Dot.ans A YEAR, N. innesota, n, M. H. — ial Frem Duluth, M Vai; 44 festiml pean Mus. Ross,—-Having tested your «yauiOC HEAL i wish to express my atitude you by tl testimonial, which ie can use, ink it will assist you in sailing H my | severely wita t navinyg en- Saal ; y hand, makinga long and ep ut I ppl 5 * MAGIC HEAL ER at ifter t ree _ app?ica- tions I was abc word, ana im taree was up Yours Ve L\LONZO H. LAVERS. CHARES I. MORRISON, Commission Werehant THE DAILY EXAMINER 7) ~ 7 settee This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—uxiripes. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1890. es OFF ORE ORB OI OM OM READY- MIADE Men’s Overcoats, Men's Overcoats, Mien’s Overcoats. eenbtielineg inant bi ivimal tat Boys’ Overcoats, Boys Overcoats, Boys os ~——-—(x)- ee ee ee CLOTHING. ae C3 . FES ee ea See in its First Stages. Palaitable as Milk. Be sure you get the genuine in Salmon AN D—— AUCTIONEER, Dye Works, St. Joha, N.B. Piince Edward Island for iachines & “Td Cpurns Agent for St J General ager “[deal” Wa 108 Queen St., Charlottetown, P. EI. Oct 7 ee ACURE IS CERTAIN: aa IN EVERY CASE—-— ag" Ty ; hf } Tn } i ; : | Wien a Eaithig) Trial is Given) WOOCGDILL’S Wor + 5 n Hozcnges. ! i New Tannery LONG BROS.,, | Tanners. and Curriers, ie a ——DEALERS Wides, Caifsk'ns, Sheepskins, Horse | Hides, Tail-Hair, ete. Market Rates paid for Hides, etc. MALPEQUE ROAD, Opposite Ch'town Woolen Mills. . * ; oct6—3m eod — —— - ee } ! i { } ; i we a pes] | sone mci elat ree ea rast UURIS LOTS FOR SALE, [Ose en beste 1OSE two beautifully situated Lots ad- ot lining the Court House, 100x100 ; al-o on ye ners, on the bill opposite Dr. These Lots command and are desirable sites for Price low. Apply to | same Stz2 , McIntyre 8 real ! S besatiful view, private residences. nee. ‘Black Nap REEFERS ; Scotch and Canadian Tweed SUITS ; a DE 6 ee ee color wrapper; sold by all Druggis s, at 50c. and $1.00, SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville. Men's Reefing Jackets, Men's Reefing Jackets, | Mens Reefing Jackets. BOYS MEN'S SUITS i 5 surps! HORSES BOARDED | — | For the Winter. We are showing a large stock of ee a ae ee ee ne A elo ova eran ae \ eS SPOOLS LOLOL DL LOLOL OL OLE EM LOLOL OL LO OLA MLL ME EE LSE ELEC LEAR OLEH OL CAO f CS warm, ventilated Stables. Care- * : oe ful attention. Horses handled for Clothing at rh od erate prices. speed. Colts broken, Feed and spertion as idesire!, Terms moderate, (x) FARRIS & STEWART, LONDON HOUSm | 1890—5i Es For further particulars apply to J. T. WENANS, 46 Great George Street, Charlottetown. Stables in rear on King Street. octl7—dy 2m eod Telephone ,arlottetown, Oct. 23, ical eae isi Sc a ae Cl ocal Exhibition, ——__——_—(x >—_--— aj i 4 ILL FURTHER NOTICE the Exhibition of HOME-MANUFACTURED CLOTH- Z ING will be continued at 140 QUEEN STREET, The artic'es displayed to which your special atteation is directed are READY- MADE OVERCOATS, in Melton, Nap, Worsteds, Beavers and Tweeds; Ttue and TROUSERS of ene In calling your attention to our stock of BLACK GOODS, we desire you to note the Excellent Values given in French and India Domestic and Imported Cloths. In CUSTOM TAILORING we are prepared to make up the best-fitting garments at living profits. Here will be shown you Pilot Cloths, Worsteds, Chinchillas, Scotch Yweeds, Fine Beaver Cloths, Fine Trouserings, Canadian Tweeds. In GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, we have Fine Neckwear, Lambs’ Wool Underwear, Top Shirts, White Shirts, Cloth Gloves, Knitted Gloves, Kid Gloves, Waterproof = Coats, Woolen Underwear in Scotch and Canadian make, | mbrellas, Silk Handker- Serges, Cashmeres, French ae, Oe ‘Merinos and Henrietta Courteous attendants will be at your command. Doors open from 7 a. m. 'o Cloths, Dalgoa Stripes and ap sect tind! German Diagonals, new and UCE ich, Courtald’ iestly’ EDe * Ag rich, Courtald’s and Priestly’s % © s * * a GENERAL svperintenvent. |Crapes, Mourning Millinery, Crape Bonnets and Hats. STANLEY BROS., BROWNS BLOCK. p- Charlottetown, Sept. 30, 1890. A&A PROMINENT CLERGYMAN, whose name I am at liberty to reveai on application, A writes as follows :— Mr. A. J. JOHNSON :— Dear Sir,—For a number of years I nov7 have been suffering from icdigestion and its conse- : quent troubles. Some months since, however, I was advised to try your = rer Pills,” and am happy to say I am now free from any symptoms of nee 2s ‘* Everybody’s Pills ’ as a thoroughly reliable Famntiy Medicine, mil - < a on having no unpleasant remedies, and | would, with confidence, after-effects so common to such recommend all who have suffered as I have to try Received per Claribel. 