* a Perea 6 he | oo. : a - 7 s ant ae a2 = . , es x Seye* Ki es rite ee UES ae a SD ere eee cee © eh a) ree WE geet eee IES sr See S BRS hy Ce On ee ad a dgeieh ees a rt ett ass THE DAILY EXAMINER. Tenus:—Five Dotuars a YEAR. * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”— Evriripzs. Sirete Corres Two Cents —_—— NEW SERIES. er CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1891. SS ~ VOL. 27.—NO. 50 —_—— GALENDAR FOR FEBRU'RY, 1891. MOON'S OHANGES., i Last Quarter, 2nd day, i2h., 299 a.m, W New Moon, Sth day, 9h., 597+p. m., N., below horizon First Quarter, 15th day, 2h.. 170 p.m, SE | i 1]|Wedneslay | 15) 14/918, 8] 59 Fali Muon, 23rd day, 3..,69 p. m., E. | a Sun Sun Moon thign Vays > DaY oF er iseu set« rises ‘oar. am fhombh mimory after 4 } Sunday 7 29 4 59) © 87; 3 10 9 3 ? Monday 2775 | 2 714 8 32, Tuesday "6 4) 3 19) 5 24 ab Vednesday | 25 | 4 30) 6 46 39 Chursday .. Se i541 8 O 41 » Friday | 22 6) 6 36 | so 4 Satarday } 2 8] 7 23; 9 54 47 ® sunday | 2 9 & O10 42 50 9| Monday | 18° 31] 8 30/0) 26 «F3 10} Tuesday | 12/ 8 55| morn | Be 12'Thureday | 13) 15) 9 40 0.47/10 2 15; Friday | 12} 17) 10 4) 1 27) 5 4 Saturday | 30; 39)t0 32; 2 12) 8 ié'sunday | 8} Oat 4.3 OF 11] i€é, Nlanday | Ti 92) 36! 4 6 i4 i} Tuesday } 6, 23) after! 624) 17| is;Wedneaday {| 5) 25) 0 22 6 33) i! uf(Toustay | 2% 26) 1 18/7 52] 96! wu friday | QO] 281217, 844; Qs! 2) Saturday \6 58 5 oo) 3 20/9 .8; 31 ® Sunday | 66) 31} 4 2210 7) 33 % Moaday | 54) 33) 5281040) = 35) 24 Tues ‘ay | 53) 84/6 32/12 12; aS 2 Weduesday | 51; 36| 7 8511 43) 44 % | Tburaday 49; 37) 8 35\aft 15 45 97 Friday 47} 331942 0 43 61 @% Saturday (6 45.6 30/10 47) 1 15/10 55) | ' | | | I DR. GEO. A. BAYNES, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON: Specialists in Chronic Diseases CHARLOTTETOWN. OFFICE- Queen Square, over Apothecaries Hall. Postal Address, Box 47. jy3—dy wy \ 7 E request a settlement of all acccunts du , nutes, judgments, etc, before the end of January. All debtors will please tace notice and save us tronble and them- relves expense, NORTON & FENNELL. janl4d—dw 3w pat dw 3w her sum jour WOOD! WOOD! ef (WING to the scarcity of Coal I have started a Wood Yard, and am prepared te supply Hardwood at a ress nable price, eut up to suit stoves, and delivered to all points in the city A. DOWN, Pownal Wharf. janl3—tf OF FED SHOREHOUND ANDAN!SES: Roup ot Cougs WhooPING COS OLDs. 334.0 YEARS IN USE. 44 PRICE25°PER BOTTLE x. ARMSTRONG & CO. PROBRIETORS St. John. N. B. WINTER GAOSSING ! _"s WINTER ROUTE between Cap Traverse and Cape Tormentine is now open. Passengers and Lurgage at the regu lar rates, Passengers will find this route very much the cheapest Passengers «ccom. modated in the very best manner. CAPT. GEORGE IRVING. deo? Am ent FRED. de ©. DAVIES, Dispensing ‘ hemist & Druggist, Great George Street opposite the Kk ©. Cathedral. JURE DRUGS AND CHEWICALS, Pa tent Med cines of all kinds; Horse Pre- Parations, viz, Condition Powders, Lini- ments, Biisters, etc. special attenti n, at any hour, given to Paysiciana’ Pre scriptions, day or night. DAVIES’ SALVE positively no equal ip the market. Ounce tried, no other used. Price 25 cents per box. 4130-—The Genuine No. 7 Liniment, 25 cts * bettie, and Dr. Eaton’s Asthma Remedy, Price 25>., 50c. and $1.00 per botile. *pendid line of French Perfumes and Toi et Preparations ; Atkinson's, Colgate’s, Gos- tre | sand other celebrated makers’ Perfumes ; ft?» Margerivon’s, Colgate’s, Crown Per ime Co’s., Cuticura, Morse’s, Herles’ and Albert Soap Co's Soaps. avana Cigare—the finest line in Char- tetown ~Osear Amande, Votre Nous, New- ca Queens, Picudor, and other well-known ods Pipes, Tobaccos and Smokers’ Re quisites $ TATIONER S | 4 Complete Stock of PLAIN and FANCY STATION- 6 s ERY, at prices that cannot be beaten. | SCHOOL BOOKS ! jettlonant to Dec, Sst, 1690 =A Haszard & Moore, PRINTERS, BOOKBINDERS, Aititude on the Great BLANK BOOK MAKERS. ur Yotto: Best Workmanship and Lowest Prices, "°° "8 —— ——{x )——_—— The True Inwa’dness of Unrestricted Reciprocity Exps.ed, SIR JOHN'S ADDRESS To the Flectors of the Dominion of Canada. He Defines the Government’s ~-—-——(x) Rpm pnts Headquarters for Books of all kinds. To the Electors of Canada : GexTLevEeN,—The momentous questions —{o) ae engaging public attention, having, in } the opinion of the Ministry, reached that SC HOOL BOOKS * stage when it is desirable that an opportu- | nity should be given to the people cf exz- | pressing, at the polls, their views thereon, the Governor General has been advised to e ; Cam hell’s Wine of Beech