sal rae The Lxaminer Publishing Company e RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION IN ADVANCE) } ' | | Unce embarked they were huddled One Your $4.00 | Stix Moths 2.00 Vuree Months 1.00 fae Moath @.355 Sen! oost pald to any part of Canada or th U ait ~tates 14ME WEEKLY EXAMINER emsin very Friday morning. It is made up of ma ‘er which has appeared in the Daily and s first classs newspaper containing allt steal pews. Subs tion $1.00 a year THE DAILYEXAMINER NOVEMBER 10, [897 MORE GIFTSTO M’GILL. ae WeDonalhl's Valuable Works Re- siinge to Anctent Architecture, An gthe many valuable gifts that ha enluiy been added to the Peter Rea » Library, at McGill University, — uber of folio volumes dealing with Exvvy. and Venetian architecture, | Tue- sve been presenied to the Univer- suy tb. Mr. W.C. McDonald, and are a ports. of the equipment of the new chair of architecture, which was founded quite recen':v by this gentleman. The gift embraces two out of the three great works on Egyptology, which have een printed during the past century. The first is Prisse d’Avenne’s mam ieoth work on Egyptian exploration, aod 1- replete with many valuable plates itlustraurve of Egyptian § architecture, hierog'\phics and temples. The second was published by the German Govern- meni, aod contains the results of the science expedition sent to Egypt by the Ew peror Frederic William IV., Kiug of Piussia. It consisis of twelve elegant volumes of plates, in a single volume of text, and contains a tund of! useful information with regard to the wanner in which the Pyramids, temples and bowses of the ancient Egyptians were constructed. It also contains a pumber of landscape views snd water tints, which are splendid works of artand true to nature. The third gr-at work on Egyptology, namely the series of volumes published by com- mand .f Napoleon I>, Emperor of France, Mr. McDonald was unable to secure at present, but there ispo Goubt but that it will be eventually procured and added to the archives of McGill. In addition to the forego: g books, Mr. McDonald has _ pre- sented the library with Organsca’s great work vu the Cathedral of St. Mark’s Venice. This is one of the most valuable gifts ever given to McGill, and but .few univer-ities on this side of the water have itin their possession. The plates are magnificent, and illustrate campletely every portion of the great cathedral, the moet beautiful in Eurepe. A perusal of the dif rent volumes gives one a splendid idea ot the richnesa of the mosaics, the beauty of the paintings, the splendor of the *tutuary, and the delicacy of the col- oring iv the stained glass windows. The set comprises 15 volumes, all of which are boucd io half vellum.—Montreal Star. SUANISH SOLDIERS MUTINY. Troub‘e on the Transport Carrying Genera! Weyler and His Staff. Maranzas, Cuba, Nov. 6.—The Spanish transport Montzerrat, upon which General Weyler lett for Spain, and’ which put into P. rt Gibara yesterday in distress, is reported to have had serious mutiny on beard. She sailed with over 600 returning ey Fifty Years Ago. This ic the cradle in which there grew That thought of a philanthropic brain; ‘remedy that would make life new lor the multitudes that were racked with pain. “was sarsaparilla, as made, you know By Ayct, some 50 years ago. ww Ayer’s Sarsaparilla Was its infancy half a cen- tury ago. To-day it doth “be- atride the narrow world like a eclossus.” ‘What is the secret of its power? Its cures! Tho in he } i THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 10 1897 military invalided and wounded privates, in addition to the retiring ‘Captain Geveral’s personal staff and upward of # handred army officers, The soldiers had made open protest when, before going aboard, they demanded their salaries, six months overdue, in wd, but were forced to accept depreciated fit bills of the Havana Bank at par. be'ow like so many sheep in orderto Jeave the decka free for their gold laced superiors. Even the goveroment health officers predicted that dozens would die on the voyage dailv unless better facilities were provided, but thir suggestions were lunbeeded. The feeling against Weyler grew rapidly, and it is understood trouble eccurrec during the second day out ‘from Havana The men insisted npoen their irights, and complained § egainst their cramped position in the hold. Weyler ordered that they be driven below, when a serious encounter is said to have occurred. during which a nambes were killed on | | i | number cf them! The woncer cf them! Imitators have fol- lowed it from the beginning of its success. They are still be- hind it. Wearing the only raedal granted to sarsaparilla in the World’s Fair of 1893, it points proudly to its record. Others imitate the remeday; they can’t imitate the record: 50 Years of Cures. both sides returning Spanish soldiers have mutinied | during the voyage. __— oom «+ ee Ay O_p Anp WeLL i Riep Remepy.