wee w-.re LL AGO LLL TNA IES ICE RO ER VOL. &. Tas DAILY lablished e eo *. —_ 7 wo Pt HiXAMINER ery Ev enmy, ‘RE: MING, CORNER OPFT IKGS' RVI OF WATBR AND BAT GEORGE S&S rREETS, ‘ > ‘lottetown » E. lL > or Srrsenrprron Six Mor ths, —- - $260 Three onthe, - e . 1 25 One Mouth, - " 0 50 One Week. « i 4 12 om Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or hs f-yearly advertisements, on appli- eation. . W; W. MJ °CHELL, Office Sup’t. L. CUTTON, | J. Mana; er. | New Grocery Store. JUST OPENED! A General Agsrortment of CHO GE GROCERIES Flour, Ten, Sagur, Molasses, Curranis, Raisins, Sezp, Starch, &c.. &e. Cugar ror Casi. Ww. A. HUTCHESON, ’$0—im 109 Upper Queen St, Next coor to Miller Bros, Nev. li “GHEBUCTO MARINE Insurance Association | OF ETALIP AS. E. PALMER, Juvr., '$8—I1m Exehange Building. 99 mas Ph town, Dod. EYE, EAR AND THROAT. DR. J. Re McLEAN, Gradnat: of the University ef Pennsylvania, formerly Assistant Surgeen to the Sth and Locust Street Eye and Ear In- firmary, Philadelphia, eonfines his practice exclusively te diseases of the Kye, Ear and Threat. @fGee ai St. Lawrence Hote), Pieton, N. S. Gc. 14, 1889. ~ OLD QUEEN SQUARE LIVERY STABLES RHh-OPEHN HD. H£ Subscriber has removed to the cem- modious Livery Stabies, LATELY OCCUPIED BY MR. JAMES BARR, North Side Queen Square, Where you can get the Curarest aAxbd Best TURNOUTS IN THE CITY. JAMES N. MILLNEP. Oh’town, Sept. 14, 1880—ly QUEEN INSURANCE CO’Y, OF ENGLAND. GAPITAL,. . TWO MILLIONS STERLING RSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ins, Merchandise and Produce. Also, om @xse.s on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences, Lesves settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward (sland Jane, 1377— INCORPORATED A, CITIZENS’ Insurance Company, OF CANADA. CAPITAL, -- - - - $2,660,600. $112,006 deposited with Dominion Governnicne. D. 1864, President—SIR HUGH ALLAN, Vice-President—HENRY LYMAN. @BRALD E. HART, General Maneger. PIAS, LIFE, AOUIDEN?, EUARANTER. RISKS taken at Moderate Raies, and es paid promptly. HSAD OFFICE—179 St. James Street Mon treal. M. A. CAMERON, Septi—3m 2aw General Agent for P. E. HE WEEKLY EXAMINER. — Per sons having relatives or friends abread, and desiring to keep them informed concernirg Pp. K: feland, cannot do soin a better or cheap; er way than by qr f to Tos Weex.r Eximiner. Sent, postpaid, to any address (treat Britain, the United States, er the Doceinion, ov receipt of One Dollar, CHARLOTTETO\ es . <r nw. OW HN ln Wisters, Qvereaa kt will pay © Charlottettown, Nov. Re) jewel o cm Next to Bapt é REPAIRING Cc patronize this establish: money. Al! work warr Parties leaving full with either one or two | a ical ns lB an de 6 ala eal” Tweeds, Pilot, Beaver, iia READYMADE JAMES INET MAKHR, The New School Desk supplicd OF Coffin Pedestals, something new and much needed, sent to New Plumes of the latest design. \ cee meen Le A OO SOTO AC LE EM ee eae gets ee or nen : ———-----=- siiviinliany siataainnmmapntl a N. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1880 NO. 7 IN, rival UR BIAS VY 4 UE MIRALA LY BD, So TAN OJ sh Ae iN ; Pie Du ae OO Lt Us a ~~ ~~ | = Siena Sealvenunstan odianpell Lact eova-cxsmegpelilinenan ara scendaa —— ren Sipandios Sapnanaananeinal 4 arom ana “7 \ *-7 Bk aga ) ay | Does it Pay to be Right? The Feeling Aga.nst the Jews in { ' ~ Aw f ¥ ‘ ’ \ +¢ 7% YO TI (: | 2 ® i ( ‘i Y eles Ger many. : : } A} : 4 . j ' a MW : ' & & 4 } tp . iY RAL MANHOO! i HOW Té A "Aaa r-— } r . , - y a yi a LY : Lv 8 4 5 4 . @ MORAL MAN OD AND HOW T@ ATTAIN 1 in an article headed **Our Political Pros- HONEST MEN SCAKCE—SERMON BY REV, ” ake i ie ’ sisi ots sontributed by Professor Von BR? a Wey y EH : ’ ‘ / i mPuvunyv bf . a ont» ' p OLS, c - ” o . SR RO Ms NOW SHO WING A j HENRY WARD bESCAER, { treitschke to a recent number vot Preus- ; 7 } ' . > “,* . Ay ' r | stsch Jonrbucner, a brief exposition 18 ‘ m~ | mae * . ; ’ 7 Sete oe ' : ie : Stock U Seaso ‘Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his| given oF the motives whica animate 80 righteousness, ana all these things shall be | many Germaans just now in their host lity ge, i ® GU, om, added unto you.” 