= <— The Daily Examiner FROM THE OFFIC@ o! The Examiner Publishing Company RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) Ouc Year .. 84.00 Six Months.... 2.00 Three tienths desea 1.00 ost nln go Pe ETT ERT 0.35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or th Cuited States THE WEEKLY EXAMINER issued every Friday morning. It is made up of toatter which has appeared in the Daily and s a firstciasss newspaper containiug ali the latest news. Subscription $1.00 a year. THE DAILY EXAMINER SEPTEMBER 7, 1897. NOTES AND COMMENTS — Threshing is repor.ed to be general h rougaout Manitoba and the vield abun- dani. ——(}'aegow is now calling tor the high- est srades of Manitoba wheat. A miller in Mootreal said a few days ago: | am under the impression that the exports of flour trom Austria and Huugary to Glas- gow have practically ceased, and that Maoiteba high grade patents are probably the best substitute they can get for the flourthey formerly received from Hungary.” Negotiations with Glas- gow ure nowin progress, and it seems more (han likely that actual business will resw t. —The Mail and Empire hits off the re- cent tiforts of Sir Wilfrid Laurier in the following paragraphs: “Of wheat, flour, cattle, ham, bacon, beef, mutton, cheese, butter, lard and eggs, Great Hritain imported $444,027,925 worth in 1895. “The United States supplied $173,266,- 325. “Canada sent $26,635,595 worth. “Our exportations to Britain were smal; those of a country which declines to pur- chase British manufactures and Canadian farm products were large. . “The British market 1s the life of United States trade. “Yet when Imperial statesmen proposed to give tit for tat to the United States, and to accord us a tariff preference in the great British market, our representatives declin- ed the offer, and to'd Great Britain to keep on with free trade. “Talk about a Cobden club medal! “It is not enough, “Sir Wilfrid ought to be gazetted a Un. ited States colonel.” It is reported that the right to the Panen a Canal has fallen into the hands of a British syndicate. From the vigorous manver in which the alleged deal is charecterized as one that will not bear the light of day and from various references to th manner in which the interests in the Uniied States will be effected, the despatch looks as thongh it might be authentic, It eo, ‘he maritime nations of the wor'd will be the gainers by the transaction,aud there will be a prospect of ihe canal being built with: ui any furtber shilly-shallying, ~ . HOLSTEIN. 2», Fine Cow With Unusta! Markings Fort One of Her Breed. In the handsome Holstein-Friesian cow in the picture we find that the white triangle in the forehead which characterizes this breed of cattle has spread all over the face and head. In other words, her head and face are white, with only her dainty ears black. A family of Holstein-Friesians spread WHITE HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN. : through the eastern states have much more white than black in their color- ings. One famous bull in New Jersey is almost white, with some bluish spot pon him. These White Holsteins are excellent dairy cattle. It will be observed that the lively calf beside its mother has her markings to a dot and is also nearly white with black ears. This cow is owned in New Hamp- shire. She is a famous prize winner. She proved the great dairy qualities of the white Holstein-Friesians by making 17 pounds 8% ounces of butter when she was only 2 years old. Foods Stimulate the stomach, ; mo oe rouse the liver, cure bilious- fess, headache, dizziness, i $ sour stomach, constipation, ete. Price 25 cents. Sold by all druggists. The only Pills to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla EEE TO LET oe The eastern half of house situated on Euston St. on the the corner of Hilis- boreugh St, Immediate possession. Ap- ply to MRS. F. PAKNER CARVELL, sept 4 -2w Kent St. en ee ‘GRANT’S SECRETIVENESS. | The Responsibility of Mis Position Forced Him to Guard His Utterances. General Horace Porter, in ‘‘Cam- paigning With Grant,’’ in The Century, says concerning General Grant’s secre- tiveness: After the general had got some miles out on the march from Cold Harbor an officer of rank joined him, and as they rode along began to explain a plan which he had sketched, providing for the construction of another line of in- trenchments some distance in rear of the lines then held by us, to be used in case the army shouki at any time want to fall back and move toward the James | and should be attacked while with- drawing. had never been a secretive man until the positions of responsibility in which he was placed compelled him to be chary in giving expression to his opinions and purposes. He then learned the force of the philosopher’s maxim that ‘‘the un- spoken word is a sword in the scabbard, while the spoken word is a sword in the hand of one’s enemy.’’ In the field there were constant visitors to the camp, ready to circulate carelessly any inti- mations of the commander's movements, at the risk of having e#uch veluable in- formation reach the ecnenyy. Any en- couraging expression given to an appli- cant for favors was apt to be tortured into a promise, and the general natural- ly became guarded in his intercourse. When questioned beyond the bounds of propriety, his lips closed like a vise, and the obtruding party was left 1o sup ply all the subsequent conversation. These circumstances proclaimed him a man who studied to be uncommunica- tive and gave him a reputation for re- serve which could not fairly be attrib- utedto him. He was called the ‘‘ Amer- ican Sphinx,’’ “Ulysses the Silent’’ and the ‘‘Great Unspeakable,’’ and was pop- ularly supposed to move about with sealed lips. It is trne that he had no *‘small talk’’ introduced merely for the sake of talking, and many a one will recollect the embarrassment of a first encounter with him resulting from this fact. But while, like Shakespeare’s sol- dier, he never wore his dagger in his mouth, yet in talking to a small circle of friends upon matters to which he had given special consideration his conver- tion was sv thoughtful, philosophical and original that he fascinated all who mstened to him. When a young woman sits down and ponders over her future life, there is one all-important subject which she should not forget. In a day dream she may yuild castles in the air with a happy home, laugh- ing children and a lovitg husband in the fore-ground. At ttiat ttidinent she miay be facing death. Matrimony and raiotherhood hold out no happiness to the young woman who suffers from weakness and disease of the distinctly feminine organism. The wo- man who suffers in this way will be a weak, nervous, sickly, petulant wife, an incapable mother and an unamiable hostess. Not knowing the truth. her acquaintances will not understand that she is deserving of pity rather than répifoach. ; Any woman may be strong and healthy in a womanly way if she will use the right remedy. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the best of all medicines for weak ana ailing women. It acts directly on the de- licate and important organs that make wife- hood and mot ah »d possible. It makes them stropg, f€al thy and vigorous, It anishes the angers that surround ma- tern} y. ft instirc’ 4 healt yb Vv and an ample supply of nourishment. Thousands of women who were Weak, sickly, nervous invalids, are how healthy, robwst wives and competent mothers of hea)chy children, as the result of the use of this medicine Mrs. John M. Coaklin, of Patterson, Putuam Co., N. Y., (B6& fo4). writes: ‘‘I am enjoying fect health and have been since I took the last ottle of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. I had falling of the iuternal organs, or female weakness, and ee caused by miscarriage, and was very weak when I commenced taking your medicine.” The unfailing, never-griping cure fot constipation—Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, The Tramps’ Woes. Inquirer—My min, Go you consider your way of life a healthy one? Tramp—Don’t know about that. But I know a chap has t be healthy to be in it. Just think of the roany different styles of cooking we have to put up with:—-Boston Transcript. — When the Duke of Monmouth was ex- ecuted in the reign of James II for treason, the duchess ordered every oak in the park | to be cuton the fateful morning. The new growth, belonging to Lerd Kbury, is one of the finest forests in Britain. — “ver 68 per cent of the whole number c* English criminals 2re unable to read. ~- on ~~ =— oe 2.7? oe Boys and girls you go to school Tuesdey 7th. We have been helping to gét you ready for a long while. Coime and see the snaps we have for you this year, We are sure we'can please you. Store open every nigit\(not all night).—Geo Carter & Co. The general kept on smoking | his cigar, listened to the proposition for | a time and then quietly remarked to the | astonished officer, ‘‘The army has al- | ready pulled out from the enemy’s front | and is now on its march to the James.’’ | This is mentioned as an instance of | how well his secrets could be kept. He | Kad Butver voror, There is a common misapprehension as tothe nature of this natural butter color. It is supposed that it is a fixed quality of the butter and is not subject to change by any process of the butter | making. this common belief, for I have found it My experience differs from | t | | to be very far from a fast color, aa | might be said, and very easily changed | by exposure to light, as well as by the action of the salt, due doubtless to the effect of the chlorine of the salt, this chlorine being a well known, most ef- fective bleaching agent and destructive | to almost all colors. Thus when the but- ter is made, if it be exposed to the light, the outer surface of it may be changed somewhat and in the working it will become mottled or streaky unless great care is taken to mix it well. Even then the light streaks will be apparent if the butter is examined by 4 microscope, and the mass will have a streaked or marbled or Py‘chy appearance. course arouses suspicion of the charae- ! This defect of | ter of the butter, for if it is not wholly | and completely perfect in every way it is open to this questionable character all through. And thus it is that the color | } ' of buiter is rightly one of its chief | per its of excellence. fometimes impurity in the salt will sanke the butter spotty, this disfiguring being the effect of lime in the salt, and this is a common impurity in the cheap kinds of salt. The lime in salt, of course, will exist mostly as a chloride, and this will have the very worst effect on the butter, bleaching it in patches or streaks and giving a soapy texture or flavor to it. Sometimes there is gypsum fn the salt, and this has, as I have found. the effect of making round spots in the mass of butter wherever there is aspeck of this sulphate of lime. There cannot be too great care taken to procure the purest kind of salt for dairy use, and it should be ground as fine as flour, so that if any impurity does exist in it it may be evenly spread through the butter and thus the color escape injury. Hard wa- ter, too, is u& fit for washing the butter on account of the impurities in it being mostly limt or gypsum, both of which, as said, are injurions to the butter color. As the butter is a mixture of oils and lime has a bad effect on all oily substances, making an insoluble soap of the combination between them, not only the salt, but the water, should be perfectly free from this impurity, and hard water is to be avoided in the dairy work. Doubtless some of the patchiness of butter is due to the water used in washing it. It is not difficult to get rid of the patchy appearance of the butter by working, if it is cautiously done. No amount of direct pressure will injure the texture of the butter. It is the draw- ing of the ladle over the butter so as to spoil the granular texture by which the injury is done. The more butter is pressed by the ladle or the roller of the butter worker the finer will be the grain, the drier the butter will be and the more even the color. It is a good plan to press out the butter at the first working and leave it in thin leaves, as it were, then sprinkle the finely ground galt, as fine as flour, evenly over the whole surface and leave it so for the salt to work through the mass by solu- tion and absorption, and in 12 hours to turn these leaves together and then work out the excess of moisture, or any patchy, marbled color, by frequent feld- ing and pressing, ayoiding the least drawing of the ladle or the worker across any surface. Of course as the butter is drained it is continually freed from the liquid (which should be clear brine, without a cloud or trace of milk) by pouring it off. Thus the finished utter will be even in color, the salt will be all dissolved and evenly mixed through the mass, ahd the color will be the same shade all through —-HL Stew- art in Cogntre Gentleman. REMOVED We have removed our Shoemaking and Harness Business from Kent Street TO GREAT GEORGE STREET, opposite Stanlev’s Livery Stable, where we are prepared to do al! kinds of work in both lines, Repairing promptly attended to, Your patronage respectfully solicited. W. W. RODD, Shoemaker. C. E. RODD, Saddler. Pr. S.