Cy ea 7 ” 7 Se ede Pas, ait ns Sigal ge OM -_-a- 4 PP we inne erie £ gyi: “PUA eM myn ore - $ & ce 5 ie Ee. Bae a Sis y age ete ¥ + Bite wee 4 PEN As way . “8 ‘ * " . re ert ~ THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN AUGUST 12 1897. - QUT OF 2,000 CLAIMS bine a Sas a> oc the beat bad to go in and _ order the j proprietor to have better order kept. | Uhese policemen saw the returned convict ind saw all that was going on, but not having the warrants in their possession and the prosecutions . 3 could not arrest h | having been called off, no informations for g ,;ue otfences committed have been laid. Surely such a state of affairs cannot be be allowed to continue. —_—— 9 ¢@¢°@--—--- -—-—"—"_—"—"s iCo.' for its caused to pedest) ins walking on the sidewalk 4 U Insures against all kinds of accidents its Premiums are low, and tu 2 es Gi 100d Polic ‘ ~VWY. Vetvow General Agent, Charlottetown | THE DAILY EXAMINER. AUGUST 12, (897. FACTS AND ENQUIRIES. ciao i THe fact is now established that shortly and the voting on the petitien to repeal the Scott | Act in against before the Provincial Election Charlottetown, certain warrants | convicted liquor dealers were called in and taken out of the hands of officer Notice appears have been sent to the exiled convicts that ali danger of arrest was ver; tor they at once came out of their hiding and actively engaged in the political and temperance It is also established that these warrants are still unexecuted and ure kept out of the bands of the police. It hae been charged that a dea) was made members of the Liberal party and certain liquor dealers in the city,—the charge, in effect, being that in consideration of the latter supporting the Liberal candidates at the Provincial election the Liberal party in Charlottetown would,in returp, assist in defeating the Scott Act on the following day. It is known that a large majority of the liquor party actively assisted in the election of Messre Rogers and Prowse, the Liberal candidates. It is also said that on the day of the Scott Act election, a couple of prominent Liberals: vne Of whom is a high official in the Liberal Association, as well as high in the councils of the party, went to the railway workshops and there demanded of the men in the Government employ that they should vote against the Scott Act. Theee men went to the pollsand dropped their ballots. The voting on the Scott Act resulted, as our readers know, in a strong vote being polled against the Act and 1n its emphatic defeat. The public learning all these facts and circumstances elections. between certain have de- the columns of Tue Examiner and the Guardian, further in- formation which so far has not been The public, in brief, have manded, through given. A QUESTION. ; mouth of the Nile is on the way of being ; '~ > lr is reported about town that Sheriff | tion in the double return” in re Commendation tel Fourth Dis3 | » | Bu Tue Examiner statt called at a@ member of the cial Secretary's office this forenoon and trict of Aing s County. Provin- was refused definite information concerning the matter. As the informationaffeets the publicitought certainly to beavailableatthe public oflice in which it is lodged in order that it may be accessible to the public The public wil! be interested in knowing who directed the Deputy Provincial Secre lary to refuse it to the representative of a public journal, Does Mr. Peters intend to keep the matter secret until the time for vit ” petition! ey bas expired ? —_—_—_—__——— 9 - e+e —_—_. — NOTES AND COMMENTS —It is suggested that the Government make Mr. J.I. Tarte goveraor of the Yukon terri tory,—and so get rid of bim. —The Guardian reports editorially that the liquor sold in Charlottetown is, not- withstanding the fact that the Scott Act * has been done for,” “as bud as ever, if noi worse.” ‘Ye editor seems to know all about it! By the way isn’t the Scott Act still in force ! —-The Patriot says “there is a good time coming for Canadian Farmers.” But it says never a word about “ cold storage ” or “direct steamship communication with Great Britain.” It we do not keep the matter alive now we shall, not unlikely, be overlooked again next year. —The recent spontaneous combustion of ill-cured hay ina barn in Nova Scotia, and the cousequent loss of barn, h u e:, utensils, etc., ought to be a warning to all farmers to be sure that their hay is pro- perly cured before it is stored.® —The Guardian says: “The next move of the rum party will be tosecure a license law, to give, if possible an air of “‘respect- ability” tothe rum business which the regulation act fails to clothe it with. Of course there will the usual petition to the legislature, setting forth the desirability of securing a revenue from the trade. Let all good citizens beware of this. The only remedy for the evils of the rum _ buainess iS suppression of the trade. To license it isto encourage the trade. No city was ever yet the better off for receiving into its treasury the price of blood.” There is a shrewd idea abroad that the new license law that has been promised is to be in the nature of a special tax act applicable to dealers in liquor, and that | that the proceeds will go, not into the city treasury, tutinto thatof the Province. desired to know by whose orders and directions the Scott Act warrants referred to were withdrawn? They desire also to know why they were withdrawn ? And they desire to know why they