The Examiner Publishing Company KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION UN ADVANCE) One Vear .... 84.00 Bin Ve sths eve 7.00 i Tiree “onths 1.00 One Vsath, 0.35 | ao sf paid to any part of Canada or th i) Sates T'tE WEEKLY EXAMINER taxne! every Friday morning. It is made up Of tna “which has appesred in the Daily and & first clases newspaper containi ag wl :} est news Subscription $1.00 a year TH: DAILY EXAMINER OCTOBER 13. 1897. ree WoORLD's WHEAT CROP, em kt Will Kun Up te Abou: six Hundred Million Bushels, Jue ‘rade estimates of the 1897 wheat Crop- tay be said to range from 575 to 60 on beshels. The October report of ih Americas Agriculturist claimed 589 wiiiive bishels, and Thomar’s Uctober repo», based on full returns from the Lhe , indicated 580 muiliion bushels. Leas \:or’s harvest, as reported by the Deva. t vent of Agriculture, was 427,684, - 340 bu-nels, and with the exception of the Yielt of 1391 (611,780,000 bushels), the curren! crop is the Jargest vet harvested. The r-gular October report of the Am- eric sn Agriculturist places the 1897 crop of wheat at 589,000.00 bushele trom an acera -e of 39,167,000 acres, compared with an |= crop of 470 millions froin 37,156,- O00 ares. County estimates to this &utbori:y iodicate a rate of yield for winter wheat of 15,6 bushels, aod for spring whe: t.41 bushels. Appiying this to the acreuy~, resulting crop in winter wheat is 3733 m Ilions, and the spring wheat crop 2154 miilions. The report says the winter wheat crop is deficient in but two States—L!lionis and portions of Mis souri—and that in every other Siate the rave of yield is above the average for @ lovg series of years, and in many of them represents the full capacity ot the coil. The total wheat crop is, with one excep‘ion, the largest ever grown. The corn cropof 1897 1s a dissapointment, with a further and serious deciine in con- dition the past month, the general average fallin: to 78.9,againet 823 in September. It is +xfe to assume that a total of 1,750 million bushele will represent the ontside measure of the crop. Owing to drought in the Central and Western States, drafts have beguo upon the new crop for farm use (vo months earlier than usual, and thi- ix being subjected to heavy demands for teediag purposes, a condition which further shortens the supply. Tho.nan’s report for October, based on full retaros from the thresher, makes the tora! vield of wheat, approximately, 530,000,000 bushels, as against 435 million busueis harvested last year. Of this total the proportion of winter wheaiis 379 million bushels, as against 270 million, aod of spring wheat 20! wiliion bushels, as agn nst 165 million bushels harvested tLe previous year. The area from which this crop was gathered equalled 38,473,000 acre-, divided into 23,930,000 acres of wintes, aod 14,543,000 screa of spring | wheat. The average yield per acre for the whole breadth is 15.1 bushels; of winter, 14.5, «nd of spring, 13 8 bushels. The six principal winter wheat States protneed 188,000,000 burhels, as against 136, (00,000 bushels last year on 12,014,000 acre-—showing an average yield per acre of 156 bushels. The three principal spring wheat States produced 143,000,000 bushels, as against 123,000,600 bushels Fifty Years Ago. This is the way it was bound to look When grandfather had his “picter took.” These were the shadows cast before The coming of Conjurer Dagucrre And his art; like a girl in a pinafore Some day to bloom to a goddess fair. Bfen certainly were not as black, we know As they pictured them, go years ago, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla began to make new men, just as the new pictures of men began to be made. Thousands ef peovle fronted the camera with skins made clean from blotch and blemish, because they had purified the blood with Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. It is as powerful now as then. Its record proves it. Others imitate the remedy; they ean't imitate the record: 50 Years of Cures, , are to participate first. and Michigan, ia of poor quality; weet of the river, especially in Kansas, the quality Is very good, Calenlating upon the basis of a 580,000, (00 bushel crop, the total supply for 1897 28, that is, from last July to June 39,1898, | approximates 640,000,000 bushels. Home requirements for bread and seed wil! pro- bably not exceed 365,900,000 bushels during the vear, and. should domestic stocks next July equal 60,900,000 bushels, the same as wascarried over this year, the exporiab'e surplus would reac 250,000,000 bushels, or in the neighborhood of 65,000, 000 bushels more than was exported daring the preceding twelve months, THEY CAN RETALIATE, The United states Newspapers Are Making More Threats Against Canada. Burra.o, October 8.