' i = a lone ae a tae sh * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evrivives. Srnere Copies Two Cenrs renms :—Five DoLtiars a YEAR, NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1889. VOL, 25.—NO.-139. rhOM THEIR OFFICER, “ LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE | Charlottetows, P. K, Inland HARRIS & STEWART. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : (x) The Daily Examiner Is issned Every Evening by The Examiner Publishing Co.. ‘ Ee ene Six Mouths.... os ees $2 a. Se a ivccce ties 1 25! : Om No Soauawian’ “OUP Fall Stock Now Nearly Complete. Contracts meg be made for monthly, quar : ———(I . copliostiong Yor Yearly sivertisements on) Dyess Goods in all the new materials and re peura oe shades, with Trimmings to match. ALMANAC FOR NOVEMBER, 1088. Yanties, Dolmans, Ulsters, MOON 8 CHANGES, ; +9 ‘ ~ } ‘ } st 7 ‘ inf: ad ‘epeated the through the Pull Moon, 7th day, 11h, 5%.7m., am, N.|Madies’ Felt Hats, Feathers, Ribbons, Flowers.) 22 iormgt, reposted them thous ihe below horizon. Last Quarter, 15th day, 4h., 23.3m, p.m, NW below horizon. New Moon, 22nd day, 9h., 31.1m., p.m., NW. below horizon. 7 ’ First Quarter, 29th day, lh., 16.2m., p.m., E. | ° miPa¥ ov weex|522 |Sun | Moon High! Day's M i (XN) FURS! A Splendid Assortment of MUFFS, BOAS, CAPES, ASTRAKAN JACKETS |\Tises|sets ; rises | water) len’h —_ Letter From Capt. Read. Srr,—In your issues of Oct. 30th and 3lst, by implication and by name | have been dragged before the public charged with writing certain letters concerning Clark Braden, which have appeared in your columns. Now, Mr. Editor, you can inform Mr. Braden and his pervert from St. Eleanor’s, McDonald, the defender of the faithful, that I have written no letters nor inspired any editorials that have ap- peared since Mr. Braden left here. I have neither the wish nor the leisure to enter on a profitless discussion of Mr. Braden’s character—the issue is not between him and me, but between him and three eminent) Christian diyines, Drs. McCosh, Cook, and Fairchild. I have my reasons for believing that these three gentlemen have written the truth, and that Mr. Braden has not. These reasoris are: Mr. Braden while here told a good many lies about myself, and, — country. attacks on the character of eminent Free- thinkers. When his statements were chal- lenged in regard to the latter, be referred, in proof of his statements, to the Mayor of Peoria and to JudgeSPuterbaugii, or any other reputable érhizen of that city. These gentlemen were written to. Mayor War- ner published his reply in the Peoria 7'ran- script, giving Mr. Braden the lie direct. Judge Puterbaugh, whose name figured in his bouk as one of his own witnesses, wrote three letters, some of which have appeared im your columns. Among other things he said : ‘‘He (Braden) got up a book made up of forged aftidavits and pretended state- ments of reputable citizens, :.. carefully keeps away from where he is knowa, as he knows his word would be jb mjh mj after;morn h w/FUR-LINED CLOAKS. 1, Friday (6 47/4 41| 2 28| 4 54 9 54 ‘aiian cial 2|Saturday 48} 39) 256/619, 51 3) Sunday 50| 38} 3 21| 7 28; 48 5 4' Monday 51} 36} 3 43) 8 23) 45 5, Cuesday 53} 35) 4 6} 9 6) 42 él Vednesday 54; 34; 4 29, 944) 40 + 7' Thursday 56) 33; 4 54/10 20) 37 = 8| Friday 57; 31) 5 23)10 54) 34) oct22—eod&wkly. 9 Saturday 58) 5 54/11 28) 3) 10|Sunday 7 OF 28) 6 B4i)lft 400 28) Sanemesens 11}/Monday 1} 27] 7 20] 040} 26 — aT 12/Tuesday 3 26 8 13} 118} 23 13) Wednesday 4) 25} 911)2 0 21 14| Thursday 6| 24,10 12) 2 46 18 15! Friday 7} 22/11 17) 344) 15 16/Saturday 8} 2limorn| 4 49 13 isliatniceatatesll 17|Sunday 10; 20} 0 2316 3) 10 13} Monday 11} 19} 1 30;}7 9 8 19) Tuesday 13} 19) 239) 8 6 6 20) Wednesday 14) 18) 3 51) 8 52 4 ——HAVE MADE OUR STOCK OF—— 21' Thursday 16) 17) 5 7) 9 37 i 22| Friday 17} 16) 6 44/10 21| 8 59 23| Saturday 18} 15) 7.43/11 4] 37 TABLE AN R 24/Sunday 20; 14) 8 59/11 49) 54 25| Monday . s te Simoes 52 ae 26 Tuesday 2: 1 5| «= 50 27|Wednesday | 24 12/11 54] 1 24| 48 MORE COMPLETE THAN EVER. 28| Thursday | 25) Tl aft3l) 217 7 ay —{0) — ae oa el tot © atl o on EW TEA SETS, Fruit Dishes, Dessert Sets, Cake Baskets, s li 2 < ; < 7 : . e oy ee Cruet Frames, with new styles of bottles, Baking Dishes, - : Egg Frames. The prettiest Breakfast Castors and Napkin MARVELOUS Rings we have seen. Knives,Spoons, Forks. A few new Opera and Field Glasses cheap. nov2 Watchmaker, Jeweler and Optician, Cameron Block, City. E. W. TAYLOR, DISCOVERY. == — - Only Genuine System of Memory Training. beur Beoks Learned in one reading. ———:0:—__- Miod wandering cured. 