PE VAILY EXAMINER. Tregms :—Five Dotiars a YEAR. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evzrripzs. ye Siyexx Copies Two CEnrre NEW SERIES. Che Daily Examiner Is issued Every Evening by The Examiner Publishing Co., FROM THEIR OFFICE, LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE Charlottetown, P. E. Island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : UNA SG sso nee ees erases $2 50 marco Monthe.s-.... be oe So ee 1 25 OE gs eee ibe etn Seen ee © 50 &@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. ALMANAG FOR APRIL, 1890, MOON’S OHANGES, Full ie 5th day, 5h., 11.9m., a. m., W.S. WwW. Last Quarter, 12th day, 6h., 41.6m, a.m, 5S New Moon, 19th day, 3h., 53.0m., a. m., N. E., below horizon. First Quarter, 27th day, Oh., 39.1m., a. m., N E., beiow horizon. Di iw & werx(S22 ‘Sun |Moon! High!Day’e M jrisesjsets | rises |water| len’h h m{h m| after; after] h m 1 Tuesday 5 45:6 23, 2 32} 8 15/12 38 2|Wednesday 42} 25) 3 38] 8 59) 42 3| Thursday 41) 26) 4 45) 9 37) 45 4| Friday 38) 27]. 5 53/10 12 48 5|Saturday 37) 28] 7 2|10 46) 51 6|Sunday 35} 29] 8 13)!1 20) 54 7! Monday 33). 31; 9 25)11 55 58 8| Tuesday 3!) 32/10 39}aft 29113 1 9| Wednesday 30, 34)11 51} 1 14 4 10| Chursday 28, 35!'morn| 2 2 7 11) Friday 26; 37) 057/3 1) Il 12)Saturday 24; 38] 1 55) 4 20) +14 13/Sunday 22} 39) 2 43) 5 52; 17 14! Vionday 20; 41) 3 22) 7 16 20 15| Tuesday 19} 42) 3 53] 819) 23 16] Wednesday 17| 43) 421;9 7) 26 17) Thursday 15} 44) 4 45) 949) 29 8| Friday 13; 45) 5 810 26) 32 19/Saturday ll} 46) 5 30/11 2) 35 20) Sunday 10} 48) 5 55/11 37 38 23| Monday 8} 49) 6 22imorn 4l 22) Tuesday 6| 51} 6 55) 012) 45 23] Wednesday 4) 52} 7 34, 049) 48 24i|Thursday 3} 54] 8 20) 1 28) 51 25| Friday 1] 55] 9 13) 2 14 54 26|Saturday 4 59} 56110 12) 3 5) 57 27\Sunday 57} 57|11 121 4 9/14 0 281 Monday 56] 59laft 15) 5 18 3 29' Tuesday 55 0} 1 21) 6 30 5 30 Wednesday 58} 1] 2 27) 7 34 8 Plans and Specifications of Buiidings PREPARED BY CHAPPELL & PHILLIPS, ARCHITECTS OFFICE :—Market House (head of stairs). mch25—6w eod & wky—pd (JOHN T. MELLISH, Barrister, Attorney, Notary Publie, &c., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. _ OFFICE—London House Building, (Davies Corner), @ueen St. All kinds of Legal Business promptly attended eo. Money to Loan at low interest. » ay &. wky tf “E. §. BLANCHARD, M. D,, Member M.P. A., G. B. and Ireland, OFFICE: Corner Pownal and Water Streets. TELEPHONE. nov6—dy 3meod wky | | aaa 2. ha] | | Med atl Hy alll | | | | | a E ia .: oe i PAINTING, &c. TRAINOR & COYLE, PAINTERS. —_—————— Whitewashing, Tinting, Manging, eft. dere wgete ——— tte Paper QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. L, Importers of British and German Dry Goods, MILLINERY, SMALLWARES, &e. Also, Fall Lines of Teas, Groceries and Warehouse Goods, WHOLESALE ONLY. ————(x) acca ape taal (ts Addition: to our General Stock are being daily re- ceived from the different sources of production, and will be offered Wholesale only at a small advance on cost. Charlottetown, April 19, 1890 —dy 1m SDA Merchant Tailors. (0) E HAVE A LARGE STOCK OF WOOLENS, in Suit- ings, Overcoatings and Trouserings, suitable for Spring, and Summer wear, at the lowest possible prices for Cash. MR. McDONALD, for the past six years (previous to c»m- ing with us) of Boston, where he acquired a thorough know- z|ledge of his business, has charge of our Tailoring Department. As a Cutter of correct styles of Garments, Mr. McDonald has no superior in the Lower Provinces. He has given our customers the very best satisfaction. Men who care to dress well can make no mistake in giving us a call. Three Cases CHRISTY’S BES? LONDON HATS just opened MEN’S FINE NECKWEAR, DRESS SHIRTS and UNDER- WEAR; Lot of BOYS’ SUITS low to clear. B.S. DAVIES & CO.,- CAMERON BLOCK. Ch’town, March 25, 1899. ()—— The “Erema” left Liverpool for Charlottetown last October, and is expected here shortly. She has on board for us nearly 100 Tons of Bar Fron and Steel, which will be Isold low on arrival. NORTON & FENNELL. Charlottetown, April 17. 1890—dy %aw wky ncn omen 47E HAVE SEVERAL HUNDRED BARRELS OF FLOUR on hand that we want to turn into Cash in the next two months, and with that end in view we guarantee to sell as cheap, if not cheaper = We warrant every barrel of Flour we sell, and if it does not turn out as we say we will gladly take it back and refund you your money. We keep all the favorite brands on hand, such as “ MATCHSESS,” the best Family Flour in the market, | “KENT,” well known as a very strong and lasty Flour, «“ESTRY,” for fine Pastry use, “« QOGLLVIE’S HUNGARLAN PATENT,” one of the strongest Flours made « CHOICE Fa MILY,” made at the Charlottetown Roller Mills, “DIAMOND,” a good cheap Family Flour, and other well-known brands. City free of charge. See our prices before buying elsewnere. BEER & GOFF, Ona, Marsh 10) 100 Whey Queen ays Ming Byuare Brora Flour delivered at Railway Station or any part of the ~ VOL. 25.