—A special des- patch froni Washingtoa to the Evening News, regarding Great Britain’s refusal to participate in the Behring Sea conference at Washington, contains the [f Great Britain persistently refuses two come tO ADY agreement on the fealipg con- troversy it is highly probable that tue re- taliatory measures against Canada will be recommended to Congress, for unless the Mother Country pledges herself to assist the United States in protecting fur seals, there is no other course which w)!] pre- vent the Canadian tishermea in the Beb- ring sea trom continuing their merciless slaughter. Great Britain contends that the proposed conference was to consider the seal question on tue basis of the regula- tions adopted by the Paris tribunal, aod that Russia and Japan cannot be parties to it. Providing two conferences are arranged, it will be more feasible to have that in which the United States, Japan and Russia The United States can theo carry the conclusions with Great Britain and a-k her participation. It Grea’ followtog : Britain then declines to pledge her- self to assist in protecting the seal herds, the United States will have two nations assisting ber, and by adopting retaliatory measures can comyel Canada to respect her wishes. It should be re- membered that the most accessible path to Klondyke country for Canadians is through American territory, which can be closed against them at aay time. Con- gress can evact legislation this winter which will cripple Canadian commerce to & Serious degree, and in the end Great Britain might seriously regret that she had not been the first t» stand for seal protection, NEWS NOTES. The late Neal Dow left no will. estate is valued at $350,000. Barney Barnato, the Kaffir king, who jumped overboard from a steamer between Cape Town avd Southampton, left e fortune officially announced at £963,895 stg. Sally Betsy Jernings,100 yeare old, and her son, Peter H., aged 80, celebra:ed their birthday at New Fairfield, Coon,, last week, and the old lady enlivened the occasion by dancing to Money Musk. Lord Teonyson’s biography containe correspondent between the Queen and thas poet, which shows that when Mr. Glad- stone was her adviser she actively ir- terfered in Opposition to Irish Home Rule. The girls’ cottage atthe State Indus- trial school at Plankinton S. D, was burned on Tuesday night, aud a teacher and five of the little inmates were burned to death. Enquiry at the Movnted Police De- The partment in Ottawa tends to ehow tnat there has ucen little or po trounle with prairie fircs in the North-West this e¢a- son. It ie actrict rule with the big trans- Atlantic steamship companies that the wife of the captain shall not travel in his | ship. The supposition is that if anything should happea to the ship the captain, in- stead of attending to his public duty, would devote his attention maiuly to the safety of his wife. Paris’ 1900 exhibition is now safe. The Prince of Wales has accepted the chairmansaip of the British Commission for the exhibition, and will see to it that Great Britain is adequately repre- sented. Assistant Secretary Howell has issued a call for a meeting at New York of the government tea experts at Boston, Phila- delpLia, New York and Chicago, with a view to the settlement of certain questions which have arisen ato Indian, Ceylon and Canton teas. Tvrought and forest fires are doing great damage in Arkansas, andthe situation grows worredaily. Thousands of dollars worth of valuable timber and other pro- perty bas been burned, and stock is suffer. ing from the scarcity of water. No general rain has falleu for over sixty days. Adjutant General Stewart has issued a warrant for $94,245 for the pay of troova fo- seryices at Hazelton, Pa., during the strike. This doves not include the co-t of transportation and subsistence. The mili tiamen, 2,600 in number, were on duty from Sept. 11 to Oct. 4, : Rinderpest being a cattle disease, Dr. Koch has found out that it does not attack birds. He tried to inoculate hens, pigeons. guinea fowls, @ crane, an eagle and a secre- tary bird with the bacillus of the disenre, tut it did not affect them. He was equally unsuccessful with dogs, mice, rabbite and guinea pigs, but is not sure that the disease may not be conveyed to cattle by any of these avimals. The German Government haa refused to recognize Mr. Ferdinand Neumann. sent by the United States to act as coneu! at Cologne. More incidents of this kind Hungary and China. Whatever it may be for the politicians, the Washingtou manrer of mixing politics and diplomacy i8 HOt a good thing for the country, HOWE’S HITS. It