> ~ re * ~ Ve s rae yutse, DAILY EXAMINER, a RIDAY, SEPTEMBER a ae . oi ‘ . | i “21. 1891. { ene “ye and Qther items. \eiklejohu s Grammer at Rr «<IVED - Tt . a iy asd ’ > + Ho ses for the season ee. sa.) lay he fovull yrusys i . , full assortment at ten 90KkS.—- — : "+ at the Diamond po.oK store, yeh 0b BS a \ berntifal lot of fancy hand ously ss opened at the Diamond P xes “Ss 3 iY yer than ¢ ” ore cu ap al oo ‘ ‘ Reratk.—LThe platform around tS ww ‘ : . . a vee. especially on the south ket House, &S{ , =: Mars very delapi ated ~ condition. to itt : jg itt i fhe larg store known as the ep — § \ y Wareh 1 bas been leased by one y goods ronan if 78 ne »« (yet a Combination Companion \B ‘ . hool requisites for o cents at the » your : * 3 Bookstore. , ygETING of the Abegw eit Football Club a pod this evening at , 3°, at the office he Del - san * att & McNeill. A puactual attend- Stewars ig requested. - «..vgy.—One of the pant ls in the west end “she north side of the Market House og pen smashed in. This morning & young for trial in larceny of a $3 or 14 days. Poyice CouRT , named Hutt was set Jourt fur it up the x Supreme ‘ apd a diuak Was UOeU a > - ~The members of the quested to meet at the Norice TO FIREMEN Ui ro Brigade are re ; Hall, on Sunday afternoon, at 1 o'clock, 3 |» attend the funeral the late Rufua Mac- hed? d a il yo Havirix —Lhe steamer Fastnet, Capt. ' jueves, lett for Halifax via intermediate se at six o'clock last eveniug, with a 4 ee) eargo and Mr. aud Mrs, George H. BB inmbs as passengers. ; iat PyaTERNAL MEETING -The first of a series ségrernal visits wili be made by St. Law- Me oce Lodge to W ildey L nig? at their regular wing on Friday evening, October 9. A good gramme Will be arranged, o goon axo LappeR Co.—A special meeting this Company wil! be held this evening, to ie arrangements for the funeral of the late Rojas McDonald. A iull attendance wanted a 73) sharp.—D. Finlayson, Secretary. - 7 Curgtaces CoLuips.—Two waggons col- ® ided oa the Malpeque Road, near the resi- ® cee of M. McLeod, Esq., yesterday after- soy, Ose of the vehicles was upset, and SE hevceupants, two elderly ladies, were hruwn oat, one being badly cut about the jd Dr. H. D. Johnson is in attendance ienpieetia . DpowNED. — Last Saturday Jeff D. a Yowart and Mrs Kennedy, while out-bvat- ion Lake Ponce de Leon, were drown- Si Their c mpanion in another boat ™ aid give n> explanation. They were wh marriod and wers out without the @ iweledge of their partuers.— Amherst Press. annie Warray.—No. 3 Co., 82ad Battalion, will metatthe Drill Shed this eveniog, at 1.40 tum A fall attendance of officers and met istegaested.—D. Stewart, Capt. fe Engineers will meet at the dill shed ia evening, ot 8 o'clock, to make arrange- matsfor actending the funeral of the late Vaporal Macdonald a ” > ™ Yew Store. — Messrs. Peter Kelly and itn MeKenna, who for many years were iu temploy of the late Owen Connelly, have med business in Connolly’s old stand, fuea Street, where they intend carrying on ifuil line of choice family groceries. Both fuog men having considerable experience inthe business will no doubt receive a fair ware of public patronage. Virgrans, Arrenrion !—Those mem- lersof No. 1 Battery, G. A., who were comrades of the late Corpl. Macdonald at etme the Battery was under the com- wd of Captains Pollard and Morris, re- wetively, and whe are not now connect- mh the militis escablishment, are re- wested to atten the funeral on Sunday, tal march together as mourners. - A Narrow Escape.