City « the Seaman’s Union. THE DAILY EXAMINER. Notes and Clippings. (Jueen what The ornamental fountain on Square will soon be playing; but about that fence [bis Province has much to gain from summer tourists, and many tourists are at- by the sport which is found in rivers and ponds well stocked with fish, and woods and fields and shores abounding in It is, therefore, important that both fish and fowl should be carefully protected — that the bounds of legitimate sport should never be exceeded. I he law that no one shall at any time fish for trout by spear, sweep net, or seine should not be tracted fattened game. violated, aud the close season for trout from first October to first December should be strictiy observed. Moreover, Sunday fishing—which is becoming all too common-—-shouvld be frowned down, and offenders in this regard should be punished. For the information of & reader of THE EXAMINER, who wants know the law about fisheries, we append the following from cap. VC. of the revised statutes, sec. 13 : other obstruction ‘‘Every dam, slide o1 st : cross or in any stream where the Minister of Marine and Fisheries determines 1t to be neces- sary for the public interest that a tish pass should exist, shall be provide d by the owner or occupier W ith a desirable or « thcient fish- ery which shall be maintained in practical and effective condition, in whichever place and é whatever form and capacity will admit of the passage of the fish through the same, and and capacity of<the fishery the plan, | any fishery officer by : Pe yay be proseribed Dy notice in writing. Telegraphic Tips. Hauirax, June lI Mackerel! fishing rted good about Canso, the traps in that vicinity taking good catches of fine yuality Between 20 and 30 barrels were aken in St. Peter's B ay this morning, and spring mackerel are reported plentiful near North Sydney The catch along the Nova Scotia coast 1s very irregular—some getting s barrel, while others, with the same num- ber of nets, get only 20 or thirty fish. The Pubnico Pomt traps took only six barrels this morning. Net fishermen did nothing. Herring reported plentiful at various points, and there seems to be better pros- pects of obtaining bait than heretofore. Several vesse!s were supplied with herring i sux from the traps at Dover. reported scarce on P. E. Island ist ; elsewhere average catch. Cod fisher- men average c atch deep sea gr yunds Share men doing fairly well when weather per- mits LiverrooL, June 12 As the f New York was about to sail for York, her crew struck and came They were acting under orders of The steamer remains unable to proceed. And gaspere Lobsters steamer New shore ut in the stream, Giascow, June 13.—The striking dock laborers along the Clyde show no signs of weakening. There are now 6,000 men sround the harbor who have quit work. Strikers have set fire to a van in which pro- were being carried to imported the Anchor Line sheds. nN, June Visions laborers at LOND 13.—The Paris corre- pondent .of the Times appears __in- clined tomake fun of the labor congress in the French capital. He says : ** Henry George has brought his eggs to a strange market. He has come to a country of peasant proprietors to advocate nationalization of land and his congress is being held at the chief hotel of Paris at a cost of 2,000 francs. The 150 members who are seated on luxurious chairs evident- ly do not set the example of renouncing their landed or other possessions. Beri, June 13.—The American com- missioners to the Samoan conference have received Secretary Blaine’s reply with re- gard to the treaty concluded by the cun- ference. He refuses to sign it on the ground that England and Germany do not allow sutiicient concession to the United States. [t is rumored that unless the concession is increased, the United States will retire from the conference. Cuicaco, June 13.—Senator Callum, of the committee on railway relations with Canada, in an interview, said he had al- ready made up his mind that ultimately Canada and the United States will have to inaugurate arrangements corresponding to the present inter-state law. ‘‘So far in the investigation,” said he, ‘* Canadian officials all affirm thav the present law hurts them, and those in this country are positive that Canada profits most by the measure. The argument of our managerr was that where Canadian roads lost onlong hauls extend- ing into this country, they recouped on lo- cal rates in Canada, while, with our law, this was impossible. Lonpox, June 13.