ee ea Wai OE ae a ae SE A te RRR IN THE DAILY EXAMINER. lerv Five DoLLars a YAR, Se NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, OCTO!] “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public. may speak free.” —Fuuiripes, 3ER 80, 1886. a ——-< “ em, —--<o- — — Sixncie Copies Two Cents. VOL. 19.-NO. 127. Che Doin Examiner | is issued every evening by The Fxaminer Publ shing So From their office, corner of Water and (;reatl (teorge streeta, Charlotte town, Vrince Kdward Island, —RATES OF SUBSCRIPILION— eS Wn hcn canned ckccdece swe . $2.50 Three mouth One month .... as habenuet cons A lvertising st moderate rates. ; Coatracts may be made for monthly, ausr- terly. ‘alf-yearly, or yearly advertiaemenis, 03 appliestiona. ALMANAC FOR OCTOBER, 1888. | Sun Sun |Moon! High Day's y D DAY OF WEE! jie — * EEK’ -ises sets | rises water| len’h | ne AT on - ~ a a | - EXPIRATION OF LEASE. MOON'S CHANGES, First Quarter 4th day, 64. 21.1m., p. m., S. Pall Moon 12th day, Ilh..1).4m., p. m., S. Last Quarter 20th day, 10h., 28.3m., a.m.y! Ss. W. New Moon 27th day, 3h, 3.0m., a. m., N. wa) (below horizon. } h mh mimorn!morn h m! 1 Friday 6 35 36:10 31; 0 32 11 33 ee 2\ saturday 5; 34/11 16) 114, 29 5; 3, sunday G Z2jaft 15) 1 59 26 a8 4 Monday 8 30) 1 8) 248) 22 ; 5 5 Cauesday | Oo il 63 & 19 6) Weduesday | 10, 26) 235)5 0} 16 7| Caarsday ; 13 243 9 615) 12) sicdibninnidialiercntialtiamsbainiite 8} “riday | 13] 221341) 721|- 9 9 saturday it 20° 4 10) 8 13 6 , aon ona ts 9" 5S 9 = . . . ° 7 <4 a : : “4 } as | : pn 10 59 i Lease of our premises expires in afew months, and not being able to renew the same om Teasonab'e terms, or procure other ? OT a é J oh a i . : : - . ‘ + ' TINUy tr : YT Say ~ ter . i2 “.. s fg yo 3.9979 8) 5g BAP MAMBOS In tune for spring trade, we will dispose of our whole stock of NEW AND fF ASHIONABLE DRY GOODS at an 13 Wednesday 20' 13; & 5u!10 ov 53 aie | Tea 98 IMMENSE SACRIFICE 15 Friday | 23 97 31143) 46 wd te cand a et iad m 16) Saturday 2h) 47) 7 3ijaft24, 4 17) sunday } 2 5} §20' | 2 40 , 18 slonday . a 4; 9 12) 1 46) 37 es a , ] yr 1¢3J y : 23 210 10) 2 37 34 20) Veduesday” | 2) O11 15) 3 41 3 Carpets, Oilcloths, Rays anl Mats at 33 per cont discount ; Bliss and Colorad Dress Goods at 33 por cont disgount ; Mintle 7 [ , ; 3 57 ' | § 2] 27 ‘ 20 : > ‘ ‘ ~ "oo - a ; sl ay 31 : ‘a 4 6 aol 04 and other Cloths, Tweeds, &c., at 33 per cent discount; Blankets, Counterpanes, Comforts and Lace Curtains at 33 per cent 23) saturday 32) 3 136 745) 2) discount ; Silks, Satins and Velvets at 33 per cent discount ; Black and Colored Plushes at 33 per cent discount; Gloves and, : “At ‘ 9} o «1 = 6 . F . : ‘ “ ; a : ; : : “ = L ; i a a ; a . 53) Hosiery at 33 per cent discount ; Linen Guods of all kinds at 25 per cent discount ; Prints anl White Coltons at 25 per cent 2) vyoaday 1 ad Uv) >} 2Y) v . 25\Laesday ' 36) 48} 5 1720 13} 2ge@seount. a7! ay - ~ ¢ 7 26 5 . 1 “175 7 j ’ 24 ai as - 4] oa a A Lot of Goods at HALF PRICE, such as Millinery, Hats, Bonnets, Feathers, Flowers, Real Lace, Edgings, Collars and 2) @ciday | 41) 44) 8 57/)morn 6 Cuffs, Frillings, a large variety Wool Goods, &c. . 0 3)) Saturday 43 43)10 0) 0 12| 81 /Suaday 16 45.4 42|10 58] © 52' 9 57 aa ~ JAMES H, REDDIN, BARKISTER-AT-LAW, SOLICITOR, AND NOTARY PUBLIC, 0 bas removed to the office adjoining that of R. R. Fitzgerald, Keq , Caweron Bivuck. i £@ MONEY TO LOAN. Sept. 27, 1836-1 mo eod & wy 3 mos All ef the Above New and in Good Order, and will be Sacrificed in order to Clear ut Quick. ee - cindy, Fars EF SEE OUR CIRCULARS FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS, Ly . Perkins & Sterns. Ch’town, Oct. 14, 1886. -FOR- BOSTON. —/@ FALL AR@ANGEWENT THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE HiTERNATIONAL §.S. 69. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- lan i, every Monday, Wedoesday and Friday, at vu m. oe ay fern Charlottetown te Boston, 35,50, 2nd class; 33.5), lst cinss. For tickets aad other information apply to -A.SAARP, P. a. ty, F. W. HALES, | P. & L steam Nav. Co, or to your nearest Ticket Agent, | Oct, 9 1886—eod wky i L. ARTHUR & CO, GENERAL | oes Comaission Merchants, L. BE. PROWSE does net offer a discount of 8! 