—The little son of ie ©. Benoit, Water Street, fell from a iit while sailing about the dock at Pownal Watt yesterday afternoon, and would bare been drowned were it not for the witky conduct of ex-policeman Thomas Vaated ies who jumped over after him, and wought him ashore. Costello was working « the stone crusher near by at the time Ss Young Benvit was very : the accident. Mtea exhausted when rescued. » = - SAUPTING Ornpyance CompetiTion.—In the Umpetition at the Isiand of Orleans, Quebec, he Moatreal team performed the ‘*‘A” shift £0 minutes and 8 seconds, and the “*B” shift "16 minates. The Halifax team did the A” shift in 5.47 2.5, and the “ B” shift in 115, When the Island team had the “A” Sait almost completed, the unfortunate acci- vitwhich resulted in the death of Corporal coe occurred, and the shift had to be j Hned. The accident, according to a “patch tothe St. John,Sun was caused by the aye of a skid. Macdonald's right arm *% Were badly fractured. agi = pw or Inpiana.—The steamer kit Ch, ptinne, Captain Doane, which bedi Atlottetown for Boston, vis inter- ine pane, at seven o clock on Sunday bay © reached her destination on W ot nan morning at nine o'clock. She had teks tongh time in the gale of Monday - a wind blue at hurricane speed, toke was a tremendous sea on which Ridhiche the’ steamer for and half. At light ‘and ws arg a y _ off mae a then the Femained there till daylight, bee nun -. abated some. There was a ee rot passengers on board and oe ettibly sick, but no one was injur- £@ Steamer acted splendidly. -_ Evixce . ANGEL ~Tha special « er Tic Senvic Vines . LVicgéss 3 Condy Mal Meth, laterest Wan; : prting we Cloge attention of his vast andience as he them from Luke 16-19, the parable fa man and Lezarus. Mr. Clarke solo “The Clanging Bells of Time.” er meeting quite a number mani- accept Christ as their Mr. Prewer, in a short . address, announced thit the Trus- Rika — \ hurch would most cheerfally BT clock free to ali on Sunday evening, "WB listic = Mr. Bliss would conduct an ing gs 1. ervice. Meeting agsia this Me invited, 3), Every p2w free. Every- i the t far asa At the ced by Mr. KE. Wells Bliss in the! ist Church are daily increasing | vev. Mr. Carruthers offered the} yesterday : (veo Forbes, Prayer, Last evening Mr. Bliss held! \W W Macdonald, 0’ ' Goff's. i TELYGRAPHIC NEWS. SPECIAL Desratones To Tur EXAMINER, DOMUNION PARLIAMENT ‘Another Amendment and Another Division—Majority 24, (ene eee A Serious Operation, Orrawa, Sept. 11. In the House of Commons, yesterday, on motion for the third reading of the Act respecting customs duties, Mr. Paterson, of Brant, moved an amendment regarding sugar duties. A long debate followed, during which Casey accused the Minister of corrupt practices. Chapleau told him he was uttering falsehoods. Casey insisted on the withdrawal of Chapleau's words, — when the Speaker told Casey he was out of order and that Chapleau was right under the circumstances. After telling Ouimet, to go to the devil, Casey sat down and a division was taken. The amendment was defeat- ed by a vote of one hundred and two to seventy-eight, the Government majority being 24. The announcement was received with wild cheering from the Government benches. Beauvolut, a Grit who was opposed to Paterson’s amendment, left the House before division. Dalton McCarthy has given notice of a series of amendments to Controverted Elec- tions Act, which comes up to-day. Nearly all the estimates have passed the House,— only half a dozen items remaining. The supplementary estimates will not be down until next week. Senator Sullivan and Dr. Bergin, M. P., yesterday performed an operation on Mr. Devlin, making an incision below the ear. The operation was followed by serious