ai . /. DUT OF 2.000 CLAIMS dzvainst an Acciad . -9 vere for accidents c ent Co. for last year, rused to pedestri THE OCEAN ACSIDENT Trsures against kinds of accidents lis pre ninms are low, cand if 2 sa goed Polic 6.IV. row General Agent Charlottetown THE DAILY EXAMINER. JULY 17, (897. THE FLANAGAN CASE. the Mr. he Mr. FiaxaGan is the one man in railway who refused Prowse’s request to vote for him; workshops and who has at this No person— Liberal or Torv—who knows the is the one and only man juncture been dismissed ! reasonable methods of our politiciaus, can avoid the conc!usion that there was a close connec- tion between the refusal and the dismissal. Mr. Prowse may not have said a threaten- irg word tothe map; he may not have even said a suggestive word to the Superin- tendent of the railway ; he may merely have pointed tothe name of Flanagan in his book, and winked. Whatever the modus operandi way bave been, Flanagan refused to vote for Mr. Prowse and F lana- gan suffered the loss of his livelihood. This is as clear and certain as any cause and effect can possibly be. Why did the effect in this case so quickly follow the cause? All the rest of the men. he ahout knowing the influence possesses at Ottawa and anxious their bread and butter, had promptly promised to vote for Mr. Prowse. Surely the refusal of one vote among so many need not have been followed by such asummary dismissal it is to be remembered t! at the railway many of Mr. Mr. Peters had deprived them of men are opposed to Peters. their franchise when it suited his purpose to do so; he had restored it tothem again when he knew that he could command their votes or their discharge. They had been treated by Mr. Peters as mere count- ers in his political game. Tiey owe him @ grudge. They are Couservatives at heart. They received their positions from Conservatives. Some of them had obtain- ed their employment at the railway through | Mr. Blake’s intercession. It that these men was feared might, upon reflecticn, change their minds and prefer to exercise that inestimable privilege of their British manhood, their political freedom, evea though their bread and butter were endan - gered. Soit was expedient to make an example of someone in that the others might be warned in time$; and so Mr. Flanagan, who stood trae to principle and the dictates of his conscience, who darad to respectfully tell Mr. Prowse that he would vote according to his political belief, received notice of dismissal from the position in the rai!way service which That this was, under all the circumstances, an act of terrorism reasonable must admit. order he held for twelve long years. every man @2<+6+s MR- PROWSE’S CHALLENGE. Mr. L. E. Prowse writes to the Patriot aod says: ‘I hereby challenge Mr. P. Blake, the Conservative candidate for Assemblyman in Charlottetown, or any one else in town ©r country, to prove that I, in my canvass of the electors, used any threatening lan- guage, or attempted to terrorize them in apy way in order to obtain their votes.” “L. E. Prowse.” ““Ch’town, July 16, 1897.” It will be observed that Mr. Prowse does not deny the charge that employes of the Government in this Province have been terrorized. He does not plead “not guilty” to the charge. Hedoes not attempt to explain the circumstances under which every employe of the railway workshops promised Yo vote for him—save one who bas since been discharged—and under which the relatives and friends of em- ployes of the railway have been constrained | to promise that they will vote for him. If he were real y anxious that employes of the government shall vote freely and without prejudice to their positicns, he would at once repudiate the action of the Superintendant of the railway in dis- charging Flanigan sosoon after Flanigan’s refusal to vote for him, use his influence to have the notice of dismissal withdrawn, and assnre all government employes that they will not be prejudiced in any way by reason of votes for Mr. Blake. THE CANVASS. ——— ae All the reports agree in this, that there is & streng revulsion of