—- While Gladstone was passing through the town of Wadebridge, in Cornwall, to-day, a missle, believed to have been a cartridge, was thrown at his; Gladstone was not hit nor much } had no share.” carriage. , disturbed by the incident. The police think it an attempt upon his life, and are looking for the man who threw the missile. A later despatch says that the police dis- credit the story of the throwing of a cart- ridge at Gladstone. If anything was thrown they say that the thrower is guilty of a bad- ly conceived practical joke. New York, June 13.—Ship State of Maine, of Newcastle, Eng., arrived yester- day from Hong Kong, after a voyage of 92 days, which the captain claims to be the fastest time on record, San Francisco, June 13.—Chinese ad- vices report the city of Luchhow, in Up- per Pantaze, was nearly destroyed by fire, and the loss of life, burned or trampled to death, is estimated at ten thousand. Lonpox, June 13.—Mr. Gladstone yes- terday addressed 6,000 people in the Mar- ket place, at Falmouth. He said he _ be- lieved the dissenters were conscientious and required time to master the Irish pro- blem, and when the hour of triumph arriv- ed, there would be a Liberal reunion. A number of maidens presented Mrs. Glad- stone with a gigantic boquet as the party drove into Redouthe. ‘The town was deco- rated with flags, and a triumphant arch had been erected. Miners flocked from the environs, and formed a body-guard for Mr. Gladstone. Nearly 30,000 people as- sembled, and owing to the enthusiasm which prevailed, Mr. Gladstone had great difficulty in speaking. He dealt with the Iceal and tenant question wit : settee eees.@ with the evils i French | of debate. el med THE DAILY EXAMINER, - ~~ Varia. English papers this week do not contain much news. There seems to be a state of quiescence on the continent. The king of Italy has been received at Berlin, and after much banquetting and state ceremonial = departed. The announcemen: that he unc his host intended to visit Stratsburg, aroused the susceptibility of the excitable people, who after a lapse of nae teen vears still remember with shame anc rage and muttered threats of vengeance, the circumstances under which that city was transferred to the Germans. The French exhibition brings much money to the Paris shop-keepers, but the reign of peace W hich it was to inaugurate seems as far offasever. Mr. Robertson, the mem- ber for Dundee, in the English House of endeavored to censure the Government for the withdrawal of the English ambassador from Paris at the opening of the Exhibition. But when it is remembered that the Exhibition is intend- ed to commemorate the Freach Revolution, it is difficult to see how it would have been possible for the English ambassador to have been present at the commemoration of the Reign of Terror and all the horrors which astounded and horrified the civilized world a hundred years ago. * * Commons, I have been accused of somewhat ap- proaching irreverence toward the ** Law,” because of some humorous verses which appeared in this column upon ** Lawyers,” a very different subject (permit me to say) to ** Law.” Ido not think the charge isa fair or deserved one. My common-place book teems with excerpts from the writings of great lawyers, as to their noble profes- sion. But L donot think that we, of the journalistic profession, owe much to judges, who for many a long day denied liberty to the Press, and whose persistence in refusing to allow juries to say whether an inculpated article was or was not a libel, if it had been successful would have destroyed, as it was intended to destroy, the liberty of the Press, and as a consequence, liberty of speech and freedom In the end the freedom of the press was vindicated. But the struggle was hard, and a bitter one, made all the more so by the judges of England, but our profession is not without its martyrs. * * The Press owes nothing to the judges and lawyers who persistently misrepre- sented and perverted the English law by refusing to leave the question of ** Libel ” or **No Libel” to the jury. - The law itself was ever on our side, and for it | have the profoundest veneration and es- teem. And Ihave a strong, firm convic- tion that no man’s education is complete without its stady (I do not mean an accur- ate knowledge of all its technical details). A great lawyer has well said: ** I think it an undeniable position, that a competent knowledge of the laws of that society in which we live, is the proper accomplish- ment of every gentleman and scholar; an highly useful, | had almost said essential part of liberal and polite education. And in this | am warranted by the example of ancient Rome; where, as Cierco informs us, the very boys were obliged to learn the twelve tables by heart, as an indispensible lesson to imprint on their tender minds an early knowledge of the laws and constitu- tution of their country.” * And yet there is a great deal of truth in what was said by that greatest of England's statesmen, Edmund Burke: ‘1 remove my suit; | fly from equity to law, and from law to equity; equal uncertainty attends me everywhere: and a mistake in which | had no share decides at once upon my liberty and my property, sending one from the court to the prison, and adjudging my family to beggary and famine. [| am inno- cent, gentlemen, of the darkness and un- certainty of your science. 