TH Terms :—Five Douuars A YEAR. NEW SERIES. Cie Daily Examiner Is issved Every Evening bj The Examiner Pablishing Co., FROM THEIR OFFIOR, ‘ LUNDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE Charlottetown, P, E. Islana. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : We Pa hk d oe vbw db ccadecseccccte @ ek ebb 25 ee i, ecw ceces . 0 30 4M Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. ALMANAG FOR NOVEMBER, 1989, MOON 8 CHANGES. Fuli Moon, 7th day, ilh., 5?.7m., a. in., N. below horizon. Last Quarter, 15th day, 4h., 25.3m, p.m, NW below norizon. New Moon, 22nd day, 9h., 31.1m., p.m., NW. | below horizon. First Quarter, 29th day, lh., 16.2m., p.m., E. D » on wae Sun ‘Sun | Moon'High!Day’s |>4* OF WEEK rises!sets | rises |water| len’h h mjh m) aftter;morn h Ww 1 Friday 6 47\4 41) 2 28) 4 54 9 54 2 Saturday 48) 39) 2 56) 6 19 51 3 Sunday DO 30| 3 21) 7 238) 45 4; Monday | Sl} 36 3 43) 8 23) 45 5| Tuesday | 53! 35.4 619 6| 42 §| Wednesday 54| 34, 4 291 9 44) «40 7iThursday | 56) 33; 4 5410 20) 3; 8| Friday | 57| 31! 5 23110 54, 34 9 Saturday 33 29) 5 54/11 25 31 10 Sunday 7 O 28) 6 34) lit 4, 28 11 Monday i l 27| 7 20; 0 40 26 12) Tuesday } 3} 26) 8 13) 1 18 23 13) Wednesday 4} 25) 9 1} $.4 21 14' Tharsilay 6} 24/10 12) 2 46 18 15| Priday | 7 22:11 17) 3 44 15 16| Saturday | 8) 2iimorn} 4 49 i3 17|Sanday | 10] 20-0 23/6 3 10 18} Monday | il} 19 130}7 9 8 19/ Tuesday | 13] 1912398 6 6 30| Wednesday { 14) 18 351) 852) 4 21\ Thursday | 316) 17) & 7) 9 37} ! 22) Friday | 17) 16) 6 44/10 2!) 8 59 23 Saturday ; 18) 15) 7 43/11 4 57 24\Sunday | 20} 14) 8 59j11 49) 54 25| Monday | i 33)10 8/morn | 52 26\ Tuesday | 23) 13:11 6035) 50) 27) Wednesday | 241 32/31 54] 1 24) 48 | 28\| Thursday | 25 \7 - 10' 1 27| 4 27 i ' i | 25| Iljaft3l| 2 7} 47 29 Friday 96} 11/1 2] 314 45! | $ 43 20/Satarday ~ JOHN 'T. MELLISH, Barrister, Attorney, Notary) Public, &c., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. OFFICE—London House Buiiding, (Davies’ Corner). Queen St. All kinds of Legal Business promptly attended to. Money to at low interest. v Ay & why *f GEORGE MUSGRAVE | JaMEs A, MORRISON. MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS | —AND— Commission Merchanis, i | HALIFAX | Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. RereRences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; DL. C. Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown, WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS, LONDON, ENGLAND. Represented in Canada by Morrison & Musersve, Halifax. Oct. 24, 1887. —<=1889—--— BOSTON DIRECT. Boston, Halitax and 7 a Island Steamshi Line. —_—-+ = Only Direct Line Without Change.’ oe CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON. i i } i The Staunch and Commodious Steamships ~ 99 “Carroll” and * Worcester,” having been thoroughly refurnished and put into first-class condition in every respect, will, during tie wepenn of 1889, run as follows, commencing with the | “CARROLL,” Charlettetown, Thursday 9th May, at 4 p. m. One of these vessels will leave Boston for ' Charlottetown EVERY WEDNESDAY, at Noon, and Charlottetown for Boston EVERY TH URS- ; DAY, at Six o’clock, p. m. m ellent Passenger accommodation. e3. FARWS~ First-class Passa th i yoll-- VRC at-clas ge Berth in woll- ferniched Cabin, $6.50. Stateroom Berth, $2.00 tre. ; Lowest Rates for Freight, carefully handled. j CARVELL BROS., Agents, ¥Yrom Low which is always Cc Hakiison LORING, Treasurer, aaa B. Gaupnen, r Lewis’ Whart, Hoston. se vies ttc aainae sk AILY EXAMINER. tetera me : ~ inageeangniegeiesipeatl * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evniripgs. IMPORTATION HAVE MADE OUR STOCK OF ee x ¥ reac a pu . a Bé & a s rH & ‘os ,} ry e 7 A! ' Bat. @ 68894 ‘ { i} oe TABLE AND FANCY SiLVERWAR! wat Swe ate #288 3 Eee, Bes * ® 58 Ge MORE COMPLETE THAW SEVER. \ EW TEA SETS, Fruit Dishes, Dessert Sets, Cake Baskets, (% Cruet Frames, with new styles of bottles, Baking Dishes, Ege Frames. The prettiest Breakfast Castors and Napkin Rings we have seen. Knives, Spoons, Forks. A few new Opera and Field Glasses cheap. cm. W. TAYLOR a's. 7 "7 i + nov” Watchmaker, Jeweler and Optieian, Cameron Block, City. t tiorse TARESHERS AND SHAKERS Combined Threshers and are manufacturing these Machines, and have some ready TK \\ to ship. They combine the latest American improve- ments, are fast Threshers, very light running, and easy on horses. For sale at satisfac ion in every respect. Terms liberal. MARK WRIGHT & CON. harlottetown, Nov. 15, 1889—2aw wky Fe, 4 Large Stock of On Hand. from $5 up—Tested and Warranted. — (x) —— Cheaper Kept in Stock but noi Guaranteed. Our Watches having received the