public feeling throughout the Province against the Peters’ Administration. The Opposition canvass has, so far, been highly encourag- ing. Itis felt that one thing and one thing Mr. Mr. Peters seems to be aware of ovly will save Peters—and thai is boodle. this fact; for all over the country there are the Aas in 1893, money parties of voters at work on road +> bridges, wharves, etc. seems to be no object. Ths great point is to keep the purcbaseable vote in hand until the day of election. Not the slightest re- gard is paid to the estimates passed by the Legislature. The pubiic money is being spent with lavish hand, “wherever it will do most good.” Surveying parties are at work and every other “‘human device” to win votes from a reluctant electorate is being resorted to. Indeed it 1s questionable if the limit of the public tolerance of such se] lune subterfuges has not been overreached. am ashamed of my party,” said an tlaential Liberal yesterday, “the support ers of Mr. Peters are resorting to all these tricks for which we used to blame the Tories and are doing worse than ever they did. Yes, ’m ashamed of Do they that This was the frauk utterance in the Post hundreds, my party. think we’re all fools ?” frout of There Office yesterday. are aye thousands, of influential iudependent men in the Proyince who gay openly that they will not vote for the Peters’ caudidates. Tbe Ovposition pros pects are bright. et MORE IMPUDENCE. Greav Briratn’s difficulty is America’s opportunity. the United States. Britain was bringing pressure to bear upou tians who were being massacred. Just at the United States exploded its Venezuelan bomb, Great Britain had to look to her her col- onies, and her efforts in Turkey were At the present Britain is the leading power in the concert which has brought the Sultun to rea on- own defence and the defence of frustrated. time Great Christian Greece. States able terms with now, again, the United interferes with some question about seals, and tries aifrovt tue was hoped that the to fasten Mother Country. It an upon sea! question had been settled But the Government of hope has proved vain. the United States refuse- to be bound either by the decisions of im- partial arbitrators or by the law of nations. Lord Salisbury adopted the “ sunny ways of conciliation” tor the settlement of Venezuelan difficulty, aud as a result has U nited States impudence. We have not yet seen Secretary Sherman’s despatch to which ex- taken; but all the English papers agree that it isin the highest de- gree impertinent and Lord Salisbury cannot forget that there iga pointat which “ forbearance ceases to be a virtue.” been treated to another cose of ception is insulting. énswees ds SOVEREIGN FRUIT SYRUPS We make these delicious flavors STRAWBERRY, LEMON, LIME FRUIT, RASPBERRY, PINEAPPLE, CHERRY, RASP. VINEGAR, VANILLA, GINGER CORDIAL. You will find “Sovereign” true to flivor, of matured frmts from which they are made. They are pure and delicious. Simson Bros. & Co. Manufacturers little folks indoors this kind of steck. HOME MAKERS. Ii is also the opportunity cf | Some time ago Great | Turkey on behalf of the Armenian Chris- the critical juncture the Government cf | But } by arbitration. | The | Cie 7 baby plump and healthy. See that yours gets it, about how to do it. We have the Carriages, and as the season is get- ting late, we will make the prices interesting on the few remaining in Mark Wright & Co., Ltd r THE NEW STAFF AT EDGEHILL Miss Lefroy, the new Principal at Edge- hill, has completed ber staff. This resp- 1 onsible task bas been speedily and success ' fully accomplished by the cordial co-oper- ation of Miers Beal, the Principal of tbe Ladies’ College at Cheltenham with whem Miss Lefroy has worked for twelve years. With Miss Beale’s cuncurrence, Miss Le- froy has secured a governess from Chelten ham tocome with her to Edgehill, so that in Sepiember vext there will be a migration, as it were, of three of the pre- sent or former gstaff of the first Ladies’ College in Kagiand to Bdgehill, in Wind- sor, N.S.; viz, Miss