a ee 5 a ’ Sa ign ee aun an Es \ YEAR. * This ts true Liberty, eae SS ens Oe yEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. RE. eee te when Free Born Men, having to advise the Pablic, ma ISLAND, TUE y speak free.”—Evnririvgs. ao a SDAY, JULY 7, ——— 1891. Srrecie Corres Two Crexre VOL. 28.—NO. 39 ie Rush Continues AT! —_—-- VoE BROS. STORE HE WONDERFUL CHEAP MEN, x} ” q . T a. Hundreds of People are taking Advantage NS h ui My of their Big Clothing Sale. HOS’ & CHILDREN'S CLOTHING Seing Sold at Never-to-be-Forgotten Prices. -_———-—-—_—_— ( x )-— —~— ——-— Are PROWSE BROS. THE WONDERFUL CHEAP MEN. Charlottetown, June 23, 189l—eod & wky g\iK OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (With power to increase.) = ee ee 2 eae 208,000, 1,040,000 | Ireorporated by Royal Charter, 1362. | Cwpital Paid Up....... £500,000, €3,000,000 | § ———-(x) _ a EM Bank of Montreal, Taeree. OUA. Bank of evaern HALIFAX, NS Ova Scot chants Bank of Hal Halifax, ST JOHN, N B-—Bank of Mo otia, 3 . Halifax Basking Co. CHARLOTTETOWN sti \ . . 2 ¥ ; JONTREAL—Bank of Montreal, Canadian Bank |} Commerce, M ~ TORON Note Circulation Notice. lnaceordance with the provisions of Sec 55 of} : Bank Act, which comes into force on FIRST } LY proximo, this Bank has made arrange- | s whereby notes of EU AT PAR bg the following Banks at # their Branches ; , Imperial Bank of iraders Bank of Canada. Bank of Hamil- m, M ‘reBanis Bank of Halifax, {o, Union Bank of Halifax and Commercial { Manitoba. iTangements have be ing Manksto ACT Si for ihe redempti« rt e wir enhioned Ciiles .'O0—Bank of Montrea!. or t Molson's Bank, loi i faders Bank of Canada. WINNIPEG Bank of Montreal. anaca, Mols iis f Manitoh or Pp ot " Instant Fei f, Cure, Fuilune Impossitie, fs, GR { a a) : .e Dp OVA Wary > ‘Eng i Ke iO UR! in LONDON YOU know we sell Men's Boys Clothing ? tE- the Bark will be F in the Dominion, viz :— Canadian Bank of oe - Canada, Bank of sot! TD) NT YOU Buy till you see OH »s Halifax Bank: | son made with the follow > as LALLY A AGENTS | of Bank’s notes at DON’T COME Ss BE surprised if you buy cheaper than you ever did. AND Over, Bank of M if ntreal, Bank of Ban <Ing Co, Mer- fax and Union Bank of 7 whi thtA 1a, ntreal, Bank of Nova Halifax and ; ¢ Ries hants Bank o I hants Buuk of Halifax. ‘ meric SEE the Stock, look it PE Bank of Nova ‘ aand Mer son's Bank, Bank Nova k of Halifax. Canadian Bank ommerce, Imperial Bank of Canada, Bank of Hamilton and aend Merchants Ba (x) ———- HARRIS & STEWART, HOUSE. Charlottetown, May 11, 1891. A Reputation of Five and Twenty Years Standing THE GREAT ais tenindecnseiiati TONiIc, Imperial Bank Bank and Commercial mbia will redeem at above mentioned hes in British Columbia, WM. C. WARD, bb IS} - . I rit a 1? y bes Bai Manager. 2 EAL! © 41a, Permanent — | ——(x)— NVALUABLE in casas of Loss of Appetite, I Lowness of Spirits, Fevers of all kinds, an tem when weakened by changeg of the season. ! It is necessary to remember that there are many lthe GREAT ORIGINAL is ‘* Campbell's,” and that t apon the label. The best proof of its value is the fact that its sale at the present time Weak or Painful Indigestion, Malaria, d as a general Strengthener of the Sys- so-called Quinine Wines, but that d ith. @ is larger than ever before. j , . . ts, or sent, #m The fullowiug certifieate shows how CAMPBELL'S QUININE pry m= rn ind 31 byaddressine ciated. Having submitted two samples of Quinine Wine, imitations : 2 e pone = Co. rockville, Ont, 3 Be along with a sample of our own, to the Public Analyst, we setsived: the Ss es — ee ‘©: aMPBELL'S’ is the only genuine Quinine Wine of the three samples examined at Messrs. Kenneth Campbell & Co's, request.” Joun Baker Epwarps, Ph. D., F.C. Be, Public Analyst. the average man as Clothing —unless it 1s ap2l re ~~ Se ee — — —— - — oe" Q y a 2 * fVVHERE IS NOTHING that an much as the price he pays tor 218 Ne the price he pays ‘for his Wife’s Clothing. We et ee ‘the latter. In the former we have an assortment that = ‘General Excellence and Low Prices has absolutely no equa ‘in the city. We do not claim to ‘but we claim to give the Best Value. | Our READY-MADE CLOT AING is manufactured c ; : of good material. ‘premises by competent workmei2, and : premises by Pp We can give you a solid n the No DANDANISEE | AY tal ' iY 7 Fo COUGHS SlioopinG COU A lshoddy. No moss-back cloths. : Gy NOS SOLDS. |\TL-WOOL TWEED SUIT for $7.25. It pays to deal with Ae ft ARS IN USE. ‘PER BOTTLE & MG & CO. PROPRIETORS St, John., N, B, BRUCE THE CLOTHIER. Charlottetown, June 