Teaxe:—Five Dottans a Yuan. SC A ee et eA et cat et tesa I EL ES tT THE DAILY EXAMINE ea a mere aoe ne lt See eaaeneh ee et “ This is true Liberty, when Free Korn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evsiripts. ~~ — NEW SERIES. a we CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. | eo — oe So TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1891. a a EE cxoocumenentieiiiinnsatan Srxerze Corms Two Grrxra om a a VOL. 27.—NO. 46 ~~. ruwn 7 TRIAD nt ALBHDAR FOR FESRU RY, 1861, MUON's OQHANOES Last r, Quad 1?h., 2999 a.m, W New Moon, Sth day, 9b., 597 p. m, N., th e | : First er, Sth day, 2h.. 17 0 p. m., 8S E Fell d 2érd day, 31.,69 p. m., E. p'par — Soo Sun Avon ft, , aye ; s isex wa lenh hm oimorn afte: * ~ lay 7 29 4 St 0 47, 3 10 9 3D ooday [i 6 UF 7 4 3 af Puemiay 6 . + it 5 4 ot Vednesday 2.) -| 4 80) 6 46 39 ursd rf N51 Ss O il is 22 6) 6 Su} 9 t 2 % 7 23) 9 54 & samiay 20 % % OO 42 § Wonday '§ thy S j sy a 12) 8 of) mor: i} Vednes lay | 1S 14} 9 #8) © 59 ik ht lay i is Sy 9 4 0 47/10 {3} Pricday ; 12 Wiw +4) }4) Saturday : a i910 31; 21 15) sunday | 8 Bult 4:3 @ 1) Monday [ 7} 22)1l 36) 4 17 Tues ‘ay 6} Yai fter| § 24 18) Wednesday 5, 25 0 22) 6 24} 21| 1% Phars lay | 26) | 1s) 7 52 25 WP riday O} 28) 2 17) & 44 218 tur day 6585 %) 329 8 ti) Sun vay 56] 31142210 7 Bi vloaday 54; 33, 5-8 10 4 Mi Tunes ay 53) 34) 6 3zit1 12 25) ‘V edoes-jay 51} 36) 7 35,14 45 26| Thursday 49) $7} $ B5laft 13} 48 a7 Frid«y 7| 33; 9 42, 0 43) 5) 2S Saturday 6 45:5 30:10 47/ 1 1E}10 55 | | DR. GEG. A. BAYNES, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON: | Specialiss in Chronic Diseases CHABLOTSICTOWN. OFFICE. Qneen Square, over Apothecaries Hiall. Postal Address, Sox 47. jy3—dy wy ! Don’t Mistake. YOU *VvVorp | VIVIONI fy LUM -——AND ANYTHING—— Unwholesome or Injurious.. _— BY USING yOODILL’S German Baking Powder. a — on nee ee Nee tt COL NON! ‘ } Settlement to Dec, Bist, 1890, ' \ ~ TE request a settlement of all accounte | du , notes, judgmeuts, e'c., hefore | the end of January. All debters wil! please! take notice and gave us trouble aud them- <pense. NORTON & FENNELL. jani4—dw 3w patdw3w her sum jour to supp'y Hard. ood at « re 8 nable price, cnt vp t» suit steves, and delivered to ell pow ts in the vlty A. DOWN, jan)3--tf Powns!] Wharf. —_ OF y, ced SHOREHOUND anDAN Se CORO up oi Coats SYHOOPING <A OLDS. a04.0 YEARS IN USE. Su PRICE 25°PFP ROTTLE & ARMSTRONG & CO eT, Sr. John, 3 ; WINT-R C+ OS: ING | "¥ HE WINTER ROUTE between Cp Traverse and Cape Torm- ntine is now Paswengers «nd Luggage at the regu f rates, Passecgers will find this route Very much the cheapest Passengers ccom modated in the very best mavner. CAP!. GEORGE IRVING. de8—Am ced whey Open WOOD! WOOD! Lye to the scarcity of Coal I have | i. started a Wood Yard, and am prepared | 9 taszart PRIN! ERS, BLANK Ay FD Pa a Pee oa 3 q BOOKBIN DERS, AND-———_— BoOK MAKERS. ————({x }»—__—__— eeiinnsgilaiiiial in A Complete Stock of PLAIN and FANCY STATION- ERY, at prices that cannot be beaten. {o)— 2" 5 Headquarters for Books of all kinds. Tar Kotte: Bast Workman hip and Lowast Prices. “8S S STATIONERS | ——— (»)--—~-— Charlottetown, January 6, 1891—wfs “ ' SCHOOL BOOKS! SCHOOL BOOKS! Heating md 4 Cais e us fils — ; a ey dias ‘3 gata a= Wi.) eed LL KINDS, and Cooking. We inv *< purchasing It will pay to do so. in the Market. ins nang buyers to inspect our stock and compare value before Our Stock comprises the Lates: and Best Good DODD & ROGERS. Charlottetown, November 12. 1890 (5) Campbell's Wine of Beech Tree Creosote. WE NEW REMEDY for affections of the Thacat, Larynx, Bronchial Tubes and Lungs, such as obstinate Sore Throat, Hoarsenvess, Bronchitis, Chronic Cough, Congestion of the Lungs and Incipient Consumption. ———--——-PREPARED BY —-—— KENNETH dae Rew &AL An 603 Craig “treet, - FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. ", CAMPBELL CO. DRUGGISTS, Montreal oct30 || Es SOLID COMFORT dec 18—c&wky AR ENP EEE LE TEE RES - —-—- YARRIAGE BUILDERS! Kor the coming Short. Prices Low for Cash. Oharlottetown, Bee, 0. 