Lefroy, with Miss Daoby and Mi-s Gildea as her assistants. Nhe statfat Edeeh 1! now consists ef Mies Blanche Letrov, Principa'; Mise Danby, nolding from the University of Cambridge, Higher Certificates 'n English Languege, Literature aud Anglo-Saxon; Euclid: Al- vebra; Ariwthmet'¢ —Coertificate in Theory, Histoiy and practice of Teaching. Miss Danby has had eizht years teaching expe- rience —two in the Ladies’College Chelten- bam, as Assistant Teacher, and six years in the High Sch ol for Girls, Baker Street, London, Eng , as Head Mathematical Ti a- cher; alsoas Form Mistress- Latin and I’rench. Miss Lobbau, B. A. of London Univers- itv, with One years’ experience in teacbing Classics and Mathematics for the “London Intermediate Arts course”; Violin and ky ementary German. i Miss Gildea—Uuiversity of Cambridge Certificate in Theory, History and Prac - tice of Teaching, Higher Cambridge Cer t.ficate in Divinity ; French ; English Lit- erature ; History and in Arithmetic. Has had one year’s experience as Assistant Teaeber in Cheltenham Ladies’ College, on? year as hcuse governess in the College with a contingent of twenty-five young ladies ; four years’ experience in Miss Cbreimanon’s system of Physical Culture ; Piain and Fancy Needlework | Miss Beckingham—Oxford University, Junior and Senior Examinations in Eng- lish; French; Botany; Geology; wah Distinction in Religious Knowledge, in both Juoior and Senior examinatious. Holds | st Clase Higher Cambridge Certific»te in English Language, Literature and Anglo- Saxon ; Eoglish, French and Constitutional Histors ; Geography—Historical, Political, Physical aud Commercial; also Certificates in Mathematic-. Miss Beckham has had | four years’ experience in private tuition | The Modern Language Mistress, prob- | ably a French lady, is not vet appointe, | ‘the Music Department remains under | Miss K. Manners’ charge, with oue change, Mies Florence Manners, from England, | taking Miss Lillian Manners’ place. Miss | Irving Continues as assistant ia Piano and Theory. Miss Shaver remains in charge i } | | of the Art D-partment. Miss Danby has also been a Teacher of Drawing in the High School, Baker St., Loadon. Friends of Edg:hill will be glad to know that Miss Lefroy’s family connection with | Canada is not only close, but. distinguish- led. The Bishop of Nova Scotia annonnc- ed Miss Lefrov as the neice ef the Vice Chancellor of the University of Uxford, vat be did not mention the more interest- lug association to Canadians, that Miss Le- frov’s father, a retired cflicer, was a cousin | of the late General Sir Henry Lefroy, for many years in charge of the Maguetical | Observatory at Toronto, subseqneptiy | Governor of Bermuda, aud well known to } many in Halitax. General Lefroy married | a dangbter of the late Sir John Beverley | Robinson, Chief Justice of Upper;Canada. | Miss Lefroy comes to Nova Scotia with a the history of the conatry. THE SUPREME COURT The Criminals Sentenced—Court Adjourned Until July 28th, The Supreme Court met this forenoon when the Chief Justice passed sentence upon the prisovers as foliows :— William Joyce. Three larceny cases. Three years for each offence, the sentences runving concurrently, Marun Power. Three months in jail for assaulting Jchn Crowley and six months for escaping jail. William McCabe. ‘Iwo years in Dor- chester Penitentiary for assault. William Ellsworth. Two years in Dor- chester Penitentiary for larceny. Gilbert Gallant. Three years in Dor- chester Peuttentiary for entering Newson’s store and stealing a bicycle therefrom, and three years additional tor breaking into Sanderson & Co's. store, in all six years. After passing the sentences noted above the Court adjourned until July 28ih when the trespass case of Gillis vs. ,Martin will come up for trial. Orrawa July 15.