluloid, Plush, Oak and Glass, all kinds of Toy+, Games, Dolls, Doll's Sleighe, Doll’s Corriages, Doll's Tea-sets, Boy’s and Girl’s Sleighs. Also all kinds of Crockery. Make no mistake in the place, but come direet to C. LEWIS, Grafton St. Opposite North side of Market Sq. “ts = snag g) ce pt et Tn aa Ties vraniutes Lecture and Entertainment Course SEASON 1897—1898. St Peter's New Hall, Ch'town Alternate Tuesdays as follows :— Dec, 14th aad 28th, Jany. llik and 25th. Feb. 8th and 22nd, Particulars of each Entertainment will «given in due course in our local colums septlL3— THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER 22, 1897 1 amen — ae PARANA AMADA AR AAAA AA AA The Way to Get Good Reliable Whisky in to Ask Some Reliable Dealer For = MORNING DEW SCOTCH WHISKY” This rare cld whisky is guaranteed TRN YEARS OLD, and is the product of the most noted stills in the Highlands of Scotlaad. Ask for the “Black Label MORNING DEW SCOTCH For sale by leading wine merchants, wholesale by ANGUS MACDONALD, Charlottetown ann eEy eye RUBBERS & OVERSHOES” 60 oe VERDICT... All the leading dealers in the principal towns of the FEES SES SSS SS SS SS EES HAAFHASAAAAAASSA ¥ Dominion agree that 6a THE CANADIAN RUBBER Co,’s RUBBERS ARE THE BEST IN THE MARKET.” All Dealers... - Fann ¢ STANNAPN NEVER T AWEDEN ———— yoo | : ) o*< LON HOUSE Boy s Over- coats | in 26 and 28 inch size, a lot we are clearing out. T. J. HARRIS . a YOPPPPTEPHNOTNTTN PrP rorenNNTNRDEN TENN TT TE ep enero TUNA . aha’ A> AARAARAR AAMAS Ae aAAP ir North Wit Will be seen some beautiful vases, and fancy chinaware, a PR aE ak TW a AE EAE ak ak Tk ak ak Ea suitable for christmas presents. a . * * ° , ’ We have also a couple of splendid Qhina Dinner Sets left wnich we wil seli regardless of cost. Fancy goods sold at reductions for two wecks at Q2ABOB4R88SB8T T J. MORRIS Corner of Queen and Kent Sts. FLEE EE SELEY PPP YY _EY ———— AAAAAAAR HAAR ARASH PTAA Cove Pally EAU For the Holiday Season with a complete stock of nid? lines of Footwear. We have all kinds of Shoes; low Shoes, honest Shoes dancing Shoes ana Temperance Shoes (that don’t §? | tight). Slippers in great variety, Rubbers, Oversho?t_ Gaiters, etc. Big Values, Low Prices, Honest Goods, Bast Style Will make almost any one hapyy. We are more thaf] happy to think that we have pleased you in“the yal and know that we can do so now bette: than ever: © Weeks & Vi