ek ‘ - a EAP Me FOS sere ee Oe Ne Te iE = = ere a reese, LE WANG Sie Mm a mF PR Or ” > oe wen ig he a me “ % sale — ie saan tary ™ 4 Oe ERT RE ee me - bi : a OOD a RE Kio ee no: 2 a é < te * lees — est eer ge a ees RNB RR Ge ee “ty =< Br al Sieve saul Sata aml tt I lie HO ON = a -— aad lis Ge * ~ < . er 3 eae se . ‘ a a . ' ce “es THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN,SEPTEMBER 8 1898 THE DAILY EXAMINER | lasued every :ftemoon from the once ef the Exanimer Publishing Ce, —_— RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (tm ADYTANCE) Gane Ye. © -« & 81% @ ? © 4 @=x Months, e e e e. © 2 2 oe & Bivee Months, - = =e 2 ssh Gee Month, —_ eeee 0. ee te amy part of Canada or the Ucited THE WEEKLY EXAMINER ig issued every Friday morning. It is made ap o€ matter which has appeared in the Deity, and is s first-class newspaper, con- taining all the latest pews, becription $1.0 a year, Blended of the same rare old High- iand Malt W hiskies, during more than years, Sanderson’s CLENLEITE to day asiathe vast, the purest and best whisky in the world, Sole proprietors: Robertson Sanderson & Co., Leith Scotland. Established 1446---Capital paid up + 350,000. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING WINE & SPIRIT MERCHANTS Ltd., NOVA SCOTIA'S —-—_G RAND ——__ PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION --AND— INDUSTRIAL FAIR on in HALIFAX, N. S&S: Sept, 22nd, -- - Sept. 29th, 1898 416,000 in $16,000 By 25 per cent. ti> largest Prize List of- ferid in Hastern Canada. Improvement ia Every Department Wonderful Special Attractions Premiums At G>-at Expense the Commission have ecured the Grand Historical Spectacular Drama, Tue Relief of Lucknow Magnificentiy mounted with beautiful Costumes, employing a fu)! Batallion of Troops and Bands Produced under the management of Hana & Teale, of Hamilion, Ont., with fiaplay of Fire Works surpassing apy- hiiug everseen ast cf Torcuto. To- ether with vnurserous other new and riginal amusements from London and New York, Superior in ev‘ry way to the (treat Show of 1897. For Prize Lists ard al! information, eddress, J. BE. WOOD, Mer. Sec'y City Hall, Halifax, N.S shaw & Beairsto The Practical Plumbers Are prepared to lo all kinds of jobbing i will be pleased to furnish estimates al) branches of the trade. If you are uding it would (2 well to get their prices AN IMPOSING BUILDING. | Accurate Description of the Premises of the Salada fea Company. | dienes A stranger arriving in Toronto for the first time, and coming in by boat, 1s apt to acquire & much better impression a3 to the beauty and imposing character of our buildings, both public and private, than would the same stranger, had he reached the city by rail instead of by water. First | impreestons always count for agood deal, and in this respect Yonge Street possesses | many advantages that cannot be claimed | for York street. Coming direct from the boat at the wharf,and walking up Yonge Street, several fine buildings at once attrac: aitentien. The Customs building, the Board of Trade, the Bank of Moutreal, and only a few step: north of the latter build ing, and on the same side of the etreet, a strikingly handsome building attracts the attention of the thousands of visitors in the constant procession from the boats. The building referred to is the pew home of the ee evylon TeaCompany. With its reatored, clean, white stone front, and fine entrance lead ing to magnificently fitted up offices, the Salada Company building 1s pow one of t g Street. It is about aix years ago since the Salada Tea Company first commenced business in Toronto. Atthat time tbe only teas sold in Toronto were the Japan and Chioa teas About thie time the teas of Ceylon and Iudia began to be introduced. And since then, what a revelation, and a revolution at the same time, bas been brought about in regard to teas. In nis day, Colley Cibber, the poet and the attractions of Youn gossip, wrote: “Tea! thou soft, thou eober eage and venerable liquid; thou female tongue, running, emile~-octhing, heart-opening, wink-tppling cordia!, to whose glorious insipidity | owe the hap- piest moments of my life, let me fa!) pros- trate.’ It must have been Salada Tea, or some- thing like it, which could induce such enthusiastic praise, for if only such teas nad been available in Cibber’s day as was dished out to Toronto tea drinkers six or seven years ago, those happy moments he refers to must have been very few and very far between. Butwith the advent of Salada Tea Company, with their Ceylon Teas, a change set in which has being going on to this day. These teas only required to be kaown to be appreciated by the public. With commendable esterprise, and rightly judging ‘hat a tea conveyed pure and direct to the consumer, without passing through half adozen intermediary @.an- nela, io be subject to aduiterations of the vileat description, the Salada Company commenced packing the tea in leaded pack- ets, in quantities Of Ose pound and half a pound, This was adistinct innovation iu Canada, for the Salada tea was the first to be put on the market and sold in leaded packets in this country. Teas had heen packed in that form in Euglapd ‘ut the practice was new to Canada, The Salada Tea Company was also the firstin Canada to advertise tea as it is advertised today— tiat is, as a speciaity, as distinct from the many articles which went to make up the stock- n-trade of the chand- ler and grocer of the old days. ‘ea was then included among the soaps, starch aod peppers, with uo theught that it was an article required trained skill and care in select'on and treatment. It was difficult at first to get the average grocery dealer to see the possibilities of the tea trade as the Silada Tea Company saw it. tis av old story of natural dislike o: new metnols anda change from long- established custom. But gradually the old prejudices began to give away,as the manifest advantages of the new way of selling tea direct from the shipper put up im packages and guaranteed, began to make themselves felt over the old method of retailing from she bulk in open drawer or canister. Now, every up~to-date grocer has fallen in line with the new idea,and only the old-fas- hioued grocer, more slow to move, persists in tollowing the plan of his grandfathers. As an instance and proot of the great proportions which the busimess of Salada Tea Company has assumed, not Jess than @ million and @ half pounds of tea are now sent ou’ of its warehouse in packet form annually, TheCompany has warehouses in Boston, Butfalo, Detroit, Pittsburg aod Toronto. A visit to the warehouse on Yonge | Street is both interesting and instructive. The tea urrives direct trom the tea gar- dens of Ceylon, put up in 100 Ibs. in boxes lined wit lead. These boxes are placed on the elevator and conveyed to the top floor ofthe building. Here theg are emptied into a ponderous looking machine called the Blender,’ ormixer. Intothis machine 30 of the 100 1b. boxes can be poured at onetime. Commencing from the blender, a perfect system of. shoots and hoppers have been cons‘ructed through which the iea passes in its various stages from the top floor to the shipping rooma. A short distance from the “mixer” the tea is delivered from a shoot to a dozen or more young fellows ranged along the, room variously occupied. Some are ~~ prise which preeeats ilself to the visitor to this modern tea emporium. The aim of the Company since it started business bas been to supply the pure Salada Tea direct ssumer from the gardens of Ceylin in which it grows. The success of the company in attaining this object is attested by the immense proportions to which their business bas 80 rapidly growt to the cor ote a HEROISM OF THE FISHERMEN. it is alwayy with a vague regret that we read the sagas, and are be viking’s exploits. It seems as if the is of during had gone by forever, ind as if the heroes of the deep were a nyth of the past. Absorbed in the Norse romance, we forget that the vik- ings were only pirates, and that they fared for slaughter and for booty. If the Gloucester of today had only existed then, what heroic saga would it not bave inspired! For torisk life for glory yr riches or rescue or love is in the heart of every man to do, but to risk lite for a bare existence, for other peo- ple’s profit and for an anonymous end partakes of that commonplace sublimity which does not form the favorite plot of poets, although once in awhile it is the subject of a daily paragraph. For the vikings are not dead. From Portland to New Orleans, our harbors are full of them. They lounge upon our wharfs, and we do not recognize them. They loiter on our streets, and we know them not. But if there is a more mod- est, unconscious, or braver fellow than Jack the Fisherman, our eyes have yet to rest upon his face. He is the hardiest and most daring, the best sailor in the world today. Any continental kingdom would give its wealth to possess him for {ts defense. He is the envy of every maritime nation. Has he no value for us, beyond the halibut and the cod, the haddock and the cusk?