Jer* than 18 per cent, were tuberculous. THR DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER 7, ‘897 Teal amie The wea mINnea Publishing Yamnany 1@ UXAmIner Fublushinge Vompany RATES OF SLBSCRIPTION IN ADVANCE @ue Year s4.00 Aik Vonths 7.00 Three Months 1.00 @ae Neonth O05 ~ m™ } i any part of Canada or th t S La = THE WEEKLY EXAMINER seer every |} ay rnorning. It is made up of ter ¥v Ss app ared in the Da ly a’ “ » first ses HNewspapercontaining | all atest news Subscription $1.™ THA DAILY EXAMINER a veal PRECAUTIONS IN DENMARK. Ix view ofthe fact that human beings have been infected with consumption as a dir cause Of drinking tue miik of tubere cnious cows, the Danish Government have | —a~« Tae Examiner stated laet week-— adupied measures for eradicating tuber- cul vetericarian of tbe highest rack in Europes has had charge of this work since 1891. A ! er for the Nineteenth is from Danish herds. Dr. Bang, a! wr Century reports that Dr. Bas gs work has covered the testing of 54,000 animals It is stated that Dr. Bang has found that when tbe tuberculin tect is properly conducted, it is not i: jurious, unlees to animals which are | in an advanced stage of disease; and that | it‘‘may have acurative effect in mild ! cases.” In order to carry on an effective | crusade against the disease, Dr. Bang ba~ applied the tuberculin test, subsequently separating the acimals which react from those which do not. Sick animals are slaughtered, either immediately or after being rapidly fattened. Calves are reared by Dr. Bang’s direction, only from cows which are hesltby or which are bat slighily diseased, Care is takeo tl at the calves are not fed with infected milk and the ca'tle houses are thoroughly ventilated and the rays of the sua adimitted. The number of cattle whic’: have re-| acied outef the 54,000 teste made in Dei mark varied from 20 per cent. to 50 per ccnt., aod averaged 39 per ceni,; whereas out of 132,000 animals slaught ered in the publ'c abbatoirs of Copenbagen: Tpon cue Danish farm, where Professor Bawy ius Carried out the Danish regula- tions for three years, 131 asimale were found to be diseased, against only 77 which were bealtby. During thie period all the calves born of the diseased cows, with two exceptions, have been reared in health; and therefore there is reason to suppose that the same measures, wherever } adopted, will soon result in the establieh- | ment of healthy herds. In thie connection, it is to be noted that Canada bas upon its statute book a law which fixes the respoasibility for diseased herds upon the owners thereof. Under the Avimwale’ Contagious Diseases Act, every breeder of or dealer in cattle er other avimals, and everyone bringirg foreign aviv a's into Canada, is bound to potify the Mnister of Agricu‘ture if he ehall perc ve ab¥ appearance of infectious disea-e among his cattle or other animale, |} purchasers are and heavy penalties amounting to two hundred dollars foreaeh neglect to do so may be levied upon euch farmers or other } respectively, and also the percentage of Whether or not it is advis- ( increase in the export from these several { countries during the decade, From this cattle owners, able to make further Governmeutal pro- vision, as in Denmark, for the prevention of the spread of tuberculosis is a question which may well be seriously considered, -~The Toronto World says that the Centre Toronto election will be at once proested. It says thatthe positive proof 1a in the hands of the couservatives that the liberal« spent $20,005 in cash in order to carry the riding. It will be interesting to find in what way much of this money was used. : —Morniog Herald (Perth, Australia) : The reader should never despise a paper’s facts or opinions, and, if he is inclined to be critical, he should remember that it is not | every audience that cheers most loudly for the best music. You don’t know where you got that cold. Do you know where you can get the cure for it? Every drug store keeps Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. Lt cures coughs and colds. AMERICAN TOOLS ABROAD. | Purchasers Found For Them Nowadays Throughout the World, American tools are sold all over the world. The New York representative of an American tool manufacturing estab hment when asked where American tools were sent ran over the export or lers received that day. They included rders from Hungary, Austria, Ger- many, France, England, South Africa und South America. ‘There were alt gether about 20 orders, and from some » countries named there were two export orders of day included orders from + and New Zealand, unusual orders, but ‘eived. In the mi or three rders. Th previous these were not such & are nstantlyv r shipping room at that ment stood cases marked for Java, for Ecuador and for Australia. Many of Ts are small. In some cases there were orders fora single these ord tool, or for two or three; for some orders of } dozen or two or three dozen to supply orders or to keep lines filled. These small orders are mostly from Enu- ropean countries, with which commu- nication is nowadays quick and conven- ' ient. European merchants order these things just about as merchants in other cities in this country would. It costs no more to send to London than it does to Chicago, and it is as easy to send to Berlin as it is to Paterson. The characteristics that commend these American tools to their foreign the same that mark American machines and implements | generally — lightness, fine finish and perfect adaptability to their several uses. The exports of American tools to all parts of the world are steadily in- creasing.