nw thao ~ Faisal pee a eg air fee 2 eicind Wendie « Tus. 7 mage SEE Atgamnaitions. yh snmagpn spillage aaa ~ a ober a 2 en anata iin ati - ae sl SF Ta SE Sail ec a BOR ” Ve -_* a m : ' oa - sn Sel ee a eee Se a te emia ee in: ts es * re Tae - ote ie 2 ons la wat ee RRR RR —aT a eee ane ee A a A OC Ae ae ate — nm la oy JJoctrp. rO THE SONS OF TEMPERANCE. BY MRS. COSMOPOLITAN. Sons of Temperance raise your banner, Far o’er mountain, sea and land, Herald the glad tidings onward, Strong 1 ark and union stand. Save the wretched, human creatures, From a drunkard’s early grave, Save the weeping wives and mothers, And their hapless children save. Brothers, here is work in plenty In our own far mountain home ; Then let all be up and doing, Round the temperance standard come. We have many in our numbers, Brothers, yes, and sisters, too, But we want more added to them, For we all have work to do. Look and see the drunkard daily, As he staggers to his door ; See his little ones in terror, With their garments soiled and tore. See the weeping wite and mother, As she falls upon her knees, Clasping her white hands in anguish Hear her prayers,.behold her tears Who would not then do his duty, Save the weeping, sutfering ones ; Save the husband and the father, Make them happy, cheerful homes. Oh, that Heaven may bless our order ; Make it like a guiding star ; Then our hearts will beat with gladness, As it spreads its light afar. ENGAGED. There are so many types of the en- gaged girl that it is impossible to follow their numerous caprices. Sometimes the girl professes complete indifference to her intendant husband. be seen speaking to him. She openly laughs at sentiment, denies the exist- ence of true love. She sneers at noon light walks, and keeps her engaged ring loose in her work-basket. Yet her feel ings, such as they are, may be well calculated to stand the test of time and | matrimony. It is perhaps more pleasing to watch the behaviour of the young girl who is} delighted with her lover and her pros- pects. You are expected to congratu- late her, not as a matter of form, but as it were, spontaneously. You may see no great reason for congratulation. You may, in fact, disapprove of her choice; yet you must not say so, else she will think you hard-hearted and critical. She expects you to see through her eyes or not at all, and as she takes off her glove you know that she wishes you to admire a ring on her third finger, and ask her for the photograph of her swain to place opposite to hers in your album. As time goes on she settles down to a more prosaic view of things. If you are in her confidence she expects you tosit beside her and ask for biographical particulars concerning her intended, and to give her advice as to the man- agement of her future household. After @ time these topics cease to be touched, and she gradually becomes more like other people. _.3o--- -—_— lt is related that during the Crimean campaign in 1855, a French officer un- dertook to chastise a Turkish private for disobedience, by slapping his face, hat the soldier threw off his coat and umeld the Frenchman so soundly that Ss cried for quarter, and that thereupon, the panting private bracing himself up, delivered this piece of advice, which 1s said to have made a marked impression on the spectators: ‘ Now Misther Par- ley Voo, the next time you strike a Turk, look out that he isn’t a Tipperary man.’ This story was told at the time to prove that the pugnacious sons of the Greek Isle are to be found in every camp where there is fighting done. If we are to believe a writer in Cork Ex- aminer, there is another proof furnish- ed in the person of Suleman Pasha, who tirns out to be one Patrick Sullivan from the County Cork. The writer gives a connected history of the youth- ful Celt, from his school days down to the time that he entered the Military Sehool at Constantinople. He also states that the gallant Patrick has been heard from since he went into active service urider the shadow of the Crescent. —— > <> are —————— A Financier who seldom had any money but always had plenty of ingenuity, went into a restaurant and ealled for two roast chickens, one of which he ate, and then ealling the landlord, he said—‘ I’ve no money, and so | leave this chicken, which is mine, a material guarantee dinner. The landlord thereupon seized his