THE DAILY EXAMINER. Five Doutars A YEAR, NEW SERIES. Whe Daily Examiner ia issued « very eveving by Tae Examiner Publishing Co. From their offices, corner of Water and Great George Streots, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION~— Se I 6 isi ss o'caun veevctcowebonc. $2.50 Thros mouths...... bicvwebietcke betas 1. 25 Gupteewtts 66 ik A i. hi esheee Hose * Advertising at moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. half-yearly, or yearly ajvertisements, on application, ALMANAC FOR NOVEMBER, 1888, MOON'S CHANGES. " ao iii: . o = First Querter 2r; : 2.7m., m wr, Ee (be mW MOLL : Fall Moon Ilth day, 3h., 54.0., p. (below horizon.) Last Quarter 18th day, 6h., 27.8m., p. m. (N. below horizon. ) New Moon 25th day, 3h, 6.0m., a £5... 8 44/11 52) 48 | 9 35\morn| 47 11/10 28) 0 32) 45 - 8} 1 10) 8 43 j ' | 7 43/11 13) 50 27| Saturday | @ 28) Sunday 25, 29| Monday 26) 30) Puedday 7 264 PAT OF wee reales ( risee (water! lox i SeES'iS 3€3 “uvel enh h mh mmorn{morn h 1 Monday 6 47.4 41/11 51) 135 95 2, Tuesday 48 39jaft 33) 2 21 SiWednesday | 50) 33! 1 10) 311 4 Thursday 51} 36) 1 43) 4 13 5| Friday | Si 3 2 131 5 42 6 Saturday | 54 3412351631) 40 7\Sunday 56, 3313 5730) 37 8} Monday 57| 31/331) 819) 34 9, Tuesday 538; 29; 3 58| 9 O 31 10 Wednesday 7 0 28, 4 26/939 28 11 Thursday L 27) 4.58/10 15) 6 12 Friday 3 26) 5 34110 52 23 13 Saturday 4, 235) 6 18/11 29 21 14| Sunday 6) 2417 Tiaft 8 18 15 Monday 7} 2218 3 0 49 5 16, Tuesday 8 21,9 8 1 34 13 17| Wednesday | 10) 20/10 14) 2 35 10 18; Thursday 11; 1911 24) 3 24 8 19) Friday 13; 19\morn; 4 40 6 20) Saturday 14; 1810366 3 4 2i)Sunday | 16) 17) 149)718) 1 22) Monday 17; 16] 3 2) 8 19] 8 59 23) Tuesday 18} 15) 41459 38| 57 24) Wednesday 20; 14) 5 27} 9 53 34 25| Thursday 21} 13] 6 36/10 34| 52 26) Friday | & ] l | } i JAMES H. REDDIN, BARRISTER-AT-LAW, SOLICITOR AND NOTARY PUBLIC, has removed to the office adjoining that of R.R. Fitzgerald, Esq., Cameron Block. i 4a” MONEY TO LUAN. i Sept. 27, 1886 -1 mo eod & wy 3 mos BOSTON. | FALL ARRANGEMENT mee THE PALACE STEAMERS INTERNATIONAL S.5. C0. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- land, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at $.00 a. m. i Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd i class ; 29.50, Ist claes. Yor tickets and other information apply to . A SHARP, F. W. HALES, ; P. & L R’y., P. E. L Steam Navy, Co, or to your nearest Ticket Agent. Oct, 9 1886-—eod wky ee ——— L. ARTHUR & CO. GENERAL | Cominission Merchants, 12; ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, ™M™ — Roos and Produce a Specialty. | Jalw 15 -dly wklv HARD COAL, D> Store, a quantity of BEST HA2D COAL, Egg and Chestaut Sizes. 4a” Cheap for Cash. CAPT. J. HUGHES, Water Strect. Ch'town, Oct. 14, 1886—1m eod BARCLAY & Ov, GENERAL Conuissivd & Shigvlag Merchatts, aud Wnderclothing below competition. 191 Atlantic Avenue, Geston. — ; ; . oe ey years’ experience In this market, A jue Miy shamed baie ET pnd not be led away by sensational advertisements. pana rosie DY tov for pa feaights at short notices. Write for morket | re» rus a@ Ao scialties — Potatoes, ned Lobaters, Eggs. Suny 17, '86—3mo eod Vezs-ls | Mackerel, Can- i | } cent. ing at wonderful low prices, Overcoats from $2.7&, Suits from $4.50. up. Job Lot Clothing at about halt: ‘price. | Ge'tewn, Uct. J1, 1880, — - - a age —— enemies SD rctepsdliceypeeeeessemeentliencssietiinensains re enegpemeananeaoeeegepenenerslliiinsar eee — -_ “ Phis is (rue Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Hvairipes. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1886. « HAPEREATION OF LEASE. _— EL EXTRAGREINARY SALE ————- OF vtapie & Fancy Dry Goods ‘ices: MN eailaie -erkins HE Lease of our premises expires in a few months, and not being able to renew the same on reasonable terms, or procure other premises in time for spring trade, we will dispose of our whole stock of NEW AND FASHIONABLE DRY GOODS at an iMMENSE SACRIFICE. Carpets, Vilcloths, Rugs and Mats at 33 per cent discount ; Black and Colored Dress Goods at 33 per cent diszount ; Mantle and other Cloths, Tweeds, &c., at 53 per cent discount ; Blankets, Counterpanes, Comferts and Lace Curtains at 33 per cent discount ; Silks, Satins and Velvets at 33 per cent discount ; Black and Colored Plushes at 33 per cent discount; Gloves and Hosiery at 33 per cent discount ; Linen (ioods of all kinds at 25 per cent discount ; Prints and White Cottons at 25 per cent discount. A Lot of Goods at HALF PRICE, such as Millinery, Hats, Bonnets, Feathers, Flowers, Real Lace, Edgings, Collars and Cuffs, Frillings, a large variety Wool Goods, &e. All of the Above New and in Good Order, and will be Sacrificed in order to Clear Gut Quick. . ran E> SEE OUR ULRCULARS FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS. a t= nn) a Perkins Ch'town, Oct. 14, 1886. 