aN 0 » f ; j | ; ? 3 : i i } Meine i sigue, % wahiea oa ol THER NOVEMBER 2, 1889. THE DAILY EXAMINER. | DAILY EXAMINER, - eat Varia. | The principal item of European news this Czar’s visit to iweek is furnished by the | Berlin (his visit was entirely of a non political character. Not a word was spoken poli Notes and Clippings. wWti x ¢ ly De ; demand made up n I non governmen to ulter the t Mr tt lesirous of acting ie part of peacemaker in : establishit ’ won Ss ipl — Europe by holding the balance between i stry in Vanada At present saps ¢ Seance and Germany. In Bulgaria matters | stru {in Engla r Scotian® are “| have been more lively. Prince Ferdinand miele ae ose ow” has gone to visit his family, or as some say ing such shij s Uanada are Su! te choose a wife. <A re vent will act for him duties. It is sa wit the new s pyare os luring his absence, which many Russo the P bons, at /wen ween and ee ,; hils hope will be for ever. (Jueen Nata- posed yard of D __ playin _ lie of Servia has hada formalinterview with Bsvw se ‘great industry Dy & Fe-aujus'”| her little son, and the affair is described as ment of the tarifi more like acomedy than anything else. A The ¢ roner’s Tury sitt ng up |} message, eV idently dict ited by King Milan, body of nfortunate linesman w! W&S | was read by the little king to his mother, burned to death 1 a tangle « lectric | and the queen in replying, advised him to Wires In one of ft reets New| respect both his parents, especially his York, h ig 1 a verdict directly] father! This farce ended, Alexander ran incriminating two electric light companies, | to his mother’s arms and a private interview and =f iry are at the verhead | followed. “ es are a ns n nenace life an pt *,* perty Although the ris have sustain-} Jn answer to K. J. I would say that | ea the in) preve ng the ¢ cul la » not know when the art of knitting was poration from instantly removing allim-| introduced into England. I can find no | properly insu ‘ ¢ light wires, On|] mention of it until the 16th century, but | the 2g ind that the co ranies should Nay before that time it was pt acticed both in s reasonable time ect their inter *}Italy and Spain. The tradition in the —_ ply Wi eity 8 ce na, vw" toe tland Isles is, that it was first intro ne Ot tne Wer Qe verhead Wires} duced there wheu the Spanish Armada was in New York is sete : | dispersed, the ship belonging to the Duke Lord Wolseley, whose Opinions in mat | f Medina Sidonia being wrecked at Fair ers tary is certainly worth something, | Isle, and the rescued sailors teaching knit- speaks as follows of the German army :|ting to the inhabitants; and that from those Grea 8 is r war. it is infinitely |islands it was imported into Scotland and yrea rasa LC IOTA Ci l ror the moral Eng] ind B it before that date knitted and physical training of the people. De-jsilk stockings had been presented t » Ed- signed exclusively f ar, it has become] ward VI. from Spain, and some stockings the most important of peace institution ad been made in England. The Scots In itall G ns are trained gth } claim the invention of{knitting, because the and taug! é les . il | first Knitting Guild, founded in Paris, took cieaniiness and of h here they learn | for their patr St. Fiacre, the son of a to be honest and manly 1d are taught the!Scotch king Knitting obtained an un- ex ice of th vir s whi serve t | enviab e notoriety in the time of the great A sub 3 aw abiding citi- French revolution, from the practice of the ; lt isthe school of the nation. in Parisian women, when viewing the execu- Ww deep love f fatherland is f re Vit ns in the Place de la Concorde, of knit- ul ished, and w er 411i ciasses earn | ting, and as ea h head fell from the guilla- ‘ ere 18 Honor in edience and nobil-| tine, of counting the number as if