—Thbe Department of Public Works has been notified of serious tloods in the eastern townships. It is re- ported that the town of St. Hyacinths is under water and at Wickham factory chimneys are undermined. Baby Days. These June days your doctor will tell you that it’s wrong to keep the weather. The spring air will make No need to worry NEWS NOTES, An Auburn, Me, man who has been confined to a sick bed seven weeks, wrote a book three years ago on ‘‘How not to be Sick.” The American edition of the Queen Victoria Jubilee book has been nearly all sold, on advance orders by the Century Company. It is published at $50 and $15 a copy. In these days when the air is like the breath of a seven times beated furnace, tudvard Kipling should come across to Canada and see “Our Lady of the Snows” mopping her brow and absorbing ice cream eoda in a vain eodeavor to keep cool.—Brock ville Times. The city of Duluth Royal McKenzie by name, whose actus] height is 6 fee:, LO} inches, and weight 265 pounds. As he appears on the street le measures 7 feet 34 inches tothe top of his helmet. He was born in Ontario, is 26 years old, and says he has not yet etop- ped growing. La, Presse, in speaking of Sir Wilfrid Laurier’s coming visit to Paris, says: “He will be received undoubtedly in Paris in a most respectful mauner, becoming an Koglisbh +tatesman of French origin, but itis possible that the French national heart will be little moved. The reception to be tendered him will .be purely diple- matic.” Mr. Tyson, the Australian multimil- liovaire, made his first big baul shortly after the great rush to the Bendigo gold- field. Thousands of gold-seekers were en- has a policeman, camped on the golden flat, and a meat famine was at its height, when Tyson sbrewdly arrived on the scene with a herd of cattle and a numerous flock of sheep, He made a profit of something like 10,000 per cent on that little specu avion. It is said that one of the cheaf features of Mgr. Sambucetti’s special report to the Pope on the growtk of Roman Catholicism in England, is the astonishing conclusion that the decrease of Methodism 1s largely due to the transference of membership in that body to membership in the chureh of Rome. At the recent Roman Catholic Congress at Hanley, Cardinal Vaughan said that the efforts of the Roman Catholics in the fatare would be mainly directed towards proselytism among the non- conformists. Under the heading of “American Insol- ence” L Evenement say-: “ Canada is de cidedly the bete novie of Uncle Sam.Our neighbors, not content with closing their markets ‘to us, by erecting a customs bar- rier between the two countries, even forbid American soil to Canadian workingmen. The Canadian workmen who goes to work in the United States is treated no better than @ Ch naman. He is expelled from the factories or refused work,and by a sys: tem of persecution he becomes di+gusted and discouraged and returns to his own country. It is the duty of our Govern- ment to make reprisals. Trouble is looming up at the Nova Scotia Stee] Works, New Glasgow. Two weeks ago the men accepted a cut of ten per cent. in wages which they were told was compolsory. At once however, the men formed a lodg+ of the Provincial Workinginen’s Association. The manage: ment objected and followed their objection by a notice that the services of aii who bad then jomed would not be reqnired af- ter July 24th. This notice of dismissal ailects at least two hundred hands. Hon. RK. Drummond is working with the men in perfecting their organization. What be the outcome it is hard to say. Ww j } ] I ee SOME QUESTIONS TU BE ANSWERED. Sir,—The one-man Government bas at Jast found an apologist and defender in the person of C. B. Chappeli who writes for the benefit of ** College Boy Fooled ” in your issue of the 14th. He says all the materials specified are of the very best kind, If that is true why are the government try- ing to humbug the people and fool the College students? Mr. Coappell has made asorry and poor apology. He has not answered any of my questions, but has given mesome new infirmation inreference to floor joists or beams. As Mr. Chappell is an architect be will be able to answer the following questions and let “College Boy Fooled ” ard the public know : First, What 1s the breaking strength ofs a spruce beam 26 ft. clear span 14 inches