THE DA CeRM: hive DonLAKS A YEA} “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evnirivgs. LY EXAMINER. Sine tx Corizs Two Certs pert VEW SERIES. CHARLOTLETOWN, BP. FE. (SLAND. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1889. 2 — ---— “ “ oe eC . a €ije Daily Examiner fs issued Every Evening by The Examiner Publishing Co., FROM THEIR O1FICE, upp ONDON HOUSE,” GUBEN SQUARE, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. —e RATES OF SUBSC/RIPTION : | | | | i i ; i i : ' ie Pe i an ives i. as , 22 & Three Months..... jheeece etwa cet 1 25) ee ee . 08 a7 Adv ertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. ALMANAG FOR JUNE, 1808. MOON S C HANGES, et Quarter, 6th day, Sh., 49.1m., p.m., 5. K, Full M 13th day, ‘dh., 45.7m., & m., ae below horizon. : Last Quarter, 20th day, 3b., 22.6m, a.m, SE. New Moon, 28th day, th.. 4). 1m., a.m., N.E. — ; iit Sun Sun ;Moon: High Day's seas oF ™ KEK’ isesisets ; rises |water| len’b h mth m/morn| im 1 Saturday 4 18:7 38/6 23/morn 15 20 2/Sunday 17; 39: 7 161 0 3 2) 3 Monday ici wee Mik 7 23 4) Tuesday 15} 40) 2 16) 1 47 25 > Wednesday 15} 41ilo lj 2 3l 2% §) Thursday | 2121 28) 3 22 27 7iFriday — 14) 43\aft37| 4 26) 29 8) Saturday | 34) 44! 1 47) 540) 30 9 Sunday |} 14 4513 21654 31 10) Mouday 141 46) 417) 7 57) 32 11) Tuesday i 14) 46) 5 36) 8 50) a2 12} Wednesday | | 47, 6 4) 939 8B 13 Thursday 4) 47) 8 9110 27} = 33 14! Friday | 14) 47) 9 15it ha 34 15|Saturday | 14) 48/10 Lijaft | 34 16/Sunday 14; 48/10 55) O 45) 34 17) Monday 13} 48111 30) 1 35 35 18) Puesday 13} 48)11 59) 2 24) 35 19! Wednesday 13 48| morn | 3 17) 35 20'Thursday — 13! 4648) 0 24) 4 20 35 21\Friday — 13} 48) 0 471529) 36 22 Saturday | 49} 1 916 38) 35 23\ Sunday 14} 49) 1 31} 7 35) 35 24) Monday | t5| 49} 1 56|.8 23) 34 25 Tuesday | 15) 49 2249 5} o4 26 Wednesday | 13) 49; 2 57} 9 45) 34 27) Thursday | 15} 48) 2 34/10 25 33 28 Friday | 15) .48) 4 19110 59) 3933 ) Pa »f - a=! |} 16) 48) 5 Viiit 35} 48| 6 Timorn!15 32 | ia FRED. W. L. MOORE, (Late of Davies & Sutherland), Barrister, Notary Public, Commis- sioner fer Affidavits, Wilis, &c., OFFICE, -- LONDON HOUSE Above Messrs. Harris & Stewart's, next to EXAMINER office. 29 Saturday 30 Sunday } Searches, a Special attention given to and all Loans, Collections, Conveyancing, branches of Solicitor’s work ju4—Im eod w pd SPECULATION. GEO. A. ROMER, Banker and Broker, 40 & 42 BROADWAY AND 51 NEW ST., New York City. Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Provisions and Petro- leum Bought, Sold and Carried on Margin. Pp. 8.—Send for explanatory pamphlet. sept20—dy & wky ly MARVELOUS aR AS q “+ Pin Bigee ite . ei bo a ba it ; Goss Bw : a 7 = £ y =e . DISSOVERY. Oly Clennice Grsetem of Memory Troining. ,euc liscks Learned in ene reading. ivf wamiezing cared. Every child end ade't greatly berefitted. Groat inducements to Correspondence Classes, Powneetna, with Oninions of Dr. Wn. A. liam mond, tis w famed Specialist in blind D seases, ,12ict Greenleaf Thompson, the great Psyc!h: ‘MW. Buekley, D.D., editorof the Christa | . Y., Richard Proctor, the Scientis., 3 ‘ A W. Astor, Judge Gibson, Judah P. : 4, and others, sent post free by . Prei. s LOk ‘LTTE. 237 Fitth Ave., N. ¥- JameEs A, MORRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS -AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Reverences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; D. ©. Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scowa Charlottetown. WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS, 1 East Cuzap ann 9 & 14 Mincine Lave, Loxpon, ENGLAND. Represented in Canada by MogRiso Mousexave, Halifax, Oot. uw, 1887—— & } ' j i i | Ae | : 3 > ie } ao si » cc a & From England vi “LX irussels Carpcis, Tapestry Carpets, Kidderminster Carpets, Union Carpets, facusington Squares, Rugs and Mats, Paraso's and Umbrellas, Zephyrs and Gingnams. een eee an 3 rene ga ahs &. STE Al LONDON HOUSE. fe Local and Other Items. — - ————— Promotion..—Mr. J. S. McDonald has been promoted to the railway agency at Port Hill. ~ ' Youne Lavixs Jounnan.— This excelent monthly for July is at the Diamond Book- @ ore, ‘ ree | F H. & C.—Port la Joie Encampment ;meets to-night at 8 o’clock. The second and third degrees will be conferred, > | To keer the beard from turning gray, and * | thus preveut the appearance of age, use Buck- lingham’s Dye for the Whiskers, the best dye made sesh Kinkora Racrs.