they ty in self-sacrifice | were counting their l@tting stitenes. The In an ew with newspa r 4 best knitters on the continent are undoubt- respondent Walk al the | edly the Germans nd Poles, but the art is tall of the G am army, said Phat [| Umiversally pr ucticed, and even in Turkey ics wa nonsens lat niv e tne s ariel fez s ; are knitted, and tHeni ‘ that may be so strongly satis locked, dyed and mace to resemble cloth. i ules uy $e desir¢ at i the Pyrene atl Knitt ng executed in the bas c us I know war well enough to be| Pyrenees is celebrated for its lightness, and l ac oa nest man | st | also for the diversity of colors used in it; eav t al in the interest e | but noknitting exceeds in beauty of texture At ire and, ] it he whole w } that made in Shetland at Unst. k up is a lastresort. Th — i t | nK it can be av led I ¢ sider I fn ave at length come across the poem of y duty to do all power to pt which the last verse was given me. It is by Cc S Pt id e. h eI Urrace, ana entitied es he Grave. | give send us war I shou] have t vreateat con- | “e whole of it tor the benefit of my _ cor- © in being able to carry the task respondent :- ane led > Sane VUur alhan add to our The grave is dee Pp and stilly, Krength and a at ny rate a strong Fear round its brink abides ; guarantee Of peace; but [am also sure that With veil all] dark and chilly, ae power of Germ ny held in one strong An unknown land it hides. hand and dir cted by one firm will, is i sd = {rong enouch +t . ? Sek ei uboronen ; : “as. € ae , pages , t a coalition alone By as gueah 3 ight-bit Ken ng ; Te a Affection’s flowery token -M. Tarte comes . it b ldly in his pa- Fades on the moss ere long. paper, La Canadi: é, in favor of lmper i : a ee ; ot Federa 1. which he ad ten not as & lr} ere wid werd brides may lauguish, ; SSity ‘ . he n en ni And wring ae smesncpeat er valn ; 4S deserving of serious attention by all who rhe orphans a anguish | / Pierce not that dark domain. tX10US maintain existing institu- s and to ppose an ¢ ‘tual barrier to! Yet there alone can mortals ‘Nizin gand revolutionary ten-|} Their rest, long-wished for, tind ; Libera party, Ww hich he Lhere lies beyou i tl ese portals sims to be gravely t i\reatening the sta- A home for all mankina. uty of Contederation, and to be gradual- lhe heart long vainly pressing 4 us into annezation. Mr. Mercier, Through storm, to reach the shore, > says, is the he art and soul of a power Finds pea e, that price less blessing, ‘ ganization with this object in View, | Vhen it can bear no more. nd which is preparing a section of public] * % pin 1 for radical changes, and the editor I cannot tell ** Young Student” who Le Ca enné bluntly tells his friends} first used the metaphor, ‘‘ pouring oil on it they will never combat the Quebec} the troubled waters ;” but it must be y ery r with success, unless to his vigor- | ancient. The earliest work in which I is programme they oppose one equally|hrve seen it is St. Bede’s Ecclesiastical zorous, clear and well-defined, unless to} History. The following legend is from mericanizing ideas they oppose the British | 5; :pleton’s translation, 1565 :— ica firmly and witho ambiguity, and ** How worthy a man this Bishop Aidan e34, against the advantages of a closer | was, God the high and secret judge of men’s n with the United States, they set off| hartes by sundry miracles (the proper works the advantages of a closer union with | of his majesty) declared to ail the world. 