Zz nee Trans :—Five Dontans A Year. NEW SERIES. oheeceeen “ This is true Liberty, wken Free Born Men, having te advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxiripss, ” ee eee _ CHARLOTTETOWN, P. BE. ISLAND. WEDNES Se ee oe ee DAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1891. anes ee —— ——— Srvetzs Corizrs Two Geyre SSS VOL. 27.—NO. 47 GALENDAR FOR FRBRU:RY, t€91. MOON'S CHANGE. Last Quarter, 2ad day, 1%h., 299 a.m, W New Moon, 8th day, 9h., 597 p. m., N. below herizon. Piret Quarter, 15th dey, 2h.. 170 p.m, SE Fail Moon, 28rd day, 3u.,69 p. m., E. PRINTERS, BOOKBINDERS, D par OF WEEK) . j | i#es sehe b mh mimorn. after ' 7 29 4 SY) © AZ! 3:10 Monday 76 G8 74 8 Bi ‘ NZ 19\ 6 v4 4 30, 6 46 > Ss YU 6 46; 9 ) te t ’ » morn ot 8 § 59 »y ‘ , ’ -_— ~(u)--——--—-— vureda | 4 1710 2 oe ° 2 ir 2 oro sis 6 Headquarters for Books of all kinds aturday i 9 i098 > } Nt vlay Qi) 4) 3 7 ey ee + Monda 2211 36) 4 4 erg as <1 G r ox Poco Ce 4 SCHOOL BOOKS! SCHUOGL BOOKS! a oo y ol ost ta 7 52 = Charlottetown, January 6, 1891—w fs M Priday — 28) 217; 844) 28 2 urday 6 685 ti 3 20’ 9 8 3t ’ : sr foes S03 8 Campbell's Wine of Beech Tree Creosot -Jay 54) 3315-81040 365 . {Tues a 53; 341 6 32/11 32) 38 : 2i|Wedoesday | Si! 36) 7 35,11 48) 44 LE ere , ides 7 a3 | > 49 oa m4 7c NEW REMEDY for affections of the Thaoat, Larynx, Bronchial Tubes and ; le ar = ' Lungs, such as obstinate Sore Throat, Hoarseness, Bronchitis, Chronic Cough, bd seer 4 Pee DR. GEO. A. BAYNES, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON: Specialist in Chronic Diseases CHARLOTTCLTOWN. OF FICE-- Queen Square, over Apothecaries Hall. Postal Address, Box 47. iyt—dy wy Don’t Mistake. xz<QOVU AVVO MMONIA 4 LUM ——AND ANYTHING——- Unwholesome or Injurious, BY -Usirg—— WOODILL’S German Baking Powder. fe b7 . Settlement to Dec. dist, 1890. \ du-, notes, judgments, e’c, before the end of January. All debtors wil! please take notice and save us trouble and them- relves expense, NORTON & FENNELL. nl4—dw3w pat dw &w her sum jour WooD! WOOD! ‘WING to the scarcity of Coal I hava { } sarted a Wood Yard, and am prepared piy Hard. ood at « revs nable price, cut up to suit steves, and delivered to all poivts in the city to sup A. DOWN, 113 —tf Pownal Wharf. < © HoREounp anpANISEs "tee, ne a HS Wi Ro io CNS SYHOOPING \ =e OLDS. “840 YEARS IN USE. ~ PRICE 2S*OFR ROTTLE ARMSTR« — : Peg a ———-- WIRT:R = CHOSSING | "H'HE WINTER ROUTE between Cup 4 Traverse aod Cape Tormentiae is now Open. Pasvengers and Luggage at the regu lar rates. Passengers will find this rou: very much the cheapest Passengers sccom modate dl in the very best manner. CAPT. GEORGE IRVING. do28—8m cod why ~~ 3an Sun Moon High: b | e", Vays rises wat'r! lenh 9 30 o 9 54 1] 4 010 42 50. ~ i s sels (2 STATIONERS ! 30|10 47) 1 15/10 55 —_————- AND ————(x)—— --— “Gur Motto: Best Workmanchip and Lowest Prices. ‘ ———(x) § ERY, at prices that cannot be beaten. } | Congestion of the Lungs and Incipient Consumprion. PREPARED BY ——— | KENNETH CAMPBELL CO. | WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, OOS Crete Maree" - - - * > FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. SOLID COMFORT Is in a Cup of Hot Fluid Beet, Montreal oet30 Palatable, Strenzthening. Grateful asd Satisfying, the Drink to take when tired and used up. dec 18—d&wky CHEAPEST GROCERIES IN TOWN —_ARE AT—— BEER & GOFFS. ao TO THE FACT that this has been a pretty hard winter for Farmers and ; almost everyone else to raise money, we have decided to offer some Special Inducements to CASH BUYERS. We are in a position to do this because be- tween our two Stores, we handle a very large quantity of goods, which we buy direct from the manufacturers, paying cash down for them, and thereby getting the benefit of any discounts that may be offered. Our Tea can’t be