121] ATLANTIS AVENUE, | per cent; to do so, &0 per cent profit would need to be BOSTON, MASS. added. Such profit would ruin a farmer or any other tau and Prouce a Spevialty. man---88 per cent discount means a profit of S90 per Siew eent. But the facts are: He buys for cash only, there- HARD COAL. gore huy from 15 to 25 per cent less than mary houses sadcseers”” in the trade, and can afford to sell even less than those BEST MAND COM, who pretend to give those Fabulous Discounts. wlthcictn® 1 | Ten Thousand Dollars (§$10.000) worth of Cloth- capi sae. ine at wonderful low prices, Overcoats from $2.76 oe —_— Suits from $450. up. Job Lot Clothing at about half- BARULAY & OU, price. Large stock of Dress Goods, Sacques, Uisters, ons Sacque Cloth, Ladies’ Hats, &c, very cheap. Shirts Cynmissina & Sripglay Herchawls, n.d Underelothirg below competition. ~ eee 191 Atiantic Avenue, Boston. —_—_—_—— e 3 —~+ gh sh ‘.s s £s fy, Every sensible man and woman should see os stock : i ; ; j ; SICH yours’ exoccienes in this market. » 5 awirscea pets . 4 aie id bashels P. EB. I ; s ay , sensational adverusemerBe.. i os fhy howd tutes & ET and not be led away hy sensational adveriis | out i+ "gia tis chacterel fw potato fe- gits at short po, Weise fur market; repor 4. a®” ioriritier —-Potatoss, Mack-rel, om os alias net L Yotiers, Egre Quae 17, 8 -#mo ood Up'teerm, Ove 21, 1396, m PROWOSE. The Bulgarian People. —— (London Telegraph.) A little nation of peasants organizing themselves to uppose a great prince has been seen before in the history of the world, The Swiss defied and defeated Vharles the Bold; the Tyrolese under Hofer checked Napoleon’s career, and it was the sturdy tillers planted in the soil by tHardenberg and Stein who greatly helped inally to pull him down at Leipsic and Waterloo. ‘Lhe Bulgarians are simple pea- sants of a sturdy stock, and the shrewdness and suppleness they displayed under the i:urk tur years now serves them well in evading another despvtism. It is not, however, only that the peuple are nearly all peasants, humble in their lives and wnorant of luxury. Their present rulers are racy of the soil, and show in their styie vi living a great contrast to the Russian military grandees who about a year age dazziea Sofia with their equipages and ex- penditure. A sense of this difference has aow made itself seen and felt. ‘* They are a people,” writes a correspondent at present travelling through the country, *‘ who live’ shaply and soberly, hate extravagance, and! deo not understand aristocratical distine-! tions. The Russian consul-general, who! careers about Sofia in a brilliant barouche, | with a scarlet kavass on the box, cuts a! much grander figure than the Regent! Stambouloif, who wears a shabby coat and, receives visitors in a sinall bed-room at his; hotel. All Bulgarians come of peasant raiuilies, and do not cease to be rustic after they have received a university education. A grest many members of the Sebranje| wear the national peasant costume, and} carry their dinners in their pockets when! they go toa sitting. They used to shake aands bluiliy with their prince; and a sore- ness has been left on them by the supereili- ousness Of the Russian otlicers, who always snubbed thein for their familiarity.” The spectacle of legislators dining while they discuss, munching victuals out of their pocket in intervals of law-making or debate, is One that will hardly inspire old pariia- ments with anything hke emulation. We have workingmen member and irishmen representing peasants BO poor that they cannot pay their rents ; yet anything like the frugality of the Sobranje is, we apprehend, out of the mnes- tion, We believe that the unwritten law of the house forbids the consuinption of iood within the chamber itse f, and what would happen if the sergeant-at-arms de- tected Mr. Biggar eating a hard-boiled egg in his place in parliament, ‘‘Heaven only xnows,” as a speaker once remarked. The member for Cavan, whe is nothing of an ingenious in pe mg-uthority, might contend that Mr. Gladstone takes eggs; but in that case the nutriment is dissolved and is used as a refreshment by a speaker «c- tually addressing the house. Sandwiches and sherry or other solid food on a_ back bench are not compatible with the British, however they may they suit the Bulgarian constitution. The rise of the Bulgarians as objects of Eurepean political interest is a curious story, and the origin of the people uiay partly account for their characteristics and their success. ‘They were originally a Partar race settled near the Volga, and would be called Volgarians if the initial letters had not got changed by western prenunciation. ‘hey crossed the Danube in the sixth