1890—Saw and wy Palat ble, ad “ati-fying, the Drink to take Strenzthering. Grateful when tired and used up. s , I89l. i HaMU Wade & Lali (x) -tnene Arrived-- 4 Full and Complete Stock of Kverythirg in Our Line. —— eee ( We irtend clearing out our entire stock of Carriage Goods, and give up the trace season we will seil, at Specially Reduced Prices for Cash, HARDWARE and CARRI4GK GOODS. Terms Pitas Gen Lefayette holding in his NORTON & FENNELL, Giwy Maidware Store. | NEY ‘LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. | ceca The Kech Remedy. _ Str,—In Tae Examiner, dated January dist, ul:., which oniy reached me to-day, I jhetice a severe criticism of my ** Word of | Warning,” by one who terms himself ** A Gratetu: Patieat,” wherein he attempts to lecture me aud the madical prfession on P.E Islard on medical et.quette. It is, indeed, refveshing to have a champion of | Dr. Baynes trest us to a discourse ou such {a subject, and I can afford tu pass this over with the Contempt it deserves. When | writing you those tew lines last week I had ,no desire to be drawn into a newspaper | controversy But hearing that the K och lymph was ix your city, I merely wished to ‘give the opiion of leading men here with jregard to its uses and the possible danger }of it in the hands of unscrupulous charia- lans; and your reports, sir, of the way it was being used in Charlottetown Jed me to suspect such charactera were at work in your midst. Tne Koch lymph has thus far been given by the first medics! men all over | the world in the form of hypodermic injec- tions, and, as already set forth by your ‘correspondent ‘* Verity,” this is the way it has been used and recommended to be used ‘by its discoverer, Dr. Kuch. Now, in the face of all this, when you fiad a man who talks of giving it by the alimentary canal, and advertising himeseif as going to sead fur Brown Sequard’s elixir of life, which has Canada’s Premier. It is rarely that a statesman in a colony -—even if it is a large colony like Canada or Australia—achieves a reputation that is world-wide. One reason of this fact is that the political affsirs of the colonies are to 4 large degree ).cal in their scope. Colonies do not usually have diplomatic relations with other countries; they do not make treaties with them, or declare war or cun- clude peace. But one colonial statesman, by reason of his abilities, his politica] power aad success, and his long eccupancy of cflice, and by reason of the extent and importance of the country which he leads, has attained to an eminence similar to that occupied by states- men of high r«nk in larger states. This is Sir John Alexander Macdonald, the present Prime Minister of Canada, who is always familiarly spoken of in his own country as ‘Sir John.” Sir John's political career in Canada has covered a period of forty-six years He was born in Glasgow, Scotland, in January, 1816, but when he was five years old his father emigrated to Canada. He was ad- mitted to the bar at the age of tweuty, and at twenty-nine years of age was el-cted » member of the parliament of Upper Can- IO Ne om i 5 see a Sermuda Boitied. } “You tmnst fo to Scrmuda. if) yon d® not F will net be respensi- } , #ie far the consequences.” ** Bu }decter, EF ecan afferd netthar the 1time nor the money.” “Well. fi ) that ts tinpessthie, try ER SIGN OF PURE NORWEGIAN COD LIVES OIL. Tsouieriumes ail lo icrmuda Bete ? thed, 2ud many e2saes of a CONSUMPTION, Bronchitis, Cough or Severe Cojd | } I bave CURED with it: and the) }advantaye is that the most scnst- ) tive stamact enn take it. Another j thies which conmends it Is the \atimniating properties ef the Hyr-) } peopivschiicos which if contains. 