‘\oterests aod elect the doctor, is the ques- A reference to —~ THE DAILY BXAMINER ae GUST 25, 1898. WHY THE DOCTOR 1S NEEDED! = Patriarch wi)! easily satisfy the Guardian aod ite correspondents that the candida- ture of Dr. Robertson is “all right.” It wont take much t ”? convince our “truly inde- Guardian of temperance aud morality,” that the Liberal party rose to the occasion when it preferred Dr. Rob-~ erteon to the Grand Wortby Patriarch. The “ Liberal epidemic” is not yet fully spent; and lijuor is still needed—at least in small an pendent, legitimate doses. So total abstinence principles must again yield be- fore the exigencies of practical politics. In like manner, the interests of our far- mersmust be regarded as of secondary importance when vur new Liberal Premier needs a doctor With three or four lawyers at his back, and ten or a dozen business meu around him, it is, perhaps, ne that Feiqubareon requires a doctor, able to ad- minister Scoit Act though the farmers in the Legisiature and in a position to in the Legislature. wonderful Premier doses—even re are also three honest give him So a intelhgeot, level-headed farmer candidate, such for instance as Mr. Mowre, of Cra-~ this Liberal advice and support. good, paud must, of necessity, time, give place to the “ No physician. Vins i" aie > rapaud physic an. doubt the new Premier wantsa jobs with which he has to dea! is rank and unwhole- some, and a little The smell of the stimulant is edmissable in such cases,—w hen medically edministered. Mr. Farquharson, naturally, asa good man of business, must feel sick when he contemplates the Asylum muddle and the College bungle and the expense and dam- age that will be incurred them. He has stopped work on the college, becanse although the contract amounts to $2~,000—ten thouzand dollars more than the Legislature authorized,— $7000 or $8000 more, at needed to supply in correcting least will be cloak-rooms for the students and a convocation hell, together wiih the completion of the ceilings—not to speak of heating apparatus,—for ail of which, as we are informed, the contraet does not provide,—though it does provide acomplete suite of private apartments for the Principal. As to the Asylum Annex, the result of a series of blunders—a!l due 4? ' b nothing is beiny done, though the place is overcrowded witir “the most helpless of God’s creatures” committed to the public care, while about $8000 worth of materiais placed upon the ground by thé contractor and taken poseession of by the Govern- ment is goiag to ruin and must in the end be paid for out of the public exchequer. Premier Farquharson will require more than homeopat)|iic doses frum the doctor of Crapaud ere he overcomes the difficult jes presented) by these scandalous jobs and the results of the ridicnlous blunders in which they are involved. e Government and its officials—is that We have no doubt that the Grand Worthy | DAILY EXAMINER. CE ARLO — WN, ‘A TCTTS OUR FISHERIES. Teun Sun,of St. John, publishes the following editorial and, we presume, au- thoritative statement. “There is no ground for the report that a comwmittee of the Maritime Board of Trade has placed in the hands of Sir Louis Davies a resolution recommending the concession of the use of ihe inshore fisheri. es to the United States in return for equal privileges with the United States in the market of Cuba and Porto Rico. The Mu e ister of Marine and Fisheries has re- ceived a resclution from a committee of the maritime board, but it does not re- commend any such cheap concession of the shore fisheries. On the contrary it rather discoursges the concession on any terms. We have. not the text of the resolution, but in substance it advises the minister that the shore fisheries ought to be retained for the exclusive vse of Canadians, adding that in case any proposition for the ad- mission of foreigners to a share in these privileges oboatia be considered a consider~ ation of great value should it be obtained, This resolution was not so gratuitous as would appearto one not acquainted with the antecedent circamstances. It is under-. stood that the Halifax board of trade, or oue of its committee had previously sent a re eglution to Sir Louis Dayigs, Thio y¢- Solution Commended a restoration of the fishery clauses of the reciprocity treaty that is an exchange of free fish, with the stipulation that the free market should also include Porto Rico and Cuba. Some of the members of the maritime board thought that this advice to the Can adian delegates showed too great readiness to concede fishing privileges within the three mile limit. The Truro resolution was intended to place a bigher value on our territorial privileges. If the resolution had been discuesed in public meetings of the board, no such misconcep- tion could bave arisen as the cne that has gained an unfortunate currency. But it seems tu have been thought tbat these