~ Don't forget the Kin- /kora races on Monday the 24th inst. A good ‘day's trotting is expeeted, ‘he track is in ‘good order. } - | SMALL FLerr.—Capt. Puloit, of the cutter | Critic, reports the American fleet to be small ‘iso far. The Critic is cruising on the north iside of the Island. - - } To Be Svure.— Terra Faute xpress: | Wabble—‘‘Isu’t it strange that lightning jucver strikes twice in the same place?” | VW alble—** Not i strikes su very strange. After it the place isu’t there any more,” Damacep.—A good deal of early wheat is reported as damaged in the west by the Hes- sian fly or grub. Some farmers in Kildare ‘are said to be ploughing up the wheat jand and resowing. Ail other crops are looking splendidly. once siiasisecelpaiiines A Rare Treat.—Mrs. Scott-Siddons, by the sheer force of inboin genius, carries jeverything befove her. She isan actress to all intents and purposes, and, more than this, she is one of nature’s own actresses.— London (Eng.) Era, See advertisement in to-day’s issue. -_ ~ & . may2—eod&wkly. we os ha es 4 > Bo es PERKINS & ST ARE NOW SHOWING AN IMMENSE OF New Prints, New Muslins, New Sateens, PARASOLS AND UMBRELLAS, — New Laces, Gloves, Laced iits, tibbons & Uorsets, BLACK AND COLORED DRESS GOODS, Cheapest Carpets and Oil Cloths in the City, ROOM PAPER! ROOM PAPER! ee Trade With Us and Save Money. -_—-_—-_--—_ PEKKINS & STERNS. Charlottetown. May 20, 1899 --dy & wky GOFF BROS. Are Away Ahead of Competitors for Boots aud Shoes, Cheap, Durable and Stylish. Vi MULES < —_— under all cirerumstances, and over all kinds oi roads, and have comfort- able and dry feet all the time when I buy my footwear ut GOFET BROS. ~<= end HOUR Charlottetown, June 5, 1889—eod wky P, J. FORA: Custom Clothier, ™ __-HAS ON HAND AND TO ARRIVE—— A NICE ASSORTMENT OF SUMMER CLOTHS, WHICH WILL BE MADE UP IN THE LATEST STYLES. Those in need of Shirts, Collars, Cuffs, Ties, Underwear, Hats, &c., &., should certainly call and see the Bargains we are giving in our new quarters, Next Boor to J. D. McLeod’s Grocery Store, Upper Queen Street. P. J. FORAN. Charlottetown, June 1¢, 1689—eod wky Twenty Mire Race.—The twenty mile go- as-you-please race at Souris came off yester- day as advertised, There were three entries, viz: D. McKinnon, Charities McInnis aud L. McCormack. They came to the pole in the order named. Best time two hours and three minutes. oo 1, 0. O. F.—In the last number of the Deminion Oddfeilow, » corre pondent from j Campteliton, N. B., writes: ‘‘An effort is being made to secure the services of a reverend brother from P. E, Isiand to deliver an ad- dress on Oddfellowship, «nd an appropriate programme is being prepared.” _ Berrer Stitu.—There is no use in puting tre announcement that wild strawbe::ies are on gule at Moneton, when we have them our- selves in Jarge quantities. A friend writes us that he enjoyed a dish of this delicious fruit with the usual baptism of vream on the 15th inst., and that they are now on everybody's table. jalkcepens ~~'Tue. Oak.~e A Toronto despatch says :— “ After taking part in several regattas in the States, and winning every race in which he competed, Wm. O'Connor, champion oarsman of America, has 1returned to Toronto. He will row Searle, the Australian, on the Thames, for the championship oi the world.” New Verston.— A new version of the Mary’s Little. Lamb story is given in the Arnold, Neb., News. Here it is: Miss Bertha Ne dhaim had two visitors at her school last week that were rather uawelcome guests, con- sisting of two large snakes. One crawled in at the open door and was quickly despatch- ed by her scholars, when auother one was discovered hanging over the top of the door- sill, which met with a similar fate. More Preprotions.—Rev. W. E. Chrismas is ecturing on ‘* Propoctic Events” in Oi phens Hail, Halifax. He says that Christ’s second coming will take piace in 1901, and that before the expiration of twelve months a terrible war will break out in Europe, as a resuit of which the 23 kingdoms wiil be formed into only ten, and Iteland will have self yovernment, Canada and America wiil fbenefit by the outbreak, but England will suffer greatly. , fa ceieliliiea lili Sam. Tury Come.—Another breach of promise case is reported from Nova Scotia. Catherine Davidson, living near Spring- hill, sues Stephen A. Herritt, of that town, for $1,000 damages. Mr. widower, and Miss Davidson was his house- keeper for many years. All went smooth- promise of marriage to her hag been made, which he denies. . a od A New Haxi.