4 Every child and ada’t greatly benefitted. Great inducements to Correspondence Classes, Prepectus, with Opinions of Dr. Wm. A. Ham. moad, the world-famed Specialist in Mind Diseases, Daniel Greenlenf Thompson, the great Psyely ogist, J. M. Buckley, D.D., editorof the Christian tireats, SV, Riehard Proctor, the Scientis’, Hows WLW. Astor, Judge Gibson, Judah P. $+ j cumin, and others, sent post free by Prot. A. LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., N. Y: ~~ James A. Mornxigon. wom DJ. A. BRUCE, MERCHANT TAILOR, MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS i—-AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX. ——(0) Hit PEOPLE’S FAVORITE PLACE OF TRADE, where the prices are so low that we will send you away rejoicing. We would specially invite you to see our Mens’ Reefers, Mens’ Overcoats, Mens’ Suitings, Mens’ and Boys’ Furnishing Goods, 400 Fur and Cloth Caps, Consignments of Island produce will receive Fur Coats and Sleigh Robes prompt attention. Fe : Rerexences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier 0: — Bank of Nova Scotia,” Halifax; DW. C. WEVE BARGAINS FOR EVERYBODY Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown. — The fat, the lean, the rich, the poor, the wise, the simple, the young, the old, =-1889 the millionaire, the beggar, the blind, the lame. ee ee —— BOSTON DIRECT. Boston, Halitax and P. E. Island @ NOTICE TO SHOEMAKERS.—We Steamship Line. Only Direct Line Without Change, ae EXare Headquarters for French Calf Tops, elie) Sole Leather, Upper, Calf, Goat, Kid, CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON.| Giemeareecse™ cfr copier vs Mrs Pinte sheeted - LX abe WN) \ozawe Bristles, Hammers, &c., sold cheaper {Athan can be imported. The Staunch and Commodious Steamships “Carroll” and “Worcester,” feng been thoroughly refurnished and put into first-c condition in every respect, wiil, during = Season ef 1889, run as follows, commencing e “ CARROLL,” from Charlottetown, Thursday 9th May, at 4 p. m. One of these vessels will leave Boston for Charlottetown EVERY WEDN ESDAY, at Noon, and Charlottetown f RY DAY. at Six ee nee EVERY THURS- ‘sieeans a raracellent Passenger accommodation. Low pFARKS First-class Passage Berth in wel| A Very Nice Assortment at Remarkably Low/ rnished Cabin, $6.50. Stateroom Berth, $2.00 ° Prices. Call and see them. Orders by letter carefully and prompily attended to. GOFF BROS. Charlottetown, Oct. 12, 1889. extra, Lowest Rat Preis ate 1 ‘ carefully canaee Freight, which is always CARVELL BROS.. Agents, taken for nought, and he would not be able to deadbeat on the people,” etc. This, Mr. Editor, trom an eminent jurist and Mr. | Braden’s own witness, ought to be con- clusive. The Peoria Transcript of Sept. 12th last, ima leading article, under the title of **The Liar,” etc., says: **Thissame Prof. Braden was clearly convicted of bearing false testi- mony. Mr. Braden is simply a monster of lying. * * ° A man wh» should be morally incapicitated from editing | even the Police Gazette.” The other Peoria dyily. the Jowrnal, commenting editorially n Braden’sReply,”-awhich had appeared in the Transcript over his own siguature, says: ‘The charge is a monstrous ®hd vil- lianous lie, cunningly concocted and viliian- ously planned,”—. @., Braden’s charge. The Apostolic Times, a Disciple paper, of | August 8th, 1876, says editorially, com- menting on a tract Mr. Braden had written against some of the preachers of his own denomination : ‘*We do not hesitate to de- clare that the author of such a tract deserves to be not only censured, but ex- communicated by the congregation to which he belongs and repudiated by the entire brotherhood.” the Christian Review, another Disciple paper, refers not alone to the tract,jbutsays **in addition to that Clark Braden’s con- ' ' thinkers, or words to that effect. Now, our public schools, is the production of the LETTERS T6 THE EDI POR. nis is what eminent Freethinkers have celebrated Dr. b. W. Richardson, F. R., |said of Christ. Thomas Paine says: ‘‘He 8., of England, than whom there is no |was @ virtuous and aimable man.” John greater authority in the world on the nature |Stuart Mill says: ‘* Not even now would