1 Ser wiki hud it fer sale nt your “rows in Salmon vrapper, Be “Ct the censwine.” ey LOL LD LOI ee Oh . A A a LE ee SON ee ee tt te ® “ # OWNER, Betlewt ve. i, tn, ai tn ada. Ever since that time he has been con- stantly engaged in public life, and a greater part of the time he has held high ctlice in the colonial government. He first took ‘ flice in 1847, when he had only been three years in parliament. killed more than one patient, to give in convection with it, you can safely stamp him as an imposter—I care not with what fivurish he may subscribe himself M. D. | ©. M, ete, The fact of ihe matter is, sir, that ut the present time in this city there is a lot of excitement over the sudden de sth of some of the patients who were under treatment by this new remedy, both in Bellevue and Mount Sinai Hospitals. In both cases the deaths are said to have been caused by the rapid generalization of the disease> and the coroner has ordered that ‘}any other patients who may die under this treatment be reported to him. Although your correspondent, ** A Grateful Patieat,” may feigua obtuseness and ascribe to me other imvtives, I chink after a while he will understand my reasons fur encroaching en your space, And I may further tell bim that it is ot any persunal antipathy to Dr. | Baynes that prompts me to write, as either | Drs. MeLeod, Conroy, Jenkins or any ;others of the medical profession of P. E. , Island would hear from me in like manner under the same circumstances as has Baynes, ** A Grateful Patient ” complains of my wr.ting over « nom de plume, and seems anxious that I sould come out over mnyoprope signature. I may tell him that the pabli®<weuld gain no hing by my doing sv; but if, a3 be says, there has been a miracle periormed ia his behalf, aud the instrument is still at hand, surely he will give us his namie andthe disease he has been cured from. As you state, sir, I am uacyuainted with Dr. Baynes, and my kavowledge of him is confined to the M Gil Coliege (which he claims as his Alma Mvwer) estimate of him that was given in a letter from the Secretary of the Faculty of that institution. A polugizing tor taking up so much space at a time when your culuinns are pussibly otherwise crowd- ed, I remain, etc. ; Mepicvs. New York City, Feb. 4, 1891. _——~-- n> + i> + <Ee—— --——— Legislaters * ake Notice. The farmers of Hope River in their hall, oa Thursd y evening l.st had « lively discussion on the worki gs ot the Public Roads Act of this Province. The majority of the speakers cond: mned in the strongest terms the statute iabor system. They maintain that it was in many pla-es the cause of breken whee's, aud that asa resuit of its working we had every- where roads much inferior to what they would be it the amount new levied as commutation money was collected by @ competent man in a central part of each lot in the more thick y popaiated road districts and expended by nm giving mile or half mile contracts of the roads to be kept in repair for a period of. years It was held by most of the speakers that in this way we would insure better roads | ‘at all times without any additional expense, while we would give the poorer cla-ses an opportunity of repairing the roads at a time more convenient to them and to the , b tter interests of the general public. | When the me,its and demerits of the act had been fully discussed, as also the short- comings of supervisors, the following resola- tions were moved by Mr. W. H. Hogan and adopted without a diasenting voice : possible to enforce the port relating to statute labor in the Public Roads Act of 1879; and Whereas, as a consequence of this part not not being enforced ou: public roads are in a dilspidated condition at a time when it is most necessary they should be in good repair, Therefore Resolved That it is the opinion of this club, our legislators shoul’ abolish the system of statute labor and substitute in lieu thereof a syatem of taxation for road purposes tion money. supervisors appointed for each lot or town- ship in the move thickly populated districts, these supervisors to +xpend the same by letting the roads by public contract for @ period of yeas; roads to be more uniform in width and grading. C. P. T. Hope River, Feb., 1891. 