“ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxirwxs. N KW SH i $ se Che Maily Examiner The Examiner Publishing Co., Island. Charlottetewn, P. E. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION :; Six Months.... Three Months.... bias One Month..... - O 5O é@ Advertising at most moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half yearly ry rly adv application. $10 $5 $3 TO THE- Three Families in P. E. Island WHO SEND— WRAPPERS Representing the Greatest Value in Woodill’s German Biking Powder, UNTIL SEPTEMBER Sist. igl3 & MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS AND- ertisements on GEORGE MUSGRAVE | eo CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. | SOeu st Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks, | Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks, Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks. Men's Rubber Coats, Mien’s Rubber Coats, Men’s Rubber Coats. Ready-Made Clothing, teady-Made Clothing, Ready-Made Clothing. New Carpets, New Carpets, New Carpets. | New Flannels, New Flannels, New Flannels, | ————{e)——_ commis torts HARRIS & STEWART, HALIFAX ISLAND, LONDON HOUSE pumeneen teste SincLe Copiers Two Cents EE TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 a , 1889.1 VOL.25.—NO. 103. enn een ee A TRIP TO CAPE BRETON ‘With the Maritime Press Association. ‘From Port Mulgrave to Grand Narrows Hotel. MEETING OF OLD FRIENDS. First View of the ‘Arm of Gold.” oontianemeneeal There have been larger parties, andthere may have been merrier parties, than the ‘Bross Party” which left New Glasgow on Thyrsday, the 12th September, instant ; but there never was—in my opinion—a company of men and women who better de- served a holiday trip, or possessed in a lar- ger degree the ability to enjoy one. The sacred impersonality which surrounds the Press prevents the naming of names. It , however, be stated that there were, incliled in the party, representatives of the English and the French, the Scotch, Irish and Welsh—.and chat all maintained, throughout the excursion, relations as kindly and harmonious as _ the patriotic and optimistic Canadian could desire or hope from the ‘‘jarring elements” of which the population of his country is made up. If it were hinted that one or two of the party seemed at times a little too anxious to secure the Sest rooms at an hotel or the highest seats at the table, to be in strict accord with the dictates of good feeling and good taste, the charity which thinketh no evil instantly suggested that this was but an exhibition of the worki of the creditable spirit of newspaper enter- prise,—and there was consolation in the fact that the apparently more enterprising ** didn’t always get there.” Our e from New Glasgow to Port NOTES BY THE WAY. through it from the lake to the bay if a lock were not provided at one end of the canal. As it is, the passage for steamers and sail- ing craft, alike, is easy andsoonaccomplish- ed. The length of the canal is but three quarters of a mile, and once through the _canalthe beauties of the magnificent Arm of Gold begin to appear. | At first the steamer’s way is through the midst of a group of islets covered for the ,inost part with scragg¥ wood. When these are passed the broadexpanse of the Big Bras D'Or in displayed and the high bold scenery on either shore. As the sun goes down the _ Shadows of the everlasting hills wre seen in | the quiet depths. The most enthusiastic admiter of scenic | effects will usually respond with alacrity to the call to supper. It was so in the case of our tourist journalists. After supper the hours of darkness were whiled away by means of songs, recitations and anecdotes. One of the latter will bear ‘repetition for the benefit of those who have not heard it. At the time of the is- ‘sue of farthings in Great Britain there was & general expression of wonderment throughout the kingdom as to the motives of the government for the issue of coins of Such small value. The subject was dis- cussed at alltheteatables. At one of these was Dr. Samuel Johnson, who sat persist- ently silent while the others talked. At ‘last the irascible old dictionarv-maker was ‘directly appealed to for his opinion. “Well,” said he, ‘my opinion is that the government made farthi in order that _the Scorch may be enabled to contribute to ‘the charities of the nation.” The Marion reached “Grand Narrows” ,at about ten o’clock, and our party trans- ‘ferred themselves to the Grand Narrows ‘Hotel for the night, and were lulled to ‘sleep by the rippling of the waters on the beach at its front door. W. L. C. An American View. Mr. J. Nye Cuarke has an interesting letter in the Newburyport, Mass., Herald lof the 12th September. The letter is de- scriptive of a trip Mr. Clarke made from Boston to Charlottetown and return. He! i gtock. speaks in the highest terms of the