dilate Van tacig oie eS a <a apie d - = ae : ; a ee ee ca ae 9 - SELECTED POETRY. | Hold Your Head Up Like a Man. | If the stormy winds she uld rustle, While you tread the world’s highway, Still against them bravely tusscei, Hope and labor day by day ; alte r not, no matter whether There is sunsh storm or calm, And in every kind of weather, 1: tioidg your head UP iinet a& lian. . : If a brother should deceive you, And should act a trattor’s part, Never let his treason sieve you, | Jog along with hzhtsome heart ; Fortun » seldom follows ilawning, Roldness is the plan, Hoping for a better dawning, Hold your head up like a man. | Barth. though e’er so rich and mellow, i Yields not for the worthless drone, But the bold and honest fellow, He can shift and stand alone ; Spurn the knave of every nation, Always do the best you can, And no matter what your station, Hold your head up hke a man. [ Written for the Heramueu r.] DICK THE BARBER; HOW WE GOT TO BE SIR RICHARD. To return to Dick,—his parents hada ba- ker’s dozen, and he was the one over. The Like produces like. That is all Dick was never at latest born are the wisest. The dozen died and were buried. the world knows or cares. school. Well, he went to himself some, and to the last he could scratch he write right. His father had Knowing boys’ tendency to get into scrapes, he turned this to account in Dick’s case. He ap- prenti ed him to a barber. The young shaver learnt the trade and stuck out his striped pole in Boston. He occupied an underground cel lar. ‘‘ Come to the subterraneous barber -he Cc ymuld not some sense, shaves for a penny.” Customers crowded int A penny a shave became tue rule. He next; yroclaimed ** a clean slave for a half-penny ! ! Who found the soap, 1 dont know. Aftera few years he quit. We tind him an itinerant hair dealer. Wigs were worn—wig-making was a big business. He bought and he sold hair. Hering fares he attended. Young wo- men attended theirto obtain situations, For lucre they allowed themselves to be shorn of their locks. Dick was very successful at such negotiations. ‘Then Dick, they say, —perhaps I ought’nt to tell it—perhaps it isn't true— Dick used some sort of hair dye which enabled him to suit the market. He seems to have made but a bare living at this, Next, wig- wearing underwent a change. Wig-makers were ip distress. Dick was inclined to bea conjuror, the popular name for an inventor then. It indicates something. Like old Hingley, who died in Margaree, Cape Bretor, some years ago, after losing thirty years at it, and like five hundred more, he sought to make a perpetual motion machine to periorm a mi- racle. He failed of course. His wife got tired ot that, as Hingley’s wife cid, and ho wonder, tor he negle tect his busipess, lost his little sayings, and got to have nothing. His wife got out of patience. She got vexed. She smashed his models. Then he got wroth. He left ber. He was joined to lis idol. Some- how, from perpetual motion-ism he got to thinking out and getting up a machine to spin with. tle totally abandoned hair-collecting. With the help of one Kay, a clock-maker, he got one up. No credit is due to Kay, however, as to the invention, so it appears, tichard——now that he is an inventor we will call him Dick no longer—Richard set up a model made by Kay under his direction, in the parlor of the Free Grammar School at Preston. He hada vote. He was a burgess of the town. He voted at the contested elec- tion at which General Burgoyne was returned. Such was his poverty, and so tattered and torn was his dress, a number of persons sub- scribed a sum sufiicient to enable him to get himself in a fit state to appear in the poll room. ‘‘Times aint as they used to was” then, A noisy, growling mob assembled around the school-house. ‘They thought their craft was in danger. Kay had been mobbed and forced to fly from Lancashire because of the invention of the fly-shuttle. Poor Hargreaves’ spinning- jenny had been pulled to pieces by a Blackburn mob. Richard Arkwright—for that was his full name—packed up his model. He left. He went to Nottingham. Hethere applied to the Banks for assistance. A party oflered to advance him money and share the profits. The machine, however, was not perfected as soon as anticipated. - The bankers recommended Arkwright to apply to Messrs. Street and Need. Mr. Street was the inventor and paten- tee of the stocking-frame. Street at