surpassed on P. E. Island for flavor ‘and strength. Our West India Raw Sugar is the cheapest sweetening you can buy. Gur Kerosene Gil is the best American water-white. Our $525 Flour is the best vatue in the city. Gur Molasses is bright, pure and nice-fl vored CALL AND SEE OUR PRICES AND GOODS. BEER & GOFF, Queen nnd King Square Stores. WS ia EY RYBODIS PIALS, for Indi. | JOMNSON’S COUGH SYRUP, for i gestion, Consiipstion, Bi iousness, Piles, and | ¢ ou, hs, Celds, Hoarseness, Sore Lhroat and ithe manv aiments caused by the sluggish | Bronchial troub er. Pleasant totake. Will ‘action of the Liver, Kidneys and Boweis. not burt the youngest child or feeblest adult. j>n81—2aw & wky Price 25c per Box. Price 2ic. per Battle. ' ' We have constan'ly in steck all the well-known Congh Syrups and Balsame, Cod Liver | Oil Emuisions, and other remedies in demand at this seas» of the year, Also- Glycerine | Glycerine Jelly, Vaseline, Honey ard A)mond Cream, Philoderma, Campher Ice, Col i Cream, Cream of Witeh Hazel, for Chapped Hands and Face, at A. & JONSON'S DRUG STORE, Ch'town, Dec. 27, 1800. Corner Kent and Prince Streets. WINTER, !89I. aL HaNUWade & Gal Arrived-- 4 Full and Complete Stock of Everything in Our Lire. a wee ( X )— —— entire stock of Carriage Goods, and give up the trace for Cash, HARDWARE and CARRIsGE GOODS. Short. Prices Low for Cash. NORTON & FENNELL, Charlottetown, Igec. 9. 1890—2aw and wy City Ha: dware Store. Haszard & Moore, BLANK BOOK MAKERS, A Complete Stock of PLAIN and FANCY STATION. bag, as a dressing for wounds. — | tesulte, by leading to many efforts to pro- | tinal tract. Cveninen BUILDERS! We intend clearing out our for the coming season we will sell, at Specially Reduced Prices ‘lerms THE DAILY EXAMINER FEBRUARY 11, 1881. Scientific MisecHany. New Uses ror aN Otp Matertat —Peat, used for fuel from the earliest times and long known to be of great value as a fer- tilizer, now finds so many other applica- tions that its preparation has lately devel- oped into quite an industry. Peat powder is serviceable not only about stables but. elsewhere, on account of its absorbent and somewhat antiseptic properties and low \cost. A few years ago a French surgeon introduced this powder, treated with anti- septic solutions and contained in a cloth The idea, Said to be a very old one among the work- jing people of some places, was improved ‘upon by avother medical man of Paris, Dr. | that the animal is guided to food by smell and not by sight; and that the tentacles near the of the sense of smell. Taliyrand’s Audacity. A CONTEMPORARY'S ANECDOTE OF THE FAMOUS DIPLOMAT. M. de Beugnot, a contemporary of Tally- rand’s and superintendent of police at. the time of the Prussian occupation of Paris, relates the following anecdote of Tallyrand, an incident in which he himself played no inconspicuous part : *‘M. de Talleyrand,” says M. de Beug- not, ‘‘on hearing that the Prussian army and knowing that on these occasions no Marshal Blucher, wherever he might be, and to use the strongest language in my vocabulary on the part of the king and his Redon, who made a soft and phabie wad- ding of peat Other dressings have since. government in order to induce the Marshal to give such peremptory orders as would ‘crowded these out of hospitals, though the! prevent the threatened outrage. } peat applications are coming into use and! gaining in favor among veterinary surgeons, | Dr. Redon’s wadding has yielded important ‘duce woven fabrics, so that peat is now made into mattresses, coverings, carpets, etc, which are esteemed on account of their power of absorption. Non-Insunious Biackrnc.