é Se eee cals as Sarees te ty ey 26s ae ia E oe Oe he THR DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLO TTETOWN, NOVEMBER 10 1897 rr eoetr os B® DBAS ‘Souvenir ( ; => OF ee, P & island A copy of ‘ Prince Edward Island Llus- trated.” is about the thing for the purpose of giving strangers an idea of this beautiful Prey- inee. It sts of 100 pp. printed on the best paper, The engravings are nu- merous und _first- class. The price is 25c a copy. They are for sale at all the bookstores in Char- best Consl =~_><«=-«. *o-*F oe. a = @& © = * 22 2 2 @& | @ = £0697 2 @ @ @ @ = lottetown, m merside and Souris and on the train. They may be ob- tained at this office securely wrapped, ready to mail to friends abroad. Write or call. ) THE EXAMINER OFFICE, eseeeeQ UEEN STREET... se DDD B2GBWS2B8O7 a SUITABLE 3 BOOTS For this time of year. We have a large stock of walking and Skating Boots. Is it something like this yow want? Girls Oil Pebble Boots $1.00 “ “ “ “ Sp. Heel 1.25 Womens Gil Pebble Boots 1.25 = “ © Limeu 1.35 « oo « io) - 1.45 oe se “ “ ms 1.60 se “ ““ “6 “ 1.85 “* Dongola ae > 1.85 We want you to call and see our goods, we know they will please you’ Our prices speak for them- selves. R. BR. Jost BOCOOOOOHSOOD 00000001 COO" EPPS'S COCOA 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 JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homceopathic Chemists, London, England. NICHT SCHOSL —_—— -- The Evening Session —OF THE— Charlottetown Business College and Writing Academy OPENS ON OCTORER 18TH INST. This fox-ion affords an excellent opportunity for th «ewhe eanpot attend during the azy to &quire @ business education. Its object isto assist those in needof help; and the work j.soarranged that no one, however d<ficient, need feel any embarassment. INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCIION SUPBJECTS—Prectical Arittimetic, Writ ing. easy and rapid) Business Cor: espond-nee Book xeeping by single ard Double Entry Actual Business Practise, not copying short hand and Typewriting, The Per mavahip Department is conducted by» rJ. Harry Williams; for specimens of bis e‘udents’ work. see wieo. Carter & Co’s Window. Shorthand by Mr Wm Moran, the “nly licensed public teacher in this Prov- ince. Five sessions per week; hours 7 50 to 9 30 p ™m For rates nnd ftull information call at the C, B. C. or write to 1. B MILLER, Prine al take up any SSOSSSSOSOSOCOSSEEOOCSs 288888 Intend ing brane} hes des ire sd Oct 8 dif students may 5! ddd ee =e @] oe > © *% © 66 82844 828 3232404046074 06074 8 @ nee 0060000000066 SOO® DOTe OOO9 9604 BEAUTIFUL COWS. BEpecimens of a New Jersey Belted Cattle. ‘Dutch Belts,’’ as the Belted cattle are commonly called, come from Hol- land. They are somewhat similar to the Holstein-Friesians, except that they are rounder and neater in build. As milk producers they are first class. Their milk is rich in quality. These picturesque animals are some- Herd of : | SiLO FILLING, Friendly Neighbors Work It Effe ctively on the Co-operative Plan. Corn has been raised on clover sod on which 15 or 29 loads of manure to the acre had been spread during the winter. Variety of corn, Pride of the North. Rows three feet apart, with from 20 to 25 kernels to the rod of row drilled in. Veeder used twice. Corn cultivated six cultivat times, tion shaHow and level. Average meaty of corn, 8 feet. Corn heavily eared and well matured. Three neighbors change work in filling silos. ne has a ten horsepower engine, an- sther has a machine that cutsand binds the corn in the field, and the other owns & cutter and elevator. No better rig is . » } “ , 4 "> oe . Pon . . times 8180 called Blank t cattle, from needed for Grawing the corn than a flat the effect of the white belt on their | hyyrack 16 fect long and 8 feet wide tac . | or roe x? hea ay e - } om e bodies, whic h gives them the appear With atamdarés at each end. <A _ truck ance at a distance of having a white | wagon is v and the top of the rack > . Ae aad ‘ ‘ . c ’} , ii Lat La sheet or blanket pinned smoothly around is on a leve! with the feed table of the them. In roman sition thev are as intelli- enttaw sehen i - ee yada a DUTCH BELTS. gent and gentile as cows could be. A ) dairyman who had a herd of them would be sure of a large quantity of milk of fine quality and richness, and he would have besides a herd that would make his farm one of the show places of the neighborhood, so picturesque and attractive are the Dutch Belts. At Lilewellen Park, N. J., isa fine herd of these cattle. They drew to themselves much attention at the state fair and captured nine prizes. The Datch Belts are very hardy in constitution, enduring extremes of weather well. In color they are entire- ly black except for the wide white band around their bodies. The bulls mark the characteristics of the breed strongly upon their grade offspring. In a herd of cattle the Dutch Belt cross is sometimes shown in red cows with the white band around their bodies. Classes of Creamery Patrons. First.—There is the genuine dairy- man, who always has at least 20 cows giving milk and sometimes 60 or more. The cows and his mind are both well eared for. The butter maker who at- tempts to instruct such a man about the management of his herd or the care of his milk must be well informed and read at least three agricultural or <lairy papers every week. Second.