— Chicago to have an Oddfellows ten:ple, end ike everything else undertaken in tat city, it is to be erected on a graud scale, and wilt cost $1,000,000. The new buildiag wil! be located in the business pertion of Chicago, and vitl be arranged to accommodate ail the Oddfellow lodges in the city. In addition to the lodge rooms there will be a large auditorium that will accommo- date 10.0°0 people Office rooms will also be ariangel for, and it is the intention of the agsocistion to make it the finest temple in the country. is - - Sensitive.—A well-known punster was yesterday afternoon testing the water supply in front of his store on Queen Street, when two countrymen drove by. One of them requested a small quantity of the beverage, which was granted by the generous donor, exclaiming, ‘* let us spray,” aad pointing the nozzle over their head asa dew-ty. But the gentle vain from heaven was not in this case ‘* twice blessed,” for the recipient displayed chagrin, and hied away to the court of justice in order that his injured m-jesty might be avenged. He is stiil at large. A Cvever PersonaTion.—There were many instances of personation at the re- cent mayoralty election in St.John. Pro- gress has the following: A well dressed lady entered Queen’s ward polling booth, Tuesday mornimg, gave the name of a qual- ified voter, aud voted. She looked like a woman, she spoke like @ woman, waiked like a woman, and fur all the uninitiated knew, was a female. But she wasn’t. had shaved off his mustache, bor- rowed a neat fitting dress and personated a woman voter. leave again in a week or two for England to! Herritt was a} Tendency of our, Fish Trade. On Monday there went from St. John, by way of the Short Line, shipments of fresh fish and lobsters amounting in all to about aton. They were consigned to par- ties in Sherbrooke, Waterlow, Quebec and Montreal. Messrs. Leonard Bros., of St. John, for- warded a car-load of fresh fish by the 1. C. R. to Montreal on Monday morning. The weight of the shipment was 20,000 Ibs. In the afternoon the same firm made con- signments by the Short Line to Sherbrooke and other points in Ontario and Quebec. Personal. Premier Mowatt and family have gono to Europe. Rev. Father Danaher, ot Halifax, was taken suddenly ill afew daysago. At latest accounts, however, he was reported improv- ing. Cardinal Gibbons will shortly perform the initiatory ceremony toward ordaining the first colored priest in the United States by admitting Randolph Uncles to the clerical state, A Buffalo despatch says the family of Alex. Sullivan, who figures ian the Cronin murder case at Ciicago, reside in Amherstburg, Oat., in confortable circumstances, and are highly respected. Theodore Tilton, now a white-haired old man, is to be seen every night at a famous chess cafe in Paris. There is talk that he will soon publish a history of the great Beecher-Tiiton trial. Engineer Burke, of the British man-of war Caliope, the only vessel which escared from VOL. 25.-NO. 25. Torturing Horses. Under this heading a correspondent of the Empire cails attention to the ‘* Ameri- can Bearing Rein” so commonly used in this civilized age: ** Observe any horse in harness with a tight check-vein and see for yourself what he is made to endure—h's nose held up in the air, and the weight of his head and neck support- ed by the muscles of the iatter in an unnat- ural rv! constrained position for a long period ust be an almost unendurable strain, ihe only sight relief being afforded by resting on the bitin his mouth; and I have seen many a horse ~ith his mouth full of blood and foam a! +: a long drive, especially in the summer. Watch a horse in waiting at the side of the pavement, attached to a post or weight wearing one ef these reins (which is rarely, if ever, unhooked, as it might easily be from the saddle), his head cease'essly turn- ing from one side to the other seeking rest and finding none, and his eyes showing as plainly as words could the intense discomtort he feels. And now, what can anyone ad- vance in favor of this barbarous check-rein ? Here is a reason or two against it: 1. It is undoubted cruelty; the misery it inflicts is on the noblest of animals. 