—New York Sun. Bad Story Telling. If Oscar Wilde’s assumption were to be taken seriously, that all fiction is ly- ing, it might account for much that afflicts readers, since the lack of morale affects the intellect, and what is done without conscience is apt to be done badly. Of course all fiction is not lying, as all killing is not murder, but it isa sad fact that many writers of novels and short stories seem to have left their consciences and much of their brains behind when they go forth to work—as if these belongings might safely remain in seclusion, with the dress coat and the white tie. to be brought out only for especial occasions. Artemus Ward once remarked that he hada giant mind, but did not have it with him, and that (or the latter half of it) is apt to be the case with any of us when we are care- less. True, even good Homer sometimes nodded, but this affords no example for us who aie not Momers. To come to our ! tasks otherwise than with all our wits | about ys and invite public attention to the chance ‘‘oozinys of our brains’? is ts if one should issue from his apart- ments unshorn and half clad or enter upon the busy haunts of men without money in his pocket.—Frederic M. Bird in Lippincott’s. Leather and Kerosene. There is one use of kerosene which is seldom mentioned. It oftem happens that wheu a heavy shoe or boot has been wet it hardens and draws so that it hurts the foot. If the shoe is put ou and the leather thoroughly wet with kerosene, the stiffuess will disappear and the leather become pliable, adapt- ing itself to the foot. If oiled while wet, the leather retains its softness a longer time. The kerosene does not in- jure the leather at all. At the beginning of this century a most peculiar cholera remedy was in use in Persia. It consisted in wadding up a leaf from the Koran and forcing it down the patient’s throat. - Oe _ —A Glasgow paper recently compiled trade statistics showinz, things, the total export trade in machinery from Great Britain, the United States, France, Germany, Belgium, Swelen and Switzerland, in the years 1885 and 1895 statement it appears thatthe total export of machinery from these countries in 1885 regated in value abont $33,000,000. that by 1895 the value of this export bad increased to about $131,(00,000. The increase in the ten years was thus about 58 per cent. This is, the averaze percent- age of increase ef the seven couoiries, Mow, how does Great Britain stand with reference to that average? The purpose of the compilation of these figures Was no doubt to show that Britain has been lag- ging in the race with tbe rest of the world; but there is po reason on that account to doubt their accuracy. They show that she is still ahead, but that her lead is rapidly growiog less. The percentage of increase in the exports of machinery from the several countries named between 1885 and 1895 are given as follows: pr. ct. Waited Benbiiis scockss cicsss 6 Fs « sésjudbeten eee EE ee Ries att oie caste jkaviaas Gerimady....ccccereeseesececceces France. ooo vcsccsossccsscrcersssccccosece-cne SG Switzerland......000 +--+ degecccnseidtesqeces OD United Kingdom.....cccccccceosserseeee 20 The average percentage of increase for all the countries was 58 ; the United States madethe largest percentage of increase, namely 250; the United Kingdom made the smallest percentage of increase,namely 27. his of course. does not show that Great Britain ia not still easily tiret. But it but it does show, as the Halifax Herald remarks, that she is not maintaining her among other}: Hood’s lead in the race. er ORGIVENESS. I ant in the evening cool Of the heat baked city Musing and watching a Who played on the w alk at A boy, the of strong, r His sister, a blossom sweet. street little pair my fect—- ugh molds lader eidaer, When, just in the midst of their play, Came an angry cry and a biow That bruised the cheek of the little maid And caused bri And brought from my lips quick, sharp reproof On the lad who had acted so. And he stood by. sullen and hard, While the maid soon dried her tear, He looked at her with an angry « She timiely drew n ey — 1 little s« ) i i I lve < { T And the cloud is passed and