22, 1891—dy & wky | ! an d. }mcre to theacre in yield over the ; we would add nearly $500,000 annua CAMPBELLS QUININE WINE. he genuine bears our signature | P be the Cheapest Clothier,’ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Experimental Farms. Sir, —I have just received 2 marked copy of Tar Examinea of June 8th calling my attention to an article on experimental farming, by J. W. Palmer, of this college, and also of your city. In this article Mr. Palmer explains that there was some mia- apprehension in regard to s\me statements made by me in a previous letter which was published in your Isiand press, bearing on the cost of experiment:! farms. | interpret the muiling of this marked copy as an in- Viistion to me to say something mvore on the subject. To this invitation | will try and respond, notwithstanding the extreme pressure of work here at this seasor, when we are having on an average 500 farmer visitors a day, who come from all parts of the Pro- vince Of excursions expressly srranged for this purpose. And here I desire to say in reference to Mr. Palmer, that he has just graduated witn honors, the first man in his year. I state this in justice to him and also in justice to the people of your Island. Mr. Palmer correctly interprets my letter when he eays that I did not mean that the experimental portion of the work was self-sustaining. That cannot boin any case from the very nature of the work. While many of the experiments succeed, there will always be a larger number which will fail. The return comes in the benefits which the knowledge of those failures and successes confer upon the agricultural com- munity generally. To illustrate, take our own experimental station, Ina this Province there are prob- ably 200,000 acres of bare fallow. If the labor of man and team were hired to do this work it would cost the Province $2,000,000 annually. Now we are trying to show our people that this unnecessary outlay may be avoided in mast instances by another system of farm- ing. We are clearing this farm from foul weeds, and doing it most effectively by growing rye and rape and certain other crops on the land that would otherwise be bare fallow, If by our experiments in thls line we can succeed in persuading our farmers to give up the bare fallow so far as possible, by so doingthe gain to th2 country at large ' would be very great. We are now testing at this farm about 60 , kinds of winter wheat, some 60 kinds of bar- | ley, 16 kinds of oats, some 80 kinds of spring wheat, 82 vari ties of co n, 70 varieties of poe tatoes, 109 kinds of roots, and cther crops in Fishery Bulletia. —_— ~~. (Fisheries Intelligence Bureau R:port.) Hairax, July 6.—Codfishing reported good at St. John River, Long Point, Perce, New- port Point, Que, and the Grand River, Bank- evs have arrived with excellent fares. All fisheries are poor at Alverton, P. E. [., but codfish are reported very plentifal at Mal. peque, the ee there to-day being over 200 per man. Both the cod and haddock fishermen are doing fairly at Port Hood, Meat Cove and L’Ardoise, God fair at Mabou. In Nova Scotia the reports are cod fair at Canso and Liverpool. The inshore fishery poor again at Lunenburg, but very good at Port Medway. The mackerel fishery is fair at Port Hood, C. B., and about forty barrels were taken in seine this morning at St. Peter's. One trap at Dover Bay, N. S., had 300 barrels this morning. ‘The fishery is re- a fair at Whitehead and Lunenburg. erring are fair at Port Hood, C. B., and have struck in at North Sydney, where good catches have been made. The fish are report- ed very plentifal at Lunenburg and fair at Whitehead and Liverpool. A few buckets of squid per trap are being taken at Canso, Fox Islend and Crow Harbor, N. S., and quickly vold to bankers. News Notes. Winnipeg isto have a $260,000 High School. The affects of the drouth in Madras are becoming serious. The number of immigrants to the United States from 1820 to 1890 was 15,651,688. It is suid Venezuela is favorable to a re- ciprocity arrangement with the United States. The customs returns of Montreal for the past year were $9,065,487, an increase of $288,611 over the preceding year. A bell boy at the Grand Union Hotel, Ottawa, has confessed to stealing Mra. Alexander Mackenzie's jewelry. The Italian troubles have diverted Am- erican travel from Rome, and the shop- keepers say their losses have been very large. While the armies of the British empire cost about $177,000,000 a year, the Ger- man empire costs about $167,000,000 a year and the French army a little over $140,000, 000. The most unhappy period of marriage, according to French divorce statistics, is for the period extending from the fifth to the tenth year. After that the figures drop rapidly. Only 27 per cent. of couples seek divorce between their tenth and twen- tieth years of union. Only one pair in a proportion. Now, if we can introduce a kind of winter wheat that would add but one bushel , province, | ly to the wegish of the country. If a variety of oats can be thus introduced which would increase the yield of oats by one bush per acre, the gaia to the country would be $300,000 per yevr, on the supposition that they be generally grown—which would not be the case, of course, for some time; nor would any one variety give equally good results over the whole of Ontario. But suppose such results were obtained by only one-tenth of the far- mers of this province, this institution would then be the best paying investment in all On- tario. Again, we havein our stables at the present time a row of experimental grade steers of different breeds. These steers have been treated and fed similarly since the day of birth. One of them when one year old was worth $10 more than he cost us, Another one when one year old was worth $10 less than he cost. The former was well bred, the latter was a scrub, such as many of our foer- mers still try to turn into beef. I admit these are extreme cases. But suppose the cost in one case had been only $5 more than in the other, when you multiply this result by the thousands thus kept i: the country, in the aggregate it amounts to a large sum. It is thus apparent that experimental sta- tions properly handled may be of immense services to any country; when not properly handled, on the other hand, they may do very much injury by misleading. I desire to re- peat again what I have already said in sub- stance to your people before, and I desire to say it with all possible emphasis, that no agricultnral country en this continent can any longer afford to be without an efficient experimental station, otherwise it will soon fall hopelessly behind in the race of pro- zreRs . At this station we have a farm, a large por- tion of which was not hitherto devoted to ex- perimental work. Some of the farmers com- plained because in years gone by this had not paid its way. Last year a separate account was kept, with the result that the farm pro- er showed a balance of $1,709.25 on the right side. With the same amount of land devoted to farming purpose, I have stated ublicly that I would undertake to show a Ralenes on the right side every year, that is, one year with another; but the experimental work of the farm is developing so rapidly that this idea will soon have to be abandon- ed. We have this year more than 160 acres directly under experiment and soon the larger half of the farm will be used in that way. With a well equipped and efficiently conducted experimental station, with a man} level-headed and brimfui of enthusiam at the helm, and a proper system of distributing seed and diffusing information therefrom, the result cannot be other than the gradual up- lifting of the whole system of agriculture to a higher place. Tuos. Saw, Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph, June 26th, 1891. —— ee Many preminent mea are now bein carried off by the ravages of la grippe. When we consider that by using Campbell’s Quinine Wine as a preventative we can ward off the attacks of la gripp2, we would advise you to purchase a bottle from your druggist. tf —— For the cure of female weakness, suppres- sions, nervousness, bearing down pains and all those peculiar ailmente that mike womans life almost unbearable, Dr Williams ; Pink Pills are an unfailing cure. They build up the blood, restore the nerves and bring a glow of health to saliow cheeks. All dealers, or by | mail post paid on receipt of price (50 cents a box). Dr Williams Med. Co., Brockville, Ont. iw hundred seeks to cut the knot after the period over thirty and under forty years. Summerside Exports. ScuMMERSIDE, July 3. Per str Northumberland, Cameron master, for Point du Chene— SB CAMS OGM < .occ cc nccvs coogcvvces $ 5655 4% Dum, potatoes .... ....sccssessecs 138 ss Si i lg ds ok akens 145 Be i, ss cheeks bc cece 81 ee = cs <a ss 0c oho So bee 10 i NS co TT daa teen uae 12 ue wee weenie Cadtlhor. . 