it and effects of alcohol. The object is to in- be easy for an unbeliever to find a better struct in the facts as to aleohol, its char- translation of the rule of virtue from the acter and composition, and its effects upon 'abstract to the concrete than to endeavor ‘the organs of the human system. These ‘to live that Christ would approve our life.” |facts once understood, the deplorable re- | Strauss says: ‘‘He remains the highest |sults of contracting the habit of using ,model of religion within the reach | liquor through ignorance of its nature and of our thought,” and Ingersvll says, |effects are likely to be avoided. If children ‘*For the man Christ 1 have infinite re-/are taught the danger and the neediassness spect. Let me say, once for all, that the of the use of alcoholic liquors, the coming place where man has died for man ,is holy generation will bless therr teachers for the ground. Let me say, once for all to that | moral effect of their efforts. Mr. Theo. ©. greét*ind serene*Man, I gladly pay, I gladiqg' Chappelle has been appointed wholesale pay the tribute of my admiration and my |agent for P. E. Island, from whom supplies tears. He was regarded as a blasphemer, |may be obtained. Retail price 25 cents. and his life destroyed by hypvcrites who | rt =e ee have in all ages done what they could to Pca: ae The Favorite trample freedom out of the human m_nd. | Medicine for Threat and Lung Difi- Had [ lived at that time I would have been | His friend, and should He come again He |} culties has long been, and stil ig,Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. It cures “Croup, » | Whooping Cough,.Bronehitis, and will not find a better friend than I will be.” } Compare this with the lying and scurrilous | Asthma; soothes “Writatiei} of the Larynx and Fauces ; ‘stfen abuse heaped by Braden and his followers | on the great idoloclast —offset indeed —and ' this is the idea of some who would fain be} considered as having a title ta.the kingdom ens the of Him who admonished His “followers to Vocal Organs; allays soreness of the return good for evil. Lua Ps prevents Consumption, and, The St. Eleanor’s pervert again saysin| ¢Vem in advanced stages of that disease, effect that ‘Mr. Watts was not assailed in| ‘elieves Coughing and induces Sleep. a brutal manner, while Mr. Braden was.” There is no other preparation for dis- Mr. Watts did not Jeave himself open to a: ©#5¢S of the throat and lungs to be com- brutal attack, buthad he endeavored to| Pred with this remedy. destroy the fair faine of T. De Witt Talmage | or *‘worser far,” his fair and innocent | daughters; had he endeavored t» throw over | their fair fame the leprofis mantle of | ; “My wife had a distressing cough, with pains in the side and breast. We tried various medicines, but none did her any good until I got a bottle of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, which has cured slander think you he would not have been! her. A neighbor, Mrs. Glenn, had the attacked? Now, Mr. Braden commenced! measles, and the cough was relieved by the attack, mot only upon Mr. Ingersoll; fe use of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. | have no hesitation in recommending this but upon myself. He had not been speak- | Cough Medicine ing five minutes before he declared he had | come thereto ‘skin infidels.” That he! Se understood from the chairman that I had | re every one afilicted.”’—Robert Horton, t , . j “oreman Headlight, Movrillten, Ark. certain documents reflecting upon his char- “T tenon Giiee |‘ nenndin eee acter, and with a face reddened with rage} 4. forte von, J a Sone ee he shouted, *‘ Let the infidel bring them with a violent cougk, " hich threatened along.” I had previously asked Mr. Camp-/ to terminate my days. Every one pro- bell, the chairman, to request Mr. Braden | nounced me in consimption., T deter- not to make use of personal abusef and he | 1 S Me: . ne : roe Pectoral. would not be attacked by me; but that was! — grcly relieved amd continned to iceres out of Mr. Braden’s line. Did not! — untilentirely recovered.”