— samt THE DAILY EXAMINER. Terms :—Five Doutuars a YEAR. * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evnxirivzs. Srne_e Copies Tw Cents NEW SERIES. ee CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. S\TURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1888. VOL.93.-NO. 142. The Daily Examiner ls issued Every Evening by The Examiner Publishing Co., FROM THEIR OFFICER, LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : ee ig ica ies $2 50 Ee NS Vidas demliesebiaetiacds 1 25 One Month..... oun . 0 &O sa Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. ALMANAC FOR NOVEMBER, 1888. MOON'S CHANGES. New Moon, 3rd day, 7h, 49.9m. a. m., S.E. First Quarter, 10th day, Oh., 3.3m., p.m., E., (below horizon. ) Full Moon, 18th day, Ilh., 3.4m., a. m., N., {below horizon. ) Last Quarter, 26th day, 1lh.,8.0m., p.m., W. D Sun ‘Sun | Moon’ High! Day’s nr OF WEEK! ises|sets | rises | water} len’h h mh mimorniattr’n h m ] Thu sday 6 47\4 41; 3 22) 8 55, 9 4 2\Friday — 43/ 394391941) 51 3 Saturday ov 338; 5 S58\10 25 48 4\Sunday | 51} 3617 37/211 7 45 5) Monday 53| 35| 8 37/11 51 42 5; flues lay 54\ 34! 9 52imorn 40 7 Wednesday 56 33:10 59) 0 35 37 8| Thursday 57| 3lill 56 23 34 9 Friday |} 58; 29\aft 43) 2 16 31 10*Satarday i7 oO! 28) 1 23) 3 14 28 11) Sunday rT wina~n FF 12 Monday 3} 26) 2 20; 5 43) = 13 Tuesday i 4 25) 2 44) 6 53 2) 14| Wednesday 6) 24.3 7)750;| 18 15 Thursday | Ti 2 3 2) § 3 15 16| Friday ~ 8| 21; 352; 913; 13 17| Saturday | 10; 20) 4 18) 9 49 10 18) Sunday | ll} 19) 4 46/10 23 8 19 Monday 3} 19) 5 18)10 55 6 20) Tuesday | 14] 18) 5 S6i1I 29 4 21\Wednesday {| 16 17) 6 43/aft 5 I 22, Thursday 17} 16) 7 32) 0 41) 8 59 23) Friday 18} 15) 8 31) 1 20) 57 24/ Saturday | 20} 14,933, 2 2| S&S 25| Sunday 21; 13/10 39) 2 51] 52 26) Monday | 23} 15,11 48; 3 49) 50 27) Tuesday | 24) 12imorn| 5 0} 48 28\ Wednesday | 25) 11; 0 58) 619) 47) 29' Thursday | 26) 11) 212) 7 28) 45 (7 28/4 10) 3 27) 8 27) 8 43 oe L. WHEAT. J.G. BRIDGE. 5S. L. BURR WHEAT, BRIDGE & BURR, Receivers and Commission Dealers — [_N— POTATOES, EGGS, Butter, Cheese, Poultry, Game, &c. Consignments of EGGS and POTATOES soli- cited and liberal advances made. 44 & 46 COMMERCIAL STREET, Boston, MASS. Boston Chamber of Commerce Weekly Official Market Report sent to any firm on application. sept28—-wky 3m dy law -BPOr- B-0-S-T-0-N SUMMER ARRANGEMENT —— oe THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE” INTERNATIONAL S.S. CU. neal Leave St. John for Boston, via Kastport and Port- land, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at 7.25 a. Mm. Fare from Charlottetown to Hoston, 36.50, 2nd Class ; $9.50, 1st cless. For tickets and other information apply to G. A.BSHARP, F, W. HALKS, ; P. Ee b> Be P. EK. L. Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. May 7, 18°8—~ead wks JAMES A. MORRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consiguments of Island produce will receive prompt » Stention. Rererzences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; George Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown. WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS, 1 Kast Cucarp AND 9 & 14 Mixcina Lave, LONDON, ENGLAND. tepresented in Canada by Moxeison & Musurave, Halifax. Ont 94 1827 " may be found on APER fle at GEO. F 4 RowEwL & Co's Newspaper Advertising Bureau (0 Sprace Street), where adver tising contracts may | oh ~~ pwede “a * ' JAMES PATON & CO’S POPULAR STORE. ROOMS. Sie 3 VED NEW CLOTHING IN ! PEOPLE MUST HAVE CLOTHING, and want the Best Value for their Money. DON’T BUY without first seeing our Flannel and Dress Shirts, Hats, Caps, Furs, Gloves, Ties, Collars DON’T BUY without seeing our NEW SUITS, our New OVERCOATS. A Great Bargain also in WARM UNDERCLOTHING., Special Qualities in Scotch Lambswool UNDERWEAR !!! JAMES PATON & CO., MARKET SQUARE. Ch'town, Oct. 18, 1888. --- ne a a ee ee GREAT BOOM! viene clei Away Ahead! [x] -—— T IS A FIRST-RATE PLACE TO BE, and as we undoubt- edly possess the ability to keep ahead, we can afford to lend a helping hand to our numerous struggling c mpetitors. As we have attained to the proud position we now enjoy as leaders in our art, through years of toil and hard work, we would say to our competitors, DON’T BE DISCOURAGED. Step by step, if you persevere, perchance may find you approaching our pre- sent standard. BUT REMEMBER! you will not find us there. Perfecti n is our Standard, and nothing short of that will satisfy our ambition to present a faultless garment upon a faultless gentleman. wl To supplement our own natural skill, we employ artists who acknowledge no superiors in the Dominion of Canada. 'Thus equipped with superior heads and unequalled hands, and ‘Goods of the finest quality, we feel safe in saying that we are (prepared t» fill the bill every time. McLEOD & McKENZIE, estar Wierchant ‘Tailors. Charlottetown, October 2, 1885. PARSONS’ These pills were a wonderful diseovery. No others like them in the world. Will positively eure or relieve all manner of disease. The information around each box is worth ten times the cost of a | boxof pills. Find out ience, One box will ' gbout them, and you do more to purify the | willalways be thank- bleodandcurechron- | fal. One pill a dose. ic ill health than $5 | Parsons’ Pills contain worth of any other nothing harmful, _ ae yet creer | egasy to take, an ered. If people cou a no inconven- be made to realize the marvelous power of these pills, they would walk 100 miles to get a box if they could not be had ' without. Sent by mail for 25 cents in stamps. Illustrated pamphlet free, postpaid. Send for it; | the information is very valuable. I. S. JOHNSON & CO., 22 Custom House Street, BOSTON, MASS, ‘Make New Rich Blood Re REE EE SEL A SES IN : } Still at the Front O--—-—-_-——rwror= 'TaROM YEAR TO YEAR the Manufacturers, Merchants and Mechanics are striving F to make and place before the consumers Goods that will please the eye and give ' satisfaction to the consumer. And to please Fickle Fashion, Styles and Patterns have sto be changed, for MEN OF FASHION, as of old, are ever looking for something NEW. And we take great pleasure in informing the FASHIONABLE PUBLIC, and talso those who love the GOOD OLD STYLES, that we have this season spared no pains to place on our counters ‘The Largest and Most Select Stock of Cloths to be found | in any Merchant Tailoring House in Canada. In TROWSERINGS, we have an immense stock—over 150 patterns ; also, a large line of STRIPED SCOTCH SUITINGS, the newest things in the market. In \WORSTED PLAIN AND FANCY OVERCOATINGS our Stock is complete. We euarantee our Clothes, for FIT, STYLE and WORKMANSHIP, superior to any made in this city, and at lower prices for the same quality. We respectfully solicit an in- spection of our Stock. ALWAYS ON HAND—A full lina of GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, BOYS’ SUITS, TRUNKS, VALISES, FUR COATS, &c., Xe. JOHN MACLEOD & CO., MERCHANT TAILORS, [ Rogers’ Building, Upper Queen Street. nov3—2aw & wky Constipation Demands prompt treatment. The re- sults of neglect may be serious. Avoid all harsh and drastic purgatives, the tendency of which is to weaken the bowels. The best remedy is Ayer’s THE FAIR GOD. By Lew Wallace. CHAPTER XII. Pills. Being purely vegetable, their action is prompt and their effect always beneficial. They are an admirable Liver and After-dinner pill, and every- where endorsed by the profession. ** Ayer’s Pills are highly and univer- sally spoken of by the people about here. make daily use of them in my practice.’”’