5 A Great Britain end our sister colonies certaine priest Vitta, a man ' i great grauitle and truth, and one that for his qualities was much reverenced and esteemed of men of Religious Notes. honour at what time he was sent into Kent to att fetch Eauflede, Kinge Edwine’s daughter, who 4 Boston paper Says ‘There was no} after the death of her father had been sent surprise last Sunday when the rector of Crinity Church (Rev. Phillips Brooks) took strong ground in criticism of the conven- tion’ action, or rather, inaction, regarding rights of colored clergymen in the Episco- pal body, for what he said in his own pulpit was a reaffirmation of what he said in the nvention. But there was a boldness | uid breadth in the doctor's sooUut prayer ind the prayer book,that even ,108se who know how bold and broad Phil- ips Brooks is could hardly have anticipated sentences from Sunday will be certain to prolonged public in- selected morning's di These scourse twaken wreat anu terest : [Things which were acceptable to the mother cherch in England unsuitable to the yrowing churchin America. There have been things put into the prayer book whose appli are ation gcew less clear in our day than in the past, and there are things in it that never would have been put there if subjected to the judgments and religious in- i t of the present time and bound by no spit ation growing ou . . iw ' } existing aims. We should be narrow construction of the past in construing the right ar »bligations of the great church ife of the present. We need to have more lexibility in our prayer book. The church ould be liturgical, but not wholly liturgi- cal. By relyiag too constantly on the formu- i iated expression im tn ’ : ; prayer book we were nm uauger 01 ng waotly the power of $pon- J Nothing would be more edifying than a prayer meeting in which those should pour out their religious | emotions in extemperaneous and aneous yression present thougnts and unstudied utterances.” —— ee Prayer Books—One case Catholic prayer books, nicely bound and very cheap, just opened at the Diamond Bookstore. nov2 naialiaaaail Don’t growl because times are hard, Or grumble at the weather; Prowse Bros. prices make times easy, Their clothing is as tough as leather. All-wool Pants for $1.10. nov2 sleciial Remember—The great b: i . oe rgal é scared g argain sale at the next, 4th inst. This is a rare chance to pro about utterances | 2 ’ 0KSLOre COMmMences on Monday | __Rev. F. S. Coffin will occupy the pulpit cf matters of State, and it said that the reproved Prince Bismarck for | ittempting to bring up the subject of p rli- | Che Czar is now +} Czar sternly supposed to be thither to be married to King Oswin; appoint- ing so his journey, that he minded to trauail thither by land, but to retourne with the young lady,by water; he went to Bishop Aida, beseeching him to make his humble prayers to God, to prosper him and his, who were then taking their journey. The bishop bless- ing them and committing them to the good- ness of God, gaue them also hallowed oyle, saying, 1 know that when you shall have shipping, a tempest and a contrary winde shait rise vpon you godeinly. But remember that you cast into the sea, thig oyle that I giue you; and anon the winde being Ilaied, comfortable fayer weather shall ensue on the sea, Which shall send you home againe with as pleasant a passage as you haue wished. All these things were fulfilled in orcer as the bishop prophesied. Truly at the beginning of the tempest, when the wanes and surges of the sea did chiefly rage, the shipmen assayed to cast ancar, but ail in vaine. For the tem- pest encreased, the whaues multiplied so faste and the water so filled the shippe, that noth- ing but present death was looked for, In this distress the priest at the length remembering the bishop’s words, toke the oyle pot, and did cast of the oyle into the sea; which being done (according as the vertuous bishop had forsaide) the sea calmed, the bright sonne appeared, the shippe passed on with a most prosperous viage. Thus the man of God, by the spirit of prophecy, foreshowed the tempest to come; and by