-NO. 116 CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1890. i ! | | me | os EF | | { ki of Lime and Soda } 5 is a perfect ' Seoti’s Emulsion Smusion. x iisa wonderful Flesh Producer. Ti is the Best Remedy tor CONSUMPTION, 2 Sercfula, Bronchitis,Wasting Dis- eases, Chronic Coughs and Golds. PALATABLE AS MILK. Scott's Emulsion is only put up in salmon color wrapper. Avoid all imitationsor substitutions. Sold by all Druggists at 50c. and $1.00. SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville. VALUABLE REAL ESTATE, Sale of Lands in Charictte- town Royaity. E are instructed by the Executors of the Estate of late Owen Connolly to sell at PUBLIC AUCTION, on the Premises, On Monday, {2th day of May, 1890 AT 11 O'CLOCK, 4. M., Part of that valuable property lying between the St. Peter’s Road and the Lower St. Peter’s Road, adjoining the residence of the late Ralph Brecken, Esq., and formerly owned by Michael Beazeley, Esq. The property has been Jaid off in Building and Pasture Lots. For further particulars apply at office of Peters & Peters, or at the oftice of Estate of Owen Gonnolly, where plans of the property can be geen. Terms liberal and will be made known at the sale z E. H. NORTON & CO., ap2l—eod tl sle Auctioneers. HOUSEKEEPERS ! READ THIS. AMPHORETTE, sudden death to Moths and all insect germs, cheaper than Cam- phor of any other thing in the Market, good for Carpets, Furs, ete. Ox Gall Soap, Stove Polish, and all requi- sits for House cleaning. REDDIN BROS. apl6—dy 2w. “Trainiug -the Trotting Hlarse,” BY CHARLES MARVIN, Fdited by Leslie E, Macleod, aoe publishers are now taking orders for this greatest of practical horse-books, which will shortly be off the press. It is a handsome 300 page octsvo, bound in cloth, elegantly printed, superbly illustrated by Whitney, and explains inevery detail the remarkable success of Charles Marvin, who | has given more young horses fast records than lany men that ever lived ; aod the whole plans and methods pursued at Palo Alto, as to breaking, training, shoeivg, gaiting, driving, keeping, racing and breeding trotters. The iliustrations aione are worth the price of the} book. Mailed, post-paid, to any address in; l the United States or Canada at $3.50. Read ‘what J. ©. Sib ey, the owner of St, Bel, says of this book in the Spirit of the Times, after seeing advance sheets: ‘‘In this work Marvin has let out all the mysteries of the craft, and itis sosimple and plain that any breeder, owner, trainer or rubber, who has any relish for his business, can take a colt as a yearling and develop to the highest. and fullest extent that colt’s capacity as a trotter. The work ;impressed me so strongly that I have ordered ‘twenty copies, and shall place one in the hands of every rubber on our farm.” Mailed, post-paid, for $3.50. L. E. MACLEOD. Manager Marvin Publishing Co., Box 2990, New York City. ap22 - OATMEAL. ANADIAN STANDARD OATMEAL | arriving to-day. HORACE HASZARD. ap23—Iw pd than anyone else in the trade. SEED WHEAT a Fust Arrived Direct from Torento and More to Arrive: j ‘HITE RUSSIAN, White Fife and Red Fife Seed Wheat, Timothy Seed, Vetches, Alsyke and White and Red Clover. so, Island-grown Wheat, _Barley, Buek- wheat and Timothy Seed. Will be sold cheap Wholesale and Retail. This is a very choice lot of Seeds. A. HORNE & CO., Upper Queen Street. | Ch’town, April 23, 189)—dy 4w aw wy 4i POTATOES WANTED IWMSDIATZLY: | 000 TO 2,000 Bushe’s Mclntyree § White Stars, Burbanks or Hebrons. FENTON. Ty NEWBERY, opty sl wey \ TdE DAILY EXAMINER, Henry Stewart, in The Cowntry Gentleman, says some things about sandy land which may be encouraging to those who are tilling such farms. ‘* Sandy soil, well managed, is the best of all kinds. It absorbs the rain and holds it firmly; its porosity keeps it dry in wet weather, and moist in dry weather; it en- ables the air to pass in and out freely at every change of temperature and condition of moisture; and also exerts that oxidizing effect upon organic matter, as manure or composts, which is well known to be a pro- perty of all porous substances, and thus such soil makes at once available an appli- cation of manure by decomposing it very rapidly and converting it into plant food; it is easily tilled, may be worked weeks in advance of clay land, and twenty-four hours after a rain when the working is the most effective. ‘It yields the