'towards -theie Jewish fete oes 1 & : 22 | Huglstmen and Frenchinen, says Protessor “ wtin 4 ¥ el ® These words were spoken, said Mr. |77'>) {N50 Se Frenchinen, says é cy OB be > ven Treitechke, do not know with -what aed 20% a * - ame O10 Tonal, WTR zZ CBB A et ——-=——:0: z , ts Aleeiers, Pants, ash Buyers to cali and examine Prices before purchasing clsewhere. ma” ROBERT ORR’S OLD STAND. “@a 16, 1880. HOBBS, Undertaker, &c., { Choreh, Prince St DONE, APTLY i GALN Vdd N 70: ARS E PAs 1) FIN 2 ¢ CASK SS) nent may feel confident upon reece.v'og the anted, Seasoned Stock best kind. orders for funerals will be 1orses, Nov. !2, 1880—3m 2aw GRBRAT BARGAINS IN Dress Goods, Shawls, Mantles, Wincies, Grey and White Cottons, &e., we. President and Ulster Cloths, ‘CLOTHING! Vests, Ge. at Very Low Prices, our Geods and rest, Charlottetown. 2» 7 r 2 © a3 mi at short netice, VERY CHEAP. The Undertaking Department personally attenoed to es moderate charges very best vain for their Bil whe the house free of charge. subject te ONLY HALF PRICE for hearse, ere Genti Nov. 9, 1886. A magnificent stock to choose Manties! Ladies will find the largest variety and lowest price Mantles in the City at Ladies CHen, YOU SHOULD VISIT 2 ee WINTER CLOTHING before Buying your Winter OVERCOATS AND REEFERS, J. B. IMAGDONALD'S, QUEEN STREET. irem—and very cheap. J. B. MACDONALD’S, Queen Street. UST RECEIVED p lot ef large fat H half-barrels; and daily ef Labrador Herring. direct from the wills HORN No. April 26, 1880—t# —AL&o— A large supply of Superior Extra Flour, whieh will be se’d cheap for cash. Nov. 13, ’80—2w 2aw HAT Freehold Property, with a front of eighty feet on Pownal Street and eighty- four feet on Sydney Street,the House coatain- ing 16 large rooms and two Kitchens. be turned into one Dwelling by unlocking a door. Apply on the premises to Qr er Schoonera, a eheico BOS erring, in barrels ant rive in a few days. expested, a cheice lod | | strength aud flavor, and Oct. 20, 1880. —Galt, Ont. All of E, PIERCE & CO. | 153, Upper Queen St. | - ply to July 20, 1880--eaw ean Flour & Herring. ery Superior Teas, PACKAGES just received ex Eihel Blanche ; 130 packages more to ar- Those TEAS will be found very superior in we offer them whole- sale and retail at remarkably low figures. BEER & SONS. SUILDING LOTS. pS wanting to purchase Building Lots ia Victoria, Let 2, will please ap- DONALD PALMER, Esgq., or MRS, HENRY HARDAY, Summerside, Can MRS. BOSWALL. Apply to town, Nov. 2, '8@. VHE BRICK HOUSE situate Street, adjoining the EXAMINER office, JOHN ING. Water 3eecher, in the Province of Galilee—a pro- vince that had become the thoroughfare and he delta of nations. It had become ;}amixture that it was held in very great contempt by the people of Jerusalem. ‘Galilee was not governed, but fleeced, and its people were thereby reduced to the greateat poverty, and this was especially and painfully true of the large under classes. It wasin such depression and in such times of famine that Christ preached, when Hesaid, asin the context, “You must take ne thought «about what you should eat or what you should drink,” and then adds the general stateraent of the Observe, He dil not preach political economy or recommend them to go into a combination, but he went to the root of the imatter and made the declaration that tem- poral prosperity is founded upon moral elements and does not rest merely upon sensuous elements. The declaration of the Saviour is that the lower wants of men— their social wants—will be supplied by the natural result of cause and effect if they depend all the time upon those moral elements of their nature that are over and above these wants. A MAN , i iy text. MUST live for something higher than the pas- sions chat ally him with the brute creation, This declaration of Christ is not that ifa man is converted he will begin to prosper right away, norisit that if a man joins a church he will prosper right away, for if that were the there would not ‘be churches enough -even in Brooklyn—to hold the men that wonld come. But what it does say is that these things give him an atmesphere by which the higher aims of life are strengthened and supported. The conduct that afivets man for immortality and glory is just the conduct that fits him for the lower and