the same holy spirit, though bodely absent, appaised the same. No common re porter of vucertain rumours, but a very cred- ible man of our Church, Cynimund by name, showed me the processe of this miracle: who sside that he had hearde it of that same Vitta, the priest, in whom the miracle was wrought.” Religious Services, Gospel meeting to-morrow from Subject— David's Rebellious Every- at 8 o'clock. t to 5 o'clock. Son. Lesson; 2 Samuel,'15, 1 to 12. body is welcome. Reeelens in the Upper Prince Street Method? ist Church to-morrow :—7.30 a m., Prayer Meeting; 1) a. m., Preaching and the Sacra- ment of the Lord’s Supper; 2.15 p. m., Sab- bath School; 7p. m, Preaching; and the usual Evangelistic Meeting. Morning and | Evening Service by the Pastor, the Rev. W. \W. Brewer. Baptist Church Services to-morrow, (Sun- day) in the Y. M. C. A. Hall, as usual, at 11 a. m., and 7 p. m, Preacher, Rev. J. C, Spurr. HOTEL ARRIVALS. HOTEL DAVIES, Nov | —D A Mackinnon, Georgetown; Miss lersier, J F Black, M Giblin, Montreal; G M Atwood, Truro; D Murphy, Souris; W A Forbes, G W C Oland, T C Creighton, Hali- fax: J © Brown, C P Parent, Montreal; H M Griffin, Toronto; Allan Finlayson, Pictou. OSBORNE HOUSE. Nov 1—W G Silliphant, P E 1 R; F But- ler, St Dunstan's College; M O'Connor, Sum- merside; G F Owen, Cardigan Bridge; James Evan, Mt Stewart; W 5 Easton, Georgetown. RUGS ‘cous AND cows ‘Johnson's Cough Syrup, ARTHUR 5S. ee R Cor. Prepared by Pharmacist, S71 OU hs Kent and Prince Sts, | lye rd Auction of Furniture. ce ee nov2 i ber Sth, at 2 p. m. :— good order, R. BEAIRSTO, Auctioneer. AUCTION SALE wl iis Carriage Stock, Blacksmith Tools, &e, &e. ee nov2 AM instructed by J. J. Seaman, Ksq., ta sell by Auction, at his Work and Carriage Factory, situated on Upper Prince Street, \On Thursday, t4th Instant, | AT 11 O'CLOCK, A, M., All his CARRIAGE STOCK, BLACKSMITH POOLS, &c , consisting of : Four new Buggies, two Buggy Tops, two Express Wagons, new and second-hand Sleighs, Whitewood, Hick- ory and Birch Timber, Spokes, Rims, Shafts, Axles, Iron, Steel, ete. [ron Lathe and Wheel, one Drilling Machine latest improved), one Screwing Machine, laps, Dies, Blacksmith Tools, fifteen tons Blacksmith Coal, two sets Carpenter’s Tools, Wood and Iron Cramps, one Hub Boxing Machine (nearly new), Grindstone, two Shop Stoves, one Eleetrie Lamp, six large Glass uamps, four Work Benches, with Vices at- tached, etc. GEO. M. HARRIS, AUCTION SALE HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. I AM instrueted by J. J. Seaman, Esq., to sell by Auction, at his Residénce on [J pper Queen Street, On Wednesday, 13th Instant, AT 11 O'CLOCK, A. M., Ali his HGUSEHOLD FURNITURE, con- sisting of one Parlor Set, in walnut and hair cloth, one Bell Organ, extra fine’toned, Ex- tension Table, Sitting Room Chairs, Easy Chair, Rocking Chair and Lounge, Walnut Sideboard, one Singer Sewing Machine (new), two Bedroom Suites in ash and wainut, one Single Bed, Wash Stand and Table, Child's Cot, Chair and Carriage, Hall Stand, two Hanging Lamps, four Glass Lamps, Pictures in oil and Chromos, one set China and one set China Dishes. — Brussels, Scotch and Tapestry Carpets Kitchen Furniture, ete. Cooking Stove, Stove Pipe and Drum, one Bedroom Stove, GEO. M. HARRIS, nov] —pat Auctioneer, “God Speed the Plough.” ee me Harvest and Thanksgiving CONCERT. HARVEST CONCERT will be given by 44 the Sunday School Scholars of the Upper Methodist Church, assisted by an Adult Chorus—W. A. Hawley, Condactor—on the Evening of Thursday, November 14th, St. Peter’s Church.