—The farmer who keeps from two to six cows. He does most of the work himself and has a neat and attract- ive barn, house and home. He is very well acquainted with his cows, but geads the weekly edition of the daily papers and some of the monthly maga- zines more than he does his one agricul- tural paper. Third.—The maz who farmsa good many acres of land, but lives ina small house which is sarrounded by an ac- cumulation of broken wagons, farm ma- chinery and many other things that have been dropped mm the shuffle of his everyday work. Pigs, geese and chick- ens dodge around this mass of material or roost on the water tank. They may occasionally enter the house, bui the human inhabitants ef this complicated dooryard seem to %2 either hustling about, as if they were nearly overcome by the amount of work they are trying ‘to do, or are quietly content to live with ‘the stock in these untidy surroundings. —Profes»r Farrington. See These Records. At the Rockville (Conn.) fair $100 was offered in prizes for six cows enter- ed by one man that should produce the most butter fat in 24 hours. The six winning cows gave 1764, pounds of milk which contained 8.4 pounds of butter fat, equal to 9.8 pounds of but- ter. This is not a large performance as compared with many private records made at home. These six cows, howev- er, are gcaod business animals. With 24 cows competing for the prizes the aver- age weight of milk was 27.3 pounds and of butter 1.49 pounds. Sueh dairy con- tests are worth ten times as much to the average farmer as is the ‘‘horse trot,’’ yet the latter performance usual- ly commands so much of the money that there is little for other prizes. Such dairy contests are usually surpris- ing. Actual weights and analyses mark out the robber cows and show farmers the necessity of knowing what their cattle are doing. —Exchange. ~ Miss H ‘MoDONALD FANCY DANCES S, including Highland Fling, Flag Dance, "Strathspey, Spanish Dance, Sailors Hornpipe, May Pole and Villiagers Dance. Skirt Dance, Audalucia, etc. For this seeson ouly these dances $5 each, being one third of price. Rooms in Masonic Building. sept30 Three teams are used, one for cutting and two for drawing. If the corn is far away, a third is used in drawing. Two men in the field handle the bundles with forks, putting them in nearly the right position on the load. The labor in loading and unloading is much less with bundles than with loose corn. Two men are needed at the cutter, one to feed and one tocut bands, chang- ing with alternate loads. The corn cut in one-quarter inch lengths is delivered in the silo through a dormer window. Inside it falls on aninclined carrier and is landed in the center of the silo, which is round and 22 feet in diameter. One man is kept in the silo most of the time to keep the corn evenly distributed over the surface. For covering damp saw- dust is spread on the corn to the depth of four inches. The silo is opened when ensilage is needed for feeding, usually in five or six weeks after filling. With such corn the round silo isa perfect suc- cess, and the ensilage of excellent quak ity. Other conditions being equal, we make more and better winter butter than before the silo was built. Br changing work with neighbors as aborws stated very little extra help by the day is needed and the cost of filling is not great.—C. S. Rice in Rural New Yorker. Australian Butter Box. It is a cheaper package than a tub. It is easier to nail a bex together than it is to soak a tub. Tle only trouble about boxes is that, being made of whitewood, they are easily soiled in handling. Hands must be kept clean and dry to avoid finger marks. So great is the demand for boxes at this time that many are unable to get them from the factories in sufficient quantities to fill contracts. All butter packed in boxes should be lined with parchment paper. The opera- tion is very simple, and the expense is less than a cent per package. Butter packed in boxes should weigh at the factory a trifle more than 56 pounds to allow for shrinkage. —Cream- ery Journal. Model Creamery Butter Maker. The butter maker must strive and ex- pect to be the standard of cleanliness which he wishes the patrons to follow. When he has conquered his own coun- try, he can cominence his crusade against the carelessness of his customers in the care of their cows and their cans. It often happens that sour or tainted milk is the result of ignorance on the part of the patron of the best way to prevent it. In order to be able to advise each patron of effectual remedies and to write a prescription most fitting for each case, it is just as necessary for th butter maker to call at the farm of each patron as it is for the doctor to call cn his sick patients. A personal acquaint- ance, formed by an occasional visit ar the butter maker to each patron’s farm, will develop a mutual interest in each other’s business that should be beue- ficial to al! parties. WARE - HOUSE: TO LET PEAKE’S WHARF (WO 1) Wharfage storage and coe age, at reasonable rates. Arthur &, Peake. Nov. 4 Dairy and Creamery. A creamery that is very successful in dealing with its patrons pays them in this way: It buys the milk from the farmers. Each man’s product is tested to determine the amount of butter fat in it. The patron is paid as much for each pound of fat as the price the cream- ery would obtain in the Elgin market. Of course there is one-sixth more com- mercial butter than there are pounds of butter fat. That is to say, for every 60 pounds of pure butter fat there will be about 70 pounds of commercial butter. Out of the difference between the am ount of butter fat