— Dr. I. E. Fowler, Bridge- port, Conn. **T can recommend Ayer’s Pills above all others, having long proved their value as a cathartic for myself and family.” —J. T. Hess, Leithsville, Pa. “For several years Ayer’s Pills have been used in my family. We find them Effective Remedy for constipation and indigestion, and are never without them in the house.”’ — Moses Grenier, Lowell, Mass. “IT have used Ayer’s Pills, for liver troubles and indigestion, during many years, and have always found them pres and efficient in their action.’’ — . N. Smith, Utica, N. Y. “T suffered from constipation which assumed such an obstinate form that I feared it would cause a stoppage of the bowels. Two boxes of Ayer’s Pills ef- fected a complete cure.’’—D. Burke, Saco, Me. ‘“*T have used Ayer’s Pills for the past thirty years and consider them an in- valuable family medicine. I know of no better remedy for liver troubles, and have always found them a prompt cure for a in James Quinn, 80 Middle st., Hartford, Conn. “Having been troubled with costive- ness, which seems inevitable with per- sons of sedentary habits, I have tried Ayer’s Pills, hoping for relief. I am lad to say that they have served me tter than any other medicine. I arrive at this conclusion only after a faithful trial of their merits.’’— Samuel T. Jones, Oak st., Boston, Mass. Ayer’s Pills, PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Dealers in Medicine, BOSTON STEAMERS, ‘SINGLE FARES . aS ‘Carroll’ & ‘Worcester,’ $4.00. EXCURSION TICKETS, -—GOOD FOR— BALANCE OF SEASON $6.00. CARVELL BROS., octi6— AGENTS. Ge en Civil Service Entrance Examinations, HESE EXAMINATIONS wiil commence on TUESDAY, the 13th day of November next, at 9 o'clock. a.m, and will be held at Halifax, N,S.; St. John, N, B.; Charlottetown, P. E, 1.3 Quebec, Montreal, Que.; Ottawa, Kingston, ‘toronto, Hamilton, London, Port Arthur, Ont. ; Winnipeg. Man.; Regina. N. W. T., and Vic toria, B. C. By order of the Board. P, LESUEUDR, C. S. Commissioner and S¢eretarg, Ottawa, 15th Oetober, 1888. nov7—2aw LAND AT AUCTION. ASTURE LOTS Nos. 294 and 296, in Char- lottetown Royalty, will be sold at Public Auction, at the Supreme Court Building in Char- lottetown, on TUESDAY, the 27th day of Novem- ber next, A. D. 1888, at the hour of TWELVE O’CLOCK, NOON. ; These Lots are sold subject to a long lease, with a reserve rentof £17 12s., equal to $56.70, payable yearly to purchaser of these Lots. This sale offers an opportunity for a good in- vestment, as the property is likely two sell moderately. Sale positive. Terms—Cash or approved security. For further particulars apply at the office of Messrs. McLeod, Morson & McQuarrie, Barris- ters-at-Law, Charlottetown. Dated this 5th day of November, A. D, 1888, LOUISA MURPHY, Administratrix cum. test. an. of the Estate of Cornelius Mabey, deceased. nov5 BLEW RAPPER ite 27 The Cheapest, The Purest ai SOLD ABOVE GROUND. TRY IT and be CONVINCED. septzZ7 MUALOX AND HIS WORLD. Mualox, after the departure of the king and "tzin, ascended the tower of the old Cu, and remained there all night, stooped beside the sacred fire, sorrowing and dreaming, hearkening to the voices of the city, or watch- ing the mild-eyed stars. So the morning ‘found him. He, too, beheld the coming of the sua, and trembled when the Smoking Hill sent up its cloud. Then he heaped fresh fagots on the dying fire, and went down to the court-yard. It was the hour when in all the other temples worshippers came to pray. He took a lighted lamp from a table in his | cell, and followed a passage on deeper into the building. The way, like that to the gold- en chamber, was intricate and bewildering. Before a door at the foot of a flight of steps he stopped. A number of earthen jars and ovens stood near; while from the room to which the door gave entrance there came a strong, savory perfume, very grateful to the sense of a hungry man. Here was the kit- chen of the ancient house. The paba went in. ; This was on a level with the water of the ‘canal at the south base; and when the good man came out, and descended another stair- way, he was ina hall, which, though below the canal, was dusty and perfectly dry. | Down the hall further he came to a doorway | in the floor, or rather an aperture, which had at onetime been covered and hidden. by a ponderous flag-stone yet lying close by. A rope ladder was coiled up on the stone. 