sug- gestions to the Conference should not form a part of the public record, lest some hos~ tile New England interest should be exc't» aed. The diplomatic reasons for secrecy, whatever they were, are not so importaut asthe reasons for publicity, now that a wrong report has got into circulation.” Tuis contradiction and satisfactory. We felt sure, from the be- ginning, that the Maritime Boara of Trade explavation is could not have been guilty of no such act of folly as that reported of them. We agree with the Sun that *‘ the long struggle cf Newfoundland to escape from the en~ cumbrance of French rights on the coast is @ warning to us” not to legaily cede away our rights in our invaluable fisher- ies, —The German boast that Syria is prac- tically a German colony, is something more than brag. A great pumber of Teu- tons are settled in Sy ria, and the Pagdad- Mediterranean Railway is in German hands. So that when the Kaiser goes to Pe]-stine, be will beamong his fellow-countrymen. ~—**Prove all {things, hold fast to that vhich is good” —give Prohibition a trial 1 —_— Use in place of Cream of Tartar and Soda. Thesé ar¢ the reasons why the dector is | by Government Party: W hether they are suchas to induce the farmers of New London and Crapaud to reject an able representative of their own n> jed tie tion to be desided next Wedne-day. the +rscord prove that if representative will, at nll events, sueh a clear-headed farme, as William Campbell bad heen in the! the, wasteful jobs, the bad financial troubles, to- Government, management, ‘ne gether with the heavy taxes and the in- creased debt, of which the country now complains would not have been and the eoctor would not now be called on to administer st mulants toa Government that is sicker than the people know. — 2+ ere —- EGGS AND POULTRY. incurred of his annual report the Agriculture eays : Ix the course Cow missioner of * The keeping of large numbers of poul- try of suitable kinds should be a means for greatly increasiag the revenue from Cana- dian farms. ‘l‘hey form a class of live stock which has been too much neglected. Their keeping is included in the system of farming, so far as the live stock branch is concerned, whch has been designated “small cultures.” Though singly small jn size, they can become in the aggregate, producers of large revenues. They are not merely to be c united as gatherers up of fragments, utilizers of odd scraps and gleaners of waste grain. They may be also a class of live s'ock to which grains and other products marketable in tremselvss, may be fed wit): a good profit on the trans- action.” These remarks are well worthy of con~ sideration by onr farmers, who, as a rule, hold not so high an opinion of the indus-~ trious hen as she deserves, — Ofthe members of the Liberal majo- rity in our Legislature Assembly, 10 are business men, / are professional men ard three are farmers. Nowonder the Govern- ment wants a dictor! Absolutely Pure More ‘convenient, Makes the food lighter and more healthful. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. — | The amounts due from ——— - ——o a te nenitn — “MR. TURNER'S STATEMENT. Mr. Turver, ex-Premier of British Col- umbia, has issued a statement in the course of abich he says: “I submit that His Houor’s course was extraordinary throug li- out. On August 8th he sent me a letter asking for my resignation on no other grounds than be did not think I possessed the confidence of the House, At the time the letter was written | was certainly iis advieer, avd yet at that time he sent for Mr. Beaven and advised him telling him that be had other rearons for dismissing me apd authorizing Mr. Beaven to publish an outline of one of the alleged causes. [received His Hon- or’s letter at 12 o’clock noon. Idid net consider it as a dismiseal, although the Governor told your reporter that he in- tended it as one. I thought it required a reply, and I was preparing this, in which, by the way, 1 was not going to resign, when 1 was informed by a gentleman in no way connected with the Government that Mr. Beaven had been called in. This I thought at the time was a joke, but on going into town, I found it was knows generally, that it had been talked of at a public gathering at Esaui- walt, and further that.be Livutenant Gov. ernor’s letter co me of that dale was aléo discueged in the Sireets, having been made public by some oue. This letver and sevs | eral others of importance ought to be made public, and I am considering how far I sm at liberty to give them to the press. “The position of affairs, so far as the House was concerned, was this :—I had the support of at least eighteen members, and almost certainly nineteen, as was shown by Mr. Beaven in bis published stateme nt when he said that one member of the then Opposition was ineligible for a candidate. That is to say, including my own vote, the then Government party counted nineteen certainly, and