excellent treatment he received at the hands of Consignments of Island produce will receive | prompt attention. Rererences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank ot Nova s tla, Halifax : D. Cc. Chalmers, Manager Nova Scotia Charlottetown. Bank of JAS. SCOTT & C0, BALI A-=.. A iuil Stock of Wines and Liquors JUST RECZTIVED. nd Cases ROYAL BLEND, 150 75 cases ISLAY BLEND & GAELIC, luO Cases OLD RYE, 50 * CHAMPAGNE, choice brands, 160 * CLARET, 25 “* HOCK and MOSELLE, 2 “ LIQUEURS -~Cherry Noyau, Curaco, Beneuictine, 200 ** FINE YORT and SHERR a 160 * HOLLANDGIN and OLD TOM, 300 “ HENNESSY’S BRANDY, *, ** te lOO *§ BASS'S ALE, 206 * BURKE'S STOUT, 100 ** APOLLINARIS WATER, 100 ** BELFAST GINGER ALE, 50 “ FINE OLD RUM, ©* BINABANS lL. i. WHISKEY, —And a Full Stock of — CHOICE GROCERIES ap24 Agi —=1589=— a BOSTON DIREC Boston, Halitax and P. E. island Steamship Line, Brandy, Maraschino, Only Direct Line Without Change, CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON. the Staunch and Commedious Steamships Ty C: 9 Al ‘ . e age . $9 arroli” and © Worcester, having bee ; Gute thoroughly refurnished and put into the season of 1ue® iD every respect, Will, during with the OF 18°89, run as follows, commencing “ CARROLL,” From Charlottetown, Thursday ‘ . vth May, ai G Dp. m. One ese y ; ; Cha we the e vessels will leave Roston for and (ieodest “VERY WEDNESDAY, at Noon, be -y oO tetown ior Bosion EVERY THURS. ; of “IX O Clock, p. m oa ellent | sssehgerc accommodation. Low FP, tes "ir } fener cn St-cinss Passage Berth in well- enna. 2bin, $6.50. Stateroom Berth, $2.00 Lowest Rates for Freiv thich is carefully hone Freight, which is always CARVELL BROS., Agents, 1] ARRISON LGRING, Treasurer. town. augli—eod&wkly. McLEOD & McKENZ Star Merchant Tailors, ——= ‘> Mulgrave, by the Eastern Ex‘ension Rail- | Captain Brown and the other officers of the way, was quickly and easily made in the Carroll during his stay ou the ship. first-class cars of the Intercolonial Railway. For Halifax and other intermediate ports The high, grand scenery for which Nova! he has some good words, but, like every Scotia is rema ene kept the eye and the (ranger who visits our hospitable shores, it imagination well employed ; on pleasing | Was with Charlottetown he was most im- variation was afforded by glimpses of bays pressed. After describing the trip down the sunlight, and fertile intervales dytted the cordial welcome given the Carroll on caitle. Among the points of interest on jt? say,— and Jakes and running rivers sparkling in and the pleasure it afforded him tu notice | its season of growth no country, in the world could surpass it in this respect.” When will our bad sidewalks and our neglect to paint our houses cease to be a reproach to the Island ? ee ~ . — Ask For Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and be sure you get it, when you want the best blood-purifier. 4 With its forty years of unexampled suc- cess in the cure of Blood Diseases, you can make no mis- take in preferring Ayer’s Sarsaparilla to any other. The fore-runner of mod- ern blood medicines, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is still the most pop- ular, being in great- er demand than all others combined. “ Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is selling faster than ever before. I never hesitate to recommend it.””—George W. Whitman, Druggist, Albany, Ind. “IT am safe in saying that my sales of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla far excel those of any other, and it gives thorough satisfac- tion.” — L. H. Bush, Des Moines, Iowa. “ Ayer’s Sarsaparilla and Ayer’s Pills are the best selling medicines in my store. I can recommend them consciet- tiously.””"—-C, Bickhaus, Roseland, Ill. “We have sold Ayer’s Sarsaparilla here for over thirty years and always recommend it when asked to name the best blood-purifier.”-— W. T. McLean, Druggist, Augusta, Ohio. “I have sold your medicines for the last seventeen years, and always k2ep them in stock, as they are staples. ‘ There is nothing so wv for the youth- ful_ blood’ as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.”— Pharmacist, R. L. Parker, Fox Lake, Wis. “Ayer’s Sarsaparilla gives the best satisfaction of any medicine I have im I recommend it, or, as the Doctors say, ‘I prescribe it over the counter.’ It never fails to meet the cases for which I recommend it, even where the doctors’ prescriptions have been of no avail.”—C, F. Calhoun, Mcamouth, Kansas. Ay.