Mh a Brae The Examiner Publishing Company KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION ' UN ADVANCE) i 84.00 | @ne Vear aI Nenths 2.00 Three Menths 1.00 | @ae Meath O35 | Sen? post paid to any part of Canada orth | c : “tates } rHE WEEKLY EXAMINER as very Friday mérning. It is made up | t rwh is appeared in the Daily ! P | a first classe ewspa per conLlaining alici steal DeWSs Suse tion $1.00 a year TH DAILYEXAMINER NOVEMBER 9, L897 . . Arm hoaae ; tts 2 Hirin poay., 20TH GOLO AND POISON | have been pa din rovalties for his hymns, THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 9 1897 books bring him in $20,000 a year. Swin buroe, who writes very little, makes $5,000 s year by his poems. Browning, in his ster years, drew $10,000 a year from the sale of his works, and Tennyson is said to have received $60,000 a \ ear from the Macmiltians during the last years ot his life. Mr. Moody is believed to have beat- all as more than $1! 250,000 en others, scientific American. AS TO CHEESE. ' A good cheese has certain qualities: Pinholes, Round Holes, Ragged Holes, Gassy Curd and Other Things. A cheesemaker must know when his | cheese is good. He must have a trier. He should not have to wait for some ! ‘ one else to try hiscl It isnot well, | however. to try your cheeses too much | and let the flies intothem. I would find it every week how my cheeses were | ing. | No one wants a hard, irv. indigestible but you want & solid, firm cheese, and the plug should cheese, ee ‘ show no holes or weak spots. (2) It | A Mi ‘s Experience — Has $°0.000 But i . : . : His meahh ts hKhulined § uld } oo hand m ity. (0) It shouid | have a flinty break. (4) A nutty flavor, S.«» Prancisco, Nov.6.—A mao has just nice and clean his low! rom Alask: i ; ’ : : ai i : a a sy as . id In judging cheese, flavor is given 40 ra Of ZO dus ict 1 Wouk J oS full BF & ' . . ’ “ “ . a per cent, body and texture 35 per cent, s oO i neay » - er r athe a tak .} ; took int - color 10 per cent and finish 8 per cent. myrtle ee a eae vat his Pe : ee In pulling a plug, draw it so that the eyoteu, while De was pause © Eos 1M! bare plug will not rub on the rind of his peckets, Italicame of bis Kaoownng | i dines 7 . t d bemwg tou} “** neere too uch about botany and a W T} } 3 i . a se : 1e plug should look larger than the noes reen weeds which he had 5 curiwus anon § aa i , | hole it came from. The judge will get never seen before and which hac a 5 ttaste. He was uoconscions for | the flavor by the odor. lew aw t . “s ° : end weeks and he has been aimost There are three defects in cheese, pare d ever since. which will be indicated by as many | Hic vame is L. Goth, and he was up in | different kinds of holes. - the Yuson country for fuur years. First there is the ragged hole, pene- Previous to bis going thither he was} trating the cheese irregularly and of ir- «cane gardener at Seattle. He brought! regular size and shape. One cause of these landscape £ : : mS back witb bim $15,000 ur} ragged holes is failing to keep the $20,000 in gold dust, the ttle to | curd while in the sink of an even heat | va'ust ¢ cleims oo Birch and Deadwood Ceeek , ruiued heath, & mysterious ailmene aud information of a new kind of vegetaule poison. ,He was prospecting early this year on Birch Creek with a few compauions, They were about thirty miles from Circle Uity, where a mountain rises avruptly from & shelf of land along the shore of the creek. As they neared a knoll at the base of the mountain the temperature grew very much warmer, and oa the Knoll they found three springs of boiling hot water. The only vegetation near (ue springs was a vivid greeu weed which grewou the very bring of the stean og, bubbling basin, lt bas a loug stem, uure of leaves, aod on the end a singie buit-i.kefflower. ItGotb nad known nothing of botauy and cared as liutie about geners aod +) ecles as most prospectors Le would not uw wbe apbysicaa wreck, But that green plant was like nothing he had ever seeu iu nia experience a8 @ laudscape garicuer, and bis curiosity was arvused. He piucked one of the green stems aod examived it carefully. 1t bad a plessaot odor, avd as he emelled it he toougutlessly bit on one of the petals of the buib. The taste was agreeable sad be chewed and swaliowed it. ’ . “Halran hour afterwarde,” said Mr. Goth, “Isuddealy became very dizzy and tell down unconscious. For three week- | knew nothing,except tuat ovccas- iopaliy I would come Wwaeort of beif consciousness for 4 few minutes, But such periods were like dreaw+ disturbing a deep sleep. 