2 ee eee Oo a es. <4 SO. ae a ae ee eee wee ~ E ye ! . —. d AME 1; qe oe WOL 7% treo mee " t CHARLOTTETOWN, PR NCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, NOVEME id HR 15, ™~ NO. 148 LV x 3 L880. wee. pe STN OF TT R ISLAND CROWN, ALDERMAN RANGE, FARMERS’ COOK, MAGICIAN COOK, 1 STOW Bt. STANDARD FRANKLIN, WOODBINE PARLOR, ADVANCE PARLOR, WAVERLY PARLOR, Ou WESTMINSTER BASE BURNER, (Call and Examine.) Russia Iron Pipe, TWENTY Cents per Ib. Cook and Parlor Exira Boilers, Pots, Kettles and Spiders. MODERATE. SIMON W. CRABBH, Sien of the Stove, Walker's Corner Steve Pipe (Riveted) SIX Cents per Ib. Stoves, for Wevod. Shop Stoves, for Coal. STOVES FITTED UP BY COMPETENT WORKMEN. CHARGES 12 in eod Charlottetown, Oct. 21, o--— -- a PERKINS & STERNS ARE NOW SHOWING A SUPERIOR STOCK OF New Mihinery and Millinery Materials ! DIRECT FROM BEST LONDON HOUSES. oO: PLUSH, FREIZE, VELVET, FUR AND STRAW HATS, IN ALL THE NEWEST SHAPES. Giiks and Satins, in Pompadour, Brocade and Plain Colors. Velvets and Velveteens, in Plain Colors, Pompadour and Embossed. New Laces; Ribbons, &c.. Flowers and Feathers, Hat and Bonnet Ornaments. 4 FULL SPOCK OF STAPLE AND FANCY GOODS, PERKINS & STERNS. NC K LSSO ee ~s = i eo ae _ nk ee _—— UNSURPASSED Charlottetown, October 4, 1830. were pe a eee ae } i | | | } O THE NEW CANADIAN BEVERACE! = A. OC) I 4. The Only Satisfactory Substitute for Tea and Coffee. -Highly Keeommended for Regular tse at Grdinary Meals. NEW GOODS.« Wholesale and Retail. | 275 packages choice THA, 90 boxes Valencia RAISINS, Barrels CURRANTS, 150 bbls. choice Baldwin Apples, 25 puncheons MOLASSES, | 200 boxes SOAP, | 14 boxes Colman’s STARCH, | 50 casks Kerosene (American), | OS —— as THE VERY BEST ARTICLE FOR DIETARY USE EVER DISCCVERED. :0:—--——— P4 HE injurious effects which the continuos use of tea and coffee have on he human system are well known. The most eminent physicians advise tthe patients to abstain from using either, Owing to the taste for these beverege which has been universally acquired, it has been found necessary to find a sub stitute. Various substitutes have been tried, but Kaoxa is the only one ever discovered which has been found to perfect'y answer the purpose. “Unlike Tea and Coffee, it contains neither Theine nor Caficine, nor any other poisonous principle whatever which can even by long ute, prove hurtiul te the weakest constitutions. It is especially recommended for sick persons and children, Fumilies using white bread habitually should adopt Kaoka as their regular O i i i BAIT, 300 MACKEREL BARRELS, 100 barrels 50 half-barrels FAT HERRING. 100 Quintals CODFISH and HAKE, Just Landed—a choice lot New Labrador Herring. D. SMALL. F ; lrink at meals. They will then have supplied to them the elements which, 60 5-gallon tins do. do., olin taken into the sysicm, go to form bones, nails, teeth, sinews and brains, . eiedin and which haye been separated from the fine flour of which the w hite bread is ks: Seer seereree made. ‘Thousands of persons who have been afflicted with Dyspepsia, Ner- is rousness, Indigestion, Sleeplessness, tick Headache, &c., have been restored to CHOICE GROCER iES : sake health by eschewing tea and coffee altogether, and drinking with their 50 ; meals nothing but Kaoxa. It contains no ‘*chemicals.”’ The elements from ee eo which it is made are wheat and sugar, nothing more. OFF For sale inpound and half-pound packets at the “Crown Grcoery,” South BEER & G eo} Side Queen Squ are. cast cal ! ROBERTSON & CAMERON. oe Se a ccatrerlin — Charlottetown, October 1, 1880—30 ins eod Nui Coal, Nut Goal, g¢ Oo K REE from Slate and oe ee aaoard — Ss es = — Rownd and Slack, at Albion ines, | yf r ; Pieton, Nova Scotia. For orders apply to | S d OVE >| > i ‘ ! BARRELS BAIT AND SALT, i: We gegen QUEEN’S WHARF. Sole Agent for FP. E. Island. . x . — Round Elbows, &c., | es : 500 BAGS SALT, Old Sydney Mines, Cape Breton. —AT— eo 200 enn Herring and Maekerel ‘ . - my x . Lingan Mines, Cape Breton. | MILLNER’S TIN SHOP. RDERS for Round Coal can be obtained on application to ‘ YHE Subscriber, thankful for past favors, Tertas ag usual. G. W. DsBLOIS, solicits stil! a share of public patronage. Sole Ayent for P. E. Island. . Office, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. | yoR9 PROMPTLY A VTENDED TO. augl? Jane 17, 1880 —pat her sj kea tf CHARGES MODERATE. | : ; ER \UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EXAMINER ee ~ ws DR ea Ze GEO. W. MILLNER, the Cheapest and most Newsy Paper e Chea and most Newsy Faper : ; ; : : : ™ Provinces, Great George St., Uct. 12, 80—& 2aw | published in Provinces Upper ~~. Sorreszonyenee. aa” We do not hold OUT RE lves ve apor sible for the statements or opinions of our correspondents The Water Carts. To the Editor of the Examiner. Sir,—Your item in yesterday's EXAMINER in reference to the Watermen’s Casks is of more importance than most people are aware of. Let anyone see the inside of one of these, and J believe the