eer ep Pm: WR aa ld 4 i cet GB 8. a — CREO tO ones cays eres | . | | anna ae ide ee eles A a a —— dre ee ene. arene a AARNE THe Darty HXAMINER, ~ SEPTEMBER 11, 1880. Ir will, perhaps, reassure Mr. A. A. McKenzie —whose letter appears in another ndumn—to know that not a cent has been fewicted from the salary of any teachers in ar. Y- Che only change which has been made 1s a change in the distribution of the payments. -—- > > County Jail has not a debtor és Ki 5 a. We hope nor a criminal within its walls. it will long continue as it is at present. — K,. C. Advertiser. Tis is one of the most pleasing paragraphs we have seen in the papers for a long time. It is signiticant and noteworthy that the de- crease of crime in King’s County is concur- rent with the suppression of the liquor traffic. ol 2+ aw ee Tae Toronto Mail says: ‘‘ The Ottawa papers contain paragraphs like the follow- ing: ‘ Mr. , of the Department of Ariculture, returned from his sheoting lodge near Cacouna last evening. ports the fishing and shoeting very poor his dogs were He re- Several of These this season. severely injured.’ gentlemen should not have their dogs and shooting lodges talked about in the news- papers. ‘here is a prevailing impression, not altogether well founded, perhaps, that they are both over-paid and under-worked ; and items like this will make first-rate material for an agitation for a general re- duction in their salaries. The stereotyped plea that ‘ they de it in England’ will not suffice ; this country cannot afford to keep dogs and shooting lodges, and would net f it could. Civil Service '_-—eoe Te Tue danger of dosing vne’s self with se- datives was demonstrated a few nights age in Montreal. Mr. prominent reiail merchantjof that city, it Thomas Cathern, a appears,had lately been in the habit of use- ing sedatives in order to get rid of sleepless- ness and nervousness, induced by over- mental exerti@ and business cares, from which he had suffered fer several months past. Being a druggist by profession, theugh he left that for the grocery business, he prescribed his own draughts, and when warned by his friends against the danger of using opiates, he would reply that he knew perfeetly well what he was about. On Tuesday night, he left the store about half- past eight and went up stairs. His manner was as usual, indicating neither depression of spirits nor the reverse. his son discovered that something was the matter with him and tried to rouse him, but failed; and,despite all the doctors About eleven could do he soon died. The evidence leads to the supposition that the dezeased had taken his usual dose, and finding it power- leas had taken an additional one befere lying down, the two proving too much for his constitution. —?? Dee »————_——_—________—-— Montreal Exhibition. We learn that there will be exhibited at the Dominion Exhibition, two splen- did horses and three very fine cows from the Stock Farm of this Province; alsoa carriage stallion owned by Thomas Rodd, Esq., Cherry Hill Farm, St. Peter's Read ; a carriage horse: owned by C. A. Mitchell, Village Green, Lot 49; a roadster horse, owned by Norman McLeod, of Eldon, Bel- fast ; acart horse owned by Allan Boisner, of North River; and a carriage horse, the property of H. Craswell, St. Bleanor’s, Competent judges have pronounced these animals to be very superior stock, and say that they will compare favorably with horses in similar classes at any Provincial er Dominion Exhibition. The live stock and ether exhibits will be shipped by steamer ‘“‘St. Lawrence” to Pomt du Chene next Monday morning for Montreal. The samples of grain obtained by the Advisory Board are also very creditable, considering the early season at which they ha to be prepared in order to be repare for the Montreal Exhibition. he exhibit in fish, such as mackerel and herring —barrels, half-barrels and kits— canned lobsters, and mackerel, and pre- ed or boneless codfish and hake in xes, will show that in this industry P. E. Island cannot be excelled. Apart from grain and fish, there are some very fine specimens of Island manufactured leather, gentleméh’s suits of home made clothin,;, and ether articles of Island pro- duction, of which we shall write more definitely when we receive the list of ex- hibits from the Secretary of the Advisory Board. Charlies C. Gardiner, appointed by the ment, a commissioner on behalf of this Province at the Montreal and St. John Exhibitions. Mr. Gardiner is also authorised to purchase some twenty or thirty rams of superior breeds, to be dis- tribute | between the three counties of this Province, with the view of producing that superior class of sheep so eagerly songht for in the English market. Mr. Wm. MeNeill has been appointed by the Advisory Board as caretaker of our Provincial Exhibits at Montreal. The Local Government could not make a more judicious appointment than that of Mr. Gardiner, for the important duties de- has been Local Govern. Esq., ae ; ey , National Exhibition. For his pugeenee knowledge and practical skill as a judge o he was selected by the Provin cial Board of Agriculture of Nova Scotia as one of judges at the Provincial Exhibition o } ¢ of that Province held last year at Halifax. -—_»-r Queen’s County Election. live stock, Public Temperance Meetings will be held as fellows : Tuesday, Southport. Wednesday, Tharsday, Sept. 16- -Pownal. Friday, Sept. 17—Vernon River Creek. Monday, Sept. 20—Rustico. Sept. 21— Stanley Sept. 15--Wood Islands. and Long and North Tuesday, R, 38. ; Ze Wednesday, Sept. 22-—-Summerfield. - -2* ~ a ~ Garresponocnece. gw We do not hold ourselves responsible for the statements or opinions of our correspondents The Water Question. HALES—THE ANOTHER LETTER FROM F. W. EXPERIENCE OF TRUKO SOME FACTS AND FIGURES. To the Editor of the Braminer. Sir,—By the kindness of Israel Lougworth, Esq , of Truro, [ am now enabled to furnish your readers with furthet particulars and cost of the water works of that city. Ina letter just received from him, he says :—** By the original contract the works were to consist of 500 teet 8 inch cast pipe, 2/42 feet 6 inch cast pipe, 7,600 feet 4 inch cast pipe {all tested to 300 lbs, to the inch), delivered and laid five feet below the surface of the streets (rock ex- eavation extra) with all necessary bends, ties, specials, &c., for $10,068. Twenty five double anti-freezing fire hydrants, set four feet from mains, with specials, &e ; one complete set of water works machinery, similar to that put in for the town of Brantford, consisting of two pumps and two engines capable of being worked connected or disconnectel—that is, either one or two pumps as desired ; all set up and left running, and guaranteed to throw four one inch or five seven-eight inch in fire streams directly through hydrants and one section of hose to a height of 50 feet. Alsoa brick building of suitable size to contain ma- ehinery and for engineer to live in, induction pipe from river to well under building, one coal heater and connections arranged te keep water always warm in boiler, if desired—for $9,932, making a total cost of $20,000. These were our works as first established with 1000 hose and 600 feet cotton hose feet rubber at a cost of some $1,250 extra; also, one hand fire engine and two hundred feet rubber hose, aid reels for hose. Subsequently the railway department gave $1,500,and a dam was made on Lepper Brook, below Truro Fallsabout a mile from ‘Trare,and pipes were laid from dam to street main near railway, which gave the town a supply of water for domestic purposes by gravitation from a head of 20 feet. By this arrangement the railway supply their engines with water and the street mains