hat and said—“ And [il keep your hat to coop the chicken in.” A man who can govern himself and his wife and child, has got as far as the rule of three in the matrimonial arith- metic. It was said of a great caluminator, and a frequenter of other persons tables, | | | | She will not! BANKRUPT SALE. | The Stock in Trade of the Istate of S. KEITH & CO. WILL BE SOLD AT A TREMENDOUS SACRIFICE. Worsted Coatings, « Beavers, Pilots, Broad Cloths, | Tweeds, AND HATS, WILL BE SOLD REGARDLESS OF COST. AS USUAL. C. V. MCGREGOR, Makers wanted immediately. c. ¥. MeG., Ch’town, Feb. 5, 1878—2m 2aw Buy the American iG) NRREN §, WHEELS —AND THE- BAND HUB WHEELS, For Sale at W. E. DAWSON & CO’S. A GOoondD LOT OF AMERICAN WOOD STOCK, IN— Rims, Spokes, Shafis, Ete. -—-A LSO— A FEW SHEET-IRON BODIES, with seat all complete, at Manufacturers’ prices, at W. E. DAWSON & CO’S. an. 18 -2aw ar 3i WERCHANTS Marine Insurance Coy OF P. E. ISLAND. NOTICE. 7 Annual General Meeting of the Share- holders of the above Company will be held in the Young Men’s Christian Association Hall, Charlottetown, on AT THREE O'CLOCK, for the election of Directors for the ensuing year and the transaction of other business. FENTON T. NEWBERY, Manager Feb. 9, 1878—pat taw till meeting TEACHER WANTED. THIRD-CLASS TEACHER, for the Win- sloe Road (South) School. Apply to the undersigned, or the Secretary of the Board of Edueation. = WILLIAM BRYENTAN. that he never opened bis mouth but at womebody’s expense, ‘ Winsloe Road, Lot 33, Feb. 8, 1878—3taw Ready-made Clothing GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS Clothing Made to Order Assignee N. B.—Coat, Vest, and Pant South Side Queen Square’ Wednesday, the 13th March, | 0D BOOKS FOR THE ‘Farm, Garden and Household, TEVIE following Valuable Books will be sup plied from the Office of the DAILY EXAMINER. Any one or more of these books readers, on receipt of the regular price, which is named against each book : Allen’s (R. L. & L. F.) New American_ { Farm Book, $2 50 | Allen’s (L. F.) American Cattld, 2 DO Allen’s (L. F.) Rural Architecture, 1 50 American Weeds and Useful Plants, 1 75 Atwood’s Country and Suburban Houses, | 50 Baker’s Practical and Scientitic Fruit Culture, 2 50 Barry’s Fruit Garden, 2 DO Bommer’s Method of Making Manures, 2 25 Breck’s New Book of Flowers, 1 75 srill’s Farm-Gardening and Seed-Grow ing, 1 00 Broom-Corn and Brooms, paper, 50 cts. ; a cloth, 75 Brown’s Taxidermist’s Manual, 1 00 Caldwell’s Agricultural (‘hemical An alysis, ” 00 Coburn’s Swine Husbandry, 1 75 Corbett’s Poultry Yard and Market, : paper, 50 cts.; cloth, 10 Dadd’s Modern Horse Doctor, 12 mo., 1 50 Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, 12mo., 1 50 Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, S8vo. cloth, 2 50 Dadd’s American Reformed Horse Book, Svo., cloth, 2 5O De Voe’s Market Assistant, 2 50 Downing’s Landscape Gardening, 6 50 Eggleston’s End of the World, 1s Eggleston’s Hoosier School- Master, 1 & Kggleston’s Mystery of Metropolisville, 1 50 Every Horse Owner’s Cyclopedia, 3 75 Famous Horses ot America, 1 50 Flax Culture, [Seven Prize Essays by practical growers], 36 Flint (Charles L.) on Grasses, 2 50 Fuller’s Grape Culturist, 0 Fuller's Illustrated Strawberry Culturist, — 20 Fuller’s Small Fruit Culturist, 1 i Fulton’s Peach Culture, 1 5O Geyelin’s Poultry Breeding, 25 Gregory on Cabbages, 30 Gregory on Carrots, Mangold W urtzels, “Ete., 30 Gregory on Onion Raising, 30 Gregory on Squashes, . 39 Harris’s Insects Injurious to Vegetation, Plain, $4; Colored Engravings, Harris on the Pig, Henderson’s Gardening for Pleasure, l Henderson’s Gardening for Profit, | Henderson’s Practical Floriculture, 1 6 I Herbert’s Hints to Horse Keepers, 75 Hooper's Book of Evergreens, > OO | Hop Culture. By nine exper ienced eulti vators, 30 Hunter and Trapper, 1 WO Hussey’s Home building, 5 00 Johnson’s How Crops Feed, 2 00 Johnson’s How Crops Grow, 2 00 Lakey’s Village and Country Houses, 5 00 Loring’s Farm-Yard Club of Jotham, 3 50 Mrs. Cornelius’s Young Housekeeper’s Friend, My Vineyard at Lakeview, Nichol’s Chemistry of the Farm and Sea, Onions—How to Raise Them Profitably, | Our Farm of Four Acres, paper, 30 cts. ; cloth, 60 Parsons on the Rose, 1 3G Phin’s How to Use the Microscope, 79 Phin’s Lightning Rods and their Con- struction, 50 Quinby’s Mysteries