ts ai THE DAILY EXAMINER. Terms:—-Frve DoLtuaRs A YEAR. * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having te advise the Public, may speak —_+.—_—_— free.” —Evriripes. e SINGLE Copixs Two Crent NEW SERIES. 7, er . . Cie Darin Examiner Is issued Every Evening by The Examiner Publishing Co., “LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, EK. THEIR OFFICE Charlottetown, P. island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION ; Six Menths.. $2 50 Three Months 1 25 One Month . 0 eM Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. ALMANAG FOR OGTOBER, 1888, MOON'S CHANGES, New Moon, 5th day, 10h, 21.7m. a. m., S.E. First Quarter 12th day, lh., 14.6m., a,m., NW {below horizon. ) Full Moon 19th day, 5h., 56.4m., p. m., E. i i J.L, WHEAT. J.G.BRIDGE. 8. L. BURR. WHEAT, BRIDGE & BURR, Receivers aud Commission Dealers es POTATOES, EGGS, Batter, Cheese, Poultry, Game, Xe. coctenetate st Sart De erste 44 & 46 COMMERCIAL STREET, BOSTON, MASS. Roston Chamber of Commerce Weekly Official Market Report sent to any firm on application, sept28—wky 3m dy law B-0-S-T-O-N SUMMER ARRANGEMENT THE PALACE STEAMERS (MTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. Laave St, John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- iend, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at ; 1, . i-a0 & Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd Class; $9.50, Ist class. _ : : For tickets and other information apply to GG. ASHARP, F. W. HALES, mah oie P, KEK. L. Steam Nav. Ce. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. May 7, 18°8—00d wkr #AMES A, MORRISON. UBORGKR MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, | BROKERS ~AND— Commission Merchanis, ‘ HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Reverences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; George Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown. WARREN & JONES, TELA MERCHANTS, ) Kast Cuear ann 9 & 14 Mincine Lave, Lennox, ENGLAND. Represented in Canada by Moraison & Musgrave, Halifax. Oct 94, 1997 ANTHRACITE COAL. a, eC = New York, due here about i2th inst, : 270 Tons of the celebrated JERMYN which gave such good satisfaction last year. R. McMILLAN augi—dy & wiy.tf “4 An Immense Stock of Readymade Clothing, i (Gur Coats, Reefers and Suits selling at prices so cheap) : 300 PIECES NEW DRESS GO Last Quarter, 27th day, 9b., 53.1m., p.m., NE. (below horizon. i __ jsun 'S Moon! High! Day’s oa, >4* OF WEEK! -isesise rises water! len’ h mith mimorniattrn h m 1 Monday G 35 36; 0 58| 7 40:11 33} 2) fuesday 5| 3412 6| 835) 29 3 Wednesday 6| 32!| 3 20| 923; 2% + Thursday S| 30:4%/10 6 22 5| Friday | 9} 28) 5 50/10 45 19 3| Saturday | we wee ee 16 7: Sunday 12} 24) 8 26) morn 12 8| Monday | 13) 22) 9 44,0 53 9 9 Tuesday 14 «2010 59) 0 46 6 10 Wednesday | 16 1S ait 8) 1 34 2 1!) Thareday | 37] 16) 1 8} 2 28/10 59 12 friday | 38 1463 OF 3 32 56 13) Saturday | 20; 13} 259} 450! 53 14 Sunday |; Zi] 11; 3 18] 6 17 50 15\M mdlay | oS 2a 7 46 16| Tuesday | 28 71 414,823) 43 17|Wedneslay | 25) 5 433) 9 6 40 Ls Phursday | Zi} 4,5 [| § 43) 37 19 Friday | 2| 5 24/10 17 3t 20) Saturday |} 29) 0 5 50/10 49) Si 2! Sunday | 30/4 57| 6 IZ|Lt 2i| 27 22) Monday | 31) 55) 6 45,11 53) 24 | 23| Tuesday 32} 53) 7 19j\aft 27) 2 Vy Wednesday |' 34) 52) 759) 1 1) 18 i Thursday |} 95) 50) 8 4G) 141) 15] 2v| Friday | 36) 48] 9 41) 226) 12) 27/Saturday } 38} 47/10 41}3 19) 9 23 Sunday | 39) 45/11 47) 4 28) 20' Monday 41} 44) morn} 5 48) 3 30 Tuesday | 43) 43/056) 7 3) 0 31 Wednesday (6 45/4 43° 2 7) 8 4) 9 57 ARRIVE, ex Schr. Robbie Godfrey from COAL, | | | | } } ~“ Ae ARLOTTETOWN, P. Great New Fall and Winter a Goods New~-Stock Somplete-~Prices Low. | ED ee. wee eran PEREINS & STERNS. Charlottetown, Oct. 1, 1888. CRAND EXHIBITION DRY GOODS AND GLOTHING