Tree Creosote terminate the existence of the present ~¢ House of Commons, and to issue writs sum- | moning a new parliament. Thisadyice His ) | Excellency has seen fit to approve, and eee . : : ‘you, therefure, will be called upon within a WE NEW REMEDY for affections of the Thaoat, Larynx, Bronchial Tubes and 44.00) time to elect members to represent Lunga, such as obstinate Sore Throat, Hoarseness, Bronehitis, Chronie Cough, you in the Great Council of the nation. I Congestion of the Lungs and Incipient Consumption. shall be a candidate for the representation —————PREPARED BY of my old constituency, the city of King- KENNETH CAMPBELL CO. WHOLESALE DORUGGISTS, oe ee ee = te SS FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. . py thay 1 ite Rs bY Meo Goges “ i 7 , Ae News 2 : +] in fea Ue ee = oe } Bit Charlottetown, January 6, 1891—w fs Le — / \z) aton, in soliciting at your hands a renewal of the confidence which I have enjoyed, as a minister of the crown for thirty years, it is, I think, convenient that I should take ad- Montreal vantage of the oceasion to define the atti- oct3Q _— tude of the Government, in which I am firat minister, towards the leading political issues | of the day. y ; D F RT | As in 1878, in 1882, and again in 1887, ‘soin 1891, do questions relating to the trade and commerce of the country occupy is higher to-day than it has ever been, and the rate of interest on our debt, which is the true measure of the public burdens, is less than it was when we took office in 1878. During all this time, what has been the attitude of the Reform party / Vacillating in their policy and inconstancy itself as re- gards their leaders, they have at least been consistent in this particular, that they have uniformly opposed every measure which had for its object the development of our common country. The Nationa] Policy was a failure before it had been tried. Unde it we could no” possibly raise a revenue suffi- cient for the public requirements. TIME EXPOSED THAT POLICY. Then we were to pay more for the home man- ufactured article than we used to when we bought everything abroad. We were to be the prey of :ings and monoplies, and the manufacturers wire to extort their own prices. When these facte had been proved uvfvunded, we were assurred that over-com- petition wouid inevitably prove the ruin of the manufactu: ing industries, and thus bri about a state of affaire worse than that wick the Nationa] Policy had been designed to meet- It was the same with the Canadian Pavitio Rail- way.’ The whole project, according to our opponents, was a chimera. The engineering difficulties were iusupzrable; the road, even it consiinet-d, would never pay. Well, gentle- men, the project was feasible, the engineering difficulties were overcome, and the road does! pay- Disappointed by the failure of all their pre- dictions, and convinced that nothing is to b gained by further opposition on th: cld ‘ines, the Reform party has taken & new departure and hus announced its policy to be Unrestrict- ed Reciprocity, that is, (as defined by its author, Mr. Wiman, in the North American Review a few days ago) free trade with the United States and a cummon tariff with the the United States against the rest of the world. The adoption of this policy would involve, among other grave evils, disc: imination against the muther country. This fact is sadmitied by no jess a personage than Sir Richard Oart- wright, whoin his speech at Pembroke, on October, 2ist, 1890, is reported to have said : ‘Some men, whose opinious I respect, enter- a foremust place in the public mind. Our pulicy in respect thereto is to-day what it has been for the past thirteen years, and is directed by a firm determination to foster and develop the varied resources of the Dominion by every means in our power consistent with Canada’s position as an in- tegral portiou of the British Empire. TO THAT END Pe we have labored inthe past, and we pre- = Is Palatable, Strenzthening, Grateful pose to continue in the work to which we ard Satisfying, the Drink to take have applied ourseives, of building up on when tired and used wp. ; this coutibont, under the flag of Eugland, & great aud p»werful nation. When in 1878 we were called upon to ad-! minister the affiirs of the Deominion, Can-, ada occupied a position in the eyes of the! world very different from that which she’ enjoys to-day. At that time a profound depression hung like a pall over the whole pecorons from the Atlantic ocean to the western limits of the province of Ontario, beyond which to the Rocky Mountains ‘stretched a vast and almost unknown wil- derness. Trade was depressed; manufac- | tures languished, and, exposed to ruin- ous competition, Canadians were fast sink- ( WING TO THE FACT that this has been a pretty hard winter for Farmersand ing into the — position of being almost everyone else to raise money, we have decided to offer some Special Mere hewers of wood and drawers Inducements to CASH BUYERS. We are in a position to do this because be- of water for the great nation dwelling tween our two Stores, we handle a very large quantity of goods, which we buy to the south of us. We determined wr direct frem the manufacturers, paying cash down for them, and thereby getting the change this unhappy state of Se e benefit of any discounts that may be offered. , ,feit that Canada, wich its agricultura Te- ‘sources, rich in its fisheries, timber and 9 mineral wealth, was worthy of a nobler posi- | Our Tea can’t be surpassed on P. E. Island for Gaver ee thet of aes cicnsbiee aie and strength. Our West India Raw Sugar is the cheapest for the United states." We suid to the Am-| sweetening you can bay. Our Kerosene Gil is the best ees Coney —e a0: . . . ~ or i wil yO ) . American water-white. Our $525 Flour is the best value oy ).¥fog« fair reciprocity treaty, but we. in the city. CALL AND SEE OUR PRICES AND GOODS. Our Molasses is bright, pure and nice-flaVored will nor consent to open our markets to you, | while yours remain closed to us.” So we inaugurated the National Policy. You all know what followed. Almost, as if by BEER & CGCOFF magic, the whole face of the country under- , 9 'went a change. Stagnation and apathy and Queen and King Square Stores. gloom, aye and want and misery too—gave | T . perity. The miners of Nova Scotia took OU SS KE; \combane ; the manufacturing industries in’ ‘our great centres revived and multiplied ; | EVERYEODI'S PILLS, for Indi-| JOHNSON’S COUGH SYRUP, for the farmer found a market for his produce ; gestion, Constipation, Bi iousness, Piles, and | ou.bs, Colds, Hoarsenes+, Sore Throat and the artisan and laborer employment at guod | the any aiimenta caused by the sluggish | Bronchial troub'es. Pleasant to take. Will wages, and all Canada rejoiced under the action of the Liver, Kidneys and Boweils. | not bart the youngest child or feeblest adult. quickening impulses of a new found life. Price 5c per Box. | towing treasury gave tu the government We have constantly in stock all the well-known Congh Syrups and Balsams, Cod Liver the means of carrying forward those great Oil Emu!sievs, and other remedies in demand at this seas n of the year, Also— Glycerine, works necessary to the realization of our Giyeerine Jelly, Vaseline, Honey ard Almond Cream, Philoderma, Camphor Ice, Cold purpose to make this country a homo- Cream, Cream of Witch Hazel, for Chapped Hands and Face, vt geneous whole. A, S. JO«NSON'S DRUG STORF, To that end we undertock that stupend- Corner Kent and Prince Streets. ‘ous work, dec 18—d&wky CHEAPEST GROCERIES IN TOWN —_A RHE AT-— BEER & GOFF. —_——{x) i | janS1l—2aw & wky -™ place to activity and enterprise and pros- | bh re of deficits was passed and an over- Price 25c. per Bottle. Brees . P Ch'town, Dec. 27, 1890. a an | = THE CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY. | Undeterred by the pessimistic views of our | opponents—nay, in spite of their strenuous ‘and even malignant opposition, we pushed 5 a forward that great enterprise through the wilds north of Lake Superior, across the western prairies, over the Rucky Moun- | tains to the shores of the Pacitic, with such linfl xible resulution, that in seven years after the assumptiun of « fice by the pre- sent administration the dream of our public —_( x )-—_—_—- . ‘ . men was an accomplished fact, and I, my- self, experienced the proud satisfaction of looking back from the steps of my car upon the Rocky M untains fringing the eastern — tt) —— shy 2 See | ‘he Canadian Pacific Railway now re" tends from ocean to ocean, “pening up an ; developing the countiy at a marvelluus Arrived--4 Full and a p! ~ Stock seveioring we ou feb gay y the east, over which the trade of the indies of K very thing te ur Ie. is destined to reach the markets of Europe. eR eer ee We have subsidized steamsh:p lines on both ‘RS! We inten ciearin out our oceans—to Europe, Ulin, Japan, Australia ARRI AGE BUTE ° 6 and the West Indies, \ + have spent mil- entire stock of Carriage Goods, and give up the trace pr tt ine extension a: i improvement of ‘or the coming for Cash. HARDWARE and CARRIaGE GOODS. Prices Low for Cash. season we