ll ee NER yes THE DAILY EXAMINER. DottARs A YRAR. NEW SERLES. t ad is te > . neni op a x . . = ‘ : This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Evxiiwes. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1886. SinG te Corres Two Cents. VOL. 19.—NO. 172. a ive i hay] ; Che Map Examiner s issued every evening by Che bxaminer Publishing Co. a n thoir offies, corner of Water and é George Streets, Charlottetown, Pri Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION — LADIES’ ee I eke. ceevceciadl Cal. $2.50 Lares moaths........... juchebbhs acu 1.25 Astracan Jackets, FRC Se Se Be MARS 9 es 50 . 1H conaet f° } Advertising at moderate rates, Fur-lined Cloaks, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. half-, yearly advertisemenis . ’ on application. , Fur Tippets, eariy, or luffs, in ALMANAC FOR DECEMBER, 1888, | Sea, MOON'S CHANGES. Beaver, First Quarter 3rd day, 10h. 12.5m., a. m., Otter. N. E.. (below horizon. ) , \I : h , 5 ae Full Moon 10th day, 5h., 17.7m., a. m.. W Persian Laml A: 2 he i” i rsh zamb, Last Quarter [Sth day, 2h., 26.6m., a.m..S. E. New M On 25th da) dh 4. I I N iE : - ° « Im o Ge dee Ne Be Astracan. cioW NOrizon, ) p San Sun |/Moon! High’ Day’s Monkey, \] PAY rt VRRK ° wl : i ses sets rises |water! len’h : ' De lgian Seal, Xe. h mh mimorniaftrn h m lOSUAay ( 234 Sill 44) 1 51) 8 4] Ladies’ Caps, penal) -ecciangpiiinliiagajen Sleigh Rebes, Fur Coats, Fur Caps, Fur Gloves, ALS A large ass FUR GOODS. , tment of Men’s Furnishings, Shirts, Collars, Cutts, races, Hosic ry, Ties, Paramatta aw Coats, Underclothing, Prices as L in the trade. d Rubber &c,, at OW as any 25 Brawn's Block, Opposite Market House. 0 Yiatt 16 2 34 oa ; } st 9) 0 43) 3 28) 38 Children’s Caps, is vy 32; 9} 1 9423) = 37 sunday 33 9 1 34! 6 29 36 Mufts. & 6 Monday 34 Si 1 59) 6 33 34 5 ‘ i? Si 2 926i 7 35 oOo 8 \\ resi Ly 36 S$} 2 57) 8 25 32 oe JA 9 Thursday 37 2asle2iea 2 ? of St , 10| Friday Q - 31 4 11 oa an A Full Line of Staple ed 11 Saturday 3 5} 4 58/10 3: 29 and Faney Dry Goods : 12)Sunday ; 40 3; 5 S41] 14 28 * : 2 13 Monday 41 S| 6 56/11 57 27 at Lowest Prices 14 Tuesday 42} 818 4laft39) 26 rg ; 1> Wednesday is) 4899) 9 10) 1 23) 326 16 Thursday 44 I10 27; 2 2 25 17 friday 44 Jill 3 5 35 —_-- I8.Sa lay 45, 10\morn| 4 13 25 TE . E> 19 Suaday 46) 10) 051, 5 31,24 STANLEY BROS 20 Monday 46) 10/202) 650) 24 ores 21| Tuesday 47; lj 3 12) 7 75 5 2. Wednesday 4, 12 4 22) 8 48 25 Ch'town, Nov. 16, 1886—dy & wky 23 Thursday 48; 13) 5 28) 9 34 25 24' Friday 4s 13; 6 31/10 16 25 , 25/Saturda 48; 14) 7 29/10 55 26 26 Sunday 49} 15) 8 20)11 2 26 27 Monda 49 15} 9 Simorn 26 3B Tueslay 40 16 7 47 0 10 27 9) Wednesday 49 16/10 16 0 45 27 30 Thursday 49} 17/10 50,121; 28 $1! Friday 749° 17/11 12,2 0! 8 28 to the VES. E. RUTH wishes to announce . repared ladies of Charlottetown that she is id ts todo MANTLE AND DRESSMAKING in the newest fashions, having had many years prac- tical experience in the United States, patrons can be had can fee] assured of getting every satisfaction. at our establishment. “ ¥URS1 FURS!” cS A RR oy AYO MATTER what competitors may say in their advertisements, it is apparent to the - AN general public that the we claim you save 40 _ We have not the time to enumerate our bargains in Muifs, Caps, Gloves, Coats, Sacques, satisfy yourself that our , Residence, Richmond Street, near Hills-_ It is not our claim that we offer FURS as cheap as other houses borough square. : : Nov. 29--3mo eed & wk) per cent by trading with us. ( : A. bk Asem Robes, Collars, &c., but we invite you to call and examine them THE E XAMINER PUBI 1sHING COM bargains are genuine, and our prices the LOWEST OF THE LOW. ** . 