more ordinary walks of life. Neither is this a promise that under- takes io rectify all the blunders aud mis- takes of life. lia man has wisely chosen to be a mechanic or to go into public life, then lie will succeed better in such pursuits if he hasa religious manhood, Every one of you believe this. When yau look into society aud see men struggling throngh life, you see a man by and by break down, and you and everybody says that you have expected it. Why? Because the man did that which was a transgression of some law of rectitude. A man who does not believe CASC ina future life is deprived of half his ont if his lif ia al} } > ra a energy. if this life is ail, Why, we are living in adimgeon. Now, when I take this subject a little further, i am ashamed toseay i haveto oifer an apology for the use of the word religion. Religion has been andis used largely asacloak for respectability. In Wall Street when a man talks about his religion or trades on it they always fight shy of him. ‘True religion does not puffitself of. The religion that I mean is a SCRUPULOUS h HONESTY a scrupulous honor, so that to do wrong is to wound aman self. I say that a man that thus lives will be more success- ful than other men. I go further than that. If you look out upon life, as I am obliged to do, and note the failures of men, [ notice that these failures are not in the evils and object of their life, but that it is the want of a meral sense, There are exceptions here, such as the abuse of a man’s over con- fidence, but, take the crowd as they run, you will find that the want of moral sense is the cause. It ia legitimate to seek power through riches. Still ninety-six per cent of the men who go into business fail. The root of commercial disaster is the want of a moral elementin men. They are greedy. They have business enough to bring up their families, to educate their children. They could get along with one horse, but they want six, and therefore in- creases the chances of being run away with. They may be in business and find that they are able to conduct larger and larger busi- ness, but they generally enter upon it in a spirit of rivalry. They have given away to the spirit of an aimost uncontrollable ambition.. They lack the spirit of humi- lity. They do not recognize what humility is. They think it is something that passes over a fellow in church, Hundreds and thousands of men start~to go in ior a golden palace and end great in Sing Sing. ‘‘There are ways that seem right unto a man, but the end thereof is death.” That whichis true in regard to busi- ness is just as true with regard to schemes of exaltation among men. | have lived in Breoklyn thirty-four years, and I have always regretted that I did not keep a record of the rise and fall of the men whom I have known, of men who have struggled into notoriety in public affairs. Hoy many young men have 1 seen come up, as it were, in the night, and then be cut down early in the morning sun. The same is true of my observation of pub- lice men. Those men whose names are in the calendar of time, who will be mention- endures, are the men who aimed the high- impregnable morality. To all young men market to-day are honest men. such } ed with honor as long as the country, I would say that the scarcest things in the gort and with how many Jews the Ger- lmars have to deal. In England and France the Jews are simply Eaglishmen and Freuchmen who have not embraced the dominant religion. ‘They do not work together for po itical purposes, and, though of various political opinions, they sympa- thize generally with the people among whom their lot is cast. Germany, however, is invaded periodigally by hordes of Hebrew Poles, who in time become hank- ers and Hebrew proprietors, and whose in- fluence in the faancial and journaltic world will soon be almost boundless. ‘There Pol- ish Jews bring with them a deeprooted hatred of Caristians, by whom for centuries past they have been persecuted, maltreated aid despised. The Jews of the West are excellent citizens; bni the same, according to Professor von Treitschke, cannot be said of the German Jews. Otherwisé all that is asked of them is that they shall become ‘‘Germans like ourselves.” ‘‘There are other