1 can barely remember them. When I finally came wo my senses I was too weak to lite hand or foot and for four months was, con fined 1 my bed, My Jeft arm was almost paralyzed, and is yet, and in every mutcle- ot wy vodyI could teel the effect of the poisuu | bad taken into my system by chewing the one small piece of that trange plent. [can now drag myself atout, but a!l the surength of my.body secms sapped. Novve towhom I have deecribed the p'ant * aows anything aboutit, and I sup. pose ny experience with it wiil result in bdding « new and powerful poison to the plaru.scopoeia, ” les i ete PRiIC:5 PAID TO MODERN AUTHORS. Rudyard Kipling commands the higest rice cf any living author according to the Pail Mall Gazette, which says thac it paid $750 for each of his “Barrack Room Bal- lad«,”” aad that “The Seven Seats” brour . him $1!,000. Hehas received 50can 4. for » 10.009 word story. Anthony Hope charges $450 for a magazine etory resery- ing tue copyright. Mr Gladétone’s price for a review is $1,000. Conan Doyle receivel $35,000 for “Rodney Stone,” Mrs. Humphrey Ward, $40,000 for “Robert Elsmere,” $80,000 each for“ David Grieve” and “Marcella,” $75,000 for “Sir George Treseady,” and $15,000 for “Bessie Cos- trell.” Ian Maclaren has made $35,000 outof“The Bonnie Briar Bush” and “Auld Lang Syne.” Rider Haggard still asks from $75 to $100 a column of 1,500 words and will not write for leas than $10,000. The highest price ever paid for a novel is $200,000, which, the Pall Mall Gazette gaye, was handed over to Alphonse Daudet for bia “Salpho.” Zola’s first 14 tooks netted him $220,000 and in 20 years he has made at least $375,000. Ruskin’s 64 = GSEGOE SFI ZFS CGSELCLSLISS Se It will go... Right to the spot a and moisture, as heat aids the forma- tion of acid and the curing of the curd. By letting certain portions of the curd get cold there is an uneven development of the acid, and we will see.this defect indicated by ragged holes in the cheese | while curing. | Then theré are round holes. These | indicate and are found in what is called sweet cheese. To cause this condition, either the milk has not been matured to a proper point or the salt has been added too soon. Very small round holes, known as pinholes, also indicate defective cheese. They are due to gassy curd. This gas is caused by some taint in the milk. To avoid this defect, refuse all tainted milk, and if you have any of these pin- holes in the curd (ascertgin ig by cut- ting the curd with a knife) be sure you get them flattened out before you salt the curd. If curd is put to press at too high a temperature, above 90 degrees, it will be likely to generate steam, and this. will make the cheese puff and contain holes. There is also what is called an acid cheese, indicated in two ways—first,, by leaking whey on the shelves; sec- ond, by being dry, mealy and husky, the fat seeming to have disappeared. The causes of this condition are either that some sour milk was put in the vat, or that the vat was allowed to get over- ripe, or that the curd was not dipped soon enough, or, again, that it was not. stirred enough in the sink. In short, the acid was allowed to de- velop too far before salting. In close, muggy weather the cheese- maker must have everything ready to run the milk through all the processes without any delay. Another defective cheese is the pasty cheese. It is weak in the body. One characteristic is that when you pull out the plug you can't replace it again. It is generally found in the fall and is the result of cold making and curing rooms.. There is no time of year when more care is needed in cheesemaking than im the autumn. The milk is richer, and to get a firm body you should cut the curd finer (to get out more of the whey) and salt a little heavier. r«s -9 and keep your curd warm . all its stages. The pasty cheese ue to letting the curd get cold in the v.t or the sink, consequently the acid dees not work fast and the whey does not come away freely. If the cheese does not rind on the out- side, itis due to cold hoops. If your room is cold, warm your hoops in a tub of warm water before filling them. In filling your hoop have the center the fullest; youcan get the whey out better. If you don’t get the whey ont before the curd gets cold, you will nev- er get it out. Press your cheese well at night, especially in cold weather. If you neglect to keep a fire in your curing room in cold weather, in addi- tion to having a pasty cheese you will get a spotted cheese that will grow strong and bitter. Be sure to have astove in yourcuring room when September comes in. After a cheese is properly cured it does not require much heat. Put the newest cheeses where they will get the most heat. Attend to turning your cheeses and so allow the dampness to escape from them. Red spots on cheese are often due to rough handling. Don’t let your cheeses stand too close together on the shelves. |} SUCCESS. CURTAIN RAISERS. Bronson Howard has completed a new play, which will probably be produced this season. Wright Huntington has been secured as Jeading man of the stock company at the Alcazar theater in San