old city pumps will be used in preference. As you have brought this subject up, more than likely something will be done to remedy the evil; apd as all the water carriers may not know the best way to cleanse their casks, { may be allowed to suggest what I consider the best. Wood, as we know, is fullof minute | tions. : /revenue purposes the import of foreign A Geod Word for Nova Scotia. a We notice in the Bulletin, of New York, a a commercial, manufacturing and scientific |journal in good standing, an interesting ‘description of Nova Scotia and her resour- a ices. The Bulletin speaks very highly of = ‘the gold, petroleum, coal, iron, fisheries Ml ‘and agricuiture of the sister Province. & ‘Under the head of ‘* Manufactures” the a Bulletin says :— ips i ** Not much has hitherto been done in this line, because at the time of the union of the provinces their intercolonial tariffs and currencies were fatal to home produe- ¥ Their tariff being levied mainly for manufactures was in every -possible way Bi encouraged ; and they continued to drain ° te the lower provinces of both men and money. Butthe union and the National Ae pores, and these pores are charged with albuminous sap, which, under. cireum- stances, so soon as vitality is ended, works |} the absolute di cay of the woody fibre. The circumstances referred to are the presence of water,and air. Now, the porous nature of woad is unfortunate in another respect, for the pores, in acting as the containing passaves for the necessary sap during growth, act as the recipients of all sorts of impurities. Now ordinary lime and shore sand, pat on with a rough broom or brush, with cold water, will take off the s'ime, &c.; then vse a mixture half and half of chloride of lime and common lime with hot water. In this case, be very careful to finish off with scalding water. This should be done at least once a week. Of conrse the casks or puncheons must be unheaded, and some official should seg it done. Ido not think that even with all the precautions ossible you will get a wholesome drink of | water; but by attending to these small! matters it will certainly be none the worse. As for myself, I never, or hardly ever, take water unless boiled or slightly impregnated with something that will counteract poison ous gerins. — Yours, Xc., WATERMAN, _ i> > ae To the Editor of the Examiner. Str,—I see in your paper 6f this evening | an advertisement, sigre Daniel Davies, ofter- ing for sale a thoroughbred short-horn: heifer, Shepherdess 2nd, for the pedigree of which he refers to ‘* Herd Book, page 5.” Will you be good enough to inform ine to what Herd Book Mr. Davies has reterred ? FARMER, Ch’town, Nov. Lith, 1880. __ Superficiality.. We are often. pained at the wise men of the day waxing so warm against Superfi- ciality. Not because we are satisfied with smatterers, but because we know that when the little is begun, there is an inducement to goon. The cry comes, as aruie, from classicists; and from that class it comes with little grace. ‘The ordinary collegian has read at the most ahalf dozen books in Latin, and about half that number~ in Greek, and there is a strong probability that he has not yet read the whole work of any author in either of the languages. This is superficiality with a vengeance. So take courage, beginners, and work onward to fuller and more accurate results. Floundering along with one foot on the ground, though not exactly swimming, may teach you at least to strike ont your arms. ‘‘Yankee Doodle’ is admired before a Sonata of Beethoven, but the true lover of music infallibly transfers his admiration from Italian melody to German harmony. The work of the cleverest engineer, when opeping a mine, must begin at the surface, must be superficial somewhere or other. Like him, dig down till you strike new strata and new veins. Do not be discour aged when attacked, for you will probably be able to offer the rough qnartz of your own digging, and if of a kindly dispesition you will rejoice if others extract the gold, though they crush your ore to do so. Tsai meiaalies Woollen Factory for St. John. ee It is to be hoped that the statement in circnlation that Alex. Gibson, Esq., intends establishing a woollen factory in St. John may prove true and that the hope may be realized by the many operators in St. John. It is knownthat Mr. Gibson has recently received a large sum of meney for the sale of his share in the New Brunswick railway, and is desirous of investing it in some busi ness useful to New Brunswick. During his recent trip to Upper Canada he made we learn, a personal inspection of the Hudson Mills at Hochelaga, Montreal, and was forc bly impressed with the magnificent ope- rations of that concern. Besides being a successful lumber merchant, Mr, Gibson has had marked success in the leather line and in calculating what his prospects might be in the woolen business, he remark- ed that, though he kuew nothing about the manufacture of woollen goods, he had, though inexperienced, made a success in the leather line, and said he, ‘* why can’t I do as well with a woollen concern?’ If Mr. Gibson should start a woollen factory in St John, no one, we are sure, would doubt his ability to make it a successful enterprise. -~| St.John Telegraph. Be ied lin lime Diphtheria and typhoid fever are creat- ing great ravages at Pictou and Albion town, caused by foulness of water. ——_—_-<r——- The Diritto of Rome denies the report that the Powers are deliberating over the | withdrawal of the fleets from the Adriatic. Policy are changing all this. They are om beginning to see that it is for their hest i} interests to supply as much as possible % their own wants at home, and use up as a much as they can of their own raw imaterial. a Hence mannfacturing is to be the great : business for Nova Scotia. She has every advantage over the rest of the Dominion, & inasmuch as she has all the necessary natu- ral products, besides fine water power, and open harbors the year round, with shipping facilities unsurpassed. In the development 4 of Canada’s great wheat growing west, and ie the rapid growth of population which must Ay follow the construction of their Paeific og Railway, Nova Scotia is destined, without es a doubt, to be the Massachusetts of Cauada, because she can produce goods of all kinds ! cheaper then any other part af Canada. “ia Hence that Province offers opportanities ! for the profitable investment of capital un- surpassed on this continent, while those who see it first will win ihe prize.” ee aie Fruitfuiness of Poverty. , Wen hardship presses upon either the ia vegetable er animal world, threatening the - 8 vitality of each, it is interesting to notice fs how fruitful the impoverished species de- come. In Northern latitudes the tobacco * plant grows more productive im seed-bear- - ing as it degencrates. With acurvy grass, Ss in proportion as its habitat proves ungenial, so do We find its vessel charged to the fall a with seeds. The lean, poerly-fed cow and x rabbit rear a more numerous progeny than- hg their well-fed kind. The breeders of cat- « ay tle know that over-feeding of animalp | a proves a sure rmaode of rendering thems» : Hi sterile. Well pastured sheep will often — if starved, the chances are that there will be ie two or three. So with men; let them be a degraded and threatened with extiaction: i as individuals, and they increase with am . uncomforting rapidity. Aristocratic fami- i: lies soon run out, and it requires frequent it creations to replenish the House of Lords. a But the poor increase in more than the a usnal ratio. In some poor parts of Scot- land, at the end of the last century, about i two-thirds of the population emigrated, be and scarcely a generation had passed away oe before the gap was filled. Ireland’s most 4p terrible time of suffering saw its population a increasing in am alarming ratio. Look i around a town or a_ village for the most i miserable dwellings, and there you will ed find the children swarming. Search your a land for the poor, lean and hard-worked ms minister, and if he is married, you will i surely find a Manse filled with ‘* bairns.” Major General Laurd is in hot water 9 again. It appears he refused to accept an official document in the French language, i sending it back for translation. ‘‘iua Cana- K da’ to-night censures him severely. The bs Manitoba deputation also have « grievance. e On Tuesday, headed by Hon. Dr. Schultz, t M. P., they calied on the General to pay their respects, and it is said received a direct snub, so much so that they retired . very crestfallen. It is reported that Dr. Schultz will bring the matter up in Parlia- b ment. eA cael sale aii Is ww in THE Arr !?—The New York a Herald, referring to the great number of a murders and suicides that have been re- Ti ported since the change to cooler weather, iM asks, ‘‘ What's in the wind?” The same mit question has probably occurred to many Wt persons in St. John during the past-few i > days. Perhaps this may be as Shakespeare ft puts it — <y ——the very error of the moon. " i She comes more near the earth than she was he wont. i 3 And makes men mad. uy teenage oe The imports of Great Britain increased a | nearly £5,000,000 during October, but the ad exports increased by nearly £1,000,000. * vane a " A Quebee bank clerk has been notified of ud his being ihe holder of the $30,000 prize 8 ticket in the Louisiana State Lottery. ae ® 53 Mr. Murdock, C. E., has been appointed i Chief Engineer of the Manitoba and South AF | Western Colonization Railway. it rs | i A Good Account. 4 | ‘fo gum it up, six long years of bed-rid- 4 den sickness and suffering, costing $200 per 4 year, total $1,200—all which was stopped M by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by i my wife, whe has done her own house- if work for a year since, without the loss of a i: day, andI want everybody to know it for is their benefit.” | . “Jonn Wrexs, Butler, N. Y.’}- |