—A patented shoe blacking, which contains no acid, is made in Germany by dissolving casein in a i sulution of borax or soda and adding resin- jate of iron, vesides the usual bone-black, | grease and sugar. A brilliant luster is im- | parted by the casein, andthe resinate of |iron gives a deep black color. ***Shall I say,’ said 1, ‘that the king will | have himself carried to the bmdge and be blown up with it ?” **Not precisely; people will not believe ! us quite 80 heroic; but say something strong —-very strong.’ “Off I went to discover the marshal, who was easily to be found, in a certain gambl- ing huuse in the Palsis Royal. Though by no means delighted at being disturbed at his only amusement, the marshal, on being assured that the name of the bridge was to be altered, gave the necessary orders for | stopping its destruction. **When I returned and gave an account of my mission, M. de Tallyrand said good- humoredly : A writer on mosquito bites declares that common soap is as effective a remedy as ammonia, chloroform, or any of the many, articles recommended. The lather is aliow- | ed to dry over the affected part, when all; burning and pain soon disappear. A sugar 15 times sweeter than cane sugar and 20 times sweeter than beet sugar is re-: ported by aGerman chemist from cotton ‘seed meal. 1t cannot be sold to compete with the ordinary article. Tue Mrcroscoric Funer.—The term bacteria or microbe, states Prof. Samuel Bell, refers to particles of matter, micros- copic in size, which belong to the vegetable kingdom where they are known as fungi. All these different organisms have become ‘familiar under the generic term bacteria, which is a very unfortunate application as it really applies to only a single class of : i. - Cohn calls them = schizomycetes, and makes these classtications: 1 Spiro-* bucteria (microbes, or micrococci), which are the simplest of the fungi, and appear as orgavisms of spherical form, which multiply by fission, a single cucus forming two, these two producing fourand so on. They are seen singly in pairs or fours, or as clusters or chains of hundreds. They are very active, and are almvust omnipresent, abound- ‘ing wherever fermentation or decay is in progress. Not all of these germs are the cause of disease, but certain species are /always associated with diseased conditions. 2. Bacteria-termo (or bacteris), which are! ‘slightly elongated, and inasmuch as they multiply by division, frequently appear coupled together, linked in pairs and chains, They are generally found in putre- fying infusions. 3. Desmobacteria (or baciili) rod-like organisms, occurring of } various lengths and thicknesses, Inu a alide ‘of the baccillus of tuberculosis, or anthrax may be noticed at mrervals dots which re- present the spores from which, as the rods break up, future bacilli are developed. 4. Spiro-bacteria, including the spirilla and ihe spirochetal, the former having short open spirals, and the latter long and closely wound spirals. They multiply by spores, but little is yet known of their life-history. They are often found in drinking water, The various forms of bacteria grow only in congenial soil, the cholera bacillus, for instance, failing to multiply in the stomach ‘or the blood, but developing with wonder- ful rapidity on gaining access to the intes- A material closely imitating malachite is made by precipitating a solution of cupric sulphate by potassium or sodium carbonate. When the precipitate has settled and cohered, it is dried with gentle heat, and may then be cut and given a boautiful polish. Gratirrine A Piant.