—Festival services for All Saints: Holy Communion, 8 a. m. and 1] a. m.; Matins, 10.15 a. m,; Children’s Service, 3 p. m.; Evensong, 7 p. m. Don’t forget the Railway Gospel Meeting at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon, in McLeod’s Hall. Strangers always welcome. Lesson— Romans 5-1: ‘* Therefore being jastified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” cure gifts. nov? _ >—... te sols — Zion Church to-morrow. and 7 in the ey ening. wdne « oo eee Services at 1] a. m§ Morning prayer meet IN THE CHURCH, COMMENCING AT EIGHT O'CLOCK. ‘ The Church will be appropriately decorated with a bountiful supply of the various pro- ducts of orchard and field. It is upon to make this an unique and attractive feature of the Entertainment, | Tickets, 20 cents. 15 cents. | Programme next week. Children’s Tickets, | HAVE MADE OUR STOCK MORE COMPLETE THAT on 9) N*t TEA SETS, Fruit Dishes, Dessert Egg Frames. The prettiest Breakfast Rings we have seen. and Field Glasses cheap. nove Watchmaker, Jeweler and Opt SATURDAY, NOVEMBER ~~ |MPORTATION TABLE AND FANGY SILVERWAR Cruet Frames, with new styles of bottles, Baking Dishes, Knives, Spoons, Forks. EK. W. TAYLOR, 2 1889 OF EVER. Sets, Cake Baskets, Castors and Napkin A few new Opera ician, Cameron Block, City. ————_(x) BOOKS, T SALESROOM, on TUESDAY, Novem- | A lot of Second-hand Furniture, Carpets, ! Mats, Pictures, Mirrors, Stoves, etc., all in| TOOLS AND SHOP FIXTURES.—Three | Anvils, three pairs Bellows, two Vices, one | | | | | FANCY GOODS, PLUSH COoODs, DOLLS, VASES, WILL BE HELD AT DIAMOND BOOKSTORE. [x] —{x}——_—— jessea the crush peculiar to the Holiday Season. Ch’town, Oct. 31, 1889—3i eod wky li o A GENUINE CHEAP SALE! Commencing on MONDAY, Noy. 4th, and continuing for TWO WEEKS, a BONA FIDE disposal of THE 20 PER CEN. TOFF! This Sale is undertaken in order to reduce the large and varied Stock, and to sw Make your vurchases early and obtain the best. i THEO. L. CHAPPELLE, ee - nee a ee i Cey DIAMOND BOOKSTORE. Wor ———(x) BEER BR SPECIALTY. Astracan, Bocharen, Persian and Seal Jackets, FOR-LINED CLOAKS—Latest Nove MUFFS — Beaver, Persian, Seal, Astracan, Hare, &c. | CAPES —Nutria, Opossum, Astracan, Beaver, &e, BOAS ~ Beaver, Wolf, Goat, Neouflon, Hare, &e, Caps, Storm Collars, Gloves, Trimmings, QUALITY GUARANTEED, 7 ad BO <a hae Ities in all qualities. MOURNING and of unusual value. Dress part of the Island. Goods. Charlottetown, Oct. 24, 1889. Our Stock of Black Goods is very complete Samples sent to any BER BROS. -——{ *) ——— 8 wetness till eens ODESTY forbids us (to use ¢ slang phrase) to blow our N pute. True, people have gained for themselves a name (not appearances, served the purpose they had in view. ‘leaders in the great.race for supremacy, that we should look which those assertions are based. motto ; and instead of reyealing to the public gaze, acquiesce in what wt say, is a foregone conclusion, namely, Province we treat the several branches of the trade in this ci is entitled. In the meantime, call and sec SCOTCH TWEEDS, WORSTEDS, etc., made up in the latest UNPARALLELED! W EAT? McLeod & McKenzie, Star Merchant Tailors. orl own horn, and as it is contrary to our opinion (according to the old proverb) when in Rome to de as Rome does - shall endeavor, as heretofore, to present tacts so undeniable as to be be Lan enviable one) which, to all But wisdom dictates, before posipg as To throw the mantle of charity over t through your columns, the errors int which they have fallen, we will endeavor to lead them gently into the light. r as Vathers of the trade in this al ty with the same consideration ‘sa loving parent would his innocent offspring ; and to this end we invite such traders to aim high and co-operate in elevating this, the first profession, to the our handsome goods, in NAPS, MELTONS, _ Mek ANZ Ss, we yond the reach of dis- well to the foundation upon such people is our That you will bse > , at kigh status to which it styles and cheap. 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