deep and 2} inches thick uniformally loaded ? Second, What is the safe board it will carry in a publie building to be used for a college ? Third, How will bridging the beam with 2x3 stutf at 5 lb centres, add strength to it, Forth, What will be the deflection of said beam. Fifth, What effect will the said deflection have on the brick wal!, which, he says, ia ample for a building of that kind? As the architect, Mr. Chappell, says the con struction will not be of a flimsy nature, would be please prove his statement by giving the answers tothe above questions, and oblige, Co._ece Boy Foouep. Black Diamond Line, ce <— The S. S. ** BONAVISTA,” sailing from Montreal Friday morning, July 16th, will be due at Ch’town, Monday morning July 19th, and will sail for St, John’s Nfld.. via. North Sydney, C, B., carrying horses, cattle and sheep on deck and produce under deck at lowest possible rates. For further particulars as to freight and passage, apply to PF AKE BROS & CO, Ch’town, July€,'97, 3i eed, | Perey THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 17, 1397 f The Ku UT KUOWINg How to put together the ribbons and flowers and Jaces and ornaments is haltthe battle in our pene Tryarr rere o arene Tree Svan halt Ci tae Canta® heck thal PROVINCE OF Before Francis Longworth etree Take notice that His Honor er and authority in him vested by Per. An Act to Consolidate and 4 vf Wednesday, 14th July, next, be ee ments of rates imposed or author} til all such appeals have been Dominion of Canada Fringe Edward Talay CITY OF CHARLOTTEVOMy he Su ii May te Suir) Magra pendiary Magistrate for the auld Oe Charlottetown, has by Virtue Ot the ot te of the General Assembly of the Siald. intdlinial on pe 7 OF the a several Acts Incorporating the @% the Chorlottetown, ordered and appoin set down for hearing al! | sk from the waeeting Vee to the City Council of the said City ul that on such day and daily thereafter: ay. the h of ten o’clock in the f Ly a Pubes Courts ia Ghaaalll ig achievement of Success. | .aid, all such appeals will be z Unless this knack is an fvally determined by him. - t ‘ > acquirement of yonr ated this 6th day of July, A. 0) ROBERT VANIDERS milliner, no matter how Collector for sid Oi expensive or stylish a hat you may buy, she is likely to spoil 1t in the 155. The‘above court bas been adjourned q, til Friday, 23rd, inst., at 10a. m., all the cases will be finally disposed of making up. Notso with . . er acme The First Annual Sal Paton’s Fine Millineay il tela tose. an Gerts’ Wear. Fine Ladies’ Wen 29c. Good Waists,39c, better wai, 4%c, elegant waists 60c, Men’s Pay. 9¥c; good Pants, $2.10. Suits, $3.48; good Suits, $5.68; better fine Suits, $7.98. Beantiful Latiee Wrappers. Skirts—the King Sig —tbe best in the market. Comey secure ihe bargains at the New Yok Cheap Store. P. GOODSTENE ‘«-\ man’s a man for a’ that.” Wholesale & Retail. FR FTO TTR WRT EET WT EETS Wry | \ an OR a4 8" 2 ay os \ 2 4 rac St ; hel WAS ure id Siete Ad Sl ad lated has Sei | a Rear Hae GRAND LIBERAL-CONSERVATIVE ke A T. 2 - A meeting of the Liberal-Conservative Electors of Char- lottetown Common and Royalty, will be held in tie LYCEUM cnoeenneesll PINE cierinnmnitan ’ —— ae os Tuesday Evening, July 20th. Be AT EIGHT O’CLOCK ‘i vee k The Meeting will be addressed by Messrs: Blake i Paton, the Liberal-Conservative Candidates, and other prong inent speakers. sk ag As this will be the last meeting before the Election,# dk should attend, ‘a Cc. R. SMALLYTOOD, f° July 12— SOCTOH ED cl MONTREAL. i Mother House of the Congregation de Notra Dame, . Montreal, August 24th, 1895. Be Mr. Mr. C. W. Lindsay, Montreal, Agent M Heintzman Pianos : Dear Sir,—It affords us much pleasure to “testify ae of up to the present, the Heintzman & Co. Pianos in use it : different Convents of our Order, including Vitra Mase y have given the greatest satisfaction, especially as 10g . durability. in (Signed), ? The Sisters of the Congaegaticn de Notre » revetrovonvnresepprneyy > =i iN The P. E. Island Music House. . Are Sole Agents on P. E. Island for this Piano