are kept full, which is a great advantage when steam pressure is ap- plied for fire purposes, making the combined system the most perfect in use in any town in America that I am aware of. The works have also been- extended in two or three other di- rections by laying pipes and setting up ad- ditional hydrants; and a system of fire tele- graph between the wardsef the town and the engine house has been erected, so as to ensure the engineer having sufficient steam pressure on hydrants for hese in from 8 to 12 minutes after alarm of fire. The whole cost of .works to date comes to $29,400. The costof maintenance last year came to $915.40, covering salary of engineer, coal, fuel, oil, cotton waste, and necessary re- pairs to works. This year the estimate is $708.74 for same services. Engineer gets house, fuel and light free, and $400 per an- num. Our engine heuse is close to the Salmon River, and the cellar is deep enough to receive a supply ei water five feet deep by an induction pipe trom bed of river. And the inachinery and pumps are capable of pumping 500,000 gallons of water in twenty-four hours through the street mains, ‘Lhe werk was per- formed by the Waterous Engine Works Uo., of Branttord, Ont. ’ I do not know, Mr. Editor, that I can add anything of much value at the present state of this water enguiry. ‘ I have heard that some time age Mr. Mur- deck was commissioned bya fermer Civic Ceuncil to make investigations and prepare a report on the means of obtaining a water sup- ply for Charlottetown ; also, that the work was performed and the ieport prepared, but that it was withheld by Mr. M. because the civic authorities have declined to pay the bal- ance of the charge made ; viz., $200. Perhaps, Mr. Editor, yeu can enlighten us on this matter, by pubiishing the reasons for this refusal to pay Mr. Murdock’s bill. lt seems to me that if the order to do the work was given without any limitation as to price, it is too late now to demur. For, what- ever may be the epinions eatertained as to ‘the value of the services perfermed, or the deductions and recommendations made, the city is bound i@good faith to pay the bill, and then let the citizens judge for themselves as to what is the peal course to pursue, We shall then know from where and how much water we may expect to get by gravitation, and the heights or water pressure that may be obtained ; and if those places from which a supply without steam power can_ be had, do not give satisfaction in consequence of ex- pense or other causes, then we shall be better able to come to some conclusion on the supply nearer home. I remain, yours truly, Frep W, HALEs. Ch’town, Sept. 10, 180. P —-—- Pseudo Economy. To the Editor of the Examiner. Sir, —TheS& are times of retrenchment and economy, From the shoe-black up to the superintendent of a railway ; and still further up tothe generalissimo of an army, and the rulers of empires, the spectre on the brain of financiers is Economy !+Economy! Lop the salaries, but whip the workers! It is said that extravagance is the opposite to economy, and Vice Versa. Well, I am not philologist enough to settle the truth of this maxim. But | know that penuriousness and overtasking workmen and workwomen have often murdered ; good cause. a yolying upon him as Commissioner at the! Have our city and government wiseacres Sept. 14—Eldon, 'Crapaud and} jumped into this error? if current’ reports are teue the die is cast. , Tell it ee Gath, publish it not in the streets of Askelon: but the decree has gone ‘orth that teachers, (extept Principals and Vice- Principals) are only to be paid five — salary for the first and third quarter of each year. Verily : Verily : Teachers, Fe fallen to you in a pleasant place. No wonder there has been such a rush tor admittance into the Prince of Wales College and Normal of - becoming your