-A first class Livery Stable in connection. CHARLES E. RODD, Notre Dame Convent, —_ —-+ Boarding and Day School for Young Ladies and Children. Studies will be resumed at the above mentioned institution on Tuesday, Sept. 7th. The course ‘Of instrucuon is thorough in ‘English ‘and French. The departments of Music, Drawing, Painting and Needlework are presided over by ¢ fficient teachers. Terms ‘Very Moperare. aug31—2i | ; | | ; method of persistent seif-help in overcom- ing past errors and Removing causes from a A Social Bosiniss Man. ne voung business man in New York Pas succeeded in making himself valuable to hiy employers in a peculiar way. He started in mercantile life with a firm that has a largo number of employees, and the indications were that progress along the ordinary lines of the business would be very slow indeed. It was only by accident that an opening suddenly came which made this particular man almost indispen- sable to hisemployers and the recipient of a salary proportionately large. The firm of which he is a member happens to have important social relations with many of its large customers who live in different cities over the United States. There is scarcely a day that does not bring one of these customers to call on the firm. One day this young employee was called upan to attend to such a visitor, and he did tc ‘with a tact and completeness that showed his inborn aptitude for such transactions. Gradually other duties were handed orer to him, and before a long time had passed he was relieved from other work in order that he might devote himself exclusf¥ely to what might be called the social end of the firm’s business. His salary has been raised seyeral times in view of the capable manner in which heattends to these trans- actions and takes the burden off the prin- cipals in the business. He represents the members of his firm at funerals, weddings and all social functions, traveling some- times to remote points for the purpose, and as his utility to his employers grows daily greater they hold him in proportionately higher esteem. His case was one instance in which certain unusual talents asserted themselves and won the success that comes from the ability to fill a particular sphere eapably.—New York Sun. CARTERS SICK HEADAGHE ositively cured by these Little Pills. They ciso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too blearty 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. Smail Dose. _ Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Cartez’s, Insist and demand <arter’s Little Liver Pills. DR CLIFT! treats Chronic Diseases by the Salisbury the blood. Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma, Shortness of Breath, Pleurisy, Puberculosis Consumption of Lungs or Bowels, Indiges tion, Dyspepsia, Gastritis, Ulcer, Cancer, Dropsy, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Constipa- tion, Piles, Fissures, Fistula. Diseases o Heart—Valvular, Fatty Enlargement, Palpitation. Of Liver—Jaundice, Diabetes Cirrhosis, etc. Of Kidneys—AlLuminuri Bright’s Disease, etc. Bladder—Cystitis. Of the Blood—Anae mia, Chlorosis, Scrofula, Malaria, Rheu- matism,Gout, SciaticaScurvy, Purpura. OfF male Organs—Inflammations and Displace ments of Womb, Ovaries, Bladder or Bow- els. Menstrual irregularities of Sexual Grgans, Of Nerves andSpine,—Nervous Prosiration, Sleeplessness. Decline, Hy- steria, Tremors, St, Vitus’ Dance, Chorea, Epilepsy, Convulsions, Paralysis, Loco- » motor Ataxia. Paralysis, Agitans, Soften ing of Brain. Some forms of Insanity— Dementia, Mania, Hypochondria, Melan- chulia. Failure of Vision and Voice,. 4 ness. Of Skin— Eczema, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Syphilis. Tumors, Giandula Fatty, Fibroid, Uterine, Ovarian and Can cer, Goitre, Cretinism, Obesity, Corpul- ency. Drug and Liquor Habits—Opium, Morphine, Chioral, Cocaine, Tobacco, Stimulants. Of Bones and Joints—De- formities, Curvatures, and Pott’s Disease of Spine, Paralysis, Hip Disease, Knock knee, Bow Legs, Club and Flat Fout, Wry Neck, Rickets Scrofula, Sore Legs, Var- icose Ulcers, etc. Continuous intelli: gent treatment insures Minimam of suffer- ing and Maximum of Cure,possible in each case. Avoid attempts unaided or unde blind leaders. DR. CLIFT Graduate of N Y University ard the N Y Hospital. 20 years’ a, in N Y City. Diploma registered in U S and Canada, Address :—Charlottetown, P. E. I. Office :—Victoria Row. *? Telephone Call. Accommodations Reserved for patients. References on application. 