century, and their history has been a battle anda imarch, Their strug- gies with the emperor and with his Ottoman successor fill many a blood-stained page in che horrible annals of the East; no race uas suffered more from the cruelty of con- juerors; none has shown such _ elaesticity and recuperative power. Matthew Arnold represents the successive waves of soldiery iescending upon India: **The East bowed low before the blast. In patient deep dis- dain; she let the legions thunder past, fhen plunged in thought again.”” The Bulgarians, owing perhaps to their Asiatic lescent, have shown corresponding patience, and something of Oriental servility in their demeanor toward their conquerors; but wen the legions ‘‘thuncered past” in their case they turned again, not to metapiy:ivs but to making money at markets and out vf the soil. A certain stulidity and shrewd- ness saved them. They shrugged their} shoulders under the stick, and took otf their caps to the generals or pashas who in turn lorded it over them; but marrying and giving in marriage, they multiplied and throve where Turk or Greek could not get on, and the very increase of their numbers made them a pvilitical force. Ii we go back about fifty years we find Bulgaria and the Bulgarians practically unknown as 1 modern element in the Eastern question. Of course, students of Oriental history know what they had been, but dip'omatists and statesmen clussed Wallachlans, Moldavians, Servians and Bulgarians, in one term--- ‘Greek Christians.” The bond then be- tween Russia and the discontented subject of the Sultan, was one of religion rather than proved tho best barrier to the Muscovite, and there are statesmen now who dream of a confederation of the Balkans uniting twelve or fifteen millions of freedom in resistence to Russia. But we have to deal with facts. Here is Bulgaria an actual State,inhabited by a people poor but sturdy, cherishing their independence. Thouch only a raw mili‘ia,deserted by their Russian ollicers, they fought well uoder a valiant prince. They have shown resolution, s0- briety and self-restraint, im resisting the ruubles and the rough language of their Russian liberatois. They have remembered the past service of their great patrons while resenting their present manner. This is de- cidedly encouraging to the friends of free institutions all over the world. Humanity vindicat«: itself when peoples rise to the heights of critical occasions. Nothing is so unjust as the arrogance of older nations towards populations kept down by the sword. Before Italy was free we were told that the Italians were fiddlers and singers, fit oniy to be serfs; but they have since diz- played courage, tact, and thrift as a nation; aud their army, their navy, and their fin- ance alike flourish. We were told that the dreamy, unpractical Germans could never unite, but now they are bound. together tirmly under the Emperor they rerere. The negroes in the United States, if liber- ated, would, it was said, never work; yet they produce much more than double the quantity of cotton they grew before eman- cipation. The Christians under the Otte- man were “‘devraded and unnerved;” but to r> ; : . : > Greek, Roumanian, Servian. and now Bul- garian have disproved the calumny. Why should not Bulgaria—if Turk and Czar and Kaiser let it alone—hecome, under Eu:ope’s eyes, a second Switzerland, inimbiied by a poor but independent peo- ple, with rulers living in cheap lodgings and legislators carrying their dinners fin their pockets, like workingmen as they are! ‘The world has plenty of states where princes live in grandeur on taxes wrung from the hard hands of peasants; and we should welcome little states of another type, where frugality character ses alike the ruters and the ru’ed. Bulyaria has not the military advantages of Switzerland ; it does not bristle with mountains, nor have ils people been trained to arms for genera- tions. But when the Swiss crushed Charles the Bold at Morat they were pexsants, not soldiers. The Bulgarians are, no doubt, too patient and too submissive to die in the jast ditch rather than accept foreign rule-- ioo foud, also, of the material prosperity they have built up by toil and thrift. Yet it would be a disgrace to Russia and a European scandal if this young nation were tranped on by Cossacks and simply added to the vast extent of ter- ritory under the iron heel of the Czar. Considering what they have done under great difficulties, there