10 Bundles SHEET IRON, 6 tons Galvanized Sheet Iron, 5 easks Zinc, 50 boxes Tin, 25 bexes Canada Plate, 3.000 feet Iron Pipe 1} in, and 1 in., 1,000 Fire Brick, — — i ton Fire Clay, : ped: 0 mua ge on ence See : 2 packs Russia Iron, X, <{es\ One a? «* Everybody's Pills.” Yours very cordially, * * * * EVERYBODY'S PILLS are sold only in boxes at 9% cents each, and will be sent by mail on receipt of price. Sample free on application. Prepared only by ARTHUR S. JOHNSON, Pharmacist, novl7 Corner Kent and Prince Streets, Charlottetown. ’ ; ' For sale low. SIMON W. CRABBE, nov24 —3w 2iw W alker’s Corner. 2%, ~ Nd WEST INDIA Steamship Lincs. (00 JOHN COOMEs, Charlottetown, . C. CARLTON, Souris. Or to ( ect] $ wind od J. H. BELL, The Leading Custom Boot and Shoe Maker of the Province, SNOW READY Winter trade with a good selection of and TOPS for the Fall and rs ¢, and woull respectfully invite iusn, > ae tirst-clars foot or Shoe to eect our stock and pric | : t and prices btelfure cin thelr orders. price we placing ay All ’ - Sur goods are gusranteed not to squeak, i. it well and con:fortable at o ers always filled up to time “own make | LEATHERS A ful! line cept constantly on hand. u . ality the highest, prices the lowest. RE SIN a ed et AIRING of all kinds promptly attend | J. H. BELL, | Upper Great George Street. Ci ww . + : , ‘town, Sept. 6, 1890 - 3m 2aw (thu sat) Watches, Clocks, G. H. —<—<——S > ————:— = |Halifax to Demerara via x Intermediate Perts. NEWAND LARGE STOCK Tae IT IS INTENDED TO SAIu THE s. §. LOANDA KERR, MASTER, On Thursday, 11th December, 1890, FOR DEMERARS, <n igllitincnn 3 Bermuda, St. Thomas, St. Kitts, Guadaloupe, Martinique, St. Lucia, Barbados, Trinidad—returning via the same ports and St. John, N. B. | : The steamer has splendid accommodation for first-class passengers. Tickets will be calling at Antigua, JEWELRY & SILVERWARE, ——-AT—— AYLOR'S issued at low rates. Freight and Passengers solicited. , EE. fa: Wi KE, Agent, NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE. novl5 = a cel cen: Oct 7—dy 2aw w PICKFORD & BLACK’: LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. >-—— ts Day in New Orieaus. All Sain (FOURTH LETTER ) Sir,—All Saints Day,as a loly day of ob- ligation, was an early appointmeat by the Catholic Church, but the observance of it by floral decorations spread all over the cities of the dead, as in New Onlvans, is an added custom that has arisen partly from the sentiment of perpetual affection and partly from a love of co-operative display. In New Orleans the silent m»jority are housed in tomb-palaces. with gateways of admission and statuary for guards, path- ways leading everywhere, under the bright- est Southern tlower-laden foliage; and as the living crowd of thousands upon thou- sands imake their way out of the busy haunts of city life, to wander in contempla- tion among the habitations of the departed, the unanimity and universality of attend- ance at these All Saints Day celebrations, as seen in New Orleans, seem to give a new meaning to this old-time holy day, and a brighter reality tothe too often meaning- ‘*Gone but net forgetten.” Those not familiar with burying above ground, as an 'Irishman would say, would find it hard to realize what such a system involves. Jn | New Orleans this plan of immuring the 'dead in what are called ** ovens,” is nut so {much a choice as a necessity, as to dig a | grave is t» come upon a water pool. It is | oaly the first families, « f course, that spend (smal fortunes on the lash homes of ‘their dear but dead relations ; ’ jbut some of these are prince'y in their proportions, in their quiet decora- tions, and for their symbolic and inuscriptive meanings. All, however, strive to recog- nize their duty to the dead, with more or less taste and outlay, as their means and affection dictate; but the rows of ovens, ‘that rise four deep and stretch in long rows, ' show that a vast number are only put out fof sight, without leaving any claim to de- 'eoration, or perhaps friends able or willing to furnish more than was required by the | municipal regulations affecting the disposal lof deceased persons. | Every single body, of both rich and poor, i bas to be cemented in,and occupy h’s or ber sepirate oven, hermetically sealed, and iseemingly so protected that nothing could ‘disturb their rest. But this is not alcof ‘gether a true conviction ; for supposing a tomb of sav four ovens is all tenanted, anc another member of the family requires in- ‘terment, the longest buried has to make | room for the l:test dead, and the ceflin is | bones depositec in a cavity below, out of the way. I asked an attendant at one cf these tomb yards if that was really so, and he made the philosophic answer that it war, but only strange