—Herbert D. Ward in Century. The Debut of the Bowie Knife. To the public mind duels were really anecessity. The man who would not fight ‘tat the drop of a hat and drop it himself,’’ was soon made tofeel that he had very much better mot have been born. There were progressive duels, too, from which the popular mind no more revolted than it does in this era from progressive whist or euchre. It was one of them which gave Bowie and his knife to fame. In some way there had come to be bad blood, black and bitter, between him and a certain Colonel Norris Wright. After long bickering, it was agreed to meet upon the levee opposite Natchez, Miss., each with half a dozen friends, duly armed, @nd there shoot the matter out. There were a doz- en on each side when it came to fight- ing. The battle was arranged to begin with threes, the rest standing by, and coming in only when those of the first fight were dead or disabled. But they had miscalculated their own self con- trol. After the first fire there wasa general melee—the reserves to a man gripped pistols hard, drew knife belts to a handy clutch and went into the combat to do or die.—Martha McCul- loch- Williams in paper s Magazine. LE = Se SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Dowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Piii, Smail Dose. Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. \, See you get Carter’s,, Ask for Carter’s, Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pilg, making the leaden packets; these are passed along to the weighiugand packing | department. A row of machines, the invention of Mr. Larkin,the manager of the Com pany, are here deftly manipulated | by the young men who weigh and seal ne | the packets of tea. Interested in the process, I timed the | weighing,and found that from eleven to} thirteen packets of tea were weighed and sealed up in the space of one minute at each machine. The packets are then labelled, piled on | ( pearing down a sort of toboggan slide toa large flat below, where huge piles of the | neat and compact packages are ranged ip | stacks ready to be shipped away. | “y are the practical plumters. Such is the scene of activity and Gr cers ote traye, and. presto! off they shoot, disap-~ | light ~oaplsoap! Use Kuionpike Bar the great Laundry and scouring soap. ; marvel of cheapness unsurpassed n excellence. Use Royat Oax in the Laundry. Happy homes, easy quick work, snow white clothes. Use Jusitee for the toilet and Laundry. Makes child’s play of washday, J. EAPTHGRN & CO. htown Soap Works, — thrilled by { GF GH §LLBLLGLLGGSLS IT PAYS TO BUY AT PENKINS Every Purchase Profitable — Every purchase is a profitable investment Savings of cents and dollars are found all over our store. The store news tells of a few of these, and yet foreveryone we tell about there are scores that are not named. School Suits Have your boy’s suit made of Moncton Tweed, it will wear | Sie ry “08 NZ ° ~~ ae : _ aso SPS GEL FLATNESS SS I TN sa SHB Aw HZ Shawls Ladies boney comb ABGABBAL Shawls, YS nice assortment for early fall | longer and look better than soy SF trade. other tweed. oe Ne 7 FOG If Jer First Silk Velvet Ys nO el Seys “shipment ‘ SF of our new golf jerseys has ar- We have just opened a large =F rived, and is placed on our cen- range of new silk velvets in all << tre table for your inspection— the leading slades. og. prices low. i y Table Linen Tweed Suiting We have just received from the factory one case of twee] for Have you been disappointed in the service of your table linen Yer; then you didn’t buy it here WAIST ~ : for our linens are of extra qua- Je ladies fall suits, they areon our lity, and always priced at tbe SN centre tables. See them. lowest point. SF $ SHIRT WAISTS » x Balance of our shirt waists at a big discount F, Perkins & Co. SUNNYSIDE. - 3 % ts G SF — BO ++ souacaagassaassaQ® Furness Line of & {eamers. ” Shingles at 98e } SHINGLES AT $1. LO SHINGLES AT e. 15 SHINGLES AT $1.25 SHINGLES AT si: 30! SHINGLES AT $ SHINGLES AT 3 60 SHINGLES AT $1.70 SHINGLES AT $2.00! SHINGLES AT $2.30 SHINGLES at $2.50 Shingles sawn, Shingles split, Shingles Cedar, Shingles spruce Shingles, aii kinds —all prices. Everything else you reouire in our live Puoxu 181. James Barrett, Conaolly’s Wharf. . MOLASSES AND SUGAR “*==-=--*=~=>===* Now landing ex scooner “MARY P’ N ever direct srom Barbados, 500 barrels bright Barbadoes sugar, 200 puns choice Bar- bacoes molasses, Lave good Watches been so low in price as to-day. We have them rezently bought at the latest re- duced rates, and will sell low. G. H. TAYLOR Halifax to Great Britain S. 8. “ London City” leaves Halifax for London G. B Sept- 8. Steam-|@ ship ““Dahome” will leave Halifax for Liverpool Sept. 14th. Shippers of perishable should apply early. W. W. CLARKE, Agent produce N. RATTENBURY. 