*’s Sarsaparilla, PREPARED BY , | with clumps of bushes and lazy browsing {her arrival at this port, Mr. Clarke goes on Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass, Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. soil, and cou'd but a few weeks be added to Have entered upon their Semi-Annual Season of giving Rare Bargaits, 20° IWE PURPOSE TO CLEAN OUT, 1F POSSIBLE, THE BALANCE OF OUR SPRING AND SUMMER WEAR, At prices we have not hitherto offered, in order to make reom for our This step was unavoidable, and as a consequence you may anticipate rare plums. HOURS—FROM SEVEN TO SIX. McLEOD & McKENZIE. . Charlottetown, July 31, 1889. ee © PICKLING VINEGAR & SPICES Wholesale and Retail. ‘[\HE season for Pickling Vinegar and Spices having come I around again, we are prepared to supply our many custom- ./ers and the public generally with those articles at the lowest possible prices. ENGLISH MALT VINEGAR. We have on hand a Jarge stock of this Celebrated Vinegar, which is, without doubt, the best Pickling Vinegar in the market to-day. As we import this direct from England our- selves, we can guarantee the quality. WHITE WINE VINEGAR. We have received a consignment of XXX WHITE WINE VINEGAR, from the best manufactory in the Dominion, which we can confidently recommend to be first-class. we hai ce Cider and Golden Syrup Vinegars always kept in Stock. ee PICKLING SPICES. We have received another lot of the same kind of Spice as we had last year, and which gave such good satisfaction. Don’t buy poor Spices and thereby spoil your pickles. WHOLE PEPPER, ALLSPICE, CINNAMON, GINGER, CLOVES, MACE, MUSTARD SEED, &c., always kept on hand. i» B. Garpven, Mana; BEER & GOFF, FALL IMPORTATIONS, this line are the pretty town of Antigonish, with a large old monastery in its neighbor- hood, and the stock farm of Mr. O. C. Gregory, whose name is inseparable from the picturesque sinuosities of the P. E. Island Railway. Arrived at Port Mulgrave, directly oppo- site Port Hawkesbury, on the steep banks of the Gut of Canso, our party embarked at once on board the steamer ion. Marion is notas big as the St. Lawrence the Heather Belle. Both upper and lower decks are open at the stem and stern, so that her passengers, can view the scenery of the far-iamed lakes to the best advan- itage ; and her salvons and staterooms are ras cuimfortable and cosy are thuse which are found on vessels of her class. Altogether, she is admirably fitted for the work in which she is engaged; and the table on board affords, under the skilful direction and generous management of Mr. Mitchell, the steward, everything, well cooked and | nourishment of the tourist. It is pleasing at all times to meet old friends and fellow-laborers in good works ; or Princess of Wales, nor yet as small as | with. yet this is the custom here. are to be seen the most lovely flowers, arrang- “Sunday morning was bright and lovely, and the scene from the deck of the ship, em- bracing an extended view of the harbor and the opposite shore (Southport) was one of rare beauty, Not many very elegant private resi- dences are to be seen, but some - the public buildings on Queen Square, including the ‘Post Office and Provincial Court (or as we should call it, State House) and other build- ings present quite an imsosing appearance, The |The general style of the houses is about the same, paint as a general thing being dispensed Some of the stores are very fine. We have visited several of them and found them to beequal to to those in other cities It seems strange to walk through the streets in the evening and find most of the stores closed; In Queen Square ed ina manner not surpassed in the public gardens in Boston, though of course on a much smaller scale. stay, the Citizens’ Band played in the square, discoursing fine music. A large number were pryeant, the majority being composed of young adies, who forma very pleasing feature o prepared, that is needed for the healthful !this Island. The streets are tery wide, and sprinkled daily, but the sidewalks are a terror in general. Very few are of brick, and these are laid in every possible shape, while the it was particularly pleasing to meet on -board the Marion the proprietor and editor of the North Sydney Herald, A. C. Bertram, Esq., and to receive his hearty welcome to Cape Bretor. Mr. Bertram was born and bred in Prince Edward Is- land. He went to Cape Breton abour fifteen years ago to seek his fortune. His friends here will be glad to learn that he did not seck in vain. He has won for him- self an influential position in the Jaland of his adoption. As President of the Maritime Press Association, it was his duty to take the lead in making arrangments for the annual excursion. Asthe event proved, the work could not possibly have been better done. The hearty manner in which the leading men of Cape Breton co-operated with him in the effurt to make the excursion of the Press Association at once enjoyable and profitable was the best evidence in the world of the estimation in which he is held. From Port Mulgrave, past. ‘* Terminal City""—the ‘‘great metropolis” which a made on paper—and the long line of cottage homesteads built upon the rocky borders of the Gut of Canso, through Lennox