highest awards for general excellence and time | keeping qualities, we can thoroughly recommend them Unsolicited testimonials regarding their merits received continually. in every department. . — a i | dS H. TAY. NORTH SIDE MARKEY SQUARE. New oct26 ——— -~( <}-—-————- a f, WW EL AL'T'? Oe er ae ; McLeod & McKenzie, Star Herchant Tailors. arttietiemenglty nonin N\ ODESTY forbids us (to use a slang phrase) to blow our own horn, and as it is contrary to our opinion (according to the old proverb) when in Rome to do as Rome does, we} shall endeavor, as heretofore, to present tacts so undeniable as to be beyond the reach of dis- pute. True, people have gained for themselves a name (not en enviab’e one) which, to all appearances, served the purpose they had in view. But wisdom dictates, before posing as leaders in the great race for supremacy, that we should look well to the foundation upon which those assertions are based. ‘To throw the mantle of charity over such people is our motto ; and instead of revealing to the public gaze, through your columns, the errors into | will endeavor to lead them gently into the light. That you will which they have failen, we as Fathers of the trade in this acquiesce in what wt say, is a foregone conclusion, namely, Province we treat the several branches of the trade in this city as a loving parent would his innocent offspring; and to this end we invite such traders to aim high and co-operate in elevating this, the first profession, to the high status to which it is entitled. In the meantime, call and see our handsome goods, in NAPS, M ELTONS, SCOTCH TW EEDS, WORSTEDS, ete., made up in the latest sty'es and cheap. McLEOD & McKENZIE. Charlottetown, Oct. 19, 1889 verre _ > ——_— (9) HE PEOPLB’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, Hen’s and Wee? Boys’ Furnishing Goods, 400 Fur and Cioth Caps, Fur Coats and Sieigh Robes. WEVE BARGAINS FOR EVERYBODY ! The fat, the lean, the rich, the poor, the wise, the simple, the young, the old, the millionaire, the beggar, the blind, the lame. ChartottetoumOct. 1899. Cleaners. We believe them to be superier to any machines of the | kind ever sold on P. E. Island, and we guarantee them t») give | CHES : j Geods with the same consideration | CHARLOTTETOWN, P. BE. ISLAND, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29 Best of All Cough medicines, Ayer’s Cherry Pec- toral is mm greater demand than ever. No preparation for Throat and Lung Troubles is so prompt in its effects, so agreeable tg the taste, and so widely known, as this. It is the family medi- | cine in thougands of households. “I have ‘suffered for years from a bronchial trouble that, whenever [ take cold or am @xposed to inclement weath- er, shows itself by a very annoying tickling sensation in the throat and by difticulty im breathing. I have tried a great many remedies, but none does so well as Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral which always gives prompt relief in returns of my old ccmplaint.” — Ernest A. Hepler, Inspector of Public Roads, Parish Ter- re Bonne, La. ‘‘] consider Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral a most important remedy For Home Use. ; have tested its curative power,in my family, many times during the past thirty years, and have never known it to fail. Ie will relieve the most serious affections Of the throat and lungs, } whether in children or adults.” — Mrs. | E.G. Edgerly, Council Blufts, Iowa, “Twenty years ago I was troubled ; with a disease of the lungs. Doctors | afforded me no relief and considered | amy case hopeless. I then began to use Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, and, before I had finished one bottle, found relief. I continued to take this medicine unti! a cure was effected. I believe that Ayer’s | Cherry Péctoral saved my life.””— | Samuel Griggs, Waukegan, Ill. | ; “Six years ago I contracted a severe cold, which settled on my lungs and soon developed all the alarming symp- toms of Consumption. I had a cough, night sweats, bleeding of the lungs, ains in chest and sides, and was so Y 7 strated to be confined to my bed most. of the, time. After trying varions prescriptions, without benetit, my physician finaliy determined to give me Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. I ‘took it, aud the effect. was magical. I seemad to rally from the first dose of this medicine, aud, after using only three 1cl TY!) av i n aman vO bottles, amas wella id sound as ever.’ — Rodney Johnson, Springfield, Til @ ; i i ’ - Remmede oe ee parts Ayers Cherry Pectoral, PREPARED BY Dr. J. C, Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5. | DIVIDEND NOTICE. ‘MERCHANTS’ BANK OF P. E. ISLAND, EuAnworreTown, Nov. 18, 1889. J&TOTICR Gs hereby given that a half-yearly tL | dividend, at the rate of Eight Per Cent. per annum, on the Capital Stock of this Bank, ‘has been this day declared, payable at its ‘Banking Olfice on and after December 2nd, ;prox. By order of the Board, WM. MoLEAN, novI8 —6i eod Cashier. A COOK BOOK FREE i j | | | By mailto any lady sending us her post office address. Wells, Richardson & Co., Montreal. i U N i A a A L L k L E D | canon Driving Park, FEXHE Directors of the above Association have ordered a final call of 20 per cent. ‘($20 a share), to be made onthe subscribed ;stock, payable on or before 30th November / next. | Shareholders will please pay the amount of ‘call to the Secretary, at the office of Warbur- ,ton & Smallwood, Cameron Block, City, not later than the above date, A. B. WARBURTON, i Secretary. Ch’town, Oct. 22, 1889—dy & wky tl dte { eae Peed ee ye 1 eee | Is the oldest and most. popular scientific and mechanical paper published and has the largest | eireniation of any paver of its class in the world. | Fully illustrated. Best class of W. Tav~- | ings. Published Te. Send for # men } Copy, Price $3 a year. Four months’ ti MUNN & CO., PUBLISHERS, 8]. Broadway, N.Y. | ARCHITECTS & BUILDER Edition of Scientific American. Each issue contains colored lithographic plates of country and city residen- ees or public buildings. Numerous nara and full plans and specifications for the use euch as contemplate building. Price $2.60 a year, j } A great success. 2% cts. a copy. MUNN & CO., PUBLISHERS. may be secure ed by apply- ing to MUNN & Co., who . have had over 40 years’ experience and have made over 100,000 applications for American and For- eign patents. Send for Handbook. Correse pondence strictiy confidential. = 2 TRADE MARKS. j In case your mark is not registered tn the Pat- | ent Office, apply to Munn & Co.,, and procure immediate protection. Send for Hagdbook. COPYRIGHTS for books, charts, maps, ' etc., quickly procured. Address MUNN.& CO., Patent Scliciters, i GENERAL Gyrice: 41 Broapway, N. ¥.- we . “1 wa 4 . Horses, Carriages and dleighs FOR SALE. em maa HODGSON having no further ise for his Horses, Carriages and Sieighs, will seli them, together with Furs, Harness, .&c., by private sule. They may be seen at ‘any time at his Stables. oct28—tf COKE! COKEI Ore Bushels of SUPERIOR COKE for 2o0 sale at reduced price before bein pe g warehoused. Apply at the Gas Works. ————EE —_ , 1889. SineLe Corizs Two Cente VOL. 25.—NO. 1 a Here and There. Attention has been called to the fact that England is extending her dominions so far that she is obliged to call in organizations of private persons to take care of her terri- tory. The British South Africa Company is the latest of these authorized represen- tatives of British power in remote parts of the globe. This company has now beer. duly empowered to develop and govern that part of South Africa which lies be- tween the central and lower Zambesia on the north, and the frontier of the Trans- vaal on the south; a territory comprising about 400,000 square miles, or about three times the extent of the United Kingdom, and twice the area of France. A large part of this territory is very rich in minerals, aud the climate and soil are favorable to European settlement. A good deal of it is tableland at a considerable elevation above the sea, withadry and invigorating cli- mate.’ It is abundantly supplied with water, and the soil is said to be extremely rich. Coffee, corn, rice, sugar and cotton are among the crops that can be raised to advantage. Over this vast domain the company will exercise sufficient rights, al- though the approval of the Colonial Seere- tary will be needed in certain cases. What the country needs is stable government, means of inter-communication, and easy of access. These will be supplied by the new company, which will put steamers on the Zaubesi and complete the railioad now being built from the south. The British South Africa Company is the fourth of these great companies to which the British Government has delegated a part of its power and responsibility, the others being the North Borneo Company, «nd the East Africa Company. Some striking historical aualogies may well have impressed themselves on the mind of the young German. Kaiser as he recently rode through the streets of the city of Constantine, now known as Constanti- He may have remembered that at “" nhvypic. jone time—so ciose were the relations be- ‘tween the two representatives of Roman l order in an 4 £ turmoil and confusion—a marriage was coutemplated between Char- ‘leuimene, the first German to call himeelf ;an Emperor, and