is no re to what heights of national prosperity the Bul- garians may reach if suffered to live ‘a peace. They have survived the swoid of the Turk; they have baffled the intrigues of the Greeks; they have elected their Sobranje in the face of the Czar’s frown. It is not in mortals to command success, bu) they have done more—they deserve it. No doubt they have defects, due mainly to years when the iron of slavery entered iLeir souls. Some of their otticers yielded too readily to Russian cajolery and gold; the abduction of their prince was carriel out with a mixture ef Asiatic cunning and Muscovite brutality. We must not, how- ever, blaine a whoie people for the erimes of 4 few wretches. Alitraveliers from the west who have lived amonzset them have learned vo like them. About forty yoars ago, while still subject ww che Sultan, they were painted in very pleasant tints by Mr. Welsh, one of the few Englishmen who had then traversed the territory. “Of all the peasantry I have ever met with,” he writes, ‘the Bulgarians seem the most simple kind and affeciionate. They are distinguished by their countenance and ¢cemeanor. The first is open, artless, and benevolent, and the second is so kind and cordial that eviry one we meet seemed to welcome us as friends. Wherever their buffalves or arabs stopped up the way they were prompt to turn them aside. Their houses were always open tous. The Bulgarian women nixed freely with us, and treated us with the un- suspecting cordiality they would show to brothers. They are exceedingly industrious, and are never for a moment without the spindle and distaff. Uniess in very. few places they are destitute of churches,schools and bouvks.”” That isthe picture of forty years ago. ‘The people are still the same is heart and manners, but have made cv cry possible kind of progress—political, imoral, socia] and educational. Is this fair pros- pect to be destroyed in order to please the morbid ambition of one grasping man? Free Trade. The reduction of internal revenue and the ; taking off of revenue stamps from Proprietary : : “Bee | Medicines, no doubt has largely benefitted the race. At that time, and even down to a} a consumeis, as wellas relicving the burden of ; OTS, TOC. period, there was no such| hone manufacturers. Especially is this the things as Bulgarian books or schools. If a} case with Green's Auguat flower and Boschee’s rich Bulgarian wished to give his son any education he had him taught in Greek—that was the on!y means of bringing him in touch withthe West. In fact, had! the war of 1821 or that of 1829 ended m the expulsion of the Turk from Europe, the | liberated provinces would probably have | been added to an enlarged Greek realm,and all the Slaves would have been subjects of the able, crafty and energetic race who | have planted themselves by the shores of | the ASgean. The restriction of new Greece, | however, to a narrow territory around, Athens allowed the other subject races of | Turkey te deveiop nationalities of iseir) omn. The Wallachs and the Melday bec: Roumaniens, and would not dream! now of acces Greek Hospodare as they! did in early times. glories in, the past. Bu! ed and a Bulgarian national feeling foster-, ed. How far this is a matter for congratu-! lation remains to be seen. The formetion ria Was discover- of one strong G ingdom out of thd raat rae, Of Wari ovbAtt heavy yt | German Syrup, as the reduction of this ty-#ix |ceuts per cozen has been added to increase the | size of the bottles containing these remedies, \ thereby giving one-fifth more tmedicine m the | 75 cent size. ; | Tbe August Flower for Dyspepsia and Liver | Complaini, and the German Syrup for Congh and ie troubles, have perhaps the largest sale of any mediciresin the world. The ad- vantage of increased size of the bottles will be greatly appreciated by tbe sick and afflicted, iu every town and village iz civilized cous- tries. Sample bottles for 10 cents remain th same size. > ee Few people know what is the best Scotch , whiskey to drink, there are so incr dis, The Gaelic whiskey, shipy od by the Stirling ey ling. C Sterling . B., for age ; Servie recalled her) onan Co., evling, N. B., f al purity has long stood first in Scotiend--- rmonzst the nobility. It is sold in f red bottles—-six to ihe gallon—ear!y er brands sell in sxsali sized bottles. The Celis whiskey ip sold everywhere. Black dump ite, gold tapnd bend yotd ich So you ee a ee ee OY Pe gg arnt yee oe