t= terribly hard to do the right thing. Tt always seems an effert for some men to be good natured, liven if a man has nerve he dislikes for occasion to arise for using it, Some people have no appreciation of anything beyond something to eat. When a man is silent in a quarrel with his wife, ié is because there is refuge in it. We have seen a good many wet hens in our time, but have never yet seen one that was mnad. Trying to economize makesenemies. As | long as you turn your money loose you are a good fellow. A musical laugh is one brought forth by one of yourown jokes. Allother laughs are more or less grating. There are some men who don’t know what greatness is until they have some one working under them. We have only one objection to old fash- foned people—when you see anything you like particularly to eat they say it in ‘‘not good’’ for you, As soon #5 a man and his wife have saved up enough money to afford plums in their pudding their trouble begins in finding a competent girl tocook it.—Atch- ison Globe. BUSINESS. In progress there is originality. In originality there is progress, No new thing was ever built by a whol- ly conservative builder. No new thing was ever built by a whol- y original buildes Success in business is neither in over- originality nor in overconservatism. The monument of success is made of equal parts of conservatism and progressive originality. The fool can be original. be conservative. It is the wisé man who uses both of these successful elements, so mixing them that the good of each enhances the value of the other and the bad in each dissolves by the bad in the other.— Hard ware, The fool can THE INDIAN UPRISING. England is inclined to consider that In dian uprising as ameer Russe.—Washing- ton Post. That outbreak en the Indian frontier seems sumething more than amcer baga- telle to the Afghans.— Philadelphia Press, Turkey carving, instead of being carved, is now undoubtedly the dream of the Mo- hammedan world.—St. Louis Post-Dis- patch. 4 It is now suspected that the sultan’s am- pitions have progressed beyond the mere massacre of Armenians and that he has stimulated the Mohammedans in India to undertake a similar enterprise with refer- ence to Englishmen.—Washington Star. — ¢ @-¢ @———___—_____- ‘ Of all the Bereavements which are possi- . le to a home, the loss of a child is perhaps the most disappointing, and the hardest to bear. During the heated spell in the summer in New York City as many as a thou- died in a week. Of course, in a crowded city, with its. unsani- } tary districts, many of these deaths would have occurred any way. The fact remains that this tremendous mortality was to a great extent due to the lack of inherent resisting power in the victims, These babies when born had in their bodies the seeds of disease. The deadly heated term only shortened the period of their sufferings. If a woman wishes her babies to be healthy and strong and able to resist the usual ailments of childhood, she must take proper care of herself in a womanly way uring the period of gestation. A woman who suffers from weakriess and disease of the organs distinctly feminine is unfitted for wifehood and motherhood. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a wonderful med- icine for ailing women. It acts directly on the delicate and important organs con- cerned. It makes them well and strong. It allays inflammation, heals ulceration seothes pain, stops exhausting drains and gives rest and tone to the tortured nerves. Thousands of women have testified to its almost miraculous merits. Many of them have permitted their names, addresses, experiences and photographs tc be repro- duced in Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Med- ical Adviser. This great book used to sell for $1.50, now it is lutely free. It tells all about the home-treatment of ordinary diseases. It contains 1008 pages, and over 300 illustrations. Several chapters are de- voted to the diseases of women. Fora pa- per-covered copy send 3 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of customs and mailin only, to the World’s Dispensary Medic Association, Buffalo, N. ¥Y.; Cloth bindin 50 cents. ‘Favorite Prescription” is so y all druggists. Pups cc] Culture & Dancing oe ee MISS H. MACDONALD Will re-open her Claswes on Thurscay October 7.h, Private lessons at any hour. Adults at8 p.m. Juveniles at 4 p, m. Fancy Dancing a specia-ty. . Fall particulars on application at her rooms in Masonic Building. or at the residence of John A. Macdonald, Esq. ownal St. oct 7— Ex-Senator Ingalls is now writing po- etry. Mr. Ingalls’ descent has beon pretty rapid since he left the senate.