Francisco, George Backus has won fresh honors by his clever and original interpretation of the title role in ‘*Christopher, or.’” It will cost Fanny Davenport $60,001 formance of her new historical play. t C. Goodwin will first play Shylock ary r his coming engagement at t} nw l-erbocker theater, New York city. James Young is meeting with success | in a Shakespearean repertory. He is the | youngest and one of the best of American | tragcaians, Charles B. Hanford has received a letter from Paris which announces the fact that ! Lytton’s ‘‘Richelieu,”’ translated | Bulwer into French by C Samson, is being rehearsed at the Theatre de l’Odeon. harles Frank Daniels has produced his new opera, ‘* The Idol’s Eye,’’ with conspicuous Mr. Daniels plays the role of an adventurous aeronaut, who drops among the British soldiers and nautch girls. Jessie Bartlett is branching out as a composer. She has set two of her poems to music, and they are meeting with much success. ‘‘Retrospection’’ and ‘‘Surceas« of Sorrow’’ are the titles of her songs. Pinero is a great admirer of Annik Irish. It was through him that she joined Edward Terry’s company in London and played the role of Minnie OSlfillian in **Swect Lavender’’ for over nine months. CROWN JEWELS. The Princess of Wales’ favorite flower is the lily of the valley, and the largest grow- er of these flowers in Great Britain has his garden near Sandringham. Out of compliment to the Emerald Isle the Duchess of York appeared in scarcely any other color than green—in some one or another of its various shades—during her recent visit to Ireland. The German emperor has been put on an almost entirely fruit diet. He is not allowed to drink tea or coffee, and his physicians consider it imperative that he should always have eight hours’ sleep. King Oscar of Sweden is said to bear his age so well that no one would suspect him of being 68 years old, nor would any one fancy him to be a king judging by his affability and utter absence of hauteur. The Princess Bernadotte, crown princess of Sweden, who as an intriguing maid of honor captivated the heir to the throne, is ajmost intemperately addicted to the de- lights of a full fledged cigar, a penchant which is said to be shared by the queen of Saxony and the Grand Duchess of Baden. It is said that more than half the reign ing monarchs of Europe are troubled with defective eyesight. Among those who wear glasses in private are Queen Victoria, the king of Denmark, the czar, the queen regents of Spain and Holland, nearly ev- ery member of the house of Hzpsburg and the Pripce of Wales. (PATARR and Hay Fever Cured Without Fail By a new treatment of inhaling medicated vapers. Wonderfully Successful. 10 Days Trial FREE Entire outfit sent on receipt of postage or express 15 cents. The discovery of Dr. RAY, the great English Specialist. Address, Dr. Ray's Successful Remedy Co. ROOM 24, MANNING ARCADE: TORONTO. London, England. Toronto, Canada. Melbourne, Australia | tuted, GREAT CLEARING OUT SALE SUPERIOR FURNITURE. For Sale By fLuction ; Tam instructed by the Hon F. Peters to sell by Auction at his residence, Sidmont on WEDNESDAY, 10th NOV. Next, commencing at 10 o’clock, a. m. All his household effects comprising Superior Piano, Drawing Room, Dining Room Hal], Bed Room and Kitchen Furniture. Terms cash. R. BEARISTO, Auctioneer, Fordale or to Let “ SIDMOUNT.” The beautiful residence of the Hon. F. Peters for sale or to let. c This property comprises 20 acres excel lent land, with large and commodious dwelling house, and outbuildings, al! in good repair. The house is fitted with modern improvemente, having hot and cold baths and heated with hot water, and lighted with electric light. The grounds are beautifully laid out and planted with ornamental trees. If notsold by private sale, it will be sold by auction on Tuesday, the 9th day of November, at 2 o’clock p. m. CURIOUS CULLINGS. In China to salute a persen by taking off the hat is considered an insult. In some European countrics there is a finn belief among the peasantry that a dream of walnuts will be followed by mis- fortune. During the war of the Spanish succes- sion the English army in Spain was com- | manded by a Frenchman and the French before the curtain goes up on the first per- | army by an Englishman. In certain parts of China the young wo- | | men wear their hair in along, single plait, | with which is intertwined a strand of | bright scarlet thread, which denotes them to be marriageable. Among the obscure tribes of the Malay archipelago when a young girl dies her eyes are cut out and those of cats substi- the idea being that in the next wo.