to those who as strangers, were not usedto it. The people have to do it, *tand you know,” said he, ‘‘ that neccasity, though she creates customs, can make no laws.” | In the afternoon of Nov Ist (All Saints Day) services are held in all the Catholic cemeteries. But to give your readers an idea of the features of these New Orleans cities ‘of the dead, I will mention some, just a few, of the principal ones. The old St. Louis Cemetery is the oldest in the city, and lacks the regularity of more modern grounds You find Spanish and French ia- scriptions scattered about, and these mostly refer to the ancient Creole colonial families. |The finest monument in this is one of great height and belongs to an Italian society. It is surmounted with a white marble statue of Religion supporting a cross. The walls of this cemetery are lined with ‘‘ovens,” but sad as they looks there are sadder dis- coveries yet ! They are French inscrip- tions, and tell their own story and deed. You read,here and there, mort sur le champ dhonneur, or this variety, victime de Vhonneur, they mark the resting places of those killed in duels. 1 went to the tamous Metairie Cemetery on All Saints Day. = It is a few miles out of New Orleans, and there is a curious story about this particu- lar city of the sleeping. It was formerly a race course, aud Howard (the Louisiana Lottery magnate of years ago) applied for | j t ‘* What do you propose to do?” asked “one of his friends. ‘** Do? why, bury the whole crowd on their race course,” and he purchas- ed the whole property, and male it into one of the cemetery-wonders of the world. Mr. Howard was not long in goirg to rest there himself, but his threat has been | wonderfully fulfilled, for most of the race course members who would not have him lin their society have been very glad, since, j ito buy the privilege of being for ever in ‘his, for now most of them have gathered around him and rest in beautiful tombs. | Inside Mr. Howard’s, there is a remarkable | marble figure of ‘*Silence,” with the fore- finger placed on the lips ; like his own thoughtful appearance as king of ivttery- | gains imposing silence on his patrons. The 'Washington Artillery and the Army of | Tennessee make some beautiful displays of | memorial work, and by the way, it is in the i latter tomb that the Confederate President, | Jefferson Davis, is at rest, until a more personal last-home can be erected to the honor of the dead leader of | cause,” not prominently, however, in the lsense in which history crowns Robert E. Lee, for on St. Charles Street there is a forty thousand dollar column labout a hundred feet high, with as fine | bronze stature of that general on the top. Lee was the hero of the Great lost Cause. But New Orleans seemed to place no limit to | the admiration they entertain for both presi- ‘dent and general, and any cosmopclitan ‘visitor to New Orleans cannot but admire their consistency. They loved, not wiscly but too well. ; There are two more points in connection with All Saints day in New Orleans | wish to mention. One is the Confederate moaument of Greenwood Cemetery, which maiks a modern era of revolt, which though lost as to the causes of provocation, is more than found in many unexpected results that have sisen as the ontcome of more etnobling less assurance, though graven on stone, of | ’ tan] 5 , club membership, but was black balled. | **the lost e Sineize Corres Two Cents = 6} ; VOL. 27.—NO. ambitions and the industries ef an advancing civilization. The other has its place in the cemetery located at Chalmette, about six miles below on the Mississippi. The name cf Chalmette was given the site of the battle of New Orleans, because the proprietor of the planta- tion on which it wes tought, bore that name. It has the same dimensions now as then; but it is new a national burial ground, for Uuion soldiers, and being higher ground, the dead are buried, not ‘‘ovened,” as is the case in other,cemeteries. General Jackson's, (whose usual expletive was ‘‘by the Eternal,’’) headquarters, are within a luxuriant growth of eypress—a thick orange hedge screens a humble garden, where bloom the many shrubs ot this wonderfal flower climate, and any one who has intelligently read about this defeat of the Britishers (now known in bistory as the battle of New Orleans), can find the old land- marks all there, spared to Americans to teach them the grand lesson of self-reliance, which Canada is now readiny, and to plant in their inner consciousness the plain fact that there isa stronger hand than man’s that shapes their destinies, rough hew them as they may. C. B. BAaGsTER. => The Use of the Franchise. I observe that the new Rector of St. Paul’s Church has been