94—d&w lyr. CP SE a A IO For Sale or To Let ‘Coupon Two Houses cn Pleasant Street. Good d. ions: stable and yar WIL’IAM DODD. instructions: é y 6, *%—-1m aoe KLONDYKE The Land of Golden nuggeis JOSEPH LADUB, vice eta Reins See the tts | His book reads like ‘* The Arabian Nights”” BUT Joseph 'Ladue KNOWS whereof he writes. He was the first man on ithe spot when the first gold was discovere } last August, 1896. | He located one rich claim, and immediately purchased twelve others at a low price before their value was known. He has refused $100,000 for any ONE of these claims, as they are rich with virgin gold nuggets beyond the dreams of avarice. Joseph Ladue then _ Established Dawson City, at the mouth of the Klondyke and Yukon Rivers, by erecting the first house in the region in September, one month after the gold was first discovered. He bought 178 «acres from the government on the city site where his town lets, 150x50, ae now selling for $5,000 each. Mr. Ladue was fortunate enough to be successful in his trading pos: investments to have on hand ample capital to carry out his plans, and there is no man living who is better posted on Alaska and the great North West Territories than Mr. Joseph Ladue. He has just returned from that country to his. old home in Schuyler Falls, N. Y., where he passd a large portion of his boyhood and early manhood, Mr. Ladue left his home nearly twenty years ago to seek his tortune in the West, going first to the Black Hills, where he was successful in gold mining, thence to Arizona and the Pacific Coast, and finally located in Alaska and the North West, where he has. covered almost the entire country since 1882. Mr. Ladue is a typical pioneer; strong, hardy ana resoluve—a man of iron and come out with a constitution unbroken and unimpaired at the age of about forty-three... Mr. Ladue has not only worked his muscies to good advantage to himself with the result of an abundance of the world’s goods far beyond the dreams of men, but he has evidently all his time been closely observing the conditions of that strange country—the Yukon Valley— which has so suddenly become one of the great centres upon which human interest throughout the world is focussed. When the wonderful stories began to come dowg trom the Yukon country it was naturally concluded that it was at least half exaggeration. ‘That any such amount o1 gold could be taken in so short a time from a country like that under the most unfavorable conditions was held to be incredible. But when the great bags of virgin gold began to be poured out upon mint counters in San Francisco under the eyes of the whole world (for modern journalism does this, annihilating time and space), people began to wonder, and the wonder grew day by day as the real facts were disclosed, and now people who are well informed as to the facts declare that half the truth has not been told of the golden treasures of the Yukon Valley. _ As we have already said, there is no man alive to day who knows more about this wonderful country than does Mr. Ladue. What makes his talk of it specially interesting and reliable is the fact that his knowledge of it.is practical. It has not been gained from hearsay nor from desolutory visits: made now and then at certain favorable seasons of the year, but from steady liying there through the long summer days and the long winter nights year in and year out for 15 years, where he now owns the best min ng claims on the Klondyke aud its tributavies. In presenting his book to the public we do so knowing that it is by an authority on the subject of whieh he writes. His first work entitled “KLONDYKE NUGGETS ” is a brief description of the new gold regions, and anyone desiring authentic information should not fail to avail them- selves of our re NOMINAL OFFER. which places the facts in the possession of our customers. REFIEFMBER, that our office is the sole distributing point for this locality, having closed exclusive arrangements with Mr. Ladue’s publishers. The cover of the work is beautifully printed in red and gold, the gold showing one of the author’s nuggets as nearly as it Is possible to reproduce it on paper. It is easy 10 eT en me i : tk é e secure a Cop) of Conpon for ‘‘Klondyke Nuggets aS ti : . ; v5 . KLONDYKE Cut out this coupon and bring it with you as evidence that you are a reader of The Examiner and Tena Cents in cash and a copy of ‘“‘Klondyke Nuggets,” ly Joseph Ladue, the Bonanza King of new gold regions, wit be handed to you. NUGGETS.” Cut out this coupon and send it together with 12c,in stamps for clerical work and mailing expense, and we will send a copy of ‘‘ Klondyke Nuggets” to your address. 2 es Cut out the Write very clearly and give your name and address in full. Remember, you should not delay as you will be unable to secure this valuable work on the gold region in any other way. Call at our office or address ‘The Examiner, Charlottetown —— and follow as one must needs to be to go through the hardships he has: | Fe SLE CE “sts seit i le ee ae eee ee ~~ & =e oe oe ee