a a i ee fo * * ee * seeks See 2 & SOR CBE88 THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOT'IETOWN, JANUARY 1 7, 1869 a ~~ — WE DAILY Isaned every afternoon from the office of the E xaminer Publishing Co. RATES OF SU&SCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) a TOPs b enbadoaenedondees $4.60 Bete BEOOEA esc cececs c co> sence Sovetevesis $2.00 Three Months, dettnevene: (sine Dne Munth,. 0.35 | Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States. THE WEEKLY EXAMINER a issued every Friday morning. It is nade up of the matter which has app*ar- ed in the Deily, and i+ a first-class news- paper, containiog al the latest news Subscription $1.00a year. oe } do not believe thera is a case of dyspep- nia, indigesticn or any stomach trouble hat cannot be re jeved at once and xermanently cured oy my DYSPEPSIA CURE. MUNYON. At all druggists, 25ce. a vial. Guide to Health ani medi- cal advice free. 1505 Arch street, Phila. Waves yalhda i ’ be hi 4 i" >4 . . e z WARE ok > o § be i the celebrated a b ra hi a Te ta e b E . 3s : : “ ‘ 4 a 1 ba | 4 E i aoe B KA va % ba i > CORSETS : : aw To be bought from all H leading dry goods etores, o ¥ iS | oH H VOOE COG w ro: 9 REOOOO 5066 OG OD : Tin) | 3 GRATEFUL COMFORTING | Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially crate- Tal and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Go., Ltd., Homeopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPSS COCOA ADVICE ABOUT Spice. When ordering a packt ge Pepper, Ginger, Allspice, Cin namon or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you ca» al- ways feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for ::: Mott's BOWS0'1O8 SF 642642008 ’ ‘ ' ' } 2 © €@00268 22 =4 BASE 412EGVESBSE “— Hockey, Skating Curling Open Air Rink ee ae | Available for Skaung or Hockey from 2to 4 p.m. every afternoon and Saturday forenoen. Also Skating every night ex~ cept ‘Skating Clab” nights—Tuesdays sod Thuraiays. Curling every afternoon from 4 to 6. Specie! arrangements made for private parties. Vor terms apply to the undersigned %; GREY, Manager YAMINER! CHEESE MAKING Important Addresses by Professor Robertson and Mr. Dillon, A NOTE OF WARNING. At a meeting of cheese makers held at Kingston, Ont., a few days ago, Profersor Robertson said that without trying to be av alarmist, he wished to warn Canediane that we were in immediate danger of lo>- ing our pre-eminency as the cheese sup- pliers of the Great British market. Ten lor twelve years ago, when we began our | cheese’ makieg on an established tystem, 'we quickly won our way to the top ip | England in competition with the many | sided British product, where every manu- facturer went by the rule of thumb. But a change bad just come about. The British now copy our system and produce & uni- i formiy yoo i produ 4. Secoudly, the Ka glish, who heretofore liked a hignly fiavored article, now want an insip‘d, soft and mildeflavored cheese. This cannot be produced in our orcinary Canadian curing rooms, which are kept at @ temperature cf 70 to 75. \The English temperature during the cheese making teason is 60 or 62, consequently the cheese eater is accus- /tomed toa good article made under this | temperature. This article now commands | 60 shillings per 100; ours only 40. The ‘step immiediaiely necessary for our pres- servation was the building of, or conveit~ ing our presentcurivg houses into close walled, double~doored, double windowed, tight top and bottom buildings. In such a building 50 tons of ice was a sufficient supyly to regulate a 100 ton facrcry. But where the so:l was favorable, underground coo! air migbt be utilized either by build-~ ina cellar curing houses or by building an undderground duct round the building and introducing by means cf ordiaary drain pipes the air therefrom into the otherwise airtight building. Such a con- struction would be a matterof $10 to $200, according to the size of the factory, and would in every case more thar doubly remuverate the investor oo the increased value of the first year’s product. In ad apting existing buildings be recommended a coat of whitewash as a germ killer. Some interesting Statistics were given iu refer ence to factories in Canada. There were | now 1,785 cheese factories and creameries in Quebec, and 1,317 in Ontario. In Canada, ths cheese factories have grown from 363 in [871 to 769 in 1881, 1,567 in 1891, and 