gone, And acain in their play they meet, And the rong der mie A 1 r i W ic awh ‘ 5 i eh ur of God To a man I 1 the st t I 5 I stra i Ma 1 THE OLD OFFICE DEVIL. Eke Tells How He Evoluted Into a Ooun- try Editor. The old time devil was keen to learn. He had gall. He wasn’t afraid to ask the milliners for advertising or print- ing He dreamed of owning a paper of his own. He experimented in a thou- sand ways. He lived in the office al- most, being there early and late. He | made a battery and copper plated types before the first type founder thought of doing it. He did stereotyping in a rude way, making a matrix from blotting paper. Desiring to do his work better, he tried to buy proper materials for stereotyping, but he was bluffed so easily by the prices or talk given him by the dealers that for many years he supposed he was the victim of some infamously jealous trusts. A tramp printer from Chicago made him believe that gasoline could be made. The Chicago man pointed toa big can of the fluid and insisted that he had made it. Gasoline was high priced then. The devil sold the gasoline the printer said he had made to a rival office, and the two divided the money. **Make some more,’’ said the devil. ‘*There is a demand for it.’’ The Chi- cago printer left that night, and the editor made the devil pay for the gaso- line. The editor can recall his last visit from the tramp printer he ‘‘learned the trade’’ with, the one who made gaso- line. He came into the ‘‘shop’’ and was denied work by the foreman. Hesaw at a glunce that the old days ard loose Ways Were gone. kept young men and women were at work in an office as clean as a parlor. “Whose runnin this sheet now?'’ he juquired. ‘\Ja-“ Hill,’’ was the reply. ‘‘l know him,’’ he said laconically. **I taught him his biz.’’ And then they saw him drift into the sanctum and heard him say: ‘Hello, Jack! You're doin well. I want some- thin to eat and drink.’’ ‘‘Gasoline’’ got what he asked for, just as all tourists do who apply. The next morning he called on his editor friend again, and when he found him discussing prohibition with two or three ministers and one or two of the elders of the town he lurched right into the editorial den and joined in the talk to help the editor along. He was very drunk. He cried and said that naturally he was a prohibitionist, but he really longed to die and go to heaven, only he had become ‘‘such a d——d skeptic he didn’t believe there was such a place.”' Then he went to slecp. The preachers looked at him in pity. The editor spoke kindly of him as a comrade who had seen better days. As the editor talked **Gasoline’’ awoke and said: ‘‘Jack, if you don’t gimme a quarter to buy # drink with I'll sit here and boller.’’ And ‘‘holler’’ he did. He ‘‘hollered’’ left. This may or may not account for. the fact that prohibition has prohibited in Editor Jack Hill’s town since the last visit of his Chicago printer friend.— Chicago Times- Herald. res ———— — Cained in Flesh And Féels Ten Years Younger Since Taking Hood's Sarsaparilia. “T was run down iu health. My appe- tite was very Poor,and my head ached, I read about Hood’s Sarsaparilia and took three botties. I gained in flesh and felt ten years younger.” Mrs. O. W. Heatn, ‘South Barnston, Quebec. Sarsa= parilia Is the best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Hood’s Pilis cure all liver ills. 25 cents. To Open In a Few Days a large assortment of om FANCY GOODS Xmas Cards, Calendars, Books, etc, ete. McMitian & Hornsby, QUEEN STREET | tinue to come forward. Sta gnanon. Stagnation is more dangerous than revolution, but sudden change means a house on sand. Action and reaction 1s the miserable seesaw of our child world If these extreme men had their way, the end of the century would be plunged in blood, a French r lution What we have to bear in mi:.d is that, even in a republic, there must be a gniding band; men of education, ex- perience, weight and wisdom must con- They who will not be ruled by the rudder will in the eud be ruk d by the ri ck. —Teunyson. universal Liquefied at the dozen 1 rcan now be ordered by ttles in Munich, bat just | what it can be used for ina general wav is indoubt. It is socold that it | blisters the skin at a touch, but its ex- ss of oxvgen is a valuable feature. At present chemists are the only customers for it. Neatly dressed, well until the ministers ( How much business can a man do whose is in 4 state of disorder? Beadache lt is rot a disease, rebel- been mistakes in diet system if only a symptem The palo in the head lion. There have and other abuses Dr. Pierce’x Pleasant Pellets are a gentle, ‘ffective renovator and invigorator 0: stomach. liver and bowels. They assist nature withcut threatening to tear the body piece-mes]. There is no griping pans, po nansea. One is a laxative, A book of 1008 peges, profurely illus® trated, written bv Dr. R. V. Pierce, called “The People’s