of Bee-Keeping, 1 50 Quincy (Hon. Josiah) on Soiling Cattle, 1 25 Quinn’s Money in the Garden, 1 50 Quinn’s Pear Culture for Profit, 1 00 Piley’s Potato Pests, pa., 50 cts.; cloth, 75 Roe’s Play and Proiit in my Garden, 1 50 Stewart’s Irrigation for the Farm, Gar- ' den and Orchaad, 1 50; Stewart’s Shepherd’s Manual, ] 50 | Stoddard’s An Egg Farm, paper, 50 cts., cloth, 75 Thomas’s American Fruit Culturist, new edition, 3 75 Thomas’s Farm Implements and Ma- chinery, 1 50 Tim Bunker Papers ; “or, Yankee Far- ming, 1 50 Tobacco Culture. By fourteen experi- enced cultivators, Waring’s Draining for Profit and Health, } 50 Waring’s Elements of Agriculture, 1 00 Weidenmann’s Beautifying Conntry Homes. <A superb quarto volume. 24 lithograph plates, in colors, 15 00 White’s Cranberry Culture, 1 25 White’s Gardening for the South, 2 00 Wright’s Brahma Fowl, 2 50 Wright’s Practical Poultry-Keeper, 2 00 Ch’town, Feb. 14, 1878— VHE WEEKLY EXAMINER, — Per- sons having relatives or friends abroad, and desiring to keep them informed concerning P. E. Island, cannot do soin a better or cheap- er way than by subscribing to THE WErKLY EXAMINER. Sent, postpaid, to any address in Great Britain, the United States, oi the Dominion, on receipt of One Dollar. DR. H. A. PARKER, SURGEON DENTIST, (LATE OF OTTAWA). Office, . . . St. Lawrence Hotel, Office Hours: 9a. m. to 6 p. m. Jan. 13, "78—1k eod NEW SCHOOL BOOKS constantly being received by mail, at BREMNER BROTHERS. February 23, 1877—2i TENDERS. NEALE TENDERS will be received at the Office of the undersigned, until the 15th day of MARCH next, for the erection of a Warehouse and Coal-Shed on Peake's No. 1 Wharf. Plans and Specifications to be seen at Peake Bros. & Co’s Office. Good and approved se- curity will be required for the performance of the contract. We do not bind ourselves to accept the low- | est or any tender. “ie : PEAKE BROS. & CO. Ch’town, Feb, 22, ’78—3w 3i wkly. will be sent, Post-Paid, direct, to any of ours BLANK - BILL THOMAS WORKMAN, M, P., President, LUPE AND ACCIDENT AUTHORIZED CAPITAL Ee atin, T., JAMES CLAXTON, Vice-President. squire, SUN MUTUAL [SUM Ut COMPA OF MONTREAL, HEAD OFFICE: ST. JAMES STREET. M. i. GAULT. Esquire, Managing Director. HON. L. C. OWEN, ” DANIEL DAVIES, Messrs. JENKINS & MoLEOD, R. MACAUL: Sec’y, AY, CHARLOTTETOWN P. £. ISLAND HONORARY DIRECTORS: HON. J. F. ROBERTSON, OWEN CONNOLLY, Ese, MepicaL EXAMINERS, +—:0:-————_——— This Company ¢ Its Motto is *‘EcoNOMY AND SECURITY. Jan. 31, 1878— The Greatest Medical Diseovery since the Creation of Man, or since the Commencement of the Christian Era. There never has been a time when the heal- ing of so many different diseases has been caused by outward application as the present. It is an undisputed fact that over half of the entire population of the globe resort to the use of ordinary plasters. DR. MELVIN’S Capsicum Porovs PLASTERS are acknowledged by all who have used them, to act quicker than any other plaster they ever before tried, and that one of these plasters will do more real service than a hundred of the ordinary kind. All other plasters are slow of r action, and require to be worn continually to . effect a cure; but with these it is entirely dif- ferent: the instant one is applied the patient will feel its effect. Physicians in all ages have thoroughly tested and well know the effect of Capsicum; and it has always been more or less used as & medical agent for an outward application ; but it is only of very recent date that its advan- tages in a porous plaster have been discovered. Being, however, convineed of the wonderful eures effected by Dr. MELVIN’S CAPSICUM PoROoUS PLASTSRS, and their superiority over all other plasters, they now actually prescribe them, in their practice, for such diseases as rheumatism, pain in the side and back, and all such cases as have required the use of plasters or liniment. After you have tried other plas- ters and liniments, and they have failed, and you want a certain cure, ask your druggist for DR. MELVIN’S CAPSICUM POROUS PLASTER. You can hardly believe your own convictions of its wonderful effects. Although powerful and quick in its action, you can rely on its safety for the most delicate person to wear, as it is free from lead and olen poisonous material commonly used in the manufacture ef ordin- ary plasters. One