3 ter TiS. — _ > ree i or _ LISTEN TO REASON! 70: NO DECEPTION! ———— Oe oe L. E, PROWSE does not ofier 2 discount of 333 per cent; to do so, 60 per cent profit would need to be added. Such profit would ruin a farmer or any other man---88 per cent discount means a profit of 50 per But the facts are: Me buys for cash only, there- fore buy from 15 to 25 per cent less than many houses in the trade, and can afford to sell even less than those who pretend to give these Fabulous Discounts. Pen Fhousand Dollars ($19.009) worth of Cloth Large stock of Dress Goods, Sacques, Ulsters Saeque Cloth, Ladies’ Hats, &c, very cheap. Shirts Every sensible man and woman should see his stock L. EO Peo. W.S- Em. Mr. Beecher on Life’s Troubles. | +” | have heard men say tome, ‘*Yes, Mr. ' Beecher, it is very easy for you that are in, prosperity and popular conditions to © stand | up there in the pulpit, with your salary, | with al) your loving friends around you, | and talk to us about patience..- Just come! life as we do, and you would see.” "hea,! thank God, that there is somebody that Stands so much higher than eave that he “am tell you what you ought to feel. But don’t be ina hurry. I have had my share of trouble in this life, and, thank God! | have had my emancipation out of the very doctrine that I am preaching to you to-day. If I were to groan and grumble as some men do over trials that have pursued me, sometimes like a hurricane, the bereave- ments and sorrows and various trials of my life, { should be like aj} fountain of complaints all the time. But I learned early to love Jesus. | learned early to take that peace which passeth all understanding from Him. He, has never forsaken me ; and J have carried this thought with me at every step through my long,and laborious, and varied life ; and I bear witness to you that, though 1 have courage and hopefulness naturally, I should have been erushed long ago if I had not had it. I know that I am dear to God ; | know that he would not have put these troubles upon me if he did not mean to sustain me I have said in many and many adark hour to the Lord ‘* Lay on; I believe you would not put on more than I can bear, and I will bear whatever you put on.” | have been very poor in my lifetime,and I was not cast down. I had this feeling ** The less I have, and the more [ can serve my Lord and Christ in my poverty,the hap- pier I shall be. This life is not my home: the other life is mine, and He is looking upon me; and if I be heroic, and take suiJering and sorrow for His cause, what triunaph is | maAaILy. _ ———$———— -— — SincLe Corres Two Cents. VOL. 19.-NO. 1588. The Scieace of Drinking. According eceat report by the Hon. Geo, C. Tan "nited States Consul at Chemnitz, Germany, thecitizensofthiscoun- try have as yet no adequate idea of the real science of drinking. He zives the total beer production of the German em down where we are, and take the buileting pine for the year 1885 at 1,100,000,000, or one billion one hundred millions of gallovs, and of wines and other aleeholic lis nine hundred iniilions of gallons, mak " total of two thousand millions of ggliens, This, the consul states, was the soa con- sumption in the empire, as the importations are equal to the exportations, The agyre- Lane production for Germany he gives at forty gallons a year per cap ts, unating the population at fifty millions. He gives the consumption in this country at ten gal. lons percapita. Oonsul Tanner further SAYS: ‘J have given this subject careful atten- tion, and have stated the entire beer pro- duction of Germany, including Alsace-Loi aine, and am sure of the BCCULaCy of ny figures. One can, then, form some idea of the enormous quantity of beer produced. wher. it would forma lake more than one mile square and six and a half feet deep, or it would imake a running stream as large as some of our rivers. **This is oly ft king into account one item in the e y vt drinking in Ger- Wines and ali kinds of Ss] irituous liquors are ‘reely used ; wines to a much greater extent than strong liquors. It may be saiely staved that the consumption of all intoxicants