lines have School, with the expectation a pedagogues. On your part it is a noble aspira- tion to be initiated into the mysteries of peda- gogueism. Henceforth you will in an ecsbatic consciousness of not being paid for your labor. Therefore you will want nothing for the future That is exquisite consolation | ‘This one months pay will liquidate all your debts, pay for your winter's coal, pay rent and all the other de- mands, which a long winter entaiis ; and also for your clergy and physicians and all other demands upon you, Respectfully, — A, A. McKENZIg. ee The Liquor Question. , To the Editor of the Hxamimer. Sir,—On Thursday the 23rd inst. the elec- tors of Queen’s County will be called upon to say by their vote, not whether Pepe or Davies shall be our representative in the Commons of Canada, but whether the ‘‘ Canada Tem- perance Act, 1878,” Shall be adopted as the law of Queen’s County. This mest excellent Act has been carefully worked out and be-}- queathed to us by the leaders and suporters of the two great political parties of the Do- minion. It is essentially ‘‘a law by the people for the peopie,” and when once pro- claimed | have no hesitation in predicting that, so far as little Prince K:iward [sland is concerned, the law will be enforced as well, and a little trifle better than our farcical License Law, with all its alterations and amendments. Let us give the Scott Acta fair trial, and the traffic in intoxicating liquors will soon be among the things of the ast. . J. MeL, Queen’s County, Sept. 11, 1880. HOTEL ARRIVALS. OSBORNE HOUSE, Sept. 10.—Patrick J Wright Cherry Valley; Thomas Wright, do; T B Grady, Tignish; Miss Johannah Dunphy, Boston; Miss Maria Wright, glo; Mrs Wm. McLean, Sherbrooke, N S; Miss M J MeLean, Pictou, N §&; Thomas Conway, Goldenville N 8; Wm Baker Sackville N B; Isaac Thompson, Renfrew Mills; N McDonald St. Eleanors. ROCKLIN HOUSE. Sept 10-—Rev Neil McKay and son, Pictou, N 8; R B Stewart, Strathgartney; John T Bashie, Antigonish, N 8; Thomas Taylor, Mt Stewart ; Joseph MeNeill, Montague; Miss McDonald, Souris; Miss M Dingwell, Bay Fortune; John Crosby, Bonshaw; John Me; Leod, city; Robert Jenkins, Lot 49; V Gay, do; Jas Laird, New Glasgow; Hamilton Coffin, Savage Harbor; Alex McKinnon, do; Hon John Lefurgey, Summerside ; Charles [Le- furgey, do, . WAGSTAFF'S HOTEL. Sept. 10.—W. Broader, Westviile, Ontario; Miss Goff, Montague; Mrs. Garrett, Stanley Bridge; Hon. J. ©. Pope, City. Ee yeaa 2a) Weather Builetin. Probabilities for the neat 24 hours for the Maritime Provinces. Toronto, Sept. 11. Strong uortherly to norherwesterly winds during the day, gradually clearing weather. = ee Special Notices. Smoke La Acacia cigars at 25 cents each, or 5 for $1.00 from Rubin & Hart’s. WantTED,—Two journeymen shoemakers.— John Dorsey. 88 ti Cookep Cornep Beer just received Bat Beer & Gott’s. [39 61 CHANGE oF True, On and after September 14th, and until further notice, the steamer Southport will, on Market days, leave Prince Street wharf for Rocky Point, Westville and Shaw’s Wharf at 3.30 p. m., returning about 6.30 p. m. LExcursior tickets sold for after- noon trips.—Sept. 8, 4in. Bartlett Pears, Gravenstein Apples, just received at BeER & Gorr’s, [se 8 4i _ Peacuess, Barlett Pears, Oranges, Delaware Grapes, lomatoes, etc., just received at The (‘ontectionery. 2in, _ Seventy barrels Apples, 5 barrels Onions, just received and for sale by the barrel, at BEER & GoFP’s, [se 8 41 SnorF of all kinds at Rubin & Hart’s, Curw Mayflower Solace and Giobe fine cu chewing tobacco, from Rubin & Hart’s, A FEW cheese left will be cleared out at 12 cents per lb., at the Family Grocery.—R. K. BRACE.