4awcd JES. «kt bList NU aim PANY,” having lately added to their stock of type and material for Job Printing, are better than ever prepared to execute orders for Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Handbills of all kinds, Visiting or Business Cards, &c., promptly and cheaply, in the best style of ihe art. ‘one but first-class workmen are employed in their “S#ige; and, as they import their printing dire@, from the manufacturers, they are 1|| @eders on the most favorable terms. Ch'town, Dec. 11, 1886. papers STUARTS NEW FUR STORE, NEWSON BLOCK, CHARLOTTETOWN. Un town, Nov. 16, 1236. able to fill The continued patronage of the public is oe - respéc' fully soliciteds = rane : W. L. COTTON, ~~ A HAPPY N A We invite you to inspect our stock of Gifts. Fancy Gifts: Brass Table with glass pendants, | Ladies’ Work Tables, Checker Tables, Brackets, Bannerette Mounts, Bronze Rolling Pins, Bronze Keys, Flower Stands, i Wall Pockets, | Slipper Pockets, ee WINTER ARRANGEMENT THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE INTERHATIONAL S.S. CO. Leave St. John for Bostou, via Eastport and Port- jard, every Monday, and Thursday at 8.00 a. m. are from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd class ; 39.50, Ist class. : For tickets and other information apply to | A.SHARP, F. W. HALES, } P. «1. R’y.. P. E. L Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. 1386-—eod wky Fancy Chairs, Metal Photo Frames, Music Racks, Paper Racks, Nic-Nac Tables, Queen Anne Tables, Five-o'clock Tea Tables, What Nots. ' Nov. 1 i. a ea it a K & 4d. Oh’town, Dee. 15, F886. N selecting Holiday Gifts, remember those of practical utility are best, every day the recipient more often remembers the giver. Comfortable Gifts: Lounging Chairs, Smoking Chairs, Platform Rocking Chairs, Camp Chairs, Carpet Chairs, Tub Chairs, Invalid’s Tables, Children’s Sleighs, Best Spring Beds in the world. Substantial Gifts : $200 Parlor Suits, $100 Side Boards, Dining-room Sets, Bed-room Sets, Walnut Writing Desks, Full-length Mirrors, Mantle Mirrors, Bagatelle Boards, Hall Stands, &e., Rei, And Hundreds Hore, not Mentioned Above, at : MARK WRIGHT & COS. for in using t &e., GEHENEHRAL = Gommissioa Merchants, = 2 12) ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, BOOKS !! BOOKS!!! | BOOKS ! ScHoots and Conieces Supplied. Aros and Produce a Specialty. lale th ily The undersigned, who attend Leading Book and Picture Sales, and are Purchas-| wkly BARCLAY & OO, GENERAL at abo issu Cymnission & Shipping Merchants, ora'itstiewe suppticd on shortest 191 Atiaatic Avenue, Beston Libraries furnished throughout. ee ingly low rates. Remit by Bank or Postal, an { years’ experience in this | market, Draft with order. “4 Over fifty thousand bushels P. E. I “ee J. MOSCRIPT PYE & CO., Our patrons | j potatoes received by us last fall. all satisfied. Vessels charterei for’ potato freighte at ehort notice. Write for market Export Booksellers reports 154 WEST REGENT ST., GLASGOW, s@” Specialties —Potatoes, Mackerel, Can- ned Lobsters, Eggs. June 17, 86 -3mo eod SCOTLAND. Novy. 13th, 18%3—3 mos eod ers of Valuable Private Libraries in Eng-! RAL = land and the Continent, can supply Books|and despatch commissivns entrusted to notice. |in all parts. liminary THAN GOLONIALS. ~~ PER CENT LESS. GOOD NEWS FROM HOME ! Fee, |instructions. ladies MASS. Lawyers, Doctors, CLERGYMEN, MERCHANTS, For the convenience of ‘‘Kin Beyond Sea,”’ \J. Moscript Pye (of the above firm) who BOOKBINDI NG, STATIONER Y. has had great experience of the varied requirements of labroad and in the Colonies, acts as Gern- AGENT, and executes with economy and gentlemen at about 50 per cent. less than usual Cost him, for anything large or small that may Pictures, Books, and MSS. bought lh. wanted from Europe. Correspondents Manufactures and Patents, Whole- also Financial and Commercial undertak- sale Bookbinding and Stationery at exceed- ings placed on the English Market. Pre- £25 Sterling. ‘traced. Save time, trouble and expense, by commnnicating with Mr. PYE, 154 | Stationers and Publishers,) WEsT REGENT. STREET, GLASGOW. A re mittance should in every case accompany Relatives | Nov. 22, 1886.—2aw & wky LARGE, Tender for the Works of Construction Msi cal itv PAYS JTEw hi. RY RAILWAY. SyDNEY. CAPE BRETON SECTION — GRAND Narrows 1% SEALED TENDERS, addressed to the under- signed and endorsed ‘fenders for Cape Breton Railway,” will be received at this office up to noon on WEDNESDAY, the 12th day of January, i887, for certain works of construction. Plans and profiles will be open for inspection at the office of the Chief Engineer and General Manager of Government Railways at Ottawa, and also at the Office of the Cape Breton Railway at Port Hawkesbury, C. B., on and after the 27th day of December, 1886, when the general