aimost certainly, twenty out of a House of thirty-eight mem- bers. Yet the Lieutenant-Governor chose to decide for himself what the House would do when it met aod dismissed me from power,—to replace me, first by a gentle- man pot in the Hcuse at all, and a:ter» wards by a gentleman belonging to a party, which, accordiog to his own ad viser, Mr. Beaven, was in a minority.” THE BANK STATEMENT. The circulation of the banks of Canada maintains its bigh level, as compared with the same period in recent years. The figures stands at $35,553,546, or $3,844,~ 089 more ihan for July 1897, and about seven millions more than in July, 1896. As one result the banks have had to in- | crease the amount of their deposits as joint security for their notes, and the amouat of the fund is now $1,989,645. Some of the bauks also have expanded their circula- tion till the limit is almost teuched, and further issues are impracticable. The item of current loans, $220,193,092, is $15,612,248 greater than for July a year ago, though fully two millions less than in June. The item of cal! loans still bas Jarge figures to its credit, indicative both of confidence and activity in the security market. It stands in the statement at $21,885,337, compared with $20,060,715 in June, and $15,714,954 in Julv, 1897, the increase over the latter month being $6,170,383. foreign countries and from the United Kingdom show some changes, thongh they are both large, ing $19,327,662 in the former and $10,- 513,602 in the latter. —_ —~<=> © <<< LOCAL, NOTICES. TA Pure West India lime juice 15 pint at Beer & Goft’s. Sliced corned beef for sale by the pound at Beer & Geff’s, cents: a 199, 2i. Removed to our new store, old stand Market Square.—W P Colwill. 1.41 wk dy & wy. The old stand and new store, Prowse’s Block. Ualland see how welook.— W P Colwill. 194 1 wk dy & wy. Call and see our nice new store sunny side. —W P Colwill. 194 1 wk dy & wy. Ladies, see the New Jackets opened yes- terday at Prowse Bros., only one of each kind direct from London. 199,—3i, Prowse Bros. have opened up their new hard and soft hats, all the latest American styles included, if you want the best and latest see ours.— Prowse Bros.—199, 3i. FINE NEW LINE Of Furniture Coverings just opened. Just what is wanted for re-upholster- ing that chair, or lounge, or parlor suite of yours, See our line of upholstered furniture. Mark Wright 4 Home Makers --::- Co, Ltd bex ————— ene ee HERD-BOOK AMALGIMATION. Owners of short-bhorn and Ayrshire cat- tle whose pedigrees are registered in the Prince Edward [sland Herd Books of thore breeds, will be pleaeed to kuaow those re- cords are now amalgamated with the Dom- inion Herd Books. All the action now peceasary for owners to take,is,send on the patwe and other particulars of ihe breed. ng cattle they own together witha single entry fee for each, when Dominion register certi~ ficatee will be returued by Henry Wade, Toronto, Ontario. The transter business was great)y facili- tated by the liberal and public spirit of C. C. Gardiner, Esq., the founder and ‘actual owner of those records, in handing them overto the Dominion Societies. Lt was thatgentleman’s love for good catile which caused him, at much trovble and expense, to establish those Herd Books which are in soperfect a form that every animal entered can go on the Dominion record+ as one of the bighest character of any Herd Book in the worid. We ootice that Mr. Wade, the Secretary ot the Dominion Association alludes to the Vice President of the Short- Horn Breedere Assocls*iga, I Mr. F. G. Bevyér, a the leading spitit Si the movement fot the atnelgamation of the Maritime Herd Books witn the Doilnion Association; but he remarks that he finds the Herd Books inthe neighboring pro- vinces in a very unsatisfactory state, they being in striking contrast with the correct statements of the P. E, Island records. eee anamnestic tt LLL] ALLO AD SHIP NEWS: Port of Charlottetown. ENTERED. Aug 24.—Speedaway, Campbell, Vernon River; se Greetiands, Couillard, Montrea);, Gasper Embree, McLean,Cbhatham, ss Wm Aitken, Batt, Pictou; Foam, Moran Pictou, Paragon, Cormier, New Richmond; Pleia. dee, Mclorie, Wallace; Laura C, Hender- eon, do; Swallow, Fin!ayson, Pinette. CLEARED, Aug 24.—ss Halifax, Greetlands, Couillard, St John’s, Nfid; Speedaway. Campbell, Brae; Mary P, Mc~ Lean, Chatham; Gasper Embree, McLean, Sydney; Foam, Moran, Shediac, Pleiades, McInnis, Wallace; Laura C, Henderson, do; M soem. Rulledge, Pictou, Jponcirsatemeutictaseasanachmatibontieocnendmmnasaeesseentnoasstaesoaraginaanattaltnttaineexcennpenaennasseae ~ Prince Edward Pye, Boston; ss TOURISTS Island Illustrated is a beauti- fully illustrated book on P. E Island. For sale at the bookstores or at this office — 50cG AREAARANS Aas = @ x x% s% = WEDDINGES.