reasons,” continues the Professor, ‘‘for mistrusting, if not hating, the Jews lin Germany.” Passing to couwmerce and finance, he admits that in Germany there are many Jewish houses of business which are in all respects estimable; but ib is equally true thatthe Jews were largely concerned in the enterprises which brought about the pecuniary disasters of 1873, A newspaper may be regarded as partly literary and partly financial speculation, and here the influenve of the Jews, which is very great, is said to be “as hostile to the German Father- land as to Christianity itself.” In conclusion, Professor von Treitschke re- grets that in the nineteenth century it should be manifest in any degree that odi- nan generis himani spoken of by Taictts. But the Germans have to choose between one or two things, and, as they are not at all disposed to become Jews, they must insist, if the Jews are to enjoy equal rights with themselves, on those foreign- ers becoming German. The hostility now shown toward the Jews in Germany has taken a practical form in associations established for excluding Jews from Par- liament. Breslau—-probably the most im- portant German city in proximity to the Polish frontier— has taken the lead in this movement, and a large number of Breslau electors have bound themselves not to support the candidature of a Jew under any circur stances. Last Sunday, the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher announced the opening of St. Mary’s Hospital Fair, in the Brooklyn Academy of Music, and said that the hospital was under the direction of the Sisters of Mercy, « sister- hood that in every clime were ready to give the helping hand and a womanly care to the sick and needy. He did not commend the fair because it was Catholic, bnt in order that every advantage should be taken for Chris- tiars to show to one another that on the broad ground of human nature thev conld meet as fellow helpers. ‘Chat should be the attitude of one sect toward another every- where, except where it had doctrines of im- morality that were infections, I[f any mem- ver of Plymouth Charch went to vhe fair and he or she were captured for the Catholic Church he would not be very sorry, for if a fair could do that they were not of much use to anybody. sn usual talillielsiaalitiae In the Connecticut State Prison at Wethersfield a man by the name of Stephen Abbott is serving out a life sentence for the crime of murder, and in the jail at Elmira, N. Y., he has a son whois to be hung for a like crime on Friday of nezt week. It is a case almost without a parallel. The father, sixty years of age, in prison for a murder committed twelve years ago, asd the son, only 19 years old, facing the galiows for taking a human life afew months since. In some respects the cases are similar. Both claim to have com- mitted the deed in self defence. -—-- The death of Col E. L. Drake, the first man to sink a well in Pennsylvania in search of oil, and the pioneer in the petroleum bus'- ness of that state, is anneunced as baving occurred in New Bethlehem, Pa., on Mon- day Like the majority of the. early operators in oil, he made a fortune, lost it, ‘and in his declining years found himself in poverty. Unlike many of the 6ame class, | however, he was not reduced to abject waut, | fer the state of Pennsylvania, recognizing the benefits which she had derived from his in- genuity and enterprise, granted him a pen- sion, which has been the support of himself and family now for several years, >. While the wheat crop of the United States shows an annual increase, some other crops appear to be on the decline. A Wash- ington despatch states that the corn crop shows a slight decline from last year for the whole country. There was less land planted in tobacco this year than last. The average yield is 740 pounds to the acre, against 795 last year. The area planted with potatoes this year is about equal to last year. The | total crop, however, shows a decline. ‘a - oe | Merre Frames for 25 cents ; all other kinds ?. £ 1a8v. est, are the men who maintained the most! of frames very cheap ; all kinds of pictures Moulding, wholesale and North Side eof Market nov23 |frarhed to or er, | retail at Lewis, . Heuse. eh hee Se eae