will seil, at Specially Reduced Prices our canal system. We have, by liberal Terms grants of subsidies, prometed the building of railways, now become an absolute neces- sity, until the whole country is covered as with a ne'work; and we have done all for township purposes, for couaty purposes, tain objections to this (Uurestricted Recipro city) proposition. They argue, and argue with force, that ic will be necessary for us, if we enter into such an arrangement, to admit t'e goods of the United States on more favorable terms than those of the mother couutry; nor do i deny that that is an objection, and not a light one.” It would, in my opinion, inevitably resuit in the ann: xation ot this Dominion to the UniredStates The advocates of Uarestricted Reciprocity on this side of the line deny that it would have such <n effect, though its fiiends in the United States urge a8 the chief reason for its adoption that Unrestricted Reciprocity WOULD BE THE FIKST STEP in the direction of political union. There is, however, one obvious consequence of this scheme which nobody has tne hardi- hood to dispute, and that is, that Unrestrict- ed Reciprocity would necessitate the imposi- tion of diiect taxation, amounting to vot less than fourteen miilions of dollars annual y upon the people of this country. This fact 1s ckarly set forth in a remarkable letter ad- dressed a few days ago by E, W. Thomson, « radical and free trader, to the Toronto Globe, on the staff of which paper he was lately an editorial writer, which, the Globe, with characteristic unfairness, refused to pub- lish, but which, nevertheless, reached the public through another source. Mr. ‘Thomeson points cut with great clearness that the loss of customs revenue levied upon articles now entering this conntry from the United States, in ‘he event of the adop- tion of the policy of unrestricted reciprocity, would amount to not less thanseven millions of doliars annualiy. Moreover, this by no mesns represents the total logs to the revenue, whi b the aduption of such a policy would entail. If American manufacturers now compete favorably with British goods, despite an oquul duty, What do you suppose would huppen if the duty were removed from th. American, and retained, or aa is very prob- able, increased, on the British article? Would not the inevita'! le result be a displacement of the duty p ying goods of the mother country by those of the United States? And this would mean an additional loss to the revenue of many milions more . Electera of Canada, I appeal to you to con- sider well the full meaning of this proposition. You—I speak now more particularly to the people of this province of Ontario—are already taxed directly for school purposes, while to the provincial government there is expressly given by the constitution the right stricted reciprocity, to whick Mr. Laurier and Sir Richard Cartwright have committed the liberal party, but they are not the only objections, nor in my opinion are they the most vital. FOR A CENTURY AND A HALF this country h«s grown and flourished under the protecting «yis of the British crown. The galiant race who first bore to our shores the biersings of civi ization passwd by an eusy tiaus: ion from French te knglish rule, and now fuim one of the most law-abiding portions of the community. ‘hese pioneers were speedily recruited by the advent of « loyal band of British subjects, who gave up everything that men most prize, and were content to begin life anew in the wilderness rather than forego allegiance to the sovereign. To the descendants of these men and of the multitude of Engiishmen, lrishmen and Seotecmen, who emgrated to Canada, that they might beild up new homes without ceasing to be British subjects, to you, Can- adians I appeal, and I »#sk you what have you to gain by surrendering that which your tathers he:id must dear? Under the broad folds of the Union Jack we enjoy the most ample libe:ty to govern omselves as Wwe please, and at the same time, we participate in the advantages which flow from assuoia. tion with the mightiest empire the world has ever seen. Not only are we free to manage our own domestic copserns, but practically, we possess the privilege of m»king our own treatis with toreiga cvuutries, and in our relations wiih the outside world, We enjoy the prestige inspired by ao eonseiousness of the fact that behind us towers the msjesty of England, The question whieh you will shortly be called upon to determine RESOLVES ITSELF INTO THIS ¢ Shall we endanger our possession of the great heritage bequeathed to us by our