'Flinging the ladder through the door, he ‘heard it rattle on the floor beneath ; then he stooped, and called ; **Tecetl! Tecetl !” No one replied. He repeated the call. ‘*Poor child! She is asleep,” he said, in a low voice. ‘I will go down without her.” Leaving the lamp above, he committed him- self te the unsteady rope, like one accustomed toit. Below all was darkness, but pushing boldly on, he suddenly flung aside a curtain which had small silver bells inthe fringing, and, ushered by the tiny ringing, he stepped into a chamber lighted and tull of beauty—a grotto, carven with infinite labor from the bed-rock of the lake. And here, in the day mourned by the paba, when the temple was honored, and its god had worshippers, and the name of Quetzal’ was second to no other, not even Huitzil’s, must have been held the secret conclaves of the priesthood—so great was the dimensions of the chamber, and so far was it below the roll of waters. But now it might be a place for dwelling, or for thought and dreaming, or for pleasure, orin which the eaters of the African lotus might spend their hours and days of semi-consciousness, sounding of a life earthly yet purely spiritual. There were long aisles for walking, and couches for rest ; there were pictures, flowers, and a fountain ; the walls and ceiling glowed with frescoing, and wherever the eye turned it rested upen some cunning device intended to instruct, gladden, comfort and _ content. Lamplight streamed into every corner, ill supplying the perfect sunshine, yet serving its grand purpose. The effect was more than beautiful. The world above was counterfeit- ed, so that one ignorant of the original and dwelling in the counterfeit could have been happy all his life long. Scarcely is it too much to say of the master who designed and finished the grotto, that, could he have bor- rowed the materials of nature, he had the taste and geniis to set a star with the variety and harmony that mark the setting of the earth’s surface, and of themselves prove its Creator divine. In the enchantment of the place thore was a peculiarity indicative of a purpose higher than mere enjoyment, and that was the total absence of humanity in the host of things visible. Painted on the ceiling and walls were animals of all kinds common to the clime;, birds of wondrous plumage darted hither and thither, twittering and singing; there, also, were flowers the fairest and most fragrant, and orange and laurel shrubs, and pines and cedars and oaks, and other trees of the forest, dwarfed and arranged for convenient carriage to the azoteas; in the pictures, moreover, were the objects most remarkable in the face of nature—rivers, woods, plains, mountains, oceans, the heavens in storm and calm; but nowhere was the picture of man, woman or child. In the frescoing were houses and temples, grouped as in hamlets and cities, or standing alone on a river's bank, or in the shadow of great trees ; but of their habitants and builders there was not a trace. In fine, the knowledge there taught was that of a singular book. A mind receiving impressions, like a child’s, would be carried by it far enough in the progressive education of life to form vivid ideas of the world, and yet be left in a dream of unintelligence to people it with fairies, angels or gods. Almost everything had there a representation