trial is a sufficient guarantee of its merits, and one plaster will seli hundreds to your friends, Ask your druggist for DR. MELVIN’s CAPS8I- cum Porous PLASTER, and take no other; or, on receipt of 25 cents for one, $1 for five, or $2 for a dozen, they will be mailed, post paid, te any address in the United States or Canadas. MANUFACTURED BY THE NOVELTY PLASTER WORKS Lowell, Mass., U.S. A., G. E. MITCHELL, Proprietor, Mannfacturers of Plasters and Plaster Compounds W.R. WATSON, Agent. qecember 7, 15877. CHEAPEST YET! Cheap Dry Goods Sale We will offer our entire Stock of BOOTS & SHOES of about $2,000 worth, at cost to clear, consisting of— Men’s Wellington Boots. Men's Leather Congress Boots, Men’s Felt Congress Boots, Men's Lerrigans & Overshoes, Men's Felt and Leather Slippers, Women's Leather Boots, (Elastic and Laced), Women’s Felt Boots, “ “ Women's Slippers & Overshoes, Misses’ & Children’s Leather Boets. COME ONE AND ALL AND GET BOOTS CHEAP J. B. MACDONALD, QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN. Jan. 9—ne pat - SWEET ORANGES, ARE Lemons, Grapes, Figs, Nuts, : Onions, Raisins, Currants, Spices. All kinds Crackers, Preserves, and the largest as- sortment of Confectionery to be had on the Island. Fancy Toys, Flour (by the bbl. or lb.), ‘Tea, Sugar, Soap, Candles, Pepper, Mus tard, Vinegar, and a variety of Groceries. ALEX. McKENZIE, ae Queen Street. Ch’town, Dec. 27, 1877.—tu&fir3w EADS, BLANK STATEMENTS, —AND— BUSINSS CARDS, mo Furnished promptly and cheaply, te 0 er, at the EXAMINER OFFICE, INGS’ BUILDING, Corner Great George and Water Streets, — | | ATENTS procured in ali counwies. No fees | patent is granted. | ree. Our valuable pamphlet seat free upon re issues Policies on all the AppRovED Mernops of Life and Accident Business, HORACE HASZARD, Agent P. E. island, OUR STOCK — —FOR— CARRIAGE BUILDERS IS VERY COMPLETE. ‘Over 50 Tons Bar Iron, ofS Hit eis bpriag ‘ ptic Carriage Spri 110 sets Axles. : |'ASSORTED SIZES, from { to 1¥ inch, and a very large Stock of CARRIACE & MILL BOLTS, | ‘RING BOLTS, STEP PADS, &&. which we offer to cash and prompt paying customers at better prices than ever before. W.E. DAWSON & CO Jan. 1S—2aw ar 31 American & Foreign Patents Gilmere, Smith & Co., Successors ta Chipniaa, Hosmer & Co. e tor services until the Preliminary examinations in advance. No char | eipt of stamp. Addrezs, GILMORE, SMITH & CO., Washington, D. C ARREARS OF PAY, BOUNTY, ETC. EDERAL Officers, Soldiers and Sailors of the late war, or their heirs, are in maay caes entitled to money trom the Govers ment, which has been found to be due since final pay- ment. Write full histery of service and state amount of pay and bounty received. Certificates of Adjutant Geueral U. S. A.” showing service and honorable discharge there- trom, in place of discharge lost, procured tor a small fee. Kaclose stamp to Gilmore & Co., and full re- ply, with blanks, will be sent free. PENSIONS. PENSIONS. LL Federal Officers, Soldiers and Sailors wounded, ruptured, or injured, in the line oifduty in the late war, and disabled thereby, an obtain a pension. Widows, and minor children of Officers, So} ders and Sailors, who have died since discharge of disease contracted or wounds and injuries re eived in the service and in the line of duty, cam procure pensions by addressing Gilmore & Co, Increased rates for pensioners obtained. Bounty Land Warrants procured for service im wars prior to March 3,1855. There are no war- oa aie for rae in the late rebellion. end stamp to Gilmore & Co., Washington D.C., fu'l instructions. July24 1877. International Hotel! (FCRMERLY RANKIN HOUSE) Corner of Pownal & Sydney Streets, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. Private and permanent Boarders can be ae- commodated on very moderate terms, during the winter season, at the International. D. MCISAAC, tien: Dec. 19, 1377 -2m a REMEMBER We are the Agents for the Cast Steel Single-ply Springs, which stood the test so well last season. Buy no other Single Ply Springs but ARMSTRONG’S PATENT! 60 PAIRS IN STOCK, all sizes, to carry from 160 to 850 Ibs. All Warranted ! and sold at Manufacturers’ prices. W. E. DAWSON & €6. Jan. 1S—2aw pat 3w _ BUTTER. HAVE ON HAND a small Consigninent of Choice BUTTER, which I will sell cheap for Casu, A, SIMPSON, _——— Ch’town, Feb, 7-—3i ek SX ARERR CR Rte. 88