specifi- cations and form of tender may be obtained upon application, No tender wil! be entertained unless on one of the printed forms and al] the conditions are com- plied with By order, A. P,. BRADLEY, Secretary. Department of Railways and Canals, Ottawa, 15th December, 1886 dec20—3i wy 3i Siwy a | Just Received — AT — d “HE MUSIG STORE," AN Rew Violins, New Accordeons, New Conceriitias, New Harmonicas, New Jews-Harps. Best Violin Strings, ea A LARGE STOCK OF NEW MUSIC BOOKS, VERY CHEAP. G. P. FLETCHER, Sign of the “ BIG FIDDLE,” LOWER QUEEN STREET. TO SELECT ONE’S \ihas Preselts AS EARLY AS POSSIBLE. Our show this year both of SILVER GOODS AND— of all descriptions, is WELL ASSORTED & CHEAPER, Quality considered, than ever before. Ladies’, Youths’ and Gent’s WATCHES that will Keep Time, from $6.00 to upwards of $100.00. Cheapest Watches Not Kept in Stock, ——_—— a cea Anyone, by paying a small deposit on any article they may select, can have it laid aside for them till required. —_—--—_——_ E. W. TAYLOR, CAMERON BLOCK. Dec. 4—2 aw cage CONELE, COFFEE Fresh Roasted & Ground, — AT — BEER & GOFF'S: Dec, 8, 1836. pasa ns 98 ia gs EES A Woman's Portrait. Blessing she is; God made her so, And deeds of week-day holiness Falls from her noiseless as the snow, Nor had she ever chanced to know That aught was easier than to bless. She is most fair, and thereunto Her life doth rightly harmonize ; Feeling or thought that was not true Ne’er made less beautiful the blue Unclouded heaven of her eyes. She is a woman ; one in whom The spring-time of her childish years Hath never lost its fresh perfume, Though knowing well that life hath room For many blights and many tears. —J. R. LOWELL. A The First Announcement of “ The Century's” Life of Lincoln. The following is a portion of a letter from George Alfred Townsend, (*‘Gath”) to the New York World, printed May 20, 1865. It is interesting as a graphic pen picture of the White House just after President Lincoln’s death, and as containing the first public announcement of the life of Lincoln, | by Messrs. Nicolay and Hay, the publica-| tion of which has just been begun in The | Century, after twenty-one years of prepara-| tion by its authors: — WasHINGTon, May 14, 1865. | l am sitting in the President’s ofiice. He | was here very lately, but he will not return to dispossess me of this high-backed chair he filled so long, nor resume his daily work at} the table where I am writing. There are here only Major Hay and the friend that accompanies me. A_ bright-facec boy runs in and out, darkly attired, so that his fob-chain of gold is the only relief to his} mourning garb. This is little Tad, the pet of the White House. That great death, with which the world rings, has made upen him only the light impression which all things make on childhood. He will live to be a man} pointed out everywhere, for his father’s sake ; | and as folks look at him the tableau of the murder will seem to encircle him. The room is long and high, and so thickly hung with maps that the color of the wall cannot be discerned. The President's table, at which i am seated, adjoins a window at the farthest corner, and to the left of my chair, as | I recline in it, there isa longer table before an empty grate, around which there are many chairs, where the Cabinet used to assemble. The carpet is trodden thin, and the brilliance | of the dyes is lost. The furniture is of the formal cabinet class, stately and semi-comfort- | able ; there are book-cases, sprinkled with the | sparse library of a country lawyer, but lately | plethoric, like the thin body which has depart- | ed in its coffin. They are taking away Mr. Lincoln’s private effects to deposit them ; } wheresoever the family may reside, and | the emptiness of the place, on this| sunny Sunday, revives that feel- ing of desolation from which the land has} searce recovered. I rise from my seat and ex- aniine the maps, they are from the coast sur- vey and the engineer departments, and ex- hibit all the contested ground of the war; there are pencil lines upon them, where some one has traced the route of armies, and planned the strategie circumferences of campaigns. Was it the dead President who so followed the march of empire, and dotted the sites of shock