J. B. MACDONALD ’s. went come (} een ne FY ee Ma never before attempted in this City. es ODS, HATS, FLOWERS AND FEATHERS. jo Everything new, everything cheap. You will tind the J. B. MACDONALD, WUEEN STREET. right prices at Ch’town, Sept. 27, 1888. THE B. LAURANCE PEBBLE AND CRYSTAL pectacies y Eyeglasses —ARE— RELIABLE AIDS FOR DEFECTIVE VISION. See Testimonials and Get Your byes Suited * of the following AGENTS, who have a Select Assortment of these Celebrated Glasses on hand: In Charlottetown -E. W. Taylor, Cameron Block. “ Summerside —H. R. Crockett, Watchmaker. “ Georgetown—Angus McLean, Kent Street. — “ Alberton W. B. Dyer, Chemist and Druggist. | E. W. TAYLOR, ‘ 15, 18ss—dy & wky WHOLESALE AGENT, CHARLOTTETOWN. OLESALE AND REVAIL. = eee O Hardware, Oarriage Goods, ——AND—— MILL SUPPLIES, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, &e. — — ON HAND AND ARRIVING—A FULL STOCK OF THE FAMOUS GOODHUE LEATHER BELTING. NORTON & FENNE LL. May 29, 1888—2aw & wky — ———— ae Sn enenemnny ————S ISLAND, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1888. RY GOODS. The Cheapest, Gleanings From My Common-place 3 e a Li t y Books. Is desired and admired by all. Among the things which may best be done to enhance personal beauty is the daily use of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. No matter what the color of the hair, this prepa- ration gives it a lus- tre and pliancy that adds greatly to its charm. Should the hair be thin, harsh, dry, or turning gray, Ayer’s Hair Vigor will restore the color, bring out a new growth, and render the old soft and shiny. For keeping the scalp clean, cool, and healthy, there is ne better preparation in the market. “T am free to confess that a trial of Ayer’s Hair Vigor has convinced me THE JERUSALEM CHAMBER IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY. | This celebrated apartment, situated on |the left side of Dean’s Yard, has in_ its | windows some painted glass of Richard I1.’s ‘time ; and upon its south wall the curious ‘painting of Richard IL. sitting in his regal |paraphernalia, in the corunation chair. |Henry IV. breathed his last in this cham- | ber, into which he had been brought when 'seized with apoplexy, while worshipping at |St. Edward’s shrine, March 20, 1413. He | was then preparing for a voyage to the Holy | | Land, having recently assumed the cross) jin consequence of a prediction that ** he ishould die in Jerusalem,” which had been imade to himin the early part of his life. ‘** He became so syke,” said Fabian, ‘‘ while he was makynge his prayers, to take there his leve, and so to spede hym upon his journeys, that suchas were aboute hym jferyed that he woolde have dyed right) there ; wherefore they, for his comforte, | iat it is a genuine article. Its use has bore hym into the Abbottes place — aoe — the hair of my wife and and lodged hym in a chamber, and daughter to be Ce there, upon a_ paylete, leyde him before the fyre.’’ Shortly after, on Abundant and Glossy, but it has given my rather stunted mus- tache a respectable length and appear- ance.’’—R. Britton, Oakland, Ohio. “My hair was coming out (without any assistance from m, wife, either). I tried Ayer’s Hair Vigor, using only one bottle, and I now have as fine a ’ head of hair as any one could wish for.” —K. T. Schmittou, Dickson, Tenn. ‘ST have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor in my family for a number of years, and re- gard it as the best hair preparation I[ know of. It keeps the scalp clean, the hair soft and lively, and preserves the original color. My wife has used it for a long time with most satisfactory re- sults.’’— Benjamin M. Johnson, M. D., Thomas Hill, Mo. “My hair was becoming harsh and dry, but after using half a bottle of Ayer’s Hair Vigor it grew black and glossy. I cannot express the joy and gratitude I feel.’’