lrene, Empress of the ; | Hast. Even more analagous to the present) | hospitable reception of a German sovereigu by the heir of the Abbassid caliphs was the embassy despatched with tokens of friend- ship to Charlemagne by Haroun at Raschid. Another event to which the Sultan’s visitor might naturally revert was the sumptuous entertainment of Godfrey of Bouillon and other German leaders of the first crusade by Alexis Comnenus at Constantinople. Neither would William II., who has been at so much pains to gain the good will of the Italians, be at all likely to forget that nearly seven centuries ago a prince of Ger- man descent, Baldwin of Flanders, seized, with the aid of the Venetians, the sceptre of the eastern Cresars, and was crowned monarch of the Byzantine empire. {t is not so long, indeed, since the Turkish con- querors of Constantinople had more to fear from German upholders of Latin Chris- tianity than from Russian converts of the Greek Church. Had the triumphs of Prince Eugene in the first half of the last ceatury been pushed to their possible resuits, the Hapsburgs would to-day be nearer than the Romanoffs to controlling the Bosphorus. The experience of the Franco-German and of the Turkish wars seems to pvint to the fact that earthworks aud fortifications would play an enormous part in all modern battles, and that, in fact, the struggle at Plevna would be typical of all subsequent warfare. Accordingly the German frontier has been turned by the French into a series of entrenchments which the soldiers hoped would make their possessors invincible. But almost before these preparations for a war behind earthworks and steel-capped forts have been finished comes the 1m- provement in explosives. Melinite and its kindred compositions have already been proved capable of weil-nigh . obliterating the strongest defences; and when they are perfected, as we are bound to believe they will be, the day of fortifications will be over, if not for good, at least till some effi- cient method of neutralizing the new ex- plosive force shall have been discovered. If dynamite projectiles were to put an end to sieges, it must be admitted that they would do good rather than harm to mankind, for anything that tends to eliminate the civilian element from warfare is to be ac- cepted with gratitude. Any statement that they are likely to do away with sieges must, however, be in the main conjectural. All that we can be certain of is that they will not tend to put aa eud to war. Universal peace, if it comes about at all, will be produced by very different means. What ‘they are we cannot discuss here; but we fmay be sure that they have nothing %o do with any improved method of killing. Another Jogging raft is to be buiit in Nova Scotia. This species of raft is of inammoth proportions. 1t is built of logs laid together im thé shape of a cigar and bound with heavy chains. The first Jog- gins raft went te pieces on the Atlantic, and distributed its ingredients among the natiyns of the world, The second reached New York in safety, and was in every sense of the word a success. The third, to be commenced at once, will be as large as its predecessors, and will weigh 11,000 tonsa, There is pothing novel, however, in thie idea of transporting timber on the ocean in the form vi rafts. As early as 1824 it was thought of and tried in Quebec. That jew the huge timber ship, the Columbus, was built at that port, and sailed full of forest wealth to the Thames, where, as the largest ship until then seen in Maglish waters, she was the wonder of theday. The Baron of Renfrew followed in the next year. She wasa larger vessel than the Culumbus. Both ships were lost, the Columbus after her cargo had been discharged, and the Baron of Renfrew before she reached London, qonine on manufactures of he we by machinery has led, as everyone ws, to the destruction of the old system of home labor. The shoemaker, for example, no longer works at a bench in his own house, but in a factory where he looks after a ma- chine. Scientiststell us that electricity is going to effect a revolution. We shall not of course ever return to hand labor instead of machinery. but it appears likely that the artizan of the future wall toil in his own little workshop, and that, instead of the employment of large engines in vast build- ings, we shall have the same work done by a number of sma!) electro motors, capable of being set up and run in private houses. Werner Siemens, the electrical inventor, is quoted as saying that “the goal of science is not a mass of great factories in the hands of rich capitalists, in which the slaves of labor drag out their monotonous existence, but a