%s,2* Always. GIFTS. fy. ’ You know us well enough to feel that whatever you want in our line cannot be bought to any better advantage than of us, there is nothing here that you cannot bay with perfect safety. There isn’t @ store in town that keeps the assortment of Wedding Silver that this does. Ous show cases are bubbling over with bright suggestions for Wedding Gifts, pV W. W. WELLNER THE GREAT WATCH HOUSE Tee PE EES SES ee KINDERGARTEN. The Kindergarten will reopen on Mon- day, September 5th, at 9.30 o’clock a. m. The clases jwill be under the Superinten- dance of Miss Julia H. Sayre, assisted by Miss McPherson. Miss Lena Barrett wi!l conduct the Primary department in which scholarsare prepared to enier this grade in the city schools, Parents wishing to place scholars in Kindergarten or primary school, can ob- tain al] necessary informacion from Miss Sayre, Superintendent, or F.S. MOORE, Secreiary. 197 3wks tue, thu, eat The price SELLS it, the QUALITY recom- mecnds it, Ouc Teas... “Your tea is the best we have ever used, | am gladI gave your atria) order, for I find it pays to buy the Best”. This is what our customers te!! ts every day. Are Good Try a package and find out for yourself that what we say is correct Our CEYLONS are choice in flavor and strength. SANDERSON & CO EVERY YE eeveneinenrases HIHAK PHARAAARARA TAM | Wholesale & Retail. d&w Underclothing this month to a To THE GFAND SOUVENIR CITY - HARDWARE - Seen A Nel August Cheap Selling This month we are letting go at ridiculous low prices. Men’s ard Boys’ Clothing Men's and Boys’ Shirts Prints, Flannelettes, Sheetings Tweeds, Straw Hats, half price Big reductions in our Boot and Shoe department, Everyone wanting genuine bargains should come J.B. McDonald & CO, STORE Keep out the flies with our wire, Buy General Hardware, Stores, Paints, Oils, Glass, Paper, Fence Wire, Farming Tools and lots of other lines in the Hardware Trade, Don’t forget the Que- bec Heater, but, and a great big but, you must buy for cash, Stoves, Paints, Hardware, Oils, Good Goods, Low Prices, Courteoug "Treat. ment, Prompt Attention Aleo a full line of steel and Full line of Oxtord Stoves Rang €S. iron stoves and ranges. BR, B. NORTON & CO LTD s 7 . > _ , ab bs ie ™ Bete ha Ne ‘Sen pi and Nabe The S.S. BONAVISTA sailing f.om Montreal, Tuesday Morning, Aug. 23rd, will bedue at Charlottetown Friday morning Aug. 26th, and will sail for St. John’s Newfouadland, via N. Sydney, carrying Horses, Catt'eand Sheep on deck, and produce under deck at low rates. For further particulars as to freight and passage apply to PEAKE BROS & CO. Agents. 19th’98 Ses MWh MMe GS? LQ" LGN" BQN" STQN= Sas ENGLISH NU dh PICKLES EF PLUALES We bave just received a new lot of Morton’s Mixed Pickles and Chow- Chow, put up in patent top square bottles. These bottles hold more tban the round enes, and are very useful after- wards for putting jams and _ jellies in. See them on our counter BEER & GOFF, GROCERS. ez asa as Spring Heelers ss. 3 Boots Just received Spring beots in above sizes. Box Calf Laced Boots and Dongola Patent tip Button Boots. Good comfortable Boots, girls wearing those sizes 24, 8, 34, 4. R. K. JOST, Stamper’s Corner DOV DOPOD ODI FDIS Ch’town,Aug. Heel CS 04S OOO 60B03 9B SDWSHDVIEDWDD for OD ODOBSND OHO6O6O9O6OH56O60-4O 0008 BLACK DIAMOND LINE i | That Wearing Tearing Maddening Headache 1s often the result of eye etrain instead of drugs, in snch cases the only reasonabie and effectual remedy is A pair of properly fitted eye- glasees or spectacles, which relieve the musclar strain and therefore cure the headache. We have made a especial study of fitting glasses, and would be glad to have you call on us if troubled in any way wilh your eyes, G. F- HUTCHESON Queen St. Graduate Optic ia ee sevce vos Coscecoeseeoes ee POSREVECSSSSESSSOCTL SES LE3C¢ CLCESEe sececevncqudinetmaiin seve wee aereeeea ‘Marx Fisner, Sons & C0. Victoria Square, MONTREAL Importers of Fine Woollens and Tailors Trimmings Lotter and Telegraph orders re- ceive prompt and careful attention. Sample Room, 72!) Prince Wm, St. st. John, N. B. H. H. HARVEY Agent. woe wus 2 vases oF One Moment Ladies, 9 _ No Chest Pressure Every lady knows the great discomfort, the positive distress OCCs saleiaad by chest pressure of a faultily cut, an ill-fitting cor set, 4 Height of corset has wuch to 5 do with this but the trouble has its origin mainly at the waist line. Me corset faulty at that é point can possibly be comfort- able. Perfect cut, fit, freedom and comfort are assured to wear- ers of ‘the celebrated tailor cut, hand sewed French corsets, the peerless ’ oa The lightest, coolest, most fash- ionahb le and 71 est corset made. Av all dry goods stores. In all sizes ‘and for all figures. $1. to $30. per pair: HOLASSES ANDSUGAR / Now landing ex ainda “MARY P direct from Barbados, 500 barrels bright Barbadoes sugar, 200 puns, choice Bar- badoes molas-es. N. RATTENB URY. - 194 2 mos __ ae OO 2000886 GEO G@ 2 9 8 HS OBSESSED atl teste ii pa ee ee Ma 4 Te se Ba its o ba