198 2 mos WANTED. — An experienced Pattern Maker, non (ther need appiy. Apply to box 528) Ch’town. 208 dy lwk AUCTION. To be sold by public auction at Winsloe tall, on aa 10th inst, Jeweler aod Uptician. at 10 o’clocx a. 108 boxes of ierloteetown. cheese, steam bates: sl other articles {| —-—-_—- saved from the late fire By Orper or Directors. Winsloe, Sept 6, 98, 208—dyli w li 'The Vaccination Act 1886. -| Notice ia hereby given that Vaccination * ansee | will be attended to under the provisions of A. Memb. Can. Soc.C. EB. | the above cited act, by the undersigned at Memb. Amer. W.W. Assoc. . ; ae s 9 their respective oflices, from 2 to 4 p. m M°SCONNE?!*'. & MARION , daily, for the present. CIVIL ENGINEERS rane ROOMS 308 TO 311 NEW YORK LIFE BLOC., MONTREAL RICHARD JOB NSON, M.D. Water Powers and Water Supply Systems PETER CONROY , M. D. ; (proposed or existing) examined and reported on. Superinten lents of Vaccination 91 twice a wk 3 weeks. Drainage aud Municipal Werks eenerally. ““rveys of every description undertaken. FOR SALE OR TO LET. That well known business Hotel on Richmond Street, near the market. This Hotel conta'ns about twenty good B. D, McConnELL J. A Memb. Can. Soc. C. E. D. and P. L. §, RELI- ABLE WORK MODE- FATE | pueeecee ranecccee ' SHINGLES AT $2.25 § | $ $ Pani Line, To Boston COMMENCING MAY {0th rhe favorite S: S., “HALL ‘ * FAX” will leave Charloite. “9 ‘own for Roston 4 Every Tuesday, at 1 p. m, ‘calling at Hawkesbury and Halifax. RETURNING leave Boston every Saturday at noon. Passengers jeaveing Ch’own — Wednesday morning via Pig tou, can make close CONNGEe tion at Halifax with S. S. “HALIFAX,” Sailing Wednesday evening at ]] - Mm. Tickets for sale at stations P, EL Railway. For further rates and all inte tion apply to H. L. Chipman, Ganad- ian Agent, at Halifax, or to Wee Agent, Ch’town, The Ch’town Steam Nav. ee STEAMERS..... . Northumberland & ese Leave as below every day (Sundays Excepted) From POINT DU CHENE (on arrival of afternoon train from St. n) for Summerside, connecting there with 2xprese train for Charlottetown. From SUMMERSIDE ‘on arrival of morning train from Charlottetown) Point Du Chene connecting wita day tf for St. John. Connecton at Moncton with train for Canada aud at St. John with Steamenso International Line and Raiiways for United States and Canada. From PICTOU (on arrivalof day train from Halifax) for Charlottetown, From CHARLOTTETOWN, seven” a.m. (loca!) for Pictou, (connecting ther with day train for Cape Breton and Halix — fix, at Halifax with C. A. & P. Line for” Boston. F. W. HALES! Ch’town, P. E. I. Secerragy — —a Quebec Steamship Co’y, Ltd. “STR. CAMPANA” Sailing Sailing rom Montreal from Charlotigiowa at Z p. m. about 6 p.m. Monday 6th June "Mouday 30th May Monday 20th June Monday 13th June Monday 27th dave Monday 1'th duly Monday 25th July , Monday 8th Aag. Monday 22nd Avg Monday 5th Sept Monday 19th Sept Munday 3rd Oct Monday 4th July Monday 18th July Monday lst August Monday 15th August Monday 29th August Monday 12th Sept. Monday 26th Sepx. Monday 10th Oct Mondry 24th Oct Monday 17th Oct Monday 7th Nov Monday 3lst Oct Calling at Summerside, Perce Gaspe Mal Bay and Father Pvuint. Delighitul summer trip for tourists. Passenger accommodation unsurpassed, Freight carried at competition rates. Eggs band- led with}great care. CA RVE FROS Ayer? i PICKFORD & BLACK, LINE HALIFAX & CHARLOTTE [ OWN. SEASON OF 15958. S.S8.CITY OF GHENT will sail frem Ubarlottetown every Friday at 10 &. Mey during the the season of 1898, for Halifamy salling at Summerside, Port Hastingts Port Hawkesbury, Arichat, Caneo, Laat Harbor, Salmon River, Sheet Harbor; veturning wil! leave Halitax every Tues day at 6) p. m., makiog sawe calle. The steamer/has excellent passenger sccome modatipn. Saloon amids sbips. Speci rooms and shop, all ia good repair. Good Stabling for thirty horses, with large yard in coanection. 4~ply to THOMAS CAMPBELL > Prices freighge will be given this season. ve, further information apply to H=xtracting Free W. W. CLARKE, Ag OR. J, P, MURRAY *< /Ch’town, May 13,1898