—aug. 7. A New Importation of choice Havana Cigars from 1880 crop, at Rubin & Hart’s. AGABEMY OF MUSIC, (LATE ATRENEUM), Saturday Ewvng, BY UNIVERSAL REQUEST, “ROSE OF KILLARNEY.” MONDAY—“‘ Lady Audley’s Secret.” TUESDAY—“ East Lynne” and ‘‘ Toodles.” WEDNESDAY--Barlesque *‘ Lord Lovel,” Trained Pony, Hungarian Bros. Zook out for the ** Two Orphans.” ‘Tickets 25, 35 and 50 cents. [sep 11 MRS. W. W. IRVING r now forming her AUTUMN and WIN- TER CLASSES in DRAWING and PAINTING, in all their different branches, from Modes, Life, &c. Intending pupils will kindly send in their names as 3002 as convenient. -Terms, &c., made known orijapplication at her Studio, City Hotel, opposite R. C. Cathedral, ekg Ch’tewn, Sept. 11, ’80—2aw tf te ARAN PERKINS AIN D TERNS QUEEN SQUARE. tion of our patrons, and the public generally, to: our present large Stock of Staple and Fancy DRY Go0DS. Millinery, Fancy Goods, Dress Goods. CLOTHS —AND— tee TWEEDS. Printed Cottons, Grey Cottons, White Cottons, GALATIAS AND SHIRTINGS, COTTON WARP. PRICES POPULAR AND QUALITY 00D, Give Js a Oall and Save Money, New Goods by Every Steamer. FETAIMS & SII July 26, 1880. We respectfully cali the atten- \UCTION l iN. ry¥w be sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, under | Mortgage made by John Beaton, De MacLeod aud Malcolm Martin, Belle Cp (gueen’s County. to David Small, dated the 3ist day of October, 1579, and now expired, on WEDNESDAY, the 15th day of Septem. ber, instant, at twelve o'clock, neon, Knight's Wharf, Souris Cove, a SLOO 14 tons burden, rigged complete. MICHAEL McCORMACK, Souris, Sept. 7, 1850. Auctioneer, {se 10] THE MENDELSSOHN Quintette Club OF BOSTON, WILL GIVE A— CONCERT --IN THE— ACADEMY OF MUSIO oe ens Thursday Evening, Sept. 16, They will be accompanied by the distin. guished Vocalist, MISS ELLA LEWIS. sept4 GOAL! COAL! LWAYS ON HAND, at the “Old Stand,” Water Street, Round and Nut Coal, From the different Mines, Which is sold as Cheap as by others in the trace. TERMS CASH! CAPT, JOHN HUGHES, | Water Street, Ch'tewn, Aug. 18, °80—Im tu th sa LUMBER. LUMBER, A VeRY LARGE STOCK OF Seasoned Pine & Sprace Lumber on Hand, for Sale Delivered at Point Du Chene, to Schoeners, Consisting of Pine Boards, Plank & Sheathing; also Spruce Boards, Scantling, Clap- boards, Laths, Shingles, etes All for sale Cheap, in quantities to suit purchasers. CUSHING & CLARKE, Salsbury, N. B.f June 18, 1880—3m eod MUSIC AND SINGING, N and aiter AUGUST Ist, Mrs. Jams Brown will give instruction in Mygig and Singing at her residence, King Square. Terms on application. Ch’town, July 29, 1880—3m 3taw tu ths - -'-WORTH’S LIVERY STABLES! PRINCE STREET, Between Kent and Grafton Streets Charlottetown, P. E. Island. June 17, 1880—3m eod pa BARRELS BAIT AND SALT, QUEEN’S WHARF, 50 BAGS SALT, 200 Barrels Herring and Mackerel BAIT, 300 MAOKEREL BARRELS. 100 dacrels | FAT HERRING. 50 half-barrels 100 Quintals CODFISH and HAKE, Just Landed—a choice lot New Labrader Herring. augl7 D. SMALL, a =a = E c Wants, cost, found, Se. en aoe a See uw Advertisements under this heading, m space not exceeding half an inch, wil be inserted. for Ten Cents per day. ~erueeoniinoascomnonsegatipenieny Spaces aan arena US1C—On andafter Sept. 8th Miss Me- Ewen will give instruction in Music, at her residence, Great George Street. Terms on application. {se 10 6i * OAR DERS—Twoe or three persons can be accommodated with board on reascn- able terms (a private sitting room if required) on Upper Great George Street. Apply at this office. {se 9 2aw “YR ANTED—A good COOK. Apply at the Osborne House. Reference re- [se 8 2i pd TANTED—On Ist October, a good plain Cook. Nene need apply unless filled the same office before.—C. LEIGH, Water Street, [se 7 TyYXO LET.—A New House on Kent Street, nice locality. Possession at once. Rent ‘moderate. Apply to | aug3l JAMES BEALES. G @ LET.—Two Shops on Queen Square, next to John Newson’s. Appty to septi—tf JOHN MORRIS, AGSTAFE’s HOTEL, Pownal. Street, continues to receive transient and permanent Bearers, {j 33