tathers, and supmit ourselves to direct taxa- tion for the privilege of having our turiff fixed at Washington, with a prospect of ulti- mately becoming a portion of the American Uaion ? I commend these issues to your determi- nation, and to the judgment of the whole people of Canada, with an unclouded confi- dence that you will proclaim to the world your resolve to show you selves not uoworthy of the proud distinction that you enjoy—of being numbered among the most datitu! and loyal subjects of our beloved Queen. As for myself—my course is clear. A British subject I was born—a British subject I wili die, With my utmost effort, with m latest breath, will I eppose the “*v iled treason” which attempts by sordid means and mercena y protiers to lure our people from theit «liegiance. During my tong pubiie service of neatly half a century, I have beea true to my couutry and iis besc interests, and 1 appeal with equal confidence to the men whe have trusted me in the past, and to the young hope of the country, with whom rests its destinies for the future, to give me their united and strenuous aid in tuis my last effort for the unity of the empire the preservation @f our commercial and political tieedom. 1 remain gentlemen, your faithful servant, Joun A. MacvonaLp, Ottawa, Ont., Feb. 7th, 1891. ——D "Bermuda Bottled. | “you must go to Bermada. M (ae So aes © wilt nes Se ese. dector, I can nei the time tor the money.” Wel. if m sa EMULSION OF PURE NORWECIAN COD LIVER OIL. isometimes call it Bermuda Bot- tiled, and many cases of CONSUMPTION, Bronchitis, Cough or Severe Cold I have C1 RED with it; and adventc .¢ ‘s that the most sen tive «t.-n3ch Gan take it, } pophoxpiites whieh Fon will find it for sale at your Drugzist’s, in Salmon wrapper. Be sr > you get the genuine. 7" | @ scorr « BROWNE, Benevitc. § ed Se ee A OF OR ORE RTE TOO Owe oe LLL LL o>. Seen emind . | ee ~ to impose direct taxation. This latter evil you have so far escaped, but as the materia’ resources of the provinces diminish, as they are now diminishing, THE LUCAL GOVERNMENT will be driven to supplement its revenue de- rived from fixed sources by a direct tax; and is not this enough, think you, without your being called on by a Dominion tax gatherer with a yearly demand fer $15 a fami.y, to meet the obligations of the central govern- ment. Gentlemen, this is what unrestricted reci- precity involves. Do you like the prospect? This is what we are opposing, and what we ask you to condemn by your votes, Under our present system a man may largely determine the amount of his contri- butions to the Dominion exchequer. The amount of this tax is always in direct pro- portion to his means. Li he is rich and can afford to drink champagne, he has to pay a tax of $1.50 for every bottle he buys. If he be a r man he contents himself with a cup of tea, on which there is no du'y, and 80 on all through the list. If he is #ble to afford all mauner of luxuries he pays a large sum into the coffers of the government. If he is a man of moderate means and able to epjoy an o-casional luxury, he pays accordingly. If he is a poor man his contribution~ to the trea tury are reduced toa minimum. With direct taxation, no matter -what may be the prcu- niary position of the taxpayer—times may be hard—crops may have failed—sickoess or other calamity may have fallen on the family, stili the inexorable tex collector comes and exacts his trbute. Dves not ours seem to be the more equitable plan? It is the one under which we have lived and thrived and to which the government I lead proposes {to adhere. uate NORTON & FENNELL, this with such prudence snd caution that our credit in the money market of the world y- jan2@ City Hardware Store. Charlottetown, Dec. 9. 1890—2aw and wy I have pointed out to you a few of the material objections to this scheme of unre ¢ anally Opie <DYSPEPSIA aide epticure spep i estion. spepticure cures D _— indigestion. The ‘most’serious ‘and ig long-stand Ryepepeia ronic positively cure TsDyspepticurety Price per bottle }5cts and +00 (large bottles four times siyeof email) Garies IG Shot. Stglohn NB. S00 EVERYWHERE, Notice of Meeting. HE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING of the Shareholders of the Merchants’ Bank of P. E. Island, for the election of Directors and receiving a statement of the affairs of the Bank, will be held at the Banking Office om THURSDAY, March Sch, at the bour of Eleven o'clock, a. m. Proxies for voting must be left with the Cashier on or before Wapnxspay, March 4th, By erder, WM. McLEAN, Charlottetown, Feb, 6, 19@1—eod