—~ Mabel C. Hardy, Delavan, Ill. 5 . . Ayer’s Hair Vigor, PREPARED BY Br. 2. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. ‘Sold by Druggists and Perfumers. BLEW RAPPER tien recovering his senses, the king inquired where he was; and on being told in the Jerusalem Chamber, he adverted to the prophecy, and socn after expired. The event is related upon this authority in Shakespeare’s King Henry IV. part 2, act 4, sec. 4. The same story is told in Ras- tell’s Pastime of Pleaswre,and by Holindred; but the latter writer adds this caution: ‘* Whether this was true that so he spake, as one that gave too much credit to fovlish prophecies and vain tales, or whether it was fained, as in such cases it commonly happeneth, we leave it to the advised reader to judge.” The actors and the scenes differ in the different cases; but the equivoque arises in all upon the name ‘* Jerusalem.” The late Dr. Vincent pointed out a re- markable coincidence in a passage of Anna Comnena relating to the death of Robert Guiseard, King of Sicily, in a place called Jerusalem, at Caphalonia. In Lodge’s Deviis Conjwred is a similar story of Pope Sylvester. And Fuller, in his Church History, relates something of the same kind about Cardinal Wolsey, of whom it had been pre- dicted that he showld have his end at Kings- ton, which was thought to be fulfilled by his dying in the custody of Sir William Kingston.—See Cavendish’s Life of Wolsey. THE ABOLISHER OF MONASTERIES, There lived in Wolsey’s household a man who was said to be the son of a blacksmith at Putney, near London. He had resided on the Continent, visited Rome, had gather- ed wisdom from travel, and was now one of the Cardinal’s confidential servants. Two days ;before the Parliament met that was to ruin his master, he said to a fellow-ser- vant, ‘*I intend, God willing, this after- ‘noon, when my Lord hath dined, to ride up ‘to London, and go to the court, whero I shall either make or mar, or I come again.” This was Thomas Cromwell, the abolisher ‘of monasteries. He advised Henry to be- The Purest come himself ‘thead of the Church,” by which means he could at once rescue his* ‘‘ princely authority” from SOLD ABOVE GROUND. ** the spirituality,” accumulate to VOL. 23.—NO.125. peruked nonentities, before we look on the like of either again.—Quarterly Review, 1838. WORTH OF HISTORY. When, after the victory of Aumale, in which Henry IV. was wounded, he called his generals round his bed to give him an account of what had occurred subsequently to his leaving the field, no two could agree on the course of the very events in which they had been actors; and the King, struck with the difticulty of ascertaining facts so evident and recent, exclaimed, ‘Voila ce que c'est Vhistorie !’—** What, then, is history !” ‘*Give me my liar,” was the phrase in which Charles V. was used to cail for a volume of history; and certainly no man can attentively examine any important period of our annals without remarking that almost every incident admits of two handles, almost every character of two interpretations ; and that by a judicious packing of facts the h‘storian may make his picture assume nearly what form he pleases without any direct violation of truth.