6k isis cca Xss 960 $ 1902 By same steamer on 4th— OL a re $ 399 Be Be Pinan sp: cndeanwesases 17 PPO saath aches dab ben : 12 I ins Kiss hee Chas - =a St ES vnc oo ccbdes cu is ues \ 10 $ 738 EEE eee = eer | SHIP NEWS. Summerside, July 3—Ent schr Sylvia Jane, Wright, Shediac, luntber; -Pholine, Hauser, Baie Verte, empty barrels; Jessie Neweil, Walsh, Newcastle, lumber; Life Boat, Blom- pied, do; Jennie Armstrong, Grady, Shippe- an, cedar posts; Haley Ann, Jimnia, Chat- am, lumber. Cld 3—Schr Sylvia Jane, Wright, Richibucto, bal; Pholine, Hauser, Port Elgin, herring; Haley Ann, Jimnia, Ch’town, lumber in same bottom from Chat- tam. “Frexcay No. 1” Founp Guinty.—The trial of the Ameer’ Ben Aili, bet- ter known as ‘‘Frenchy, No. 1,” for the mur- der of the old woman Carrie Brown, known as “Old Shakespeare,” which has been in pro- gress in New York for some time past, was concluded on Friday, the jury returning a verdict of murder in the second degree. The prosecution proved in a scientific way that the blood fuund on Ben Ali's shirt was the blood of “Old Shakespeare.” Dr. Formad, the eminent microscopist of Philadelphia, examined the blood and swore positively that it was the blovud of the murdered woman, that the woman had eaten cheese, cabbage and rhubarb, and the blood found on the shirt contained scientific indications of these articles cf food. The womin was first strangled, and the blood was that of a dead erson. It was also proved that the knife ound in the room was the property of Frenchy, andthatit had been used by him at fourteen meais while in jail. For Over Firry Years Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has been used by millions of mothers for their children while cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once ; it pro- duces natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain, and the little cherub awakes as “‘ bright as a button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regulates the bowels, and is the best-known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teething or other causes, Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for ‘‘ Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup,” and take no other kind. mar2 3i eod & wky lyr fics lndihitentin A Mrracie at Sre. Anne.— Hardly a dey passes but what miracles are reported from Ste. Anne de Beaupre. On Wednesday a man named Desire Raymond, from Lewisten, Maine, who was suffering from a fractured leg, and unable to walk without crutches, re- ceived Holy Communion and afterwards ‘kK. D. GC. is Guaranteed, walked away from the sacred table without his crutches, wholly cured, —Qnebec Chronicle, > mart 7 rt phi 4 f pit «2 Of Lime ana <-> \ Ls Soda } a a. — eshecs oS pens Seati $ Emulsion Emitvion Ft , 8 a2 wonderful Flesh Pradacer Lt is the Best Remedy tor CONF UMS rsoN, Scr-fula, Bronchitis.wWasting Wis- easez, Chrenic Conghs aad Colds, PALATa~AGLE AS SELEK. Scott's Ema!sion ie only put upip saimon, wrapper. Avoidal! imitatione or «abetiart: Soild by al) Draggists at 600. ana 3. ® ( SCOTT & BOWNR, Belleville. Halifax and P. i, Island. a fra ae? a 1 Ga ee Fi eee ee ee wd 5 — = an OS % & eg" af Tre wes FS! § AG ewe solar las ee ee ee eee ee tt ie ee Cr Se a + a ee : Sn ing P _" J "et co at Ps 5.5, FASTNET, A. H. KELLY, COMMANDER, wit sail from Halifax every Monday, : at 10 p. m., for Charlottetown, call- ing at Canso, Arichat, Hawkesbury, Port Hastings and Souris. Returning, will leave Charlottetown every Thursday afternoon, calling at same intermediate ports with the exception of Souris, - ay For Freight, etc., apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Charlottetown, June 20, 1891—dy ek ee PILLS These Pil perfectly safe for persons Sof all ages and constitu- PRICE: | 2Se. < PerBox. Prepared only by ‘ALS. JOHNSON, CHARLOTTETOWN, Pp. F. 1. FOR SALE BY ALE DRUGGISTS. , CUCU i COMMON-TROUBLES CAUSED BYASLUGCISH LIVER, KID- Ban 18) 3 ss J. PIGOT, Paris, Sole Proprietor, LESSIVE PHENIX Wakes Hard Water Soft. Makes White Clothes Whiter. | Makes Flanneis Soft and Clean. Makes Fruit Stains Vanish. Makes Tin Like Silver. Makes Paint Like New. Makes Glassware Brilliant. Makes Earthenware Spotless. __ Makes Windows Like Crystal. Makes Baths and Sinks Clean and __ Bright. THE ONLY ARTICLE THAT WILL CLEAN ZINC, Por sale by Grocers and Druggists Every- where. Factory in Montreal. EVANS AND SONS, Sole Agents. julyl—dy 6m Established 1871 Continued 1891 BY CONSENT of the New Administration, W. N. RIGGS, TAILOR, WILL MAKE, CUT AND FIT Men’s and Boy’s Clothing. Clothes Cleaned, *Repaired and Pressed. Fair prices. Quick work. For cash Ouls. Kent Street, next to,Tanton’s Corner. Jnnel5 2m 2aw.