once ap- preciate the merits of theinvention. A _ part- nership was entered into with Arkwright. Arkwright’s road to fortune was now clear. The patent was secured in the name of ‘* Richard Arkwright, of Nottingham, Clock- maker.” It is a circumstance worthy of note, that it was taken out in 1709. ‘This is the year in which Watt secured the patent of his steam-engine. A cotton mill was first erected at Nottingham. It was driven by horses. Another was shortly after built on a much larger scale at Cromford, in Derbyshire. It was turned by a water-wheel. From this cir- cumstance the spinning machine came to be called the water-frame. Arkwright’s labors i ‘Garner of Pownal & Sydney Streets, | "y* }eommocvtated o 1 the Wiheer iGood Black Lustra 12 Tea doe AS Theat } nranngatrian | Ly al Lil Jui Lity mOhad LU UUL 3 (FORMERLY RANKIN HOUSE) ca CHARLOTTETOWN} P. E. I. nt Boarders can be ac- terms, during it the International. a. RAALOAAN , NICISAAS, Proprietor. Private aud perman ton \ moderate For SALE AT W. W. CLARKBE'S. Water St., Dec. 1—cod tf SPECIAL INDUCEMENT. | -N ORDER to obviate the crush which ; must take place on MONDAY NEXT A LIBERAL DISCOUNT WILL BE’ AlL- LOWED TO ALL PURCAHSERS AT Hiaszard’s Bookstore THIS WEEK. Ba -s i ery >: ert s Stow aren GE PORTERS The Greatest Medical Discovery since the Creation of Man, or since the Codamencement of the Christian Era. e wr There never has been a time when the heal- ing of so many diferent 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 a¢t 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 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. Physiciansin all ages have th roughly tested and well know the effect of Capsicum; and it has always been more or less used as a 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, convinced of the wonderful cures effected by Dr. MELVIN’S CAPSICUM PoROUS PLASTERS, and their superiority over all other plasters, they now actually prescribe them, in their practice, for such diseases as rhemimatism, pain in the side and back, and all such cases as have required the use of plasters orliniment. After you have tyied 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 ean rely on its safety fox the most delicate person to wear, as it is free from lead and other poisonous material commonly used in the manufacture ef ordin- ary plasters. One trial is a sufficient guarantee of its merits, and one plaster will sell hundreds to your friends, Ask your druggist for DR. MELVIN’s CAPST- cum Porous PLASTER, and take no other; o7, on receipt of 25 cents for one, $1 for five, or 2 for a dozen, they will be maiied, post paid, to any address in the United States or Canadas, JEANUFACTURED BY THE NOVELTY PLASTER WORKS Lowell, Mass., Uv. we Mise G. E. MITCHELL, Proprietor, Manufacturers of Plasters and Plaster Compounds Wj. R. WATSON, Agent. ¥< LIjd- Decembe r a Ae ate 5 | ME, or & evn] WExina * Hi LYENG Purchased a Large Lot BANMRUPT GOOD, at a a ‘ se selling them , >, & 7 Great Sacrifice, we prop at AucTION PRICES: Heavy Winceys for . 7 cts. por yd ) 4 ‘6 8 bh Fancy Urass Goods yal ti Heavy Gray Flannel . ee MX were then, comparatively speaking, only begun. He had still to perfect all the working details of his machine. He was constantly modifying | and improving it. Eventuaily it was rendered | practicable and profitable in an eminent de- | gree. Forsome years, however, the speculation | was disheartening and unprofitable. It swal.| lowed up a very large amount capital without, result. When it began to be a success, other troubles arose. ‘the Lancashire mann-| facturers fell upon the patent. They! attcmpted to pul it to pieces, as! the Cornish miners fell upon Bolton and Watt torob them of the protits of their | seam engine. Arkwright was denounced as tlfe | enemy of the working people. A mill he built! near Chorley was destroyed by a mob, A) -strong force of military aud pelice was present, and could not prevent it. The Lancashire men' refused to buy his materials, tho’, confessedly, they were the best in the market. Then they | refused to buy patent-rights for the use of his) machines. ‘They combined to crush him in | the courts of law. The patent waa upset. (To be Continued, ) ‘All Wool * on J ; Head BA Se B bed 2 20. MACUINGL OF BEST MAKES, OF ade fan Daw Tweeds for Boys af . Fi 1, ’ 73 ne TF ry : | Heavy Cand’an Tweeds of ae iq i A nts ite and Pimopran Shirts