2,759 in 1897. The creameries had grown from 46 in 1881 to 559 in 1897. Mr. Dillon also delivered an addre-s on cheese making. There are, he said, still some incompetent men in charge of factories. Miikis badly bandled iu many factories. A uniform cheese from the different qualities of miJx furnished re- quired care. Bad milk should be re- fused,—not necessarily uncourteously. amaker should alsobe somewhat of an engines rto undersiand sCOHOWY of fuel The Speaker then gave a detailed in struction in ali the processes of cheese- ‘making, inthe ordercf ection. Special points were that cheese should never be cooked wt a higher tem- pc rature than 98 decrees, He would not use a cylinder mill with the porsible exception of the MecPhersen. He recommended the Harrie curd cutter. Allow a free circulation of fresh ait in the makiog room. An even temperature of 60 degrees was advisable in the curing room, never above 70. Cheese required light and air, bat nosun nor drafts nor exces- sive heat. There pertaps might be a little bit of prejadice and a litle bit of 8}mpatiy in Eugland in favor of bome-~ made producis, but the fact existed that English cheese commands one-third more mouoey there than ours. We must reco z~ uize and remedy this, and take imme diate steps to keep down the temperature of our curing rooms. _—— lint Ie a At the great Astor bal! at New York the other night there were five hundred guesis present. The famed four hundred bach eleet of seems to have been relegatedto a place aa designating the sOsial'y Greater Gotham. THE FOUNTAIN OF KILLED BY A LION. Engineer on the Uganda Railway Meets With a Terrible Death. Lonpon, Jan. 14.—Thecentral News pe the Uganda railway has just reacbed miles from Mom basa. Ihe enterprise bas suflered loss by the death of Mr WH Harrison, one of the engineers, who died ftom the effects of a severe manting by @ lion. Mr Harrison wevt out shooiing with Mr Boothby and ® pative servant. Near K kiyo the party Came alion anda lioness, Mr Harriscn shot and wounded the lion, and the eoreged t eaet then tnroed and Sprang npou bim, ¢ utchiog him by the left arm and dragging him some distance away. ; Siniba camp, 249 BCTOSs l) n. seeing theser nt the lion dropped Mr Harrison. Mr MHarrson wman- aged to secure his rifle, and fired a second shot, Tais, unfortuoat- by. did not kill the animal, which, now rarther infuriated, again -eized his assail- sut by thealready bacly injured arm and meuled it in ashocking manner. Y > ; ag ‘ j M Help arrived, the lion was+hot, and Mr hie arm: was amputated, but he died few days. ee OD eee A BAD MAN. Sr. Hyacintue, Quebec, Jan 14.—Lf as the charges made against Joseph L’Heur eux,oi Upton, a ema | village fitteen mile~ from this city, are true, he is a very bad man. setting fire to the boy's bed. While L’Heureux is held there are at least five othercrimes which it ie alleged will io all possibility be traced serious of offences agamest humanity— ‘murder. There is every reason to believe itis said, that he murdered his first and second wives, Following is a list of the offences which he is alleged to have committed: That be poisoned or wasin seme other manver responsible for the death of his first wife, who died at Biddeford, Maine, about 12 years ago under very suspicious Circum- stances. That in December, 1894, he poisoned or wasin some other manner responsible for the death of his second wife at Upton village. That in 1894he burned his house and amil' to the ground with the object of collecting the insurance money. That in March, 1898, he set fire to the bed of his stepson who woke before the flames did wuch damage. That in October of the same year he set fire to his dwelling ou the lower floor and placing a rug saturated with turpentine under his stepson’s bed, again attempted the boy’s life aad tried to bura his dwelling. moenprnnsiatitiatainsitiapattiititaimdiciiadais The Plague. Catcurta, Jan. ,J4.