remain unexecut- | ed and whether it is the intention of the authorities to enforce them or not? This the public will not be satisfied until it has been given. So far the person who can give it has remained silent. The City Council, as a body, on Monday last, denied all connection with the with- drawal of these warrants, and some of the Councillors went further and stated that on no occasion had they ever interfered with the execution of processes issued out of the Magistrate’s Court. While this information from the City Council was very satisfactory to the citizens, and iodeed to the public at large, as this is not a local matter, but of general interest, it was at once seen that the repudiation came from the wrong parties because the public know that according to the City Charter, the administration of the criminal laws in this city is vested not in the City Council, but in the Stipendiary Magistrate who also hae by statute, full and exclusive control of the police officers. Therefore any interference by the Councillors in these matters would be entirely out of placeand of no effect, and would, we assume, be very properly resented by the Magistrate. The proper person therefore, to give the explanation and information demanded by the press, as representing the public, is the Stipendiary Magistrate, who, it is to be hoped, will comply with the public wish without any further delay. It is notorious that the parties against whom these warrants are outstanding, are running at large in the city, plying their nefarious business in full blast, while no attempt is being made to interfere with them either by executing the recalled warrants or by convicting them under the Regulation Act. There surely must be some way of punishing them. It is rumored that at the house kept by one of the returned convicts, if not by two of them, the noise and disorder became so great a few nights ago, that the policemen information is demanded and point of view. The San Francisco Argonaut ha3 a rare story in confirmation ofthe fact. When A!psonse Daudet produced“Sappho” Messrs. Fuok Wagnalls offered a large sum for advance sheets of the novel. Upon receipt of tbese they concluded not to iwsne the book and cabled the author, “ ‘Sapho’ will not do.” The despatch greatly puzzi- ed Daudet; he did not dream that the cha racter of the work, his masterpiece, was in question. Therefore he consulted friends, and one more wise suggested that the difficulty was orthographical—the title being spelled in French with one “p, following the Greek precedent. Greatly relieved, Daudet cabled back to the pub- lishers, “Spell it with two p’s.”? Where- upon there resulted mestification on the other side of the water. °° —Abu Hamid,the objective point for the present of the Anglo-Egyptian advance up the Nile, has been captured after some sharp fighting. Its conquest is, in its way, more important than last year’s occupa- tien of Dongola. It was one of the points of attack of the Wolseley expedition of 1884-85, but just when the River Column was preparing for the advance that was expected to end in its capture, the order of recall was received. Gordon was dead and the Desert Column in immediate danger. This time, if not better planned, the work has been completed, and a clear way open- ed for the advance on Khartoum and —There is a good aealin the literary | | j them when Mr. Tarte is agair back to his Omdurmann, the seat of Dervish power. Beyond that lie thd old equatorial prov- inces of Egypt, ann a little beyond them the northern provinees of British South Africa. The Rhodesian dream of a belt of British territory from the Cape to the fultiled, The Minister of Justice has declined to interfere with the sentence of James Wood, of Nelson, B. C., condemned to be hanged for murder. —The Simcoe Reformer continues its good work of showing up the corruption and rascality of the Laurier-Tarte combin- ation. And, in a late issue in answer to Mr. Parte’s command to “shut up,” it replies ; for the stand we have aken has come to the office from many parts of Canada. We believe that tens of thousands of ola line liberals will agree with us, and we can assure the Hon. J. I. Tarte that his simple denial of the La Patrie story will not suffice. He should have foliowed up his denial with some- thing more to the point than halfa yard of abuse of this paper. The Reformer was nehting the battles of the liberal party when Mr. Tarte was squeezing government contractors for ammunition with which to destroy it, and it is likely to be still fighting old occupation. We bave no favorto ask of the czar of the Public Works depart ment, nor have we any cause to be fearful of his journalistic thuneer, so carefully reproduced by the impartial Globe. As we said io the beginniag, the La Patrie yur Chase is only au incident. The case against the government is thet the bargain for the purch ‘the Drummoud County railway was ia the main corrupt, that cer- tain political brokers were to be greatly enriched by the deal being consummated. Time aud a rigid examination alone will demonstrate whether this paper or Hen. J. Israel Tarte have been the best friends of@ bonest liberalism. » in = oro ESTEEMED EXCHANGES. Montreal Star: The Canadian Govern- ment should not be one of those who lose money over the Klondyke affair. The Government “claim” should be, at least, self-sustaining. Montreal Gazette: Articles are appear- ing in the Liberal press