—Indian- apolis News. There must be moments with Andree when he is convinced that obscurity where a hot biscuit is is be‘ter than fame and fricasseed iceberg.— Wichita Kagle, Emperor William may be sensational, but he has the faculty of making himself appear the central figure on all occasions even among contemporary sovereigus.— Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Kansas City Journal prints a pic- ture of Charlotte Smith, the woman who wants a law compelling all men to marry. The face might not stop an eight day clock, but it weuld surely cause it to lose six or seven hours in the 24.—Denver Post. Stoke Susong is the name of an east Tennessee citizen who is coming into prominence. We suggest that Stoke Su- song, Link Houk, Ki Gudger, Bart Bad- dies and Mart Mush appoint a day and have a family reunion.— Atlanta Consti- tution. Governor Leedy of Kansvs expresses the epinion that, if a young man wishes to uke his best girl out riding ‘‘an old fash- joned buggy and a gentle horse’’ compose an infinitely better outfit for the purpose than a tandem bicycle. Evidently Govern- or Leedy has not studied human nature in yain.—Philadelphia Ledger. - Siok HEADACHE Positively curcd by these Little Pills. They «iso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Mearty Eating. A per- fect remeay for Dizziness, Nausea, Dr wsi- | 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. Filing and om 4 Piling all kinds of Lumber daily Everything new and good. Shingles in Cedar and Spruce—all classes; We Want ‘YOu to see us betore you build or repair. New customers come again and bring others. It will mean mon- ey in your pocket if you give us a oall. Lumber of al! kinds in stock JAMES BARRETT, Telephone 18). Connleys wharf Plums, Gages and Peaches Beer & Goff expect anoth. er lot of Piums, Gages and Peaches by express from On- tario on Wednesday night,the 22nd,inst Anyone wishing any of this lot, which will probably be the last this sea- son, had better leave their order at our store either Tues- day or Wednesday so that we 2an deliver the fruit at the house early Thursday morning Beer & Goff Bs al i ll lll ella ages o oe bal * ~ I — THE DAILY, EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 13 1897 = Brrcneeteentmaperes ee eeraneen os pr nara Seenavads-ceulnntsersastasaeese ee —— -- PR eS TN. ney . Peers PF aay } A : the previous year, on 10,855,000 acres, or happen in connection with U.S, diplomacy PERT PERSONALS. Ber rr ae OSG Oa ea PS ret dl yam an average yield of 13.2 bushels per acre. | than with that of any Other land. Two gone AEH ME > boom | Ee i es telah all PAPAS ASST U A The quality of spring wheat ia generally | cases bave occurred. in recent years of If the John L, Sullivan ay it |e inferior, Winter wheat east of the Mixsias- ambassadors being rejected hy the powers is anything Ike John L. § yee Fo ISSUED EVERY AFTERNOON ippi ,with the exception of parts of Otio | to which they wers aceredited, Austria- oo to be coming up groggy. fe, orses OU SF FROM THE OFFICE of } ‘ribune. . What a hum there would be on the streets about the es wonderful way in which E Pe ores ¥xk t mh > a ~ >a > dea ak a ba lesa Com cS -— — ep ao Pee eee | . vA cures Scratches, Galls and Sores. —— ° ‘ t, Every man who owns a horse should try it. usd is SOLD BVYERYYWRERE—> £7 Se a ee SNR AL TIES ANAT SARA AA Cast as de SE mrt sandal aehad Seg NOW OPENING LADIES HAT LkDIES’ JACKETS LONDON HOUSE, ee erat | T J. HARRIS alt sae LandIng to-day ex Steamer “Irene Morris,” direct from Liverpool,. ke SUPERPHOSPHATES, NITRATE OF SODS, MURIATE OF POTASH, BONE MEAL, ETC. Ali genuine, and of guaranteed analysis. The oniy reliable, best, and at least 20 per cent the cheapest fertilizer on the market, AULD BROS. oma Can You Rely on Good Work at our tailoring establishment. Not one stitch put in a garment by an apprentice, or an unexperienced hand. We employ none of that kind. We could easily boast of 50 workmen if we did. We are bound to hold the reputation we have made as high-class tailors. ~a ae o. 2 4 2a 2] .cKay Woolen Co., High Grade Tailors. - eft te i ee =e ome ee ee OUR BIG EXHIBIT... —— ~— OF NEW CLOTH _. We are opening our different lines fur the new season, with much the same feeling of confidence which a fellow ex- periences when he has a good thing. So many good, grouped together that it is impossibie to tell you all abou hem. Come and see the BEAUTIFUL LINES OF OVERCOATINGS the finest ever brought to the city. And Trouserings, the finest you ever laid eyeson; and for Suits, they are beautifu, in the extreme. Those goods will be shown with much pleasure, and will be on exhibit this afternoon and to-morrow JOHN MACLEOD &C0 MERCHANT TAILORS. English Manures J Ly As to