in this empire would nearly two billions of gallons per annum. This being the case, some faint concepticou of the enormous drinking capacity of the Germans can be formed. The hops, barley, rye, potatves and other ingredients that enter into the manufacture of this enormous quantity of liquors would be more than two : reachi mine!” And above all bodily wants amd above all sense of shame or comparis.u of estate with other men’s, I went through che wilderness ; for 1] was 4a missionary mi s1y earlier days in the unsettled and newly settled portions of America, and 1 gloried inmy poverty. My name was as nothing, my means were none. For me to live was Christ and to die gain. And Ido know—oh, not as much as I should, not as I ought—but I know enough to declare that in the midst of sufferings and deprivation there may be rising out of the sguinotes of equisite music, peace that passeth all understanding, joy in the Holy Ghost.—Henry Ward Beecher, in Brooklyn Magazine. ee oe -- - A Right Character. In his recent commencement address at Williams College on the elements of a tine education, the venerable Mark Hopkins said - ‘* By a right character I mean one that wou!d make a man a vital-co-operative forces in al! that would tend te build up society and aid in the onward movement of the moral Government or God. Character knowledge. Knowledge 1s instrumental, character is directive. Knowledge teaches us how to do, character determines what we will do. Itis a man’s deepest love, and will] determine his ultimate destiny. Hence the highest form of benevolence is in seeking to improve character. This is the object of missions. This was the object of Christ. His coming was a testimony to the value of character. He who appreciates this value clearly, and devotes himself with energy and self-denial to its improvement in himself and others is the highest term of man, and the in- stitution that does the most for characier will do most for the individual and for the country. Mere teaching, without formative influences on character, ts simply a trade. Dat can education ensure right character? No. Character is not from the intellect, but from the will; or, rather, the person that lies back of the will. To the old question whether virtue can be taught, we sayno. Some know- ledge may be forced upon us ; a right character | cannot be; still, there are indirect formative influences, and the education that ignores character is radically defective.” enema ‘Another El Mahdi ton, Lowa, period extending from predicts a great storm foi a Dec. 4th destructive winter storms of recent years, These storms will be much of the enme nature as the blizzards of last January. Heavy snow and high winds will grisatly impede railway travel, and he advises ‘rail- ways to oceur in the Western States about Deecem ber 5th, and reach the Eastern States Dec. %h. There will be energetic electric:s) dis- turbances that will affect telegraph and telephone lines. He suggests that many lives and much property can be saved from weather. olla celica gd saa What True Merit Will Be Syrup within a few years has astonished the world, It is withont doubt the safest and best remedy ever discovered for the speedy and effectual cure of Coughs, Colds and the severest Lung troubles. It acts on an entire | ly different principle from the usual presorip- | tions given by physicians, as it does» dry } up a Cough and leave the disease stil: in they system, but on the contrary removes the canes! of the trouble, heals the parts affecteii, and } leaves them in a purely healthy condition. A | bottle kept in the house for use when these diseases make their appeasance, will save doc- j tor’s bills and along spell serious illness, , A trial will convince you of these facts. It is: positively sold by all druggists and general i ! ; ; ' 1 ; | | 1 ' j transcends | {103i ; Prof. Foster, a meteorologist of Burlirig- places in Germany but to 17 th, ¢ during which will occur some of the cats | manifests itself in a boisterous or belli- prepare for blockades that. will! Statee are The unprecedented sale of Boschee’s Germrm | curative powers in coosumption. Swrinla,jorly place wh otis coughs and wasting discascs, Takel Sewmg Machine or a Gan uratle is ab Drown #, n6 other. | at the Atheneum, Ch’tuwn, billions of pounds, and would foun a goud lsizec utain if placed ip heap. Beer his tl nal beverage, and is used such fas such, if not to a greater extent than water, then assuredly equally so ‘‘Wines