2s+t6+ a ial dinalin The New York World, the other day, stated that there are near 109,000 msn out ‘of work in that great metropolis. M. Bartholdi, the French sculptor, is at present engaged in giving the finishing touches to a group, heroic in size, which is to be presented by Mr. J. soph Pulitzer, of New York, to the City of aris, The group represents Washington and Lafayette grasp- ‘disengaged hand the entwined banners of France and ef the United States. Whereas it is found by overseers to be im-; equal to the amount new levied a8 commuta- This amount to be collected by Since that period he has been attorney- general, minister of militia, of justice, of the interior, and of railroads, and has sev- eral times been at the head of the cabinet as prime minister. He had the distinction of being the first prime minister of the Do- minion of Canada, after its formation in 1867, and continued to hold that post till 1873, and again from 1878 tv the present time. But the record of Sir John’s political achievements is not expressed by the mere statement of the raany «flices he has held. He has done more than anyone else to build up and strength the Canadian Do- miuion, tv foster its commerce, and to de- velop its industries and business. To him mainly Canada owes it that, in- stead of c mpromising a number of small, separate colonies, it was transfurmed into a federal state, with « central goveroment and parliament; a state very similar in its construction to that of the mother country, Great Britain. Sir Jhn's services to Canada include the aduption of a large number of important measures. It was he who estab'ished the Canadian civic service on the permanent basis it now occupivs; whuse energy aided in the establishment of the great railway line which connects Canada.with the Pa- efic coast; and who iatcoduced the policy by which manufacturing on a large scale was introduced in the Dominion. To him Canada owes it that it has direct steam mail communicati»n with Europe ; that its system ef public education has been ex tended and that « well-devised election law has come into furce, He was selected and served as one of the joint commi-sioners, by whom the treay of | Washington, that settled the famous Alasbyma claims, was framed, and he received the high honor of being created a member of the im- perial privy council for his services. Throughout his political career, Sir John has been the leader ot the Canadian Con- servative party, and it is owing, no doubt to his great ability and popularity to a large degree, that that party has so long remain in office and power. As a party leader, he has great tact; he is soewhat mysterious and silent, and he has the art of conciliating men, and attracting them to his leadership. The value of bis services induced the Queen to confer on him the rank of knighthood in! 1867, and in 1872 he received a similar honor from Spain, His s-holarship wes recogvized by the University of Oxtord, which conferred on him the degree of D. C. L. in 1865 At seventy-six, Sir John’s activity and ambition seem as vigorous as ever, and he is not unlikely to be for some time to come the chief figure in Canadian politics.