and commercial butter the crezmery pays its expenses : and mak its profit, seems well satisfied. eS and everybody In response to the plan of Secretary Wilson samples of American butter were sent to Great Britain from various parts of the — u. The Minnesota packages seem to haverbrought excellent prices. Tho butter was done up in 56 pocnd packages and was sold by the London grocers at 24 to 26 cents a pound. Theat is the price ut the sam: market for the best French and Dani: butte So butter was rn sent to London dc up in small prints, on and two pornd This did not find so ¥¢ eis Lobetter medicine than bat- t Sow good fer biliousness aud Le 1} guic for t stomach. B howe of bitter buttermilk. Ki I mz, but it must never be bitt Here is 2a good balanced ration for a cow to be fed in ane day: Twenty pounds cornstalks, two pounds corn- meal, two pounds oats, two pounds bar- ley, three pounds wheat bran, three pounds giuten meal, two pounds oil- meal. What is called the ‘‘new corn prod- uct’’ is a valuable cattle feed either for dairy cows or beeves. It consists of the ground up stalks of corn after the pith has been taken out. The ground corn- stalk resembles coarse bran and is used by mixing it at the rate of two to one with bran, oilmeal or cottonseed meal, THE HURRYING FEET OF WOMEN at the new-born infant’s cry, tells the story of woman’s sympathy for her sister-woman. If women would only spread the medical gospel, that a woman is unfitted for wife- heod and motherheed as long as she suffers from weakness or disease of the distinctly womanly organism, there would be less neCéssity for the sisterly oe that a woman receives when she in the throes of child-bearing. A woman whe is thoroughly strong and healthy in a womanly way has to suffer comparatively little pain and sickness when she becomes a mother. Dr. Pierce’s Favor- ite Prescription acts directly on the delicate and important organs that bear the burdens of maternity and gives them health, strength and elasticity. It allays inflamma- tion, heals ukceration and soothes pain. It banishes the discomforts of the faint- hearted period and makes baby’s advent easy and altuost painless. It insures the mewcomer’s health. Over 90,000 women have testified to its marvelous merits and many of them have permitted their experi- ences, names, addresses and photographs to be printed i in Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, so that other women may learn of this wonderful medicine. Good medicine dealers sell it. “IT am now real well,"’ writes Mrs. Lillie Hib- bard, of Merrill, Lincoln Ceo., Wis. ‘I have been doing my ewn housework, including washing and ironing. JT hardly ever feel the pain in my side unless I lift hard. I took four bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, one of ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ and two bottles of ‘ Pleasant Pellets." I have not beeh taking any medicine for over two months. This isthe first time I have been well enough to do my work for over three years. Your medicine is all that helped me.” Send 3: one-cent stamps, /o cover cost of mailing and customs only, for a paper- covered copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. Cloth binding, 50 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. Itis the most popular medical work in the English language; it contains a thousand and eight pages, and over three hundred illustrations. It is a great store- house of valuable information—a veritable medical library in one volume. ap : ‘> The only food that will build up a weak cons- titution gradu- ally but surely is 3 Chance hicrtin’ Cardinal |-ood a simple, scientific and highly nutritive preparation for infants, delicate children and invalids. @ KERRY WATSON 4 CO. MONTREAL. + NOTICE has just been received of a consider able advance in the prices of Waltham SOHSSPOS OSS SOSOOSOOSIOOTHOS 0009006046600006 » Proper: ETORS, i, and Elgin watch movements. We have a large stock on hand bought be- fore the rise, which we will sell at old prices while the y last. G.E.TAYEOR: Jeweler and Optician, ‘orth Side Queen Square. Is a Fluid Beef prepared from the choicest cattle raised in the Argentine Repub ic and Australia. Contains both the stimulating and the nutritious properties o beef, aud will sustain life without the aid of other nutritious foods. BOVRIL Issuitable to 2ll, from the Infant to the Athlete, and can be Sales aud relished by invalids when ull other foods ure rejected Sold by all First-class Druggists and Grocers throughout the Dominion ..... ee mem ERR ee ee any TASSE WOODxGICO“MONTREAL | ee Good Tailoring That is the kind we do. If youcannot get suited an where else, try us). WE CAN DO IT. $17,900 Fits you with a suit of elegant os Worsted. $15.6 . Fits vou to a beautiful Blue Serge th English manufacture elegantly made and trimmed. $14, $15, $16 Is the price we ask you for nobby tweed suits. the better kind. HATS! HATS! The latest fashions. Large Stock. Don’t buy a hat until you see ours. Gents’ Furnishings in the very latest styles. MeKay Woolen Co., High Class Tailors and Furnishers. BIRD CAGES fe BRASS AND PINTED. Extra bottie and springs. Wire rat traps, for another kind of bird. SIMON W CRABBE 187 STOVES & EARD WABE We have Walker's Corner ew Remember The Place [0o——«se ==Tnsure Stock Your House, Furniture, ship or Cargo, is with we” HORACE HASZARD* (IRE AND MARINE INSURANCE AGENT- Office—Cameron Block TELEPAONE CONNECTION...... wee te eenweee —_ FONE OE ANNE SIME: INE MIE A