2. It ruins the appearance of a horse, who cannot carry himseif properly thus strapped | up; in fact an arched neck or crest is impos- sible when this rein is used; it conduces to « ** ewe-neck.” 3. It spoils the mouth, rendering it hard and callous, 4. It makes a horse fretful, impatient and irritable to s degree, and is the cause of many a runaway and accident. 5. A horse cannot jadge properly where he is putting his feet wheu his head is held up in Apia harbor during the great storm there, has been promoted to be fleet engineer as a reward for his services in enabling the vessel to steam out of the harbor. Much sympathy is felt with Mr. and Mrs, Henry Wood, on account of the death of their children, noticed in another column, Because of the nature of the disease their friends were deterred from rendering the assistance that it was in their hearts to give. The Prince of Wales has just been elected President of a committee formed with the ob- ject of erecting a monument over Father Damien’s grave at Molokai, and the construc- tion of a leper ward to be attached to the hos- pital for skin diseases in London. lt is stated that on Dominioh Day Her Majesty will confer tities upon several lead- ing public men in recognition of services rend- ered to Canada. The names of Messis Mas- son, Chapleau, Mowatt and Robinson are whispered in convection with the expected honors. Major Frost, of Boston, has received a de- spatcn from London, stating that Lord Salis- bury had granted the Massachusetts Volun- teer Militia rifle team permission to visit England, armed and equipped as a military body. The team will leave for London next , Wednesday. United States Minister Lincoln delivered a very neat address at his first public appear- ance in England. No doubt the expression of astonishment at the warmth of greeting was sincere. It must have struck him as a courte- ous return for the treatment accorded the British Minister at Washington. The Pictou heirs of the Innes estate are uncertain whether the amount is $15,000,000 or $30,000,000, Miss Innes appearsto have made a will which is ‘‘a perfect curiosity of mystical indefiniteness.” In a letter to the Halifax Herald John Walter, Sr., of River- dale, claims the[$30,000,000 for the youngest daughter (now living) of Murdoch Innes, who came to Pictou in 1803. - <> News Notes. A subscriptions has been started in Cork, Ireland, for the Johnstown sufferers. The Connecticut Senate has sustained the Governor's veto of the Secret Ballot : Bill. Affairs in Crete are quieting down. The Greek Government is acting as peacemaker between the warring factions. Smallpox and yellow fever are said“to, be committing great ravages in Rio Janerio and the adjacent country in Brazil. Ontario whitefish and trout are now on at sale at St. John, N. B., owing to the quick transport by the Short Line. Princess Eugene Esterhazy, a leading beauty of Austria,—has died, it is said, of grief for the late Crown Prince Rudolf, Russia, Germany and Austria have sent an identical note to the Swiss Government archists and Socialists. The Westminster Review points there are 800,000 more widows that widow- fact in a@ ponderous and instructive manner, The iron steamship Pomona, from New. York for Montego Bay, has been lost off Baracoa, Cuba. The crew of 14 were saved. ‘be steamer was valued at $60,000. A colored constable at Austin, Tex.,/ undertook to arrest a white horse thief the other day. A free fight took place between | ‘friends of the parties, which resulted in, the death of four whites and two blacks. A. dozen were wounded. . English are reaching after Maritime’ ‘Province breweries as well as American. An offer from some English capitalists to purchase the large brewery of Simeon ‘Jones, of St. John, N. B., has been de- clined, the amount offered not being cun- sidered up to the value of the property. Whatever may be said as to the lack of enterprise in Nova Scotia, no one can truthfully charge the banks of that pro- vince with not being alive to business and branching out in ali directions. New Brunswick, P. E. Island, Cape Breton are covered with agencies of Halifax banks; two of them have located in Montreal, one in Minneapolis, and now the Bank of Nova Scotia has opened out in Kingston, Jamaica, where W. E. Stavert. recently agent at Moncton, represents that bank. nena A French count when brought into court by eighty-two different creditors acknow- ledged that he was somewhat financially ' embarrassed, but he wanted a little more ;time to conclude a marriage