-— Quarterly Review, 1832. REGALITY OF GENIUS, Gibbon, speaking of his own genealogy, refers to the fact of Fielding being of the same family as the Earl of Denbigh who, in common with the imperial family of Austria, is descended from the celebrated Rudolph of Hapsburgh. ‘* While the one branch,” he says, ‘* have contented them- selves with being sheriffs of Leicestershire an‘ justices of the peace, the others have been emperors of Germany and kings of Spain; but the magnificent romance of Tom Jones will be read with pleasure when the palace of the Escurial is in ruins, and the imperial eagle of Austria is rolling in the dust. t. B. &. October 15, 1888. nS eaOaate In Memoriam. On Tuesday, the 18th of Septembsr, there passed away at the advanced age of 83 years, Frederick A. Dauncey, one of the oldest and most esteemed inhabitants of Lower Mon- tague. The deceased was a native of England and came to this Island in 1829. After work- ing at his trade for some time he finally settl- ed down on a farm on which he lived until his death. Shortly after his arrival he married Miss Mary Wightman, sister of the late Hon. Joseph Wightman, by whom he had six children ; five are still living, but the eldest, Capt. J. Dauncey, was accidentally killed at Charlottetown seven years ago. The late Mr, Dauncey was a man who disliked all kinds of reunning and deception, and wished to see everything done in true British style. He was an affectionate father, a kind husband and a good neighbor, and will long be missed in the community in which he lived for over sixty years, He was an adherent of the Presbyterian Church and bore his long illness with Christian resignation. He often mani- fested an earnest desire to depart and be for- ever with the Lord, His remains were follow- ed to their resting place in the Lewer Mon- tague Cemetery by a large concourse of people, there to remain until the resurrection morn.—CoM. Popular Preachers. The Rev. C. H. Spurgeon says about pop- himself “great riches, and get married Thus he cleverly appealed to Henry’s three dominant passions—the love of power, of money, and of Ann Boleyn. The spiritual authority, now transferred to the king’s TRY IT and be CONVINCED, — person, was delegated to this creature for a { season, and Cromwell became president of D {the convocation as vicar-general of Eng- { 3 t land. Lodge human power over the {conscience where you will, it is the abum- —OR— ination that maketh desolate set up in the {holy place; and so Britain found to her cost 3 5 hb 6 during all the time of the Tudors and the Flour =O anre Stuarts.—North British Review, No. 9. —FOR— a HEWING BLOCKS WITH A RAZOR. This phrase is as old as Livy, who relates that King Priscus, defying the power of an augur, desired him to cut a whetstone in I two with a razor as a proof of his magic, —AT— which he did. Hence in Goldsmith's ** Re- taliation ” ‘““To eat mutton cold, and to cut blocks with a razor,” CHARLOTTETOWN ROLLER MILL». octd —6w eod & wky A REAL TRAGEDY. The history of Sweden records a very extraordinary incident which took place at the representation of the mystery of the Passion, under King John [1., in 1513, ular preachers: One-third voice and per- ‘sonal presence, one-third sensational topics, land one-third heresy are the ingredients ior a |‘ popular preacher.” We are afraid this is true in certain religions. Weare surc some young preachers think so. The last third is easiest to obtain, and so they make it secare. |Any pretender can be heterodox; you need neither to study, nor think, nor ‘pray, in order to surpass all others in this line. Notoriety can be gained at once by being singular, and setting up to _know better than those around you. Every- body will talk about you at once. You can | impress yourself upon their memories by say- ing something very cunning and impudent, j}and as nearly blasphemous ‘as you dare to imake it. But is this anoble ambition? Can this be the course of a man of God ? We think not. Perish the popularity which comes of any doctrine but the truth, or by any means but that of solemn, earnest well-doing ! Empty sensationalism perishes like the green | herb and heresy dies like a noxious weed; but ‘the faithful preacher of the Word shall be had in everlasting remembrance.