giving his con- gregation advice as to the use of the fran- chise, and the Island Guardian reports him as having said: ‘**There were two things which, above all others, he thought we should consider when asked to vole fora candidate: (1) Is he a true Protestant,” etc. It is evidently & sisie qua non with this gentleman that a representative of the people should be a ‘“‘true Protestant.” If this is a sample of the teaching Mr. Ham- lyn intends to inculeate, let him amplify it at once and agitate for the repeal of the Catholic Emancipation Act. It enly a ,**true Protestant” can make a good repre- sentative, it follows that only ‘true Pro- testants” should be entrusted with the franchise, and that Roman Catholics, Jews, and all who are not ‘‘true Protestants,”’ S IR, can work only mischief in being allowed to in- terfere at all in elections. By all means, then, let us have the Emancipation Act re- pealed. Let Wilfred Laurier be deposed from the leadership of the great Reform Party and expelled from Parliament; let Sir John Thompson step down from the high position of Minister of Justice—-a reneg>de Protestant is the worst kind of one. Let the Governor-General immedi- ately dismiss all his Cathelic advisers—the idea of the representative of dler Majesty taking advice from anyove but a “true Pro- testant” in so vital a matter as theexecution of acriminal. Let Chief Justice Sullivan , ‘oken ™ 1 an< Me . s drawn out, broken up and burned, and the yacate the Bench, and strip the gown from his back. Turn all the Catholic school- masters adrift, beginning with Professor Caven—the education of our youth should be committed to none but “true Protest- ants.” Let our history at once be revised, -and let it be henceforth taught that Ed- ‘ward Whelan was a bold, bad man who sought to defraud the people of their liber- tics and rob them of their rights. = pains me, Mr. Editor, to learn that such an anti-Christian sentiment, as Mr. Hamlyn is reported to have uttered, should find expression in the pulpit of old St. Paul’s, endeared as it is to me by many sacred associations and from which my own father oft delivered the messege of peace ‘and good willto men. Mr. Hamlyn is ‘only a stranger in Charlottetown, and be labors under the disadvantages of not understanding our country and our cus- toms, He has a great deai to learn in the future and might with advautage take a lesson from the past. He has doubtless observed in his church a menument to the memory of its first Rector, the Rev. Theophilus DesBrisay, the first Protestant minister of P. E. Island, and whose Protestantism was above suspicion. If Mr. Hamlyn will enguire, he will learn that Parson DesBrisay was an intimate friend of Bishop MacEachern, and that they were often seen walking arm-in-arm, in the en- joyment of each other’s society. Let Mr. Hamlya enguire still further and he will find that Mr. DesBrisay’s successor, Rev. Tr. Jenkins, a ‘‘true Protestant” indeed, Vetter still, a true Christian, thought it not inconsistent with his Protestantism, while kkector cf St. Paul's Church, to go to the polls and vote for a Roman Catholic candi- date for the House of Assembly. | J wish to say nothing unkind of Mr. Hlamyln, or that would hurt his feelings, but against such narrow-minded intolerance as he is reported co have preached, | must declare myself. A Trout PROTESTANT. | Noy. 23, 1890. ~~ A $750 Corracs —Or its equivalent in cash will be given to the person detecting the greatest number of errors, words wrongly spelled or misplaced) in the Deceraber issue of “*Our Homes.” 1n addition will be given twa cash prizes of $200 cach,'four of $100,eight of $50, ten of $25, twenty-hve of $10, fifiy of &5, one hundred of $2, and ene bundred and fifty of $1, distributed in the order mentioned ir stiles and regulations, which will be sent with a copy of December issue on receipt of 15 cents in stamps. Special cash prizes given away almostevery day during competition which closes February Ist, 1891. Address Our Homes Publishing Co, Brockville, Canada, nov28 dy wy 2w. saliiicei | Farm anp Stock.—The farm and stock of Mr. Buchanan will be suld by public auction, on Tuesday, the Zad day of December next. The farm is situated at Lower Montague, and is one of the best in King’s County. The stock is very superior and inclades the fine trotting stallion, Almont M. See advertis- ment. dy till dais, Sos lialiaesen Norice.—All personal property tax, poll tax, horse and carriage and dog tax re- maining unpaid on December 10th, 1599, will be handed into the City Corrt for col- lection. n26 3i - —— — Opened today, another lot of ladies merinos and all wool vests.—Stanley Bros., Biown’s Block. 3i eod K PD. ¢. fer the Stomach. —