and overthrow. ’ There is but one picture on the marble man- tel over the cold grate—John Bright—a photo- graph. But as to his biography, it is to be written by Colonel Nicolay and Major Hay. They are to goto Paris together, one as attache of legation, the other as consul ; and while there will undertake the labor. They are the only men who know his life well enough to exhaust it, having followed his offi- cial tasks as closely as they shared his social hours, Major Hay is a gentleman of literary force. Colonel Nicolay has a fine judgment of charac- ter and public measures. Together they should satisfy both curiosity and history. ——— > <P Bulgaria’s Throne. The supply of German princelings, either | for thrones or marriages, being, so far as | experience has shown, unlimited, itis not} surprising to find one more of them now | suggested to the Bulgarians asa ruler in} the person of a scion of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Whatever his capacity for reigning, he would be more acceptable, doubtless, than the Prince of Mingrelia, and indeed the stupidest of dukes from Central Europe would have the same advantage as a ruler at Sofia over the keenest nominee of the Czar that King Log had over King Stork in the fable. Alexander of Battenberg, how- ever, so far from being stupid, was in fact able and vigorous alike in diplomacy and the battlefield, so that the hope of having him back as prince or king naturally recurs, ever and anon, to the Bulgarians. It is somewhat amusing to find Gadban Effendi, | the Turkish envoy at Sofia, accused of duplicity because he good-naturedly nour- ishes this hope in private conversation, while his masters at Constantinople are | loud-mouthed for the Russian candidate. | One might fancy that the discovery of a} double-faced Turkish diplomat was some | new and startling revelation.—N. Y. Times. | — = tee An Astounding Absurdity. any | Farmer's letter might create in the _will take no further |plenteous. I do LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. - > - The Pilotage Matter. Sir,—In writing my letter tothe Herald of the Ist inst., it was not to bring myself into public notice, as is insinuated by some parties; but to counteract the evil effects to our harbor which would naturally follow from the misleading despatch sent from Geurgetown to the Halifax press, in refer- ence to the stranding of the George Harold here ; and also, the bungling of the George- town pilot on board of her, and 1 know that every person acquainted with the affair will bear me out in saying that my state- ments were literally true in the letter. Were it necessary, I could also procure the testimony of several master mariners who were in the port at {the time, and who also read the despatch in the Halifax morning Chronicle to prove my statements. But it appears that a certain clique in Georgetown has taken umbrage at me for daring to ibring to public notice any of ther traus- actions, and one of the ‘‘fraternity”, under the guise of Pilot, has thought fit to reply in the Darry Examiner of the 9th inst., but blandly admits the accident might have been averted. Pilot, not to be outdone,and thinking he must say something, boasts of the wonderful things the Georgetown pilots can and have done m piloting vessels in and out of Grand River. If his self-conceit is gratitication to him, I am willing to leave him in the enjoyment of it, Pilot also casts out some insinuations about the buoys not being in their proper places. All I have to say to him is that hereafter, if the Georgetown pilots pay more heed to the buoys and less to their pretended know- ledge, they will have no cause to regret it and another George Harold catastrophe will not likely occur again. In your issue of the 17th inst., appeared a letter signed Farmer, Lot 56, who ap- pears anxious to step into the breach and try to give a little fictitious prominence for himself by assailing me for not paying more attention to the buoys. I may here tell Farmer that if he paid more attention to his own affairs and less to his neighbor's, if would be more conducive to his welfare; but every place has its busy body and Lot 56 is not an exception. Farmer may be an authority on frog ponds, quagmires and