— Mrs. Winslow’s Seothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething with perfect success. It soothes the child softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Is pleasant to the taste. Sold bv druggists ln every part of the world. cents a bottle. Its value is incaleulable. Be sureand ask for Mrs. Winsluw’s Sooth ng Syrup, and take no other kind Twenty-five FARM DAIRY. Description of a Home Creamery Where Fancy Butter Is Made. In nearly all cases where there is a freamery in the neighborhood it pays farm people to send their milk or cream to it to be worked up. Still there are cases where a well equipped home dairy is the thing to be desired. Where private customers can be obtain- uti Won : S SS NX ‘ FARM BUTTER ROOM. ed who will give a first rate price for fancy butter it will pay farm people to take extra pains with the butter. They have control of the quality of the milk and cream, and every facility is in their own hands. Mr. Jared Van Wagenen, Jr., furnish- es to The Rural New Yorker the de- scription and illustrations of such a model family butter making dairy. We make some extracts from the pleasant story. Mr. Van Wagenen says: Generally I think the preferable loca- tion for the farm dairy room will be within or attached to the rear of the dwelling house. It was after a good deal of thought that our own dairy room was located in the house instead of the barn, and on the whole we have never regretted the decision. But wherever located it is of prime necessity that it be constructed s0 as to be affected as little as may be by outside temperature—i. e., it should be coo] in summer and easily warmed in winter, aad the same methods in buildies wil! geenre both results. This means that it should have at least one or, better, two dead air spaces in the walls, separated by boards and building paper. It should have no more windows or doors than needed, and the windows should be protected by shutters or heavy curtains. The inside would better be of ceciling stuff, either Georgia pine or any soft wood painted some light cream color. The floor should be of cement or well oiled matched pine or oak. The cement floor is the most expensive, but if a sat- isfactory job is done will be best. Ce- ment floors, however, are often poor on account of cracks and depressions due to lack of skill in making. Unless economy compels, even a small dairy room should be supplied with a steam engine. Its advantages are 60 many, especially that of having steam for heating water and disinfecting all utensils. Of course the engine should be partitioned off to avoid dirt and noise and, above all, the heat from the boiler in summer. The churn and butter worker should be near each other and placed as seems most convenient. Near the churn should be a washing sink, supplied if possible with running spring water. It should be near the churn, so that the water can easily be taken to wash the butter. As near as possible to the butter worker should be the table on which to wrap print butter. A marble slab is the or- thodox thing fora fancy dairy, but a clean wooden table serves the purpose perhaps quite as well. Over the wash- ing sink pure water and live steam should be on tap. Water can be heated simply by turning a jet of steam into it, or the disagreeable noise thus pro- duced can be avoided by having a ‘‘suc- tion tie,’’ enabling one to draw a stream of water nearly to the boiling tempera- ture without much ncise. This is not the first time that | cement floor and <2s first iInstration shows the in- terior of the dairy room. This room is fitted up in the rear of the house with ee Nat € i i: siete & — | 2 s P 2” A re \ ss all fw} a” ) > ag ae . Se ? GROUND PLAN OF BUTTER ROOM. Dimensions of main room, 19 by 9 feet. D— Poor through which milk is brought in and taken out. D’~—Door to fuel supply. D'’—Door to engine room. D”’ Door from engine room to dwelling. D’’’’—Door from dairy room to dwelling and to refrigerator. S—Separator. C—Churn A~—Washing sink, with running water and steam at hand. LL—Line shaft, 10 feet long, hung toceiling. R—Cream ripening can. T—Table on which to wrap print butter. Butter worker. HH—Two rows of shelves for small dairy tools and Babcock test. N—- Drain in fle Engine. F—Fuel storage. - or. ia ceiled with matched basswood painted light cream color, with the engine room lathed apd plas- tered. The best method of cooling print but- ter is of importance. A large refrigera- tor, sufficient to store 200 to 300 pounds of butter at once, can be purchased for from $25 to $50 and will probably an- svwer the purpose. The cream must, of course, be cooled as soon as separated, | and this is best done by running it into _- **shotgun’’ cans and sinking in a cold well or in ice water. In our own case a Gisused well two rods from the dairy room door contains water at about 47 degrees, into which cream is lowered. Fodder Shredder. Several ensilage and feed cutters have also fodder shredding attachments which ean be affixed and made to slit the corn- stalks after they have been cut off. In FODDER SHREDDING ATTACHMENT. the device here shown a stalk of fodder is bent down over the rounded upper part and slit to pieces by the teeth be- néath. The lengths of the bits of fodder are 3 to 6 incnes, and the shredding may be gauged fine or coarse, as desired. Best to take after dinner; wu tion, cure constipation, EF ills Purely vegetable ; do not gripe prevent distress, aid diges- or cause pain. Sold by all druggists. 