Passage, with Isle Madame on the right, and over St. Peter's Bay to St. Peter's Canal, the é is smooth and the scenery pleasing- . diversified by islet and promontory, cove and towa. We found a number of vessels at anchor, waiting their turn to go through the canal. At the moment of our arrival, a very beautiful yacht, owned by one of the millionsices of the Great Republic, was passing through. a soSY oo Tt is complained that the caval iz 60 parrow that it will admit of the passage of | but one vessel at s time. If the original | plag of the work had been followed, the canal would bave been wide enough to let two vessels pags. But the Grits came in, and they had no faith in | the country ; the canal was consequently narrowed down tc meet their narrow views, and is now to be widened if the demands of company of speculative Americans have/,) plank walks are so decayed that were it not for the electric lights, it would be a difficuli matter tu get about in the evening. Tuesdays and Fridays are the market days, and it waa one of our most pleasant visits to the market that we enjoyed during our stay. At an early hour large numbers of wagons from the sur- rounding farms filled with the very finest variety of vegetables of every description, in tact equalling any of the kind to be seen in any part ot the world. The market is open all day and we should judge that most of the roduce was disposed of. A very pleasing eature was the splendid array of flowers offer- ed for sale. For two cents we purchased a fine bunch of pansies, with the prmere of having them attached to ou person the tair hands of the Island girl, Churches of various denominations abound, and are largely attended, During our stay we attend- listened toa very eloquent sermon. t is seldom one sees a finer audience than was xssembled here. oung ladies dressed in perfect taste, the sing- ng excellent, all combined to render tne evening a very pleasant one. We also a:tend- a very stylish wedding at St. Paul’s Church, the bride, a wealthy lady of the Is- land, was elegantly, aud as she passed down the aiste, I noticed that she was very lovely, and a most interesting object to look upon. As the happy pair left the church, showers of rice were thrown upon —s as they went upon their way rejoicing. onor of this saetins and 4 the fact that oue of the assistant clergymen was a passenger on board: of our My eee an intimate friend of the parties, the Carroll was very handsomely decorated trom deck to truck, and presented s besutifu] sight to an stabing wed, Notb- ing can conan the cordialjty which is shown ® stranger bere ; any information that is ask- ed, eveu from the most humble person, is given with so much pleasure, and in such a polite manner, that it wae really a delight to seek for it. We shall ever remember with great pleasure the evening we in com- paay with Captain Brown and the other \Oficers of the ship at the residence of Mr. Edward Chandler, a Well-known dry goods salesman, on King Square. The cordial re- the traffic are to be satisfied. canal. The level of the tidal water of the Bras D/Or is about three fest higher Se Sa airae. Whew 4 Pi re6@ te] “thas ‘chermtog ception given us by Mr. C. and his estimable ae as also by their charming guest from A curious fact is made evident by this | Newton, Mass., will always remain as one of the most p'easing features of our visit to the Island. Jo bidding it. farewell we dc af in an ag ‘ is VMIGUS OK | Udy es ae Oue evening during our | It was mostly composed of ' i—_—— aac SPECULATION. GEO. A. ROMER, Banker and Broker, 40 & 42 BROADWAY AND 5! NEW ST., New Yerk City. ee Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Provisions and Petro- leum Bought, Sold and Carried on Margin. P. S.—Send for explanatory pamphlet. sept20—dy & wky ly ————<2 1889. 1889. HE Clipper Bark “ EREMA,” 300 tons register, P. Ledwell, Commander, will Sail from Liverpool for Charlottetown about the 1st October, and will carry Freight at through rates to the different railway points on the Island, For Freight apply in London to Joun Prr- CAIRN & Sons, 7 Union Court, Old Broad St.; in Liverpool to Witt1AM BuLLen, 5) South | John Street, or here to the owners, PEF KE BROS. & CO, Ch’town, 2nd Aug. 1889. eod tl d NORWOOD FARM BY AUCTION. en oe ee | AM instructed by George J. Wright, Esq., to geil by Auction, on ibe premises, On Thursday, Oct. 3rd, AT 10 O'CLOCK, A. M., The Farm Property of the late George Wright, situated on the St. Peter’s Road, ant within 2 miies of the city. This Farm comprises 144 acres of land, nearly all clear, well watered, and ina high state of cultivation. The Dwelling House and Farm Buildings, whicn are all in good condition, will be offered with 60. acres separately or with all the land, as may be desirable. q } DU additional | ed the Methodist on Sunday evening and! AR RLS. emi: Cia pei ie