are used by the wealth at meais, and very extensively used { bat beer is never absent from a Gerinan table , * Classes ne . I expected to live {of the rich or poor, and it is a decided and die in obscurity, and I gloried in it. }¢gyorite with all true Germans. Since my arrival in Germany, | have to see the first glass of water drunk, Beer uyst be furnished servants for their re- pasts. I have seen children hardly weaned giver beer without any apparent bad effect. ‘‘Seience may be carried into everytuing. The seience of drinking has been <avwn and practiced in Hurope for ages, and this 18s & science, 13 it may appear, when compered with tie blind, irrational, and suicidal manner of drinking in the United » States. This science consists simply in the iordiness of drinking. AJ cnmnks are tacen : ae “** sieeidiai : sip bys & Daal or Caree gurrcen of an Sih baur being consumed for a glass of Dee! ‘Tius ts so siuiple that one is apt to ridicule for laying stress mpon ib, and yet on this hinges, ia my opiiican, @ ques- of vast importance to America? By this manner of drinking, Le ‘aroused to a greater activity in so gradual a rope point the biood manner that there is no violent WCrange ment of the animal economy. By slow drinking the German accomplishes the object of drinking, and gives his animal economy a chance to say, *Hold, enough y which only «low drinking will do. “Woman estionably carries 2 purily- ing influence hn her wherever she goes, and her pret in the drinking places of Europe drives from them that class of low vagabonds that bang around Americana ‘drinking places. Hence, one never sces a ‘drunken ian in a cafe, and rarely, even.on Perhaps lw better possible il- { the street. llustration of the purifying influences of |woman coukl be found. | *Oafes are open to all clasess, but the i lower classes seldom visits them; they would ibe abashed by dving so, as much as they |would by entering a paricr where they would meet refinement and elegant man liners, There are some exceptions to tis rule in the larger cities, but (huis .« confined to cafes that are well known, and ladies avoid them; but there are no drinking what a lady may enter with all propriety. ‘¢ Drunkenness is rare, and if so, it rare- gerent manner, but more frequently takes the shape of song, fun, and a general plea- surable feeling of warmth, energy and self- comenand, and hence those horrid crimes that .soineti™ shock us inthe United rarely heard of here. Then, why stould there exist such a difference in the evils of drinking in Europe and in the United Szetes / It is manifestly the result | of the magwer oi uiiuking in vogue in the itwo hemispheres.’ Some curicus inferences might be drawn loss by making preparations for severe / from Consul Vanner’s report. Fignratively ; regarded, the time wasted by the Germans jin swilling beer at half or three-quarter: of ian lour per glass must be enormous ; but then it is alleged te save them Jr i4c0K) *ah10N. Cais e true the tz not drink enough,and ble co: the st. 7 Americans 1s iney ag omy the matter, } 1} fol) : » (serman ' t YY would TOLUOW tie aa : } suey wi : ; namely, quadrupl» | ac jem02 In : their @rinks ond sit long ra (s1E1P Cups, they would, like the Jeutons, become a guict, sober and happy jXv,-°! —_-- i ~ ime Apvicg te Morners.— Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always lx used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natvral quite sleep by relieving the child from pain; and the little shrub awakes as “bright as - button. 4t ls Very plcasant to taste It : : one . isoothes the chiid, softens the gums. ; lays all ; - 9 : i aiers 2 and. "1ce » Celis, large . al : oon in the i nd I ri ‘ iis, re | in regulat s the hows: is, and i t3. eat intact }known remedy for diarr] whether eci: ny ——- ne SP Oo - i . } . ” ¢} oid ~ ~ alll 3. - a j irom teel ung or ther causes. we; : e Scott's Emulsion of Pure ooniat a, teeta: eo tess enkecdetn ae Cod Liver Oil, with Mypophosphites | Winsice’e Sooth'ag Syrup, and take uo other ° > - 2s ; . Is prepared in a perfectly ogreeable form, at} kind. ebd eva wk the same time increasing the remedial potency | Te 0 of both of tiese specilcsa. Lt is ac knowle d red : THE only St iv M ine and Gun by leading physictans to be marvellous in its’ Repairing & un the Dominion, and the where you con pet every partof a <t—oATD ae 7m mek LS ns Me ’ ri a Rivera Se Se eee: uh ip coe ateben ea U - A ttt ' sem Fasc mete ogo tom“ i ae ERG ACCOR EEL BB RB Bin Oa a