symptoms, and his condition is serious. WRK IN COMMITTEE. Cold Day for the Grits. Their Charges Disproved Orrawa, Sept. 11. In the Public Accounts Committee, the inquiry was continued into the charges against Lieut. Governor Schultz. The evidence of the witnesses acquit Schultz completely. The Printing Bureau investigation was resumed. Duansereau, of Montreal, Chap- leau’s personal friend, testified to never having received any money,commissions or any other consideration from parties who sold plant tothe Bureau cf Printing. If they subscribed money to the Conservative political funds he did not kuow of it, An altercation occurred between Lister and Tarte, the latter asking Lister if he meant to say that he doubted Dansereau’s oath. Lister was forced to admit that he did not. Mr, Brooks Young, President of the New England Paper Company, swore that his Company had only two sinall transactions with the Government in five years, and that La Presse newspaper never profited one cent by them. Mr. Lister pressed witness very hard, who at last turned on Lister and said thathe would submit to no more builying. He was an American citizen and the committee had no terrorsfor him. He was not going to stay there to suit the com- mittee’s convenience, and be bullied by Lister. Mr. Chapleau was no friend of his, andif he knew anything to his dis- credit. he had no objection to saying it. It was a cold day for the Grit com- mittee, Lister succeeding in nothing, eX- cept to provoke a quarrel with Tarte. The Cochrane committee have concluded hearing evidence. The charges were all disproved, and the committee’s report will undoubtedly acquit Mr. Cuchrane uure- servedly. : ; it is reported that Mr. Tarte will submit a report of his own to the Privileges and Elections committee, completely exonerat- Langevin, but condemning McGreevy. Trotting Events. ae The Races at Amherst. Amuerst, Sept. 11. In the three-year-old race Parkside, owned by W. A. Brennan, Summerside, dis- tanced the whole field in the first heat. In the 3-minute class, Stranger, owned by. Jos Stanley, Charlottetown, was first; Zulu Chief, owned by G. Wood, Sackville, was second, and Dearborn, owned by George O’Brien, Maccan, was third. In the free- for-all, Minnie Gray, owned by Peter Car- roll, Pictou, was first; Olive, owned by J. G. Mahon, Truro, was second, and Lucy Derrick, owned by Newton Lee, Truro, was third. Sir Charles beat in the four- year-old. Best time in the four-year-old, 235; in the three-mlaute, 2 354; in the B21. j ‘ > 37) free-for-all, 2 33}: in three-year old, 2.375. ———__ oe Personal. Mr. W. W. Stanley, of Stanley Bros., re- turned last evening from his business trip to e Old Country. tothe arrivals at Mute’. House include Mr and Mrs Jas Barrett, Mr_ and Mrs Geo E Hughes, Mr and Mrs HJ Worth, Miss Barrett, Miss Mutch, Miss E Barrett, RK 3race, Miss Laura Hughes, Miss Mamie Huahes, Miss Hazel Hughes, Miss Gordon Hughes, we Gordon ‘Worth, Miss Josie 3 ft *h’town. le es 8 registered at the Osborne House , Vervow River Bridge; Leary. This morning there arrived; Isaac Trenholm, Cape Spear, N B; Mrs Eliza Corbe ¢, St Peter's Island. The arrivals at the Hotel Davies yesterday included: DE Clarke, Orwell; De Doyle, Vernon River; M Stephens, Orwell; S Mac- vape, Cambridge, Mass; Dorothy Macvane, do; AJ Kiog, Halifax; G Crawtord, St i Miss Surpsice, Pictcu; Miss H Lockport, NY; ( L Snow, Piccou; Robert Jardine, St John; Clarence Smith, Loadon, Eug; JM Hume and wife, Brooklyn, N -s cere EOD a Bananas only 10 cents a dozen at Beer- septlO 2: = =< a 2 -_ = ss > Lape * Sama TiN a Eastern Steamship 00, (LIMITED, The New, First-Class Clyde Built Steamer PREMIER, CAPTAIN A. H. KELLY, Is appointed to sail as follows :-— FROM HALIFAX on Wednesday, 19th of | August, at 7 p. m., and every Wednesday thereafter for Charlottetown and Summerside, calling at Sonora, Sherbrooke, Isaac’s Harbor, Canso, Arichat and Port Hawkesbury. RETURNING, will leave Charlottetown for Halifax, calling at intermediate ports, on every Monday, at one o'clock, a. m., Fares, to any port of call............ .-$3 00! Return ..... acess beiens 14 kad bdbcices 5 00 Rates of Freight moderate. The PKEMIER is a fast steamer, and has splendid accommodation for passengers. She | will make close connection with the steamer ‘ { Halifax sailing for Boston every Wednesday | morning. _ For Freight, Passenger and other informa. | tion apply in Charlottetown to FENTON T. NEWBERY. Agent. In Halifax to JOSEPH WOOD, Central Wharf, aug!3—all papers EXCURSION | camsiens caidas Cape Breton and Bras D'Or Lakes. Per Stmr. “Premier” via Hawks- bury, and Stmr. *“ Marion.” } FARES FOR ROUND TRIP: Ch’town to Hawkesbury and return. ...$ 5 00 ™ Sydney - <~cee For tickets and further information apply to FENTON T. NEWBERY, Agent. APOLLINARIS, ‘'Th3 Queen of Tabie Waters,” 16,030,009 Gallons Bottled in 1890. tay REDDIN BROS., jy304in eot pd Sole Agents. WANTS, LOST, FOUND &e W OR SALE.—A second-hand hot water boier (Spencer’s). which we have exchanged for a larger one. Builer is in good condition. Wit be sold ata bargalu. Apply to A. HERMANS & Son, Queen Street. tf—septli aug28— 2w ANTED.—A par'or maid and housemaid. Apply to Mra. Frep. Perers. tf—septll GENTS WANTED !—“ Life of Sir John A. Macdonald,” by Col. J. P. Macpherson. [fn the dark days of 1873-78, Col. J. Pennington Mac- pherson, nephew of the late Premier, proposed to him to write the story of his life. H» con- curred, and ge.ve assistance by letters to persons in possession of the necessary information res- pecting his public life. since which time the work has steadily proceeded. Owing to the author's connection and intimacy with his uncle, he is in & position to give many interesting facts which no other writer could, and much fuller informa- tion regarding the events with which Sir John was soclosely connected, Address EARLE Puob- LISHING HousgE, St. John, N. B., Sole Pubiishers. septid WANTED.—A girl wanted to hire, about 15 years of age. Apply at this office. sept9—3ieod pd y ANTED.—A zood Cook. Apply to MRs. CHAKLES LEIGH, Fitzroy Street. septs WANTED.—By a middle-aged widow, a situa- tion as housekeeper or to attend on an elderly coupie. Apply at this office, septs—lw WANTED.—A young man to learn dentistry, Apply at Dr. Murray’s Denta! Pariors, Queen Street. tf—aug3l O LET.—The Dwelling House, with stable lately occupied by the subscriber, on Hills- borough Street, next to Mr, Lemuel Poole’s resi dence. Possession given immediately. Apply to Judge Alley, or the subscriber, at Province Building. DUNCAN KENNEDY. septs—sat tu tf wa NTED..-A general housework girl to go to Boston. Aoply at Mr. Francis MuTCcHEs, Stanhope, Lot 34. pd—sept4 V ANTED.—Two good Pant makers at D. A. BRUCE’S. d&w tf—sept4 gibt W NTED.—A girl for general housework in a family of for. Good wages. Must he wel recommended. Apply at this office. tf—sept4 ALUABL™ PREMISES FOR SALE.—F¥or sale, the land with the building thereon, now in the eccupation of Mrs. Monagnan. This land is situated between Pownal and Queen Streets, and is a good stand for business or a mechanic. Fortermsof sale apply at the office of Me. R REDDIN. sept4 ANTED.