25 cents. . Prepared only by C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, May- — ee MESAGE TO MEN Proving that True Honesty and True Phil- sutrophy still Exists i If any man whois weak, nervous and debilittaec, or who is sutfermg from any of the various troubles resulting from youth- ful folly, excesses or overwork, will take heart and write to me, I will send him con- fidentially and tree of charge the plan pursued by which I was completely restor- ed to perfect health and manhood, after years of tuffering from Nervous Debility, loss of Vigor and Orgunic Weakness. Ihave nothing to sell, and therefore waot no money, but as I knew through my Own experience how to sympathize with such sufferers, I am glad to be able to assist any fellow—beings to a cure, I ain wé:: Aware of the prevalence of quackery, for I mvself was deceived and imposed upon until I nearly lost faith in mankind but I rejoice to say that I am now perfectly well and happy once more and am desirous therefore to make this certain means of cure known to all. If you will write to me you can rely upon being cured and the proud satisfaction of having be2n of great service to one in need will be sufficient re- ward for my trouble. Absolute secrecy assured. Send 5c silver to cover postage and address Mr. G. Strong, North Roc k and, Mich 135 p&w. eee —. — HENRY R. LORDLY C. E. A.M Can. Svc, C. E. Graduate College of Civil Engineering Cornell University. Consulting Engineer for General Work, Specialtes: Hydraulic, Sanitary Engineer- ing and Bridge Designing. Offices at Charlottetown and St. John. IsIJand correspondent” address to Chariottetown. oct 14 d&w A. A McLEAN, Q. C, Barister, Etc., Brown’s Block Charlottetown —a_ Money to Loan. Printing in all its branches at the Exam- INER Office, one cf the best equip- ped Job Printing Establishments on P. E. Island. | Begin on Dairy Farmer anda vow. The very foundation of success in dairying is not the creamery or cheese factory, or any of the secondary aids and advantages that have clustered about it, but it is the dairy farmer and the cow. The great vital questicn all the time is. How shal) the dairy farm- er be induced to look upon himself and his own growth in dairy intelligence as he ought to if he expects to prosper, and, second, how shall we improve the dairy cow so that she shall become more truly a source of profit? The quicker the dairy farmer becomes posted on the true purpose and meaning of the dairy cow the quicker will reform come in dairy preeding.—-Hoard’s Dairyman. PIANOS =>. a & Ms ot oe oe % 4 re LB A Pea ie EnG5 2B the Positively cured by these Little Pilis. They <iso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Mlearty Eating. A per- fect remeay for Dizziness, Nausea, Dr uwsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Smal! Dose. : _ Small Price. Substitution -a713¢) a - the fraud of the day. x a P. YEO, See you get Carter's, Agent at Summerside, PIAN( PIANOS Now Opening —Tal In new and elegant designs of cases. —-— All prices. Cc. P. FLETCUER, Opera House Building Ask for Carter's, ee eee Insist and demand Come And S@¢ —..w carter’s Little Liver Pills. If You are Going 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. We Furnish Homes. Newson Block, Victoria Row mow Laree Your Dollar Is To-day. Never in the history of Furniture baying, was it’s } purchasing power so great, as at our store now. Especially is this true in buying fancy rockera,our line of Beautiful Cobbler Seat Rockers. Rattan Rockers and reception Ckairs, fanéy upholstered Oak Rockers, is the best mone marked at the price of cheap goods. ge POE aed 8, Ltt: y can buy, and they are” 2 The favorite S. 8. ‘Halitax” wil. | ® leave Cb’town for Boston every Friday at l p. m. Wiestiies leaving Boston every Tues- day at noon. Steamer calls at HAWKS: BURY and Halifax both ways Via Picton & Halifax Passengers leaving Charlottetown | Saturday mornings, via Pictou make slose connection at Halifax with steam- er “Halifax” for Boston direct Satur- days 11 p.m. Tickets for sale at stations P.E.T. Railway, Ch’town Nav Co, and Clark ticket office. H. L. CHIPMAN, Can. Agent, Halifax, N.S. diw New Crockery Store All kinds of First-class crockery, in- cluding Dinner Sets, Tea Sets, Chocolate Sets and Chamber Sets, Butter Coolers, Pitchers, Bowls, Pie Plates, Butter Crocks Cream Crocks, Cake Pots, Bean Pots, Teapots, Milk Pans, Churns, &c. Also, avery fine lot of Glass, in Tumblers, Goblets, Water Pitchers, Six Piece Sets in Colored and Plain Glass, Preserve Dishes, Bread plates, Celery Dishes,Butter Coolers, Cake Stands, and a lot of other articles toc n"merons to mention. GIVE US A CALL, We are sure to suit you, both in price and quality. C. LEWIS, Grafton Street, exactly opposit: North Side of Market House. —g 9 3idy wy SCH. “SAINTE MARIE,” Will sail for Bermuda about 10th inst., and will carry freight under deck and borses on deck at lowest rates. Apply to A. HORNE & CO. Ch’town, Noy 8-— hand with an ambulance and undertaker. repaired within @ year. And best cf al wayahead of all others See ee ee — For sale wholesale and retail by | Queen Street, Charlottetown At the same time we give the Dairymena guarantee for one year with our gang Cheese Preeses. Nearly al shat were imported nerein the past requ Write for prices. Terms made to suit customers. ; Our Pumps are winning a name for themselves at prices to beat any 1m % T. A. MeLEAN a none ———— BURGLAR | WANTED, To the Burglar who entered our office and broke the Handle of Safe we extend § 3n invitation to call again, promising him a free entry 7 ing him the use of the Stillson wrench. We wil not insure his easy exit, but will be into the safe, and thereby ef tweld jred to 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 lbs of curd. Pine “ ALPHA de LAVAL SEPARATOR” is on f thf — _ ——— Herring, Herriny ee Large, fat Herring in half barrels, barrels and quality barrels, from Sydney, Cow Bay, Madalene and Arichat. will warrant every package we sell, or refund the CRANT & CO.. JOHN NEWSON, | 7 y om m 20#y |