—Seversl cases ot suspected bubonic piague have Jately oc- cured here sporadicaily, but there is no lik libood that the port will be cfficially declared intected. ———— ee A Disastrovs Misraxe —Jotn Shea, an inaurauce agent, living at Lynn, a few jdiysegotork hichioride of mercury by mist ospitabl in a precarious condition. Shea has been sick for s week or more, and in- teaded taking medicine which a physician ) bad preecribed for him, the hor]s eootainin f the poison rested near the bottle contain~ , ing the medicine, and he took it by mis- take, ke and at latest accounts was at the —— <> Next Sazsatn the Rev,Howard Sprague D. D., will preach a* both services in Grace Cbvreh. Dr. Sprague wi:l be leaving the Isjaud next summer and this may be the ; last chance to hear this greatest of Metho- He will preach on behalf of the sus(entation fund of th» charch. dist preachers, tien If you have catarrh, don’t dally with local remedies, but purify and earica your blood with Hoowd’s Sareaparilla. Sao Is Known Here. -The Moncton Times tays: Inielligence was received here yes~ terday of the criticw! illoess in Chicago of Mr. E. M. Esiey, torm-rly of Moncton. The doctors concider his care hopeless but ro further word has been received. LIFE DISCOVERED. ee em meme We Would You Increase .Your Years, Strength and Vigor? Then Use Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablets— They Banish Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and all other Stomach Troubles, and Give Health and Strength to All. Ifyou hada chance to drink from the Fountain of Life—would you drink ? Avcd wouldn't there be a crowd around that fountain. People would hurry from the uttermost ends of the earth, and fall over one another in their anxiety to get adrink. If you hada chance to drink froma fountain the waters of which would pro long your life ten to fifteen years—would you drink? In these enlightened days, no one is so foolish as to expect tolive forever. But we all desire to live as long as we can, Notwithstanding this most earnest desire thousands—yes, hundreds of thous- ands of people die before their time, simply because they neglect to | waters would prolong their lives for years ; although they have an easychanceto do ; 80. This may seem strange—at first, but it is true. Our tives are shortened greatly by the commonailment of life--euch as Dyepep- sia, Indigestion, Biliousness, Liver com- plaint, Conetipation; etc. Instead of getting rid of these com. plaints, people neglect them, while they oI into the vitel organs, and finally de. velop in‘o diseases that quickly : ace q Biy Cause oe simple, cheap andeasy method a ing & couple of Dodd’s Dyepepsia ‘eet a ven raig we can drink untain that w i onge oe atwill give us longer : : . ~ Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablets are the only known cure for Dyspepsia, Indiges- tion, Constipation, Biliousness, Liver Complaint, ard other Stomach Troubles. Dodd 8 Dyspepea Tableta never fail to cure, .Lhey are safe, sure, pleasant to take, and quick in action, Th : ev — Y always drink from the fountain, whose ince acne itt at ce Harrison was carried back to camp, where in a He was arrested this morniog ova charge of having attempted to murder his stepson, Joseph Evangelisie Larocque, by ouly on thie charge, home to him, two of them being the most your money back. wu Headache NOTES AND COMMENTS. a cee eta —The Canadian Magazine grows more and more Canadian as it grows older. The number for January i# excellent in every respect. It refl cty credit alike on editor and publisher ; and deserves the patronage of every sntelligent Canadian, Included in its contents,are articles on William Kings. ford, the lately deceased Canadian bistor- 1aD ; Canada’s Trade with the States : the Queen City of British Colambia—V ictoria, Lord and Lady Minto; Review aod Ex petition togethe: with interesting sketches, stories, notea Of Current events, etc., the whole making up 4 Capital magazice. —The United Statea Goveraoment dur- ing the fi cal veer 1897 98 spent $552, 381,201, including $150,815000 on the army and navy andexpenses of the Spanish war. That was at the rate of about $7 50 a head of the population The Montreal Gazette remarks that “the Cana dian Government in the eame twelv months epent $44,240 LL7, or over $85? ahead ot the populution. The Laurier Tarte.Sifton sdminstration involved a beavier chargeon tne Canadian people than a foreign war did onthe peopie ot the Unired States. —The club Gecffrion, one of the leading Liberai organizations of Montreal, is sui)! keeping up ite fight against Mr Tarte, deep te Sir Wilfried Laurie:’s recent letter. Theclab has aéopted a resolution express- ing regret at the action of Sir Wilfrid Laurier towards the Liberal clubs as set forth io bis |eterto Senator Dandurand, and declaring tbat the club would keep up the fight untillit obtained