—Sydney | Presbyterian. ec = ER = A |Eezema. Itehy, Sealy, Skin Tor- tures. The simple application of Swayne’s Otnt- imMENtT, without any internal medicine, will OA SO ts Al ex —c1isss8-— BOSTON DIRECT, —BY THE— Boston, Halifax and Prince “gdward Island Steamship Line. THE ONLY DIRECT LINE WITHOUT CHANGE. Charlottetown {9 Boston. THe staunch and commodious Steamships TARROLL and WORCESTER, having been thoroughly refurnished and put into first-class condition in every particular, will, during the Season of 1888, run as fcllows, commenping with The Worcester, on the 4th of Gctober, One of these vessels will leave Boston for Charlottetown every SATURDAY, at noon; and ae for Boston every THURSDAY, fat 4 @lock, p, m, : Excellent Passenger Accommodation ! Rates ! ‘ ¥ARES--First-class Passage Berth in well- furrished Cabin, $6 50; Stateroom Berth, $8.50. Lowest rates for Freight, which is aiways Care- ully handled. : CARVELL BROTHees. Agents, Charlottetown. HARRISON LORING, Treasurer. R. B. GARDNER, Manager, 34 Atlantic Avenue, Low Lewis’ Wharf, Boston. ‘cure any case of Tetter, Salt Rheum, Ring- The actor who performed the part of worm, Piles, Itch, Sores, Pimples, Eczema, ‘* Longinus,” the soldier who was to pierce | aj) Scaly, Itchy Skin Eruptions, no matter the Christ on the cross in the side, was 80|pow obstinate or long standing. It is transported — ao — of — action | potent, effective, and costs but a se ; that he really killed the man _ who per-| octl2 6m dw sonated our oak who, faliing suddenly} im and with great violence, overthrew the! Belle Hamlin, the would-be world beater actress who represented the Holy, Mother. | of last winter, has gone lame, and she will King John, who was present at this spec-|not do any more fast trotting this year. tacle, was so enraged against “ Longinus,”! Reports say that when she trotted in 2.13] that he leaped on the stage and struck off she shot her bolt. nis head. The spectators, who had been, delighted with the too violent actor, became | " infuriated against their King, fell upon een and dengennne, Seen Sih im j : ille | until the poison is thoroughly e rate eer the canoe For this amen Ayer’s Sarsapa- rilla is the best and most economical medicine. | Price $1. Six bottles, $5. Worth $5a bottle. Few of those who love to loiter in the| ‘ picture gallery oi history, “‘amid the) painted forms of other times,’ but have felt week. their mareh arrested and their attention Lpnown in this country, even by charmed by two great figures in the com-| ——_—0 partment of the seventeenth century,—| Gustavus Adolphus and Wallenstein. There isin the former a single sublimity, a dif- fused and holy lustre, which sets criticism at defiance; and the glory of the saint is distinguishable around the casque of the Protestant warrior. There is a gloom in the grandeur of the other,—a shadow of pride, and passion, and evil destiny, which pains while it fascinates; yet, turning from both er either, we may wander with quick- ened step and an observant eye ** through rows of warriors and through ranks of a ee Catarrh is in the blood. No cure for this ; GUSTAVUS ADGLPHUS AND WALLENSTE*N, i eld The Nile has fallen thirty inches in 4 The water is now lower than ever tradition. When the hair shows signs of tailing, begin aff once to use Ayer’s Hair Vigor. This pre- paration strengthens the scalp, promotes the growth of new hair, restotes the natural color to gray and faded hair, and renders it soit pliant and giossy. -—_——- < > . >, It is rumored that Chief Secretary Balfour has refused to allow military to assist at the evictions on the Clanricarde estates. ‘ja Russians are buying extensive tracts of land in Palestine for the purposeof increas- ing their religious establishment. Ch’town May 3, 1888—yat sum jour kings,” a hostofcrowned, and helmeted, and se oe x2 * mart SS Ps Ae cesT AN ss —- wot a A A OR a ah ee OEE na aaa 5 e . ri ia iT a Ta? Pa ar