—It is odd to think of plants as s-eiug, but Mrs. Robert King de- seribes an experience in India that she re- gaids as confirming her husband’s theory that creeping p'ants have some faculty akia to sight. Mr. King was seated with one foot agaipst a pillar, when a kiud of convolvulus grow ng near was seen to turn toward bis leg, which was then kept motionless until at the endof an hour, the tendrils bad laid them. selves over it. He then went to breakfast and on returning found that the plant had turned away in disgust. A pole was procured and placed against the pillar about a foot from the nearest sprays of convoivulus, and in ten minutes they had begun to curve to- ward it, and in a few hours the tendrils had twisted quite around it, The pole was on the side away from the light, and the obser- vers find it difficult to account for the phen- emepon excep’ by assumiog that the pliant ‘could see the pole. INFLUENZA AND WratHer.—In a study of the London records of infinenzs and the weather from 1845 to 1899, Sir Arthur Mitchell and Dr. Buchan have found the disease to belong chiefly to the winter season, but to be connected with unseasonably warm weather rather than with unsual'y great cold. In no case has extreme cold during an epi- demic been attended with an increase of the death rate. Uther diseases which have prevailed most extensively Jn ing epidemics of influenza are diseases of the breathing orgsns, consumption, disvar:« of the ciicule- tory system, rheumatism, ati diseases of the nervous system. At these seasons there have been less than the average of deaths from diarrhvea and dysentery, liver disease, measies, scarlet fever, typhoid fever and erysipelas. Experiments made by M. Ponhv with one assurance.” **Well, mow I think that we may profit by your idea of this morning. You re- member the king threatened to be carried to the bridge, and was prepared to be blown up with it. It will make a good newspaper article..” “T profited by the hint, The anecdote appeared in all the papers, and the king received the compliments made to him upon it with his accustomed affibility and Spirit of the Press. THE SECRET OF HER DEVOTION, (Spare Moments.) Caller—-How perfectly devoted you are to your husband ? Young Wife —Yes, I am trying to pet and! spoil him so that if I die and he marries again no other, woman can live with him. CAUGHT BEFORE HE KNEW IT. (Buston.an. ) He (struggling hard to entertain her)— What month would you prefer to be married in? She—Oh, any month you wish. When shall it be ? SOCIETY AS IT Is. (Preas Siftings.) **T nevah eat mince pie,” said Chappie. **Why not ?” asked Hicks. **Tt makes me dweam of my ancestahs, and, between us, they were all twades- men,” HIS REVENUE CUTTER. (Boston Courier.) “* What a dear little craft that wife of yours is, eh, Dobson, old bey ?” ‘* Dear? I should say so. Sheso very dear I call her my revenue cutter.” THE REASON WHY. (Exchange. ) Mother-in-law (reproachfu'ly)—You used to say you wished ine to occupy the place; of your own dear mother. Soun-in-law (sincereiy)—Of course I She’s in heaven, you know, A WELL DISCIPLINED PAIR. (Milwaukee Sentinel.) ‘I’ve got a dug,” said the West Side woman to her East Side visitor, ** that actually balances himeelf on his head at command.” ** That’s nothing,” retorted the'East Side wowan, “I’ve got a husband whose hair stands atraight up when | speak to him.” WITH MODERN IMPROVEMENTS, (Brooklyn Life.) Dashaway—Miss Summit, | would sug- gest that your younger brother be asked to leave the roum, as | have some- thing of the utmost importance to say to ou. F Mies Summit—I am afraid he will have to stay, Mr Dishaway. Iu affairs of this kind I find that Tommy’s services as a shorthand writer are absolutely indispen- sable. MUTUALLY UNSATISFACTORY. (Texas Siftings. ) ** Look here,” eaid a dude to a reporter, ‘* you tell me acouple of good jokes. I want to get them eff as original, you know, at a little aucial gathering to-mght. I'll lend you five dollars if you do.” ** | don’t think it will work,” replied the newspaper man, pensively. * Why not?” **T am so blamed poor that if [ am found with five dollars on my person, I'll be sus- pected to have stolen them ; and you are so blamed stupid that if you get off a good j ke, everybudy will suspect right off that you stole it.” Apvice To Motuers — Mrs. Winslow’s Sootning Syrup has been used by millions of mothers for children teething tor over fifty years with perfect success. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natura! quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain ; and the little cherub awakes as bright as a button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gumz, ailays all pain, relieves wind, regulates the bowels and ix the best known remedy for diarrbqa, whether arisi g from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. ‘ ye-spot— useless for locomotion—are the seat | intended to blow up the bridge of regenad time was to be lost, ordered me to find! did. | i |! Bermuda Bottled. “You must go to Bermuda. If ou do not I will not be le for the consequences.” ** Bu dector, I can afford neither the time nor the money.” “Wel. that is impossibie, try _ScoTr SION OF PURE NORWECIAN CoD LIVER OIL. Isometimes call it Bermuda Bot- tled, and many eases cf | CONSUMPTION, nor’ SO Ot Or On ee Sens a oe ny ruswinwemmmanad ee a ee Bronchitis, Cough or Severe Cold I have CURED with it; and the } advantage ts that the most sen«i- } tive stomach can take it. Another } thing which commends it is the , stimulating properties of the Hy- phosphites whiel It contains. } You will find it fer sele at your ) Drucyist’s, in Salmon wrapper. He you get ihe genuine,” t SCOTT 4¢ ROWNE, Reolevti'.e. — + rhe oe ePFPTIC ) sr -~ Sarg et ‘DYSPEPSIA aids Duspepticure igestion,. Duspept cure cures hie ! Indige sfion. iNThe ‘most [ong-standigg capes. KF Gronic Dyspepsia positively cure ‘3 Dyspepticurets Price per bottle 35cts and +00 (large betes four times size of small.) Garles 16 Stor. Stolen NB. S0bD EVERYWHERE. Notice of Meeting. HR ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING of the Sharehulders of the Merchants’ Bank of P. E. Island, for the election of Directors and receiving a statement of the affairs of the Bank, will be held at the Banking Office on THURSDAY, March 5th, at the hour of Eleven o'clock, a. m. Proxies for voting must be left with the Cashier on or before Wepnespay, March 4th, By order, WM. McLEAN, Cashier. Charlottetown, Feb. 6, 1891—eod NOTICE. HE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING of the Inland Steam Navigatioa Company will be held at the office of L. C. Owen, Kin Street, on >ATURDAY, the 2ist day o February, instant, at 3 o'clock, p. m. L. C. OWEN, Secretary. Seed Oats, 1 0 Q BUSHELS FINEST BLACK, AF, now on the way from Great Britain. Orders booked at our office, where samples can now be sern. Samples wil! also be mailed on application. CARVELL BROS, feL6—f m w Imported DsMD0.1N UP PARTNARSHIP fe partnership between the undersigned, as Barristers and Attorneys, under the style of PALMER & McLEOD, having ter- minated by lapse of time, is dissolved fiom this date. Dated at Charlottetown, the 3ist day of December, A, D., 1890. ; MALCOLM McLEOD, H. J PALMER, D. C. McLEOD. jan7—all Island prs dy 3w wky 2m NOTICE. ‘THE undersigned have entored into partner- ship as Attorneys and Solicitors, under the name of uM & «UDC COC. OUMcLEOD, and continue the practice of the profession at the offices of the late firm, of Nova Scotia Building, Charlottstown, P. E. I. MALCOLM McLEOD, D. C. McLEOD. Charlottetown, Jan. 2, 1891. jan7—all Island prs dy 3w wky 2m H. JAMES PALMER, (of the late Firm of Palmer & McLeod), Barrister and Attorney-at-Law, NOTAKXY PUBLIC, &ec. OFFICE—O Halloran’s Building, next door to Bank of Nova Scotia. Money to jan? Lobster Packers! MANILLA, SISAL, } ROPE AND MARLINE, MIXED, Supplied Diect from Manufactory or frow Stock—Lowest Prices. CARVELL BROS. apll8%Miyeodwkyly ef the star-fishes—Asterias glacialis—show jand7—9w aw pat rm