justice. Several of the members guid tha: Sir Wilfrid Laurier’s speech did not cover some im portant questions, and Mr Tarte should have talked politics instead of trying to lead the people to b lieve that they had a rightto display the French flag in this country. Health and strength carry us through dangers and make us safe in the presence of perl. A perfectiy strong man with rich, pure blood, tas nothing to fear from germs. He itmay breathe io the bacilliof comsumption with impunity, If there isa weak spot where the germe may fiod aa entrance to the tissues, ther the trouble begins. Disease germ- propagate with lightning like rapidity. Once in the blood, the only way to get rid of themis to kill them. This is what Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical D»a- covery is for. It purifies the blood ‘Tbat means thatit kills the germs, but that isovly part of whatit does, It as- sists digestion by stimulating the secretion of digestive fluids, so promoting assimila tion and nu ritioo ; purifies and enriche- the blood and sosppplies the tissues with the food they need It buildsup strong healthy flesh and puts the whcle body in to a disease-resisting estate. * Send Sl one-cent stamps to cover cost of mailiogon!y, andget bis book, The Peonle’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, absolutely free, World’s Dis- peps-ry Mdira! As ociation, No. 663 Main Street, Butf.'o N. Y. Address, ‘Probably no single drug is employed in nervous dis- eases with effects so mark- edly beneficial as those of cod-liver oil.” These are the words of an eminent medical teacher. Another says: ‘“‘ The hy- pophosphites are generally acknowledged as valuable nerve tonics.” ) Both these remedies are ' combined in Scott’s Emul- Therefore, take it for nervousness, neuralgia, sciatica, insomnia and brain exhaustion, Soc, and $1.0, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto, —_—_——— sion, Effect of Lime on the System. A medical scientist is authority for the statement that children and old people especially suffer from a lack of Jime in the system. Persons who habit- ually drink soft water, while they may enjoy immunity from certain of the ills of life, expose themselves to others per- haps quite as much to beavoided. Hard water helps the teeth and the bones by furnishing lime, which is necessary to health, growth and development. Old persons who drink but little lose their teeth more quickly than those who take a reasonable amount of drinking water. Lime, or food products in which it abounds, should be a part of the regn- lar supply furnished to the system. One of the most valuable vegetables for this purpose is the yellow turnip or ruta baga, which should be given to growing children at least once a week. Properly prepared, it is very relishable and its food value has never been appre- ciated. She Thought She Did. He—Do yi love me well enough to become my wife? She—I think I do, but I must have all the money I want, and I must al- Ways have my own way, and go when an’ where I want to, and come home when I please, and stay away when 1 please. Yes, I think I really do love you well enough to marry you.—Boston Transcript. TO CURE TOOTHACHE IN A MINUTE Use NERVOL. One aprticeten forse ;if not, ually good for Neuralgig at all Dengiists, m WVING Ta ARIS Opposite Post Office—~wy Early in January, Before moving we will sell at low prices The Challenger Tie do Kenevin do do Senator do de Loie do do Mirella do o Belmo nt do do Umg Bow’ do do Gerada do do Sapp Ho ~~ do do Saleta do do Paris Bow’ do do Nasen do 25 to 33'1-3 p. ¢, discount. D. A. BRUCE es & PRESENT STOCK CANNOT FALL TO PLEASE Like two friends, are the foot and shoe which meet in perfect harmony. Sully pieetings are common in our experience. ’ Ladies’ and Gents’ Slippers in all styles, Overgaiters aud legzins, Moccassiatg Overshoes and Rubbers. A nice line of skating boots in to buy where high quality is cheapest, than you get elsewere. VWreeks& VWrarret SUNNYSIDE...... all the latest etyles and colors. Iv’s economy We’ve always lower prices aud better qu REGISTERED PURE INDIA TEA . : SERRE: Five tons just arrived airect from the Gardens r.ore.ce Haszat Ch’town, 27th December—2wks eod English & Germal Cutlery Pecket Knives, ; Table Knives, Razors, Scissors, Also: lub and Hockey Si , FENNEL & CHANDLE pn ft woh ek — &. rte OS a ee, — ke 0 P in em He gre 4nc He wed M) rer MJ of