1 never darken- ed it with absurd and _ contradictory notions, nor confounded it with chicane and sophistry. You have excluded me from any share in the conduct of my own cause; ‘ The science was too deep for me;’ I acknowledge it; but it was too deep even for yourselves ; you have made the way so intricate that you are yourselves lost in it ; you err and you punish me for your errors.” + % The “* judicious Hooker” was a great divine, he was distinctively not a lawyer, and therefore he is speaking of *‘law”’ in the abstract when he says: ‘‘ Of law there can be no less acknowledged than that her seat is in the bosom of God ; her voice the harmony of the world. All things in heaven and earth do her homage—the very least as feeling her care, the greatest asjnot exempted from her power; both angels and men and creatures, of what condition soever, though each in different sort and manner, yet all with uniform consent, ad- miring her as the mother of their peaceand joy.” ” * % + This quotation (from Hooker) will, I fear, sound strangely to those who have lost their property, by, as Mr. Burke ex- pressed it, ‘‘a mistake in which the victim But in many cases, has it not been found, that the law-makers of our country have been the very best friends of the rascal and the rogue? Their persever- ing ingenuity in burying simple facts, de- signed for the public guitlance, beneath Sa dense medley of verbiage, tautology, re- iteration, and verbal mysticism, that puts the legal acumen to a severe test to dis- entangle one single thread of any practical utility from the mass ; their constant pass- ing of acts to amend acts of which nobody (save themselves and the Queen’s printer) had been aware of the existence, their in- cessant passing of other acts to repeal other acts still, until it requires the most gimlet- eyed clairvoyance to discover which are acts in force and which are not—surely I think lam not going too far in saying that these kindnesses place them in the first rank of our rogues’ benefactors. > And yet English instinct and prejudice are strong within me. I have very little pleasure in attending courts of law, but I have never witnessed a criminal trial with- out feeling a glow of complacency when I have heard the learned Judge, taking un- common pains to prevent the prisoner let- ting out the truth. It has, on these occa- sions, I admit, suggested itself to me, that if the obiect of the trial be to discover the truth, it might be as well to hear it, even from the prisoner, as to hear what is gener- ally not always the truth from the prison- er’s counsel. And there are times, in quiet moments, in which I wonder at the rapturous manser in which I say ard write o- — ap ! that it would be ‘* un-English " to examine the prisoner. | suppose that with common | fairness it would not be possible to confuse ‘him, unless he lied; ae if he did lie, | imagine he could hardly be brought to con- fessiog too soon. * * * There is a great deal of truth in what Swift said: Laws are like cobwebs which may catch small flies, but let wasps and hornets break through. ** * 1 close my remarks with an extract from a quaint and now almost forgutten writer— Felltham—which seems to me accurately to describe the position of those who get themselves involved ina law suit: ‘*To go to law is for two persons to kindle a fire at their own cost, to warm others, and to singe themselves to cinders; and because they cannot agree as to what is truth and equity. They will both agree to unplume themselves that others may decorate them- selves with their feathers.” — DIED. At St. Catherine’s, West River, on the 9th inst, Donald Alexander, the only son of Angus and Annie McFadyen, aged 11 months and 12 days. Tur HustLer.