marshes; but when it comes to harbor affairs, he appears to be all adrift. From the tenor of his letter, the reader would naturally inver that it was the little village of Annandale that required buoying and not the harbor of Grand River when he reads such phrases as ‘*The buoys of Annan- dale” and ‘*Phe buoys at Annandale.” To dispel any alarm which the reading of minds of any persons contemplating a visit %to Annandale, I may inform them that there is no obstacle in the way of coming in and being safely harbored. In conclusion, I wish to remark that I notice of anonymous scribblers. Yours, truly, <oNALD S. McDonaxp, Harbor Master. Grand River. A Poisonous Dart. ‘*A letter passed through the Post Office the other day, addressed to Murray Harbor, via the ‘Lightning Express from Montague Bridge.’ Is this « joke on the mail driver 7” Vide Patriot, Dec, 16th. Sir,—In justice to the present mail driver between Montague Bridge and Mur- ray Harbor, the writer feels satisfied that mails and passengers were never carried on the above route with more efliciency, regu- larity or expedition than than they are and have been by Mr. Martin, As to the accommodation as to horses, vehicles, ete., the travelling public are the best judges and not the editor of the Patriot, who, in his vain efforts to fling dirt at every one, makes an unwarrantable and poisonous dart at our obliging mail driver. REsIDEN" Murray Harbor, Dec. 17th,’ 86. a Tennyson. Tennyson is to us what Victor Hugo was to the Frenchmen of his time. He began to sing in his teens, and is stil] musica) at four-score. He has been the life-long com- panion of the most of us. He is the last of a generation of seers. ‘‘A man solitary and sad, dwelling in an element of gloom,” as even Carlyle pictures him. ‘‘Alfred is one of the finest looking men“in the world ; a great stock of rough, dusty-dark hair; bright, laughing hazel eyes ; massive acqui- line face, most massive, yet most delicate; of sallow brown complexion, almost Indian looking; clothes cynically loose, free and easy; smokes infinite tobacco (!). His voice is musical, metallic, fit for loud laugh- ter and piercing wail, and all that may be between; speech and speculation frev and not meet, in these late . ° . ° . i - err In its palmiest days, Dickens’ Circumlo- decades, such company over a pipe ‘ cution office could not have furnished a more astonishing instance of the absurdi- ties of red tape than is reported from Washington to-day. An engineer officer | paid a fire tug $48 for saving the Govern- ment wharf at Detroit from destruction. Had it not been for the services of the tug a heavy loss would, doubtless, have fallen upon the Government, and yet the amount has been disallowed because competitive bids had not been advertised for! The thing is so outrageously ridiculous as to be almost incredible, and yet it is solemnly and sadly true.—Baltimore American. ———; Scott’s Emulsion of Pure ) Cod Liver Oil, with Hypophosphites IN CONSUMPTION AND WASTING DISEYSES, seems to possess remedial powers of great effiacy. It heals the irritation of the throat and lungs, makes pure blood and builds up | and fortities the system against further inroads by disease. Take no othier. AT aT CRN SS ! . Free Trade. The reduction of internal revenue and the taking off of revenue stamps from Proprietary ' Medicistes, no doubt has largely benefitted the consumers, as well as relieving the burden of home manufacturers. Especially is this the case with Green's August Flower and Boschee’s German Syrup, as the reduction of thirty-six cents per dozen has been added to increase the size ot the bottles containing these remedies, thereby giving one-fifth more medicine in the 75 cent size. The August Flower for Dyspepsia and Liver ‘Complaint, and the German Syrup for Cough and Lung troubles, have perhaps the largest sale of any medicines in the world. The ad- vantage of increased size of the bottles will be ‘greatly appreciated by the sick and afflicted, in every town and village in civilized coun tries. Sample bottles for 10 cents remain the same size, _—— .2e-_- -——- Buy your Xmas and New Year presents at Dorsey, Gott & Co's, doc 22 ti See oS ST we nes naearen e-em ee ee oN fae iM Pi cui, 7 pagan n= BS es arceuer t oe