return to individual labor.” The anti-vaccinationists are a very per- sistent body. They obtained a roya: com- mission of enquiry out of the British Gov- ernment, which will sit for two years and exhaustively investigate the whole subject of vaccination. This commission has just issued its first report containing the pre- limiaary steps taken to obtain evidence on the question. The report contains the evidence of a few eminent physicians in favor of vaccination and the history of the compulsory laws in existence in different parts of the world. So far the anti-vaccin- ationists have not stated their case, but the next report will probably coutain something from their point of view. In New York beer is carried in valises by people who by it on Sunday forghome consumption, and who want to conceal the infaction of the law. The valises are ap- propriately called Sunday growlers. When they first came into use the unsuspecting police were amazed at the immense number of gentlemen who seemed anxious to catch a train. — a » >< <r Herse Notes. Polonius, the American-bred colt that August Beimoat is running in England, bas just won another race, and his chances of capturing the Derby next spring are serious- ly discussed. Axtell is being winiered at Warren Park farm, near Terre Haute, Ind., in a_ brick stable erected especially for his use. The story that he would be taken to California by Budd Doble never had any foundation in fact. W. P. ljams, who owns Warren Park Farm, and who was a member of the syndicate that purchased Axteil from C. W. Williams, seems to have the most if a of any of the party, which is prob- ably why the most vaiuable horse in the world went to his farm instead of being taken to California and wintered by Doble. Axtell’s fee for next season has been fixed at $1,000, and it will be interesting to note the mares that are bred to the stallion with the highest service fee ever exacted in this country. The carriage colt owned by Willie Nicholson, of Dundas, which took first prize at King’s County Exhibition, was not sirod by Captain Jeff, as formerly inserted, but by All Right, 5817, owned by Mr. Newton Lee, of Truro. ———— How to Cure a Cold. When one becomes chilled, vr takes cold, the mouths of myriads of little sweat glands are suddenly closed, and the impurities which should pass off through the skin are forced back tothe interior of the body, vitiating the blood and putting extra work ou the lung and other internal organs. Just beneath the surface of the skin, all over the body, there is a néet-work of minute blood vessels, finer than the finest lace. When one is chilled, the blood is forced from these capillary vessels into one or more of the internal organs, producing inflammation or congestion, and thus often causing diseases dangerous to life. The time to treat a cold is at the earliest possible moment after you have taken it. And your prime object should be to restore the perspiration and the capillary circula- tion. As soon, then, as you feel that you have taken cold, have a good fire in your bed- room. Put your feet into water as hot as can be borne, and containing a table-spoon- ful of mustard. Have it in a vessel so deep that the water will come up well toward the knees. Throw a blanket over the whole to prevent rapid evaporation and cooling. In from five to ten minutes take the feet our, wipe chem dry, and get into a bed on which there are two extra blankets. Just before or after getting into bed, drink & large giass of lemonade as hot as possible, or 4 glass of hot water containing a teaspoonful of cream of tartar, with a little sugar if desired, Should there be pain in the chest, side, or back, indicatiag pleurisy or pneumonia, dip a sinall towel in cold water and wring it as dry as possible. gFold the towel so that it will cover a little more surface than is affected by the pain. Cover this with a piece of flanne!, and béth with oiled silk, ov better, with oiled linen; now wind a strip of flannei ~ foot wide several times wround the chest. The heat of the body will warm the towel almost immediately, the oiled linen and flanne! will retain the heat and moisture, and, steaming the part, will generally cause the pain to disappear. Should there be pain or soreness in the throat you should treat it in a similar manner with wet compress and flannel bandage. * Eat sparingly of plain, simple food. ed apples and other fruit, bread and butter, bread and milk, milk and toast. | baked potatoes, or raw oysters inay be a . y following the above direction intelli- gently and faithfully you will ordinarily | ‘The formation of latge companies for [check tho ae the cold, and prevent . aan | '