advocating the appointment of a resident Canadian agent at Washington. What statesman feels himself in need of a job? The London Economist of July 31 says: The condition of the money market bas not appreciably altered during the past week, and alhough the approach of the end of the month has had some alight hardening influence that has been shown rather in the tone of the market than in quotations. For three months’ bills the rulivg quotation is 13-16 per cent., which is the Fame as when we last wrote, and it is Only for six months’ paper that the rate has slightly advanced. The likelihood of shipments of gold being made to the United States later on is still being discussed, and as to that no definite Opinion can be expressed. Al! that can be said is that for the present there is no indi; cation of such a movement,—on the con- trary, gold is still being shpped from the States to this side, the American banks have more than usually ample funds at their disposal and gold is being sent to America from Australia. These are not conditions that point to the probability of gold having to be sent hence to the States, at all events to any large amount; but of course the conditions may alter Jater on. ~— Endorsed by the English Navy —_———— ve British sailors are sometimes called “Lime Juicers,” from the fact that the law requires that they be supplied with a weekly allowance of Lime Juice as a medicine. Its virtues as a blood cooler, and preventitive of rheu matism, have long been recognized by the medical professions. If you want the best ard strongest. ask for the SOVEREIGN LIME JUICE tefined and bottled by Simson Bros. & Ce. Manufacturers THERE’S . have so much DRAWBACK About buying FURNITURE here it much money here as you would elsewhere, You'll Furniture .. ‘HOME MAKERS. that you’ll have to enlarge your house: withstanding this, old customers remain, and new ones are coming daily. ark Wright & Co. Ltd einen | you spend as Still, not- The sort of Shirt men need nowe-a days. Add to coolness ——— The Kind That’s Cool ner fection of style and fit, and you have a fair idea of our Jiens Negligee Shirts at The celebrated W. G. & R. br 98ce. and that are sold everywhere else for $1.25 to $1,50—some have two collars and one pair of cuffs—others have cuffs and are intended to be worn with white collars, able with a heavy pair of suspenders, *" Light Weight,”—they’re cool even to look at. No matter how cool the shirt, you can be hot and uncomfort- We've a kind we eall the Some of them, pretty stripes, are sold at 40c, —our price—é&e, FOR Charlottetown to Boston about 30 hours. Leave St. Jobn by Steamship St. Croix at 4.30 p. m. direct far Boston. FAST HXPRESS SERVICE. THE ELEGANT STEAMSHIP “ST. CROIX, BOSTON —BY THE INTERNATIONAL §.S. CO, = = ee Tt ye (2,000 TONS.) Summerside to Boston about 28 hours Roure 1.—Leave any point on the line of P. E. I. Railway by Morning Train Tuesday or Saturday, reach St. Johu via Sun merside and Point du Chene at 4 p. m at noon next day. E. A, WALDRON, Gen. Route 2.—Leave the Island on Tuurspay, reach St. John same evening and con= nect with the Friday Morning Steamer for Boston, via Coast Service, Send for Folder and information to nearest Ticket Agent, or to Agent, Boston, Masa. Arrive there C, F. LAECHLER, Agent, 187 amas = pana —_ a | You can have it by the barrel, dozen or any way c> at all. — = 8 mS os as mo wn 5 Z & 3 a o ‘ 3 JAMES KELLY & CO. Price per bbl. of 10 doz. 85.00 Single doz. 60c. See eee een Ale, etc., and it’s far better. ——— This is the greatest country in the world for variety of drinkables. None of us could sit down and write out a list of al) the styles and flavors from Plain Soda to Mumm’s Extra Dry. ere But there’s one summer drink that de- serves to occupy this advertisement and to be impressed on vour memory so that vou’ll not forget to ask your grocer for it. Iv’s ALLAN’S CHAMPAGNE KOLA. _ Ina year from now we’ll'all be drinking it in preference to all other aerated or min- eral water drinks, because it’s such a pleasant drink. Not only that, but its such a wholesome drink, its invigorating, it cools the braina and strengthens the nerves. Ite a great thing to take before breakfast, or before going to bed. It’s good when you’ve got that tired feeling ; it brightens you up. It's the Temperance Drink of the Day and everybody sheuld try it. Keep it in the house to treat your friends or for family use. It costs no more than Giager If your Grocer can’t supply you write the maker. meee The only genuine made by ROBERT ALLAN, MONTREAL, BICYCLES d ‘GIVEN AWAY STEARNS’ WATCHES EVERY MONTH To those who send the largest number of Your Grocer will give you particulars, of drop a post card to LEVER BROS., Limited, Toronto. AA | as2S44448R4 2 L887. a0. We A a] i ‘tl Maritine Championships | ON “ll Charlottetown Amateur Athletic Association Greunds LABOR DAY, September 6, Bea List of Events. 1. 1 mile novice ~ - 4 mile C. W. A. Maritime Championship 1 mile (boys under 16) 1 mile (2.50 class) . 1 mile (C. W. A. Championship + mile race 3 mile (lap race) . 2 mile (handicap) 5 mileC. W. A, Maritime Championship 10. 1 mile Tandem 11, 220 yards flat race -—— ££44224 a os te Ory oo Maritime £4244 rp = Soa — = = ~ a SSSATSS Stee usa es 12. } mile flat race 13, 4 mile flat race 14. High jump Handsome prizes given in all the other events, A. E. INGS, President. H. D. JOHNSON, M D Secretary 24224 Aug. 6 dy wy aug 12 31 lawk Pee TeTTTe?