and Uraweis UuUDds eo LRianizata Horse MLOUA CUD, ’ _ an fiona Boys ru? Uaus, —s All other goods equally cheap. Buyers should ¢all and eXamtine our stock before | purchasing. ROBERT ORR & CO. h’town, Dec.4- HAY! HAY! | Q+n anor t Ww Stranped, Weg a0 cts, For SALE AT W. W. CLARKE’S. Wte):., Ch’town, Dec, 1—eod ty | 50 cts, | | MENS* BEEFING JACKETS, (Good) -_ Fm —. =" — ee ee A Ex fF em AA G q CN Sk finite Yun FY CA H Ps ~~ = G0 AA ROR O ARE NOW SELLING UFF REDUCED PRICES FANCY DRESS COUDS, AT COST. A LOT OF LADIES’ FANCY DRESS: LESS THAN COST. ie a ies Black or Colored Silks, LOAV, TO CLEAR. Frencn Merinaos NI Cashmeres, EXTRA VALUE, FROM 45e. fee "TES fee Ju a i Dy BLACK L Fr mua | ite t ree PAISLEY SUA ALS, WORTH 35.8 ™, “arE? a I ey, $4.70 A large lot of , T : ¢ . Fancy and Plain, to close lot from 31.10. Beaver, Pilot & President CJ Riise es (‘} ) {UneayD). A PLAIN AND FANGY & gr, WOOL TWERDS From 60c., (for Uls Cranes, Fringes, Ribbons, Feathers and Flowers, (c WOVE HOSIERY, PLAIN and FANCY #8 €@ G el, A. Ne ee, lezy'. RIMMED HATS, inghan & Walk Velvet, Pinsies, & Velveteens, Black and Fancy Shades, {very low), Ladies’ Stays & Corsets,| * From 36 cents. TABLE LINEN, SHIRTINGS, SHEETINGS aud COUNTERPANES, MIRROR CURTAINS and DAMASKS. (Extra Creap.) WOOL, UNION, FELT and HEMP CAR. PETINGS, (cheap); STAIR CARPETS, STAIR DAMASKES, (very low). Good, All-Woel 10-4 Blankets, se 52.90 ea Floor and Table GEL-CLOTHS, trom $4.00. “ OVERCOATS, (Good) trom $5.70. a ULSTERS, from 29.80, J.iD. MASON & 60, © Charlottetown, Dec, 18, 1877. (877, CHRISTMAS —ocai aan = seeen teat CHRISTMAS, LADIES AND“GENTLEMEN INTENDING TO SELECT PRESENTS FOR CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEARS are invited to call and see my stock of Elegant Card Receivers, Handsome "Engraved Brooches and Ear Rings, in Cake Baskets,from 84 to $10. GJLD WATCHES,| Gold, Gold-Plated and Jet, Vase and Cake or Fruit Stand Silver Lever Watch & Chain, ‘Can be had either separate or combined, very pretty, for $12. to match. Richly Chased Tea Set,6 pieces, | WALTHAM WATCHES, | in Silver Cases, from $15, Wedding Rin gs, from $1 to 3& Rings set wita Precious Stones from $3 to $20. Waiters, from $2.50 to $7.00. | Childrens’ Mugs, from $1.00 Youths’ Watches in Silver upwards, Case from $3, all warranted. Engraved Guard Rings from Napkin Rings, from 35 cents $1 to $3. to $5. Ladies’ long Gold Chains and —- Studs for Front and Collar, — from 1l5c. t» $7 per set. Gents’ Alberts, in Gold Top Studs for $1 per set, Gold, Silver, and Nickel. Cuff Studs and Pins, from 15s, to $6 per pair. Spectacles and Eyeglasses te suit nearly all sights, Fancy Call Bells from 75c. each. Victorias. Spoon Holders, Sugar Basins, Fancy Pickle Stands from $1.50 Teilet Bottles on Stand, very pretty, | Gold Necklaces, Vases from $1.25 upwards, Bracelets, &c. A great part of the above are quite new, and the prices of many Goods are much cheaper than we have hitherto been able to offer. One price only charged. E. W. TAYLOR. Sonth, and nearly fronting Post Office, Charlottetown. December 17, 1877. RAILWAY TIME. R. SNE HS'TON, WATCH, CLOCKMAKER AND JEWELER, NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES, GOLD CHAINS, SILVERWARE WEDDING AND Mourn ‘ng Rives, Broocues, CFE ON, SS hae eS Clocks, Ships’ Barometers, Chronometers, &c., ALWAYS ON HAND. Chronometers Adjusted, Rated, and to Hire. de ¢l5—dlm Pe nr JUST RECEIVED AT J. F. M’KAY’S, NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE, consisting of :-— Ladies and Gents’ GOLD WATCHES, Ladies’. and Gents’ GOLD CHAINS, LOCKETS AND CHAINS, STONE, ENGRAVED, and PLAIN RINGS, SILVER-PLATED WARE, in Buiter-Coolers, Cake-Baskets Cruet Frames, Napkin Rings, Fruit Knives, Butter Knives, Vases, Goblets, Mugs, &¢., &e. ALSO, A NICE ASSORTMENT OF FANCY CLOCKS AND TIMEPIECES. elles J. F. M’KAY’S. decl10-3w B77. Syecil Notige, {878 Extraordinary Inducements to New Subscribers. The Weekly Examiner, From November 30, 1877, to December 31, 1878, 57 weeks, postage paid, for $1.00. No pains will be spared to render the WEEKLY EXAMINER interesting and attractive. A good Serial Story will be commenced in the course of a few weeks, Persons who desire to avail themselves of the inducement offered, are requested to remit, promptly and directly, by Registered Letter, or Post Office Money Order, to, W. L. COTTON, Manager. Charlottetown, Nov, 27, 1877. o> eommename, «