Common Sense Medica!) Adviser,” will be sent free for 31 one-cent stamps tocover cost «f mailing only. World’s Dispensary Medical Association, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. EPPS GOGUA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIESUNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMBS EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homeopathic Chemists, London, En, ‘land. MORTGAGE SALE, To be sold by Public Auction, at the Court House, in Charlottetown in Queen’s County, on Wednerday, the 15th day of December next, A. D. 1897 atthe hour of 12 o’clock nuov, under and by virtue uf a power of tale, contained in @ mortg- age bearing date the 28th day of Febuary A. D. 1889, made between Robert Angus and Catherine Aun Viola Augus his wife of the one part, and Edward J Hod; s0n isthe sign of Trustee of the Estate of the late Charles Wright, of the other part. All that tract piece or parcel of land, situate lying and being in Charlottetown in Qucen’s County, in Prince Edward Island, being part of Town Lot number forty-two (42) in the first bundred of Town Lots in Char- loitetown, commencing on the westward side of Queen Street at the sovth east angle of the prop rty formerly owned by the late William R. Watson, thence by a line at right angles to said street wert- wardly on or abou’ eighty six feet, or until it meets the division line between Town Lot number forty one, and said Town Lot forty two in said hundred, thence along raid division line southwardly seventy two feet, or until ic meets the northward edge of King Street, thence along King Street east, twenty two feet, or until it meets the west boundary of the property lately owned by the Bank of Prince Edward Island, thence following the course of the same northwardly, on a line parallel with Queen Street forty four feet, or to the northward boundary of ea'd Bank property hence following said northward boundary astwardly for the distance of sixty four ect, or uniil it strikes the westward edge of Queen Street; thence following Queen Street northwardly for the distance of twenty eight feet, more or lees to the place of commencement with the appurtenances. or further particulars, apply to Mr. William S. Stewart, Solicitor, Charlotte- town. Dated the 8th day of November, A. D. 1897. EDWARD J HODGSON, Mortygagee. SV_*Ees BVBOSssssessuses TO BE STRICTLY IN IT You must buy your lumber from us. Many of your friends do. Be among those who get all out of their dollars that there is in thei. Let Us Reason the thing out. We don’t claim to have the largest stock in the world, but we keep plenty ofall kinds of lumber always Our expenses are not the greatest. We buy only first class Jumber. Our prices are smile inducere, Are you with us? Teternoxe 181 JAMES BARRETT, Connolly’s Wharf. | | | 40086668 ws $82 SSSF:. O87 FOR ae ioe. ce It is intended tu about Bis is TOT Sth DECEMBER Freight carried at lowest ace will p'ease apply early. rates. Shippers rex Nov27—-d5i2 164 Ww a English Manure SOOO 0OSS OSES OSO9D 1 —— BOSTON > ao despatch the steamer Elliot for Beston {Uizing a. McMILLAN, Landlng to-day ex Steamer “Irene. M>»rris,” direct from Liverpool,. kre SUPERPHOSPHATES, NITRATE Or SOD MURIATE OF POTASH, BOWE MEAL, ETC. All genuine, and of guaranteed analysis. The oniy reliable, best, and as east 20 per cent the cheapest fertilizer on theSmarket, AULD BROS, ——y, Assortment Large, Quality away up Prices away down. SIMON VW CRAEBE Walker s Corner STOVES & EiAR DWARE To be stored (free of charge) for the winter, and cleaned repaired, nickeled or enameled, thoroughly renewed, ready for spring. ENAMELING as others charge for ordinary paint, See sample at shop. . We P. DOULL, Kent Street. Reduce d Prices For To=day To reduce our large stock of woolen underwear the following prices: 50¢ suits for....ee- sulin eéesed scares She ele Gis ks v's 600608 on chines wha cans On Weis Tl. ck ceh dcceccasccevetuesesetenue POA Gis 066 csc wetndd0ce 0 eseveceseen OO in oa eb a kc nveseses cs cad Bm De TOU vk 6 ba. 0% odo 50 vee cess dd LA ete Bae 5s iW ei sibs cave ce ccvgh comet 1. 7e ORS TEE no nec ce ecbsecceccccscheenmi S95 caite Gok o6 divs éideiee veces sumeowunsons we give 40, 35. 45. 60. 80. 1.00 1.20 1.40 1 80 Proportlionate discounts off top shirts, These are genuine reductions off goods already marked low. D. A. BRUC LS ae — eo ~ — ~~ WEDDING RINGS THAT W heavy weights. Wedding Presents 4 I am opening to-day a new and che line of Silverware, as good as the hest, and as cheap, we belicve, 2s the cheap: est. Your trade will be mvtuaily ‘6. F. HUTGHESON The Queen StreesJe I am showing a nice line of c Plain Gold Rings ia ext® 200 Bicycles Wanted We use the highest grade Enamel (black or colors) that § money cay buy in New York, and dase it on in a manner that — the most fastidiovs cannot criticize, and the cost is the same § “y eo 9 sar ie eo ila Rae eae AEE