best quality of wheat, thin, clear-skinned and heavy in the grain; the very best and brightest barley, the heaviest oats; the veay finest potatoes and roots; and being warmed up quickly by the sun’s heat, which it absorbs greedily, it yields the finest corn, clover and forage crops. It is healthful to live stuck and to the owner. It is generous, kindly in disposition, tract- able, and when liberally treated returns favors promptly and abundantly. Like the greatest virtue of humanity it is twice blessed, it blesseth him that gives and hin that tekes; but also hke everything kindly and good, it pines for kindness and gener- osity in return. It is thankful for small favors, and gives quid pro quo for the least | it receives. I would rather work a sandy loam farm than any other kind; and if the right kind of sand is there, the loam will soon be made of it by ploughing in green crops and by the use of fertilizers, lime in- cluded, as well as manure.” After “La Grippe.” Correspondents writing from Germany and Italy to the English press, speak of a new disease following the trail of la gtippe, and affecting only those who have suffered from its forerunner. The Italians call it ‘-La Nona,” which may be translated into English as ‘‘falling asleep.” People drop into a comatose condition under it, and remain seemily dead, except for a faint breathing, four or more days. If then they recover consciousness, they exhibit every sign of nervous exhaustion. vinee of Italy the prefect has issued a cir- cular tu the inferior authorities to this ef- fect :— ‘Although the epidemic known as influenza isalmost at an ead, yet in these late days, in several communes, cases of very rapid death have been veritied, in consequence of cardiac paralysis and comatose attacks. In view of this fact, the prefect recommends not to hurry the burial of persons deceased from such mat- adies, protractiog the period of delay even to 48 hours.” (Lhe Italian law prescribes 24 hours as the usual custom.) One case is mentioned of a syoung man who has been asleep for twenty days, open- ing his eyes but oncea day. He is ex- tremely emaciated and corpse-like. A physician writes to the Boston Herald from Illinois that he has seen cases of the dis- ease in that State. In these the heart and eyes have been chiefly affected, the heart showing irregular pulsation, the eyes great photophabia and penetrating pain. One woman patient has been forbidden to read, write or sew, on penalty of losing her sight very speedily. The Herald adds: there has been no pubiic _ reference to the subject that we have seen in this city ; yet a local physician informs us that he has a case of the complaint under treatment. Mr. Parneli’s Objection. A London despatch says:—An intimate friend of Mr. Parnell, in giving the Irish leader's reasons for opposing Mr. Balfour’s land purchase bill, said Mr.Parneli con- sidered it a bad bill from every point of view, not only bad, but to a great extent ridiculous. Considering the matter from the point of view of the Irish tenant, it may be said at once that the proposal is one to rob the tenant who is foolish enough to buy up his own property or his holdmg. | If the bill passes there will be three classes of peasants: 1. Holders owning land as pur- chasers under the Ashburne act, whom we may call the Ashburne tenants. 2. The tenants owning land under the Balfour act, whom we may call Balfour tenants, and (3) tenants holding land at a rent, either judi- cial or non-judicial. These tenants wiil be placed in an unfavorable position as com- pared with the first mentioned. The Ash- burne tenant will have his land at a reduc- tion from the present rate of (roughly speaking) 49 per cent., whereas the Baltour tenants, under Balfour’s peculiar arrange- ments, will, the first five years, hold his land ata reduction of about 25 per cent., and the ordinary tenant will be paying a rent which will be equal to the old rack rent fixed by the land commission. The meaning of all this is that everything will be unsettled ; that agitation will become not merely desirable but necessary, for it is contrary to reason to suppose that one man on one side of the road can hold at an acnual rental of £50 a year, and two men on the other side of the road pay twice that sum for the same quantity of land without causing the two latter to rise in whatever way may be open to them. The land ques- tion would thus be opened afresh. Mr. Baifour, in short, by his bill, which provide: only for the gradual transfer of the properts to the tenants, puts a divect- premium not only on agitation but only violence, and i: thus destructive and not conservative, Ki. , G.