with an Am- lerican git], It was granted. : ; } advising it to deal more severely with An- ly until taree or four years ago, when he marfe@, after which she claimed that a}. that} eniinmatinaas aie ers in England, and moralises upon this | @ star-gazing position, and he cannot recover | himself as weil from a consequent stumbie. In conclusion, I will add that I pity from the bottom of my heart the horses condemned to endure this torture, and trust that some | Teans may be tound to abolish its use or mia- use, About Horses. There is a mad competition among the wealthy residents of Buenus Ayres, South America, to see who shall own the best running aud trotting horses. The man who secured Prince Wilkes for $30,000 un- doubtedly leads the procession among the trotters, but the running horses in Buenos Ayres are more evenly matched, An offer of $50,000 was receutly made tor the Eng- lish race horse Goidseeker, winner of the Suburban Handicap. Little Queen, 2.40, by King Herod, foaled May 28, a black colt by Herod, 2.244. The aggregate ages of sire anddam |equal forty four years. Owing te-elose re- ilationship and old age a smail-boned, weak- ily colt was predicted. The result is the strongest, largest, biggest-boued foal the |mare has ever had, though she has had |sevon foals before by large Clay and Ham- | bleton stallions. / 3 » trotting stallion Nutwood, that created ‘such a sensation in California last season, ' making a record of 2.15, and showing him- self to be game as well as fast, died recent- ly from pneumonia. The loss is a severe jone on the, owner of Belmont Boy, an | offer of $15,000 having not long ago !refused for the stallion. by such strongly trotting-bred sires as Nut- wood are apt to speed at either the pace or trot with more uniformity than almost any other stallion, this having been shown in the case of Sidney and others. -_— r= ie ee oo Télegraphic Tips. Liverroor, June 15.—The British steam- er Kansas and the Datch steamer Lestris collided this morning. Both vessels are badly damaged. AsHLAND, Wis., June 15.—The Colby mine at Bessemer has practically shut down. Thisisdueto the fact that the ‘grade of ore it has been producing is not | profitable. Colby was third in the list of great mines in 1588. Lonpon, June 15.—The sailors’ strike at Leith is collapsing. Shipowners find little difficulty in securing crews. | Crry or Mexico, via Galveston, June 15. | ~The roof of the Merced market fell in ‘yesterday, burying a number of persone, Eight dead and forty-five wounded have al- ready been taken out, The soldiers are ,removing the rubbish and searching for bodies. SE Oise. At West River, June 19, Mrs. David Me- Ewen, danghter of William Hyde, aged 64, {[Punera) Friday 2ist, at 1 o'clock.) At Pownal, Lot 49, on the 13th May, Evelyn Henry, aged 6 years and 2 months. On the 19th, Georgia Jane, aged 4 years and 3 months, and on the 26th of May, Edward Earl, aged 2 years and 6 months,of searletina, children of Henry and Melinda Wood, “ Of such is the kingdom of Heaven,” Though cast down, yet not forsaken, Though afflicted, not alone ; Thou didst give and Thon hast taken, Blessed Lord, ‘* Thy will be done.” At Montague Cross, on Thursday, the 13th inst., Patrick A. G'Connell, eldest son of John O'Connell, Esq., in the 22nd year of his age. The deceased was a young man of good moral character. He served in his father’s store for a number of years and won and enjoyed the good will and esteem of cu:tomers, neighbors and all with whom he became acquainted, He left bis home in May, 1888, for the United States, where he found employment until April, 1889, when his health failed. His medical attendant advised a change of air and on the 5th inst., he lett New Hampshire tor his native home, where he arrived on the Sth inst., in a Jow and exhausted state. His remains were interred ia St. Michael’s Church Yard, Montague West. The largness of the funeral processiou (three-fourths of a mile in length) tormed a true estimate of the respect and esteem in which the deceased was held. May his soul rest in peace. Tue benefits of vacation season may be greatly enhanced, if, at the same time, the blood is being clesnsed and vitalized by the use of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. A good appetite, fresh vigor, and buoyant spirits attend the use of this wonderful medivine. | The pacer Belmont Boy, a son of the- ee Pacers that are’ _ ed >