— Youth's Companion. ee ee “Are Canadian Cathel cs Priest- Ridden?” ' Mr. James A J. Mackenna, of Ottawa, formerly of Charlottetown, has 4 well- , written article on the above subject iu the | January number of the Catholic World, monthly magazine published at New York. | The article, which deals mamly with the ‘working of the ‘* parish” system in the | Province of Quebec, is the outcome of a conversation Mr. Mackenna had with an Awerican Protestant clergyman whom he met while travelling through that Province » few yearsago. ‘This clergymen, it ap- pears, was particularily struck with the number and value of the churches he saw there and ventured the assertion that they were out of keeping with the smail though appareutly comfvrtable farm houses in the newhborhvod, and that the money which built them had been extorted from the people by the priests. Mr. Mackenna takes exception to this statement, and shows clearly that ‘* Quebec is not a land of darkness inhabited by « priest-ridden people, whose substance is exturted from them for the erection of grand ecclesiastical structures,” as the clergyman referred to and sme others appear to thick. In con- clusion, he quetes frem a letter in the Toronio Week, written by Dr. S..E. Daw- sn, a leading M »ntreal Protestant, as fol lows: ** No doubt the clergy (in Quebec) use their influence, as they would anywhere, but they canuot in any way drag inio such matters their functions as dispensers of the sacraments,’ and whatever is dune has been done freely by the laity ‘ who have more tu say about it than is usually supposed.’ ” — —-o To the Deaf. A persun cared of Deafness and noises in the head of 23 years’ standing by a Simple erat ae ISEEPTIC/ (DYSPEPSIA Pyspepticure aids D igestion. yspeptfeure cures co jndise stion. UsThe most’ serious ‘and F atronte ag caste of ¢ ’ positively Fite. is Duspepticurety Price per bottle 35cts and +00 (large bottles four times sizeof small) tn 6 Fee, Sdn FRED. de ¢€. DAVIES, Dispensing ' hemist & Druggist, Great George “treet opposite the K ©. Cathedral. x URE DRUGS AND CHEMICALS, Pa- tent Medicines of all kinds; Horse Pre- parations, viz, Condition Powders, Lini- ments, Blisters, etc. Special attenti pn, at any hour, given to Physicians’ Prescriptions, day or night. DAVIES’ SALVE positively no equal in the market. Once tried, nc other used, Price 25 cents per box. A1so—The Genuine No, 7 Liniment, 25 cts. a buttie, and Dr. Eaton's Asthma Remedy, price 25c., 50c. and $1.00 per bot le. *p endid line of French Perfumes and Toi- let Fcemanaidenss Atkinson's, Coigate’s, Goa- nell's and other celebrated makers’ Perfumes ; Pears’, Margerison’s, Colgate’s, Crown Per fume Co’s., Cuticura, Morse’s, Herles’ and Albert Soap Co's Soaps. Havana Cigars—the finest line in Char- lottetown— Oscar Amanda, Fntre Nous, New- ed} top, Queens, Picador, and other well-known brands. Pipes, Tobacoos and Smokers’ Requisites generally. jan20 POLITICAL MEETING, PUBLIC MEETING of the Supporters of the Liber: 1-Conservative Paity will he held in th MARKET HALL, Charlotte- town, ou i U us DAY, the Tenth day of Febra- ary, inst., at 8 o'clock, p. m. The Candidates who thall have been nemi- nated at the Convention held that day, be- sides others, will address the meeting. A. A. McLEAN, Secretary. DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP pa partnership bet ween the undersigned, as Barristers and Attorneys, under the style of PALVER & McLEOD, having ter- minated by lapse of time, is dissolved from this date. Dated at Charlottetown, the 3ist day of December, A, D., 1890. MALCOLM McLEOD, H. J PALMFR, D. C. McLEOD. jan7—all Island prs dy 3w wky 2m NOTICE. THE undersigned have entered into partner- ship as Attorneys and Solicitors, noder the name of MM & (OD, OUC. «OMcLEOD, and continue the practice of the profession at the offices of the late firm, Bana of Nova Scotia Building, Charlottstown, P, E. 1. MALCOLM McLEOD, D. C, McLEOD, Charlottetown, Jan. 2, 1891. jan7—all Island pre dy 3w wky 2m H. JAMES PALMER, (of the late Firm of Palmer & McLeod), Barrister and Attorney-at-Law, NOTA*Y PUBLIC, &c. feb2 McDougal Street, New York. K. B.C. is Guaranteed, wep dy law Remedy, will send a description of it LREE to any person who applies to N cutorson, 177 OFFICK—O Halloran's Building, next door to ssnk of Nova Sovtia. Money to Lvan. « §aaf