—McEachen, the cheap shoe man, is doing a rushing trade at his store. Success to him. iliac Kelly & Co., Photo. artists, beg to announce that theirCh'town season isdrawing to a close. ‘Those wishing sittings will please call early and make engagements, Open in the even- ings from 7.30 until 9. Tanton’s studio, Gt. George St. A large number of local pictures on exhibition. HALIFAX & P. E. ISLAND Steamship ) Company, Ltd. STEAMER “ PRINCESS BEATRICE,” Will sail from Halifax on TUESDAY EVEN- ING, the 25th inst., for Charlottetown, calling at Sheet Harbor, Canso, Arichat, Ports Hawkes- bury, Mulgrave and Hastings, Bayfield and Port Hood, Returning. will sail from Charlottetown on THURSDAY EVENING, 27th inst., calling at Murray Harbor and Souris, and same calls to Halifax. The above Steamer will make the round trip every week, making same calls until close of navigation, This will enable Murray Harbor and Souris shippers te make direct connections with Steamers at Halifax for any foreign market. Freight and puanenner solicited at lowest rates and Through Bills of Lading granted to any port on the Continent or United Kingdom. Apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent, Charlottetown, Or Pickrorp & Buack, Halifax. junel5 —eod tf POSITIVE SALE. To Close Consignments. | Y AUCTION, on MONDAY, June 17th, at 10.30 o'clock, at Rooms: 100 boxes Bermuda Onions, 100 pails Jellies, in Peach, Red Currant, Strawberry, Raspberry, Grape, Pine Apple, Crab Apple, etc., 5 barrels Foxberries. Ail in prime order. No reserve. A. McNEILL, Auctioneer, LOBSTER PACKERS ! Highest Prices Paid for Good Brands, Correspondence solicited. JAMES E. GRANT. juneld jul5—dy lm LYCEUM THEATRE Three Grand Performances, FRIDAY & SATURDAY, JUNE 14th AND 15th, —AND— MATINEE, SATURDAY, AT 2.30 P. M, HYERS SISTERS COMEDY CO, ie. “Out of Bondage,” A MUSICAL COMEDY IN 3 ACTS, depicting life in the South before and after the war. During the performance the Hyers Sisters, justly styled ‘“‘The Colored Nightingales.” will render their specialities. This is the only Colored Dramatic Co, in existence, and contains a Bril- liant Gathering of Singers and Comedians, Grand Band Parade at Noon daily. Admission, 50, 35 and 25 cents, Matinee (any part of the Hatl)—Adults, 25c, Children, 15c. Secure seats at Reddin Bros’. Drug Store three days in advance. dy—ju AUCTION SALE ial casi Household Furniture, &c. I AM instructed by the Rev. M. R. Knight to sell by Auction, at his residence, Little York, On Thursday, 27th Instant, AT 11 O'CLOCK, A. M.: All: his HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, in- cluding 1 Bell Organ, 1 Royal Sewing Ma- chine, 2 Book Cases, and 200 volumes from library. Atso—Horse and Buggy. G. M. HAR ju7 - Auctloneer, A LL A ON cachet CN Ce .vrewy ver. Be SA 4) Aelia ae > Pr MHE GRKANDEST OF THE SERIES OF TEA PARTIES which has put Alberion in the first rank for successful gatherings. will be held on the beautiful and commodious grounds of the Alberton Trotting Park Company, ——ON THURSDAY, isth OF JULY, In Aid of the Sacred Heart Church. ee Special train arrangements will be made, giv- iag the people of the Far Kast and intermediate points an Opportunity of visiting the Kar West— a part of the Province, the beauties and advan- tages of which are so little known. Notice of attractions, train arrangements, etc., in short, J. P. BRENNAN, Secretary. Alberton, June 5, 1889—2aw wky li ———_- A GRAND BAZAAR WILL BEJGIVEN BY THE Ladies of the Convent de Notre Dame, —-IN THE— MA REET HALL, ON JULY 3rd AND 4th. The object of the Kazaar is to raise funds to aid the Congregation de Notre Dame and St. Ann’s School, {n addition to the Bazaar, the Pupils of the Institution intend giving « STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL. Those having the matter in charge intend to make it one of the most interesting affairs of the kind ever given in this city by the Ladies of the Congregation de Notre Dame. Tickets at one first-class fare will be issued to and from all Stations on the P. E. I. Railway on the 3rd and dth July, good to return up to and on the 6th, to all attending the Bazaar. The holders of these tickets must present a certificate of attendance at the Bazaar, signed by the Seere- dy 2aw wky li—apl0 Biscuit & Confectionery Soda Biscuits, Wine do, Fruit do., Sugar do, Conversation Lez- | anges, | Mint Lozenges, ‘Sugar Sticks, Fancy do, | Royal Mixtures, Pilot Bread, | Novelties, &c. SYRUPS! LEMON, RASPBERRY, STRAWBERRY PINE APPLE, VANILLA. Wholesale and Retail at the “ City Steam Bakery.” A. & C. QUIRK, PRINCE STREET. may2I1—1Im eod Fishwick’s Express Line, TO HALIFAX. STEAMER “2. A. STARR,” CAPTAIN FERGUSON, Leaves Charlottetown EVERY THURSDAY EVENING, for Halifax, caliing at Bayfield, Perts Hawkesbury, Mulgrave and Hastings, Arichat, Cape Canso and Sheet Harbor. Returning, leaves Halifax EVERY TUESDAY MORNING, at 7 o'clock, making same calls. Freight handled with care and carried cheap. Through Bills of Lading granted on Canned Goods to London, Liverpool, Hamburg, Antwerp, Rotterdam, Havre, Bordeaux, &c. A special low rate on Canned Goods to New York by Red Cross Line. For any further information apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent, Queen’s Wharf, Charlottetown. juns—tf pats jour Tenders for Lathing and Plastering ILL be received by the Trustees of the Connolly Estate, until noon on WED- NESDAY, the 19th instant, stating the low- est sum for which the party tendering will contract to Lath and Plaster the Double Tenement House now building on Haviland Street, according to plan and specification to be seen with the Foreman of the work at the building. Ali materials will be supplied by the Trustees. Tenders to state in a lump sum the amount required for the whole work, and also the time within which the tenderer will undertake to complete it, which must not be later than the 15th September next. A. A. MACDONALD, W. W. SULLIVAN, FREDERICK PETERS, Trustees of late Owen Connolly. june!3—dy tl 19th ad HE 8. 