—What is [et In one pro- | wouldn’t be worth the powder. The Bit of Ready Money. BY. LILLIE E, BARR. x Ihave steady work in plenty, I’ve a master just and kind, Work that’s easy to my fingers, And exactly to my mind ; But I have another pleasure, One for which myself I thank— Listen, listen, Mollie, honey ! I’ve a bit of ready money fn the bank. If; O, you make my home so happy ! And you are so good and fair, That there is no man I envy Anyhow or anywhere ! But I may as well confess it, li I would be true and frank, Every blessing’s doubled, honey, By the bit of ready money In the bank. Iii. And though you are bright and hearty, Aad though I am strong and hale, No one has for health a surety ; I’ve seen other workmen fail. But if trouble touched us, Mollie— And it touches every rank— None 1 love would suffer, honey ; I’vea bit of rexdy money In the bank. Iv. Some care but for passing pleasure, Love the feast, and dance, and song ; Spend their doliars as they earn it, Trust to luck to get along. Then care comes with grief or sickness, and they have themselves to thank For not having, Millie, honey, Just the bit of ready money * In the bank. v. For it doubles every pleasure, And makes sorrow less and light ; He that has a growing bank-book Does the thiag he thinks is right. He can choose his work and master, He can speak out bold and frank ; He’s a freeman, Moliie, honey, Who has laid by ready money In the bank ! LETTERS T0 THE EDITOR. “Traveller” to * Fairplay.” Sr1r,—I have no intention of replying to the flippant effusion of the Grand Sachem of the motley school of unbelievers, whose headquarters is Summerside. The gama Besides, the Christian religion requires no apology at my hands, nor any defence against such blatant blasphemers, who crop up every succeeding age, from the days of their pro- totype, the fool who said in his heart, ‘There is no God,” down to the philoso- phical wonder who invokes Euripides, and talks about liberty when he means license, over the pseudonym of ‘* Fairplay.” I merely write to give certain parties a word of warning. As the general public happily believe in Christ and not in the gentlemen comprising the school above referred to, it ig not very likely that they are going to tolerate much longer in their servants the conduct complained of, especially when, apart from religious considerations, they are in the possession of facts more than sufli- cient, under the service, to send them about their business. It is uscless for the gentle- man to cast aspersions upon Christianity because there have been, and are, erring Christians. Can their vices be traced to © Christianity? And if comparisons, always odious, are to be made, how will we com- pare with the votaries of Tom Payne in this Province?) Knowing the ground they stand on, one would have a right to look for a little more wisdom than ‘‘ Fairplay” displays when he attempts to ‘‘ ad- dress the public.” But then as ‘‘ the beginning of wisdom is the fear of the Lord,” we are not to comment on its absence in certain quarters. ' TRAVELLER. O'Leary, April 23rd, 1890. News Notes. Boston expends $16,000 a year to main- tain its quarantine establishment. Brazil’s revolutionary government is hav- ing trouble with its soldiers. It was the same soldiers who placed it in power, and probably they do not see why one govern- ment should be more sacred to them than another. A newspaper of the smallest circulation is that published for the use of the Em- peror of Austria, his Minister of Foreign , Affairs, and his Secretary of State. A fourth copy is never issued. Its contents consist of the criticisms of the journals of the world upon his administration of government. Its annual cost is $80,000.— Washington (D. C.) Craftsman. “To discontinue an advertisement,” says John Wanamaker, Philadelphia’s great merchant, ‘tis like taking down your sign. If you want to do business you must let the public know it. Standing advertise- ments are better and cheaper than reading notices. They look more substantial and businesslike, and inspire confidence. I would as soon think of doing business without clerks as without advertising.” ee 6 0 Apvice to Morners.—Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has been used by motjers for children teething for over. 4fty years with perfect success It re- lieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain; and the little cherub awakes as ‘s bright as a button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the zurus, allays all pain, relieves wind, regu- iates the bowels and is the best known cernedy for diarrhoea, whether arising from ceehing or other causes, Twenty-five conte a bottle. aplie Hdyvodwkyly