but humanity, the brightest fallen nature. Mualox entered as one habituated’ to the chamber. The air was soft, balmly and pleas- ant, and the illumination mellowed, as if the morning was shut eut by curtains of gossamer, tinted with roses and gold. Near the centre of the room he came to a fountain of water crystal clear and in full play, the jet shooting from a sculptured stone up almost to the ceil- ing. Around it were tables, ottomans, couches and things of vertu, such as would have adorned the palace; there, also, were vases of flowers, culled and growing, and of | | } i estimable in Cholula, and musical instruments, and pencils and paints. It was hardly possible that this conception. so like the Restful World of Brahma, should be without its angel, for the atmosphere and all were for a spirit of earth or heaven softer than man’s. And by the fountain it was—a soul fresh and pure as the laughing water. The girl of whom I speak was asleep. Her head lay upon a cushion; over the face, clear and almost white, shone a lambent transpar- ency, which might have been the reflection of the sparkling water. The garments gathered close about her did not conceal the delicacy and childlike grace of her form. One foot was exposed, and it was bare, small, and nearly lost in the tufted mattress of her couch. Under a profusion of dark hair, cov ering the cushion like a floss of silk, lay an arm; a hand dimpled and soft, rested lightiy on her breast. The slumber was very deep, giving the face the expression of dreamless | repose, with the promise of health and happi- “ness upon waking. such color and perfume as would have been} The paba spprneanes her tenderly and knelt down, His face was full af holy affec- tion. He bent his cheek close to her parted lips, listening to her breathing. He brought the straying locks back, and Tia them across her neck, Now and then a bird came and lighted on the table, and he waved his mantle to scare it away. And when the voice of the fountain seemed, under an increased pulsation of the water, to grow louder, he looked around, frowning lest it might disturb her. She slept on, his love about her like a silent prayer that has found its consummation in pethent peace, And as he knelt he became sad and thought- ful. The events that were to come, and his faith in their coming, were as actual sorrows. His reflections were like a plea addressed to his conscience. ** God pardon me, if, after all, I should be mistaken! The wro would be so very great as to bar me "Rein the sun, Is any vanity like that which makes sorrows for our fellows? And such is not only the vanity of the warrior, and that of the ruler of tribes, sometimes it is of the priests who go into the temples thinking of things that do not pertain to the gods. What if mine were such? ** The boly Quetzal’ knows that I intended to be kind to the child. I thought my know- ledge greater than that of ordinary mortals, I thought it moved in fields where only the gods walk, sowing wisdom. The same vanity, taking words, told me, ‘ Look up! There is no abyss between you and the gods. They cannot make themselves of the dust, but you can reach their summit almost a god.’ And I labored, seeking the principles that would accomplish my dream, if such it were. Heaven forgive me, but I once thought 1 had found them ! Other men, looking out on creation, could see nothing but Wisdom-—-Wisdom everywhere; but I looked with a stronger vision, and wherever there was a trace of infinite Wisdom, there was also for me an infinite Will. ‘* Here were the principles, but they were not enough. Meenitiinn said to me, ‘What were the Wisdom and will of the gods with- out the subjects?” It was a great idea; I thought | stood almost upon the summit. ‘‘ And I set about building me a world, I took the treasure of Quetzal’, and collected these marvels, and bought me the labor of art. Weavers, florists, painters, masons—all toiled for me. Gold, labor and time are here —there is little beauty without them. Here is my world,” he said aloud, glancing around the great hall. : ‘‘T had my world; next I wanted a subject for my will. But where to go? Not among men—alas, they are their own slaves! One day I stood in the tianguez where a woman was being sold. A baby in her arms smiled, it might have been at the sunshine, it might have been at me. The mother said, ‘ Buy.’ A light flashed upon me—Il bought you, my poor child. Men say of the bud, It will be a rose; and of the plant, It will be a tree; you were so young then that I said, ‘It will bea mind.’ And into my world I brought you, thinking, as 1 had made it, so I would make a subject. This, I told you, was your birth- place; and here passed your infancy and childhood; here you have dwelt. Your cheeks are pale, my little one, but full and fresh; your breath is sweet as the air above a gar- den; and you have grown in beauty, knowing nothing living but the birds and me. My will has a subject, O Tecetl, and my heart a child. And judge me, holy Quetzal’, if I have not tried to make her happy! I have given her knowledge of everything but humanity, and ignorance of that is happiness. My world has thus far been a heaven to her; her dreams have been of it; I am its - 7 And yet unwilling to disturb her slumber, Mualox arose, and walked away. (To be continued. ) A ——— _ — Shipments at Cardigan Bridge. The following vessels have cleared at Cardigan Bridge since Nov. Ist, 1888 :— Schr Farrie, for Channel, Nfld—40 bush tur- nips, 260 bush potatoes, 10 lbs wool. Schr Alexander, for St Pierre, Miq—85C bush potatoes, 150 bush turnips. Schr Annie G, for Georgetown—276 bush potatoes, 185 bush turnips. Schr Lochiel, for Little Glace Bay—1,000 bush oats, 1,400 bush potatoes, 200 bush tur- nips. Schr Defiance, for Port Hawkesbury—650 bush potatoes, 206 bush turnips. Schr Violet West, for Halifax—1,356 bush potatoes, 200 bush oats, 150 bush turnips. Schr Antelope—1,000 bush potatoes, 100 bush turnips. Schr Valenian? for Halifax—1,600 bush potatoes, 900 bush oats, 300 bush turnips, 1 cask pork, 5 pigs. Schr Emma—622 bush potatoes, 137 bush turnips, 542 bush oats. Schr Guardian Angel, for Spry Bay—1},020 bush oats, 170 bush turnips, 2 casks pork. Schr Beulah Benton, for Lahave, N S—1,380 bush oats, 600 bush potatoes, 200 bush tur- nips, 2 pigs. Schr Winnie L, for Sheet Harbor, N S—600 bush potatees, 300 bush turnips, 900 bush oats. Schr May Fly, for Channel, Nfld—1,179 bush potatoes, 129 bush turnips, 26 bris flour, 2 bris cornmeal Schr Maggie Blanche, for St John’s, Nfid— 1,420 bush oats, 400 bush potatoes, 100 bush turnips. Schr Delight, for Halifax—1,300 bush pota- toes, 300 bush oats, 150 bush turnips. Schr Lorne, for lsaac’s Harbor, N 5—1,511 bush potatoes, 242 bush turnips, 710 bush oats. Schr Ripple, for Port Hawkesbury—300 bush oats, 800 bushels potatoes, 100 bush turnips. se Vessels now loading :—Brigts Sirius and Aguila; schrs Ella B, Charlotte EC, Dart, Alliance, Galaxy and Kate Stewart. Prices :—Oats, 32 to 33 cents; potatoes, 18 to 20 cents ; turnips, 16 cents; pork, 7 to 74 cents; beef, 4 to 5 cents, ES Eczema. Itchy, Sealy, Skin Tor- tures. The simple application of Swayne’s Oryt- MENT, without any internal medicine, will cure any case of Tetter, Salt Rheum, Ring- worm, Piles, Itch, Sores, Pimples, Eczema, all Scaly, Itchy Skin Eruptions, no matter how obstinate or long standing. It is potent, effective, and costs but a trifle. oct12 6m dw ——_——- ib ——— Come one, come all and get a bargain while we are selling off so cheap. You can get a dinner set, a tea set, or a nice chamber set at prices that suits you every time. nov’ dy wy Gw ee y } iG . .¢