8. “BONAVISTA,” for St John’s, New- foundland, will be due at Charlottetown on MONDAY MORNING, the 17th inst. Produce carried at low rates «{ freight. For Freight or Passage apply to PEAKE BROS. & CO., junel3 Agents, DWELLING HOUSE, containiug Ten Rooms and Attic, with Pump in Kit- chen, large Outbuildings, Garden and Six Acres of Land, three-quarters of a mile from the Post Oilice on the Malpeque Road, now occupied by B. W. Higgs, Esq. Possession given immediately. Atso—A Dwelling, containing 10 Rooms and Shop, on Upper Great George Street. J. T. PEARDEN. . ju6—Saw tf ‘ | OUR 8k it pays “* TO BUY YOUR AND BEER BROS. NEW Charlottetow:, June 14, 1889—eod The Gre Which is Creating such S \¥ Ay Y, i) Wp by f/ / Fi AEA junel2 Shortest Route to Boston, VIA HALIFAX. oe ee ee Canada Atlantic Steamship Co, The Fast, Steel, Clyde-buailt Leaves Noble’s Wharf, EVERY o'clock. Returning, leaves Lewis’ Wharf, Boston, for Halifax. EVERY SATURDAY, at 4p. m. Passengers leaving Charlottetown on Tuesday, via Pictou, atrive at Halifax same evening, and can, if they prefer it, yo directly ou board the Steamer without extra charge. FARES: Charlottetown to Boston (lst class).......... $ 9 20 i ee a 16 00 Through Tickets issued at ail Stations on P. EB. Island Railway and Intercolonial Railway ; also by the Agents of the P. E. Island Navigation Co., and on board their Steamers, and at my office, Charlottetown. FENTON '. NEWBERY, Agent, I i Halifax, for Boston, WEDNESDAY MORNING, at W CHIPMAN Bros, General Agents, Halifax. R. B. GARDNER, Agent, 34 Atlantic Avenue, B may2i—tf — CIGARS TO THE TRADE. WE HAVE ON HAND 90,000 Cigars, FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC, which we will sell at prices that defy compe elsewhere. CUNNOLLY & CO., jul—2w eod . wky 2i- Queeh Street. JUNE 15, 1889. a EN il [eq | See FASHIONABLE G00DS---LOW High Water Mark | Dress Goods) -AND— SHAPES Jet Wrap This Summer was LEY (0008 1,000 D0Z. prin conan BONANZA LINES: Millinery we a —— ar Childrens Hats, FLOUNCINGS, 5 Cents, — 10 Cents, |- (20 Cents. | Arriving Weekly. tition. Examine our stock before purchasing ——— a e = BROS, W PRICK {OWING OF Bonnets, Dress Good) Every Novelty, ; —— Sik W ry | Every Style, -—— = + Print Cottons) FLOUNCINGS, Ww onderfally Cheap. SU NSHADES, SUNSHADES, Special Bargains. STYLES: — at Mi a gi a BIG EXCITEMENT in New York City at the Present Time, Will Positively Visit Charlottetown in a Few Days. ~--- (0) -—+— WAIT WATCH apd WONDER. ee — PSESHOLD PROPERTY, BY AUCTION. rO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, On Wednesday, the 19th inst., STEAMSHIP “HAl FAX 9 At 12 o'clock, on the Premises, | A Double Tenement Two-story House, con- ‘taining 14 Rooms, situated on the east end of King Street, measuring 42 feet on King Street and extending back 80 feet. The House is finished throughout, and would make a good | Boarding House, TERMS—-One-third of purchase money | down ; the balance ia four years, with interest | al SIx per cent, a ROBERT BEAIRSTO, | ju8—dy Auctioneer. Le a ee ee ee” i TMPORTANT SALE at EMERALD —OF THE ‘Business Stand, Laud, Buildings, &, { Recently occupied by the undersigned. THE SU BSCRIRER will sell by Public A at Il o'vlock, a. m., on TUESDAY, #8 day of July next, on tbe premises :— The weil-kuown business Stand » Emerait Junction, containing Four Acres of Land, W ee Store, three Dwelling Houses, Warehouse and Barn. Also, at the same time—The Household Furnh ture, two Wagons, three Sleighs, two #ets ness and other articles, Store Fixings, &c. Terms for the Property :—A portion of the p& chase money may rem*in at sx per cent, :eow! as agreed uvon, Halance, ca-h or a 2 gover at three and six months, For Farnivare hree months. Fall particulars on application on the premiere pending the sale. First-class deed guaran J. W. HUGHES | P. S.—That the Snbway matter and . §.—Th: ‘ ‘s | Made wilt be taken up at the next seesion gurranteed. Litending purchasers may conf deuily rely on that necessary andortahng iH. ju6 . we ONEY SAVED —We, the undersicned, 9% prepared to fit in your Water Pipes -* oot, Ten Cents each Elbow, and One Dollar. No extra charge for fitttug — Hove ba & Sons, £08 Fitzroy street, Dust. -—lw pd . gee a . ERE 8 git