®1 sie will be better able to see. PORTLAND, Oregon, November 5. } > = : | President Mason, of the Portland chamber of telegram to Secretary of War commerce, has tent the following Alger, at | Washington: “Starvation and deat i | confropisthe unfortunate miners on the | Yukon, through failure of the trading | companies to get supplies into the interior before the close of navigation on the Yukon. The chamber of commerce of Portland has undertaken to relieve the distress, which must appear before the icc fetters ef the Yukon release the supply steamers, and for this purpose it will donate provisions and supplies, The chamber of commeree asks the co-oper- ation of the war department in transport~ ing this relief from the city of Portland to the most accesible point on the Alaska coast, whence the relief exdedition may carry itto the impriconed gold miners. Our duty to suffering humanity demande thatthe sacrifice may be necessary to accomplish thisend. Wil] you co-operate with us in this undertaking? ” O SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They atso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Mearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. . . 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. If You are Going —To— BOSTON Or any part of the United Siates, the cheapest and best route is via the Plant Line, THE POPULAR SUM- MER ROUTE DIRECT - SERVICE FROM CH’TOWN. The favorite S. S. “Halitax” wil. leave Cb’town for Boston every Friday at 1 p. m. turning leaving Boston every Tues- day at noon. Steamer calls at HAWKS: BURY and Halifax both ways Via Pictou & Halifax Passengers leaving Charlottetown Saturday mornings, via Pictou make close connection at Halifax with steam- er “Halifax” for Boston direct Satur- days 11 p.m. Tickets for sale at stations P.E.I. Railway, Ch’town Nav Co, and Clark tieket office. H. L, CHIPMAN, Can. Agent, Halifax, N.S. déw MISS H. McDONALD The “Thick Set’? Man, § , we st oe 8 f '—Lacks height to look symmetrical, ( ° His short arms, short legs and long ¥ body, require the special type of “Fit- J i Reform” suit, keptreadytowear,forhim. ¥ ‘Morning’ coat like this is best, ‘Shooting’ or ‘Prince rs ~ Albert’ next, with waist line cut higher than usual, to give appear- , ance of stature and slenderness. | He who would add inches to his height, and know just how such clothes will | make him look, can satisfy his judgement | ¢, on the finished garment before he buys, Hy ‘ if he selects ready-to-wear “Fit-Reform” a - Clothing. Equal to best sx tailor made of twice the cost. Makers’ brand and limited price in left breast pocket, & s Pt | $10, $12, $15, $18, $20 Per Suit. , aa Catalogue from | Fit-Reform Clothing Co., Montreal. The Place 10-1 5 Your House, Furniture, Stock | ship or Cargo, is with 7 TELESGONE CONNECTION....00....000000 0 Herring, Herrin! eed te 5 det ee ower HORACE HASZARD FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE AGENT: Office—- Cameron Block ag 8 - | : : “Insure! a { { —_ Se —— eS ——— - RRS BURGLAR = . To the Burglar who entered our office and broke the Handle of Safe we exten 3» invitation to call again, promising him a free entry into the safe, and thereby sof | ing him the use of the Stilleon wrench. We wil! oot ins re his easy exit, but # bee hand with an ambulance and undertaker. s po At the same time we give the Dairymena guarantee for one year with oat a | - gang Cheese Presses. Nearly al what were imported oere in the past requir repaired within a year. Our improved Cheese Vat is the most popular in the market, Our Babcock Testers never break the bottles. The press hoops are right for eighty Ibs of curd. And best of all the “ ALPHA de LAVAL SEPARATOR” is on f th fi wayahead of all others Write for prices. Terms made to suit customers. : Our Pumps are winning a name for themselves at prices to beat any im : T. A. MeLEAN 1 > a —_—_——— ue ‘ Large, fat Herring in half barrels, barrels and qu & ’ barrels, from Sydney, Cow Bay, Madalene and Arichat. will warrant every package we sell, or refund the mareY = For sale wholesale and retail by ; GRANT & CO. — Queen Street, Charlottetown Ayer’s Hair Vigor will go right to that bald spot and begin to bring the hair back. It Makes Hair Grow. They must not touch each other or any- thing else. Have them in straight rows on the shelves. Fix your press so it will work straight. Take care of your utensils. Don’t get your hoops all bruised up. Have your cheese neatly bandaged, even sized and pressed straight. —Ad- dress of J. E. Hopkins. : —alLso-— Oce driving mare, one superior cow, carriages, sleighs, robes, hai ness, farming implements, and a lot of hay and straw, etc., etc. The extensive sale of superior furniture will take place the following morning at 10 o’clock. R. BEAIRSTO, Auctioneer, FANCY DANCES, including Highland Fling, Flag Dance, Strathspey, Spanish Dauce, Sailors Hornpipe, May Pole and Villiagers Dance. Skirt Dance, Andalucia, etc. For this seeson ouly these dances $5 each, being one third of price. Rooms in Masonic Building. sepi30 | / ' 1