—A goed plain cook. House heated with hot water; no washing; highest Apply at this oftice. ang28 wa ses. w* WANTED AT ONCE —Parlor and housemaid, with god references. High wages. Ap- ply at fHE EXAMUNER office. aug?1 Vy ANTED —A reneral servant, Anply at once to Mrs. F. PARKER CARVELL, Pownal St au gi—tt WANTED —A general servant in a family of three. Light work, every convenience and good wages. Apply at this office. tf—jy27 YTED.—A Cook. Apply to Mrs. W, A. WrEEks, Pownal St! ect. aug26 TANTED.—A housemaid in a small family. Washing given ouv. Inquire at this office. aug2i—tf ei es WANTED IMMEDIATELY.—A Cook. Good references required. Appiy tu MRs, _ eer NAUD, Dundas Terrace. YOUNG LADY from Kayland, who has been carefully trained a3 music teacher for the piano-forte, and who holds certificate of me it from south Kensington London, desires pupils. Is very patient. with children. Apply to Miss Hitt, Wey mouth Street (near Prince of Wales College), dy 2w pai—ang3i ANTED.—A girl for geaeral housework, W Anoly at this office. tf_ane3l ee eee nares NTED.—A xervant for ganerai h sts work. W vase to Mrs. C. V. McGreGox, Prince Street. _ aug2l ATRANGERS and the travelling public by »s Train and Steamboat !—Stop at the Railway Hotel, opposite the Railway Station, Water Street. Tea and breakfast, 50 cents. Rooms free.—J. BOLGER, Proprietor. 2w pd—septs a STANLEY BROTHERS — RECEIVED TO-DAY ax § SS. “Ottawa” from Tondon: Black and Colored French Lacing Cords, Children’s Cashmere Hosiery, — Black French Merinoes, Black Silk Velvets, Black Velvet Ribbons, Black Silk Ribbons, 7: Black and Colored Lacings. Black and Colored Plain Sateens, Black Crapes (Courtald’s).. Einglish Silesias, Black and White Print Cottons. Fancy Print Cottons. STANLEY BROTHERS, BROWN’S BLOCK. Charlottetown, August 7, 1891—eod & wky FROM = GREAT (x) ie i, + D tds Bw FALE GOODS —__— WOW - OPA ING AD— ; {x) ress Goods. New Mantle Clothis, New Velveteens. Novelties in eM bor (x New Manties, New Velvets and Plushes, New Cloth, Plush, Velvet and Serge Caps, in all the Wew Shapes. Everything Cheap! Charlottetown, September 7, 1891—dy & wky IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT! fot LX] JSTAS. PATON & CO. Gratefully acknowledges the success which has attend- ed their Great Alteration and Extension Sale, and now intimate that they will offer the remaining portion of their large stock of substantial Dry Goods at extraor- dinary reductions. It isimpossible to enumerate all the lots that have been offered, but the following list will give some idea of the leading lines :— Black Silks, Dress Goods, Print Cottons, Smn- shades, Umbrellas, Waterproofs, Dolmans, Jackets, Capes, Trunks, Valises, Readymade Ciothing, Under- clothing, Blouses. cic. Sale will last about Three Weeks longer. JAMES PATON & CO. Yharlottetown, August 24, 1891—eod & wky Books for the Holidays! fx] E have gut a Large Stock of NEW BOOKS (a3 w2!l.a3 th? 94 Saalird Works), spocislly salectel for the H ylilay S:ason Prices the lowest in town. Intending Sialeats of the Peinesof Wales College sould secure their Boks early, and the best place in Charlottetown to buy them is at the BAZAAR STORE. Usll bafore purchasing elsewhere. SCHOOL SUPPLIES very A A lot of LAWN TENNIS NETS ant RACK WLS to sell aterst. HAMMOCKS very low. cheap. ; . AIN POLE3, BRILISH PLATE MIRRORS, FANCY CROCKERY, Our stock of WINDOW BLINDs, PICTURES, CURT etc., etc., was never larger. * a s A splendid assortmant of PLAIN and FANCY STATIONERY, BLANK BOUK3, MEMOS, PENS, INK, MUCILAGE, ete, PICFURES FRAMED TO ORDER. Moulding and Pictures of all kinds kept in stock. Preserve Covers, 15c. per hundred. BAZAAR STORE. Caactintisio ea, J uly 2), LVtL—nigé wky