—Joel Bullard, Mr. Braden in Halifax, Truro and| Guilford, Conn. Charlottetown adopt the same methods ?, Are not two of his books entirely of the same character? Reference is also made | to some kind of broad humor by some, people in Summerside who characterize this! — gan to take Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. A pervet-as.a ‘‘dugiout,” a ‘‘tadpole” and! — few bottles of this medicine cured me,” ‘** bigot.” Well, that is humorous, the very4 Mi edt. Goblvurn, 19 Second st., Lowell, idea of calling an advanced thinker like; “~“** oo er ~ i 2. H. MeDonald a * dug-out” is enough | “* Por children afflicted with colds, to draw asmile from a stoic. Whoever coughs, pore threat, or croup, t deaes . know of any remedy which will give says that he has not advanced beyond the more speedy relief than Ayer’s Cherry tadpole stage would cause a laugh, forevery| Tectoral. I have found it, also, invalu- one here knows Mr. McDonald is a full able in cases of Who ping Cough.” — grown croaker, and as for a bigot, why he — ry 1257. Washington street, is so tolerant that he has no fault to find stata se with reading even Mr. Ingersvll’s works ; , indeed, he was one of the first persons here yer S herry Pectoral to receive and distribute this kind of litera- ’ ture. But Mr. McDonald should not find PREPAKED BY fault with the little joke, for wittingly or Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. unwittingly, he jokes hiinself. For in- Boid by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5 stance, when he says in effect: ‘‘If Mr. ** Six months ago I had a severe hem- orrhage of the lungs, brought on by an incessant cough which deprived me of sleep and rest. I tried various reme- dies, but obtained uo relief until I be- duct has been such for some time past that | the Church has discarded him and disowned any fellowship with him.” There is much } more in these two Christian papers of a! Similar import, but space forbids me to quote. The Falls City Journal says : ‘We! personally know Clark Braden to be an un- scrupulous liar. Braden is a liar! by nature and a charlatan by profession. | The Table Rock Argus says: *‘ From what’! we can learn from Mr. Braden, he is a! Christianity evidently needs no! such defenders.” His statement that Dr. McCosh mistock | his book for another of somewhat similar | name is false, as the correspondence will | prove. Very much more vould be written to show the utter unreliability of this gen- | tleman’s statements. Now, if Mr. Braden should produce the letters he claims to have from Drs. McCosh | and Fairchild, and have them certified, they would avail him nothing in the face of his reputation. Messrs. Cook and Fair- child can have no strong motive for stating | what is not true, while Mr. Braden in this case has. Mr. Braden’s unmanly and ungenerous | attempt to shift the onus of responsibility | on the shoulders of his publishers, is scarce- | scoundrel and a villain of the blackest dye, | @2ything to enhance the value of Christian {the promotion of a higher ethical culture in these gentlemens’ emphatic statements and J"! themselves, and his cenfession that he has ful Jim,” ** Buttons” and ‘* Bootle’s Baby,” by| NY ly less contemptible than the falsehoods John Strange Winter, author of ‘* Beauti-| Cw. COW. NOTICE. “AVING relinquished the Agency of the Uniform Collecting Co,, I beg to inform Braden’s character is not what it should be he is well able to defend himself.” Now Robert, that is a joke. In conclusion, Mr. Editor, I have to} thank you for space which might, perhaps, be better employed ; but as I intimated last summer, the sooner the Christian com- munity discovers the viper it is warming my friends and the public generally that I into life the sooner it will have prevented |shall continue business as Insurance and the sting that is sure to follow. 1 do not General Agent, and respectfully solicit a con- claim to be a Christian, but if I could do |tinuance of their support. JAMES P. COOKE, Cameron Block, institutions, if 1 could do anything towards those who claim the name, but who, in- re-| Agent for the American Decorating Co., ality, are wolves in sheep’s clothing, [| Boston ; the William Willar inside and Slid- Be it distinctly understood ing Blind Manufactory ; the -Byam Manufac- turing Co., Toronto ; the New Hamberg Flour Mills, Ontario. lw—nov5 would do so. that I made a distinction between Braden- ism and Christianity. 1 would be sorry to charge the latter with the vices of the count : there is about the same rel stion ‘Horses, Carriages and Sleighs yetween them as there was between Judas | , a | FOR SALE, and Jesus. [ am a very busy man and have no time now to notice the scribbling of}. \ RK. KE. J. HOUGSON having no further Sein Dine | 4 A use for his Horses, Carriages and Sleighs, S’side, Nov. 2. | wili sell them, together with Furs, Harness, &c., by private sale. They may be seen at any time at his Stables, New Books, Ete. | oct28—tf Bradenites. New. ‘“*Army Society,” ete. John attack on the character of Mr. Ingersoll year in advance. was made as an offset to the charges the letters in his own possession arouses the Lovell & Son, Montreal, is the publisher. suspicion that he is at his old tricks again. | These are interesting stories of life in the The extract purporting to have come from army. The first is directed against class the Princeton Review does not appear in distinctions and encs very happily. The that periodical as juoted in ‘‘ Problem of second is capital throughout. Mr. Theo. L. {Problems.” When it is known that Dr. Chappelle has the book for sale. McCosh did not review the book, and he Inthe last number of the Dominion writes emphatically that he ‘‘certainly did Jllustrated Hamilton is well represented not review it.” What does appear in the both as to its leading men and to its archi- faint praise than commendatory. Some pages. best he had read onthe subject”; while and elsewhere. Sportsmen will Braden’s book quotes the Review as saying ‘*Where’s the Field’ and the Noon-day | it was the best book written, etc., avast Nap is a blissful reminiscence of the sum- | difference inthe meaning. The reviewer mer that isno more. The Dominion Lllus- | may not have read two works upon the sub- trated is published by the Dominion Ilus-| ject in his life. The letter of Mr. Braden’s trated Publishing Company, Mr. (. E. | voluntary defender is even more unfor- Desbarats, managing director. Subscrip- | tunate than the principal’s. It scarcely tion, $4. Address: 73 St. James Street, | merits reference, except as it reflects the Montreal. ! feelings of acertain class of siily people, ‘The Century Magazine for November is | who look upon truth as an unwelcome full of interesting matter. November be-| guest when it disturbs their fossilized pre- gins the twentieth year of this excellent judices. This writer cannot see that he is magazine. | blaspheming when he takes my name in We are in receipt of a monthly paper a practical poultry- | , vain three times (and that without any called Furm Powltry, reverence) in the space of eight lines, know- raising guide. It is published at 22 Custom | ing, as he says, that ‘‘I worship the beauty House Street, Boston, Mass. ! of my own brain.” The Christian Guardian, published at | Now, if I knew what he worshipped 1 Toronto, is the leading organ of the Metho- should not, according to his ideas, fail to dist Church in Canada. worship it too, or at least to pretend | did. first-class family paper. Another point. He says that Mr. Braden’s editor. It ix, moreover, a Dr, Dewart is its Subscription price two dollars a beg taser MARK WRIGHT & CO. Lewis” Wharf Hoston. Charlottetown, Oct, 21, 1889. ‘The Teaching of Temperance.”—This_ inst Christ and _gthers by Free-_exs, 4 DOO Ort rear) 0 athe elles athe iia hie eaadaael rt De ael een at, Mee ee La, ee ee ae . . ° . . {Scot th Oat Cake " Leo Lise { KOS, Review is rather damnatory by reason of tectural features—claiming three eutire |<, ‘*The meet of the Ottawa Canoe! writer says of it in effect ‘‘that it was the Club” will gratify canoists at the capital | French Rolls, French Horns, Rose Puffs, Rock CBjoy | Biscuit, Scotch Short Bread or Cake. =~ i W E have recently secured from Mr, Mc- Gain, of Glasgow, Scotland, from his personal instructions, the secret of making the |following fine Cakes, Pastry and Rolls | Knowing them to be of excellent juality, we lintend baking some of them daily with our | already large line ol goods Bath Buns, Scotch Perkins, Cheese Cakes, Scot h nes, Rye scones, Cobvui 4 Cak if ecles : 5 ’ (Yel me er . , F Cakes, Cookies, London Buns, Vienna Rolis, A. * C. QUIRK, City Steani Bakery, Oct. 19 Im eed. 2>..2 4 Prince Street. HAWKER’S COLL AND CERRY, A Favorite and Most Valuable Remedy for all Threat and Lung Diseases, It has cured hundreds of cases considered hopeless. It soothes, heals and strengthens the diseased or irritated Throat and Lungs in a very short time. Just a few doses wil] cure a fresh cold if taken in time. Price 50 cents \per bottle. For sale at the Drug Stores, W. HAWKER & SON, Proprietor, ES te a apo Cece od fg ge ey aw