TeRMs: rir t THE DAILY EXAMINER. DoLLARS A Y RAR. NEW SERIES. The Daily Examiner! 1s 1880 From their Great LWroord Priv Six months Thres months One mouth ...- l every ev corre ning yr af by Water and streets, Charlottetown, } The Examiner Publi shing Co | 7 | bdward leland, —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— Advertising *t moderate rates, Contracts may b=» made for monthly, quar- ferly. half-yearly, or yearly alvertiaemen's, oa application. eee ee et eee ee eee eo re * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having (to advise the Public, may speak free.”— Huniipes. BUY YOUR GROCERIES ALMANAC FOR APRIL, 1887, MOON 8 CHANGES. First Quarter }s day, 9h. 40.3m., a. m., N.E. 1 | anpecae Two Stores - = =: Full Moon Sih day, lh., 26.4m., a. m., 8. Last Quarter l4th day, Ilh., 5l.dm., p. m., W. (below nor. zon.) New Meon 2ist day, 4h, 42.7m., a. m., E. First Quarter 30th day, 6h., 47 9m., p.m., Ss. pi... a Fr WEEK) ys, P4t or r ‘ises sets Sun ‘Sun |Moon! High!Day’s rises | water| len‘h QUEEN SQUARE AND KING SQUARE STORES. 20° Ch'town, April 7, 1887—eod wky AT COST! BEER:-GOFF'S. Cne FPrice. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1887. ‘LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. —_—_— A Law for the Doctors. j ADAMSO Sia,—As one deeply interested in all A ‘matters pertaining to the general good, has (5 it not often occurred to you as somewhat singular that nothing has been done tw provide for the proper registration of medi- leal practitioners in this country’ Such ‘legislation as would make this practicable 7 : is of vital importance to the medical pro- ae ae 'fession itself as also to the general public. The members of the bar have shewn them- selves quite capable of protecting their own ‘interests, and thus, indirectly, the inter- ‘ests of those requiring legal advice. Then, Sir, if it be important to protect a man’s PRO Por | pocket, is itnot equally so to protect his life. bs This can only be done by the medical AWOND 5 profession seeking such legislative enact- ; ERFUL REMEDY ‘ments as would make quackery punishable Adamson's Botanic Cough Balsam. _by law, and would also compel all prospec- Tt is as-plenkant a3 honey Colds. and tive applicants for medical registration to Asthma, whieh lead to Consomption, have been | pursue a rigidly detined course of study speedily cured by the use of ADawsoN’s Balsam after and examination. A test in general educa- all other medicines have Cailed tion, as required by all Canadian Univer- sities, with four years of study in such ‘schools only as are recognized in the Mother ‘Country should be .made compulsory in ‘every ease. Certain degrees should admit |to registration without examination, while Conghe, Sufferers from either recent or chromic coushs or bronchial affections, can resort to this gra nildent of obtaining speedy relief. t remedy, ci Do not deiov, =et tt | FOR BALE BY ALY. at once PRUGCGISTS, Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druezists, SixeL_e Corres Two Crnts. VOL. 19.—NO. 272. Sam Jones Speaks to Girls. No human being on this earth like your mother, you as well. Nooneon earth will sacrifice for you like she will, and if there is anybody in this universe capable of advising you, it is your precious mother. Many people are fit for nothing but to give adv-ce. Like the sign- board nailed to a tree at a country cross road, they arealways pomting to where they never go themselves. I don’t want a person to point their fingers in the right way, but I want them to move off and say follow me. This is the best way in righteousness and holiness,and the only way to heaven. Nine-tenths of the trouble at home, young ladies, grows out of the fact of taking somebody else’s advice in- stead of mother’s. Ican sympathize with a girl up to the point where she thinks she knows better than mamma, and thinks Miss Brown, over there, a better friend to her. Trouble begins at home when somebody else is listened to rather than mother, and there is many a girl in Boston to-day that lays like lead on her mother’s heart. Your mother never sees you that she don't feel in her heart, ** Oh, my God! what is to become of my way- ward child?” Girls, you have got it in your power to make mother as happy as an augel er just as miserable as it is possible fora human being to be, and do you know you make mother happy just ia proportion as you listen to and obey her, and make her miser- able just as you begin to show the opposite disposition. loves you No one on earth wishes i a 1 ome on vera ni ane ae a . es “7 Sn aa UA fh . a a ~ a meal Ny ae eae Seanad oe & 7 N co reer ran th , 7 — a * eters SB Ud us a a a etal eed . amide ame lat % si ) h mh m)morn jmorn h m ner lace tay Me ct others should only be honorary—should canons ieamstianl anil iilisas : ; | Friday 5 44.6 23.10 50) 3 17 12 39 r “7 ~ jnot admit to registration without exami- ; Welk 2 Saturday 42) 2501 51) 4 41 43 =e NOTICE | mation. This law obtains in Nova Scotia Volapuk. WE i 3 sunday 4) 2ieft G9) 6 10 & ‘then why not here? Surely the lives of ; & 4 Mouday 38} 27) 213) 7 23) 52] [5 horeliy Siren that an application will be P E tao ade at atta ee, It has been maliciously said that Volapuk is ie i 4 5) [wesday 27; 29! 3 31} 8 3} 55} . a [ ss aT’ cneT ‘ made to the Parliament of Canada, at the next 7 - %- . » ose already a dead language. It is, on the con 1 6 Weduesday 35 30 447). 9 22! 59 | i. 30 days I will SELL AT COST, an immense lot of Oia atk a sheeses, for =o to onshartas our worthy neighbors. In the older _pro- trary "auaiehane rapid Spades asan interna- HI sua) 2 24) . and allowthe Nova Scotiz ; ant a he : - . ae ; ; om pow . . etieleemles | Sh 3a' 8 filio alia a and alow the Nova, Scotia Peuwanent Benefit vinces registration is much more difficult tional speech. Two hundred of its adherente a 8 Friday 31! 33 7 23/10 49 5! established and formed under an Act of the than in Nova Scotia, Even in the latter/ lately dined together in Paris ; and now Hert a5 9 Saturday 29' 34) 8 35/11 30 8| \ Y | Lee ie eactocia cotiied “be net oot. British and Colonial diplomas alone secure} Alfred Kirchoit, of the University of Halle, | | }0 Sunday 27; 35) 9 Sljaft 1) 12) ’ ~ 8 regulation of Benefit. Building Socceties” to Tegistration without examination. has compiled aud published an elaborate guide ci 1} Monday 25\ 37.10 58) 0 52 15) transact business as a Building Society and; Take two men of equal abilities—Smith| to the language. Herr Kirchofl, in this vo- ere [ aos m2 38 11 591 1 39 I Savings Fund throughort the Pravinces of New| } a M j es i f Vol k / 12 Fuesday 3) 38 5 36 8 f KS. ug e rince New and Brown. Smith graduates, say ab Mc-|!ume, gives us some specimens o olapu Dae . j , , ~) ° a3 : . k a Pp se , > , - ° a, . Bi 13 Wednesday 22) 40'morn| 2 2s 21 Atso, 300 WHITE AND FANCY SUIRTS, some of which are slightly oo ‘Detchahe ae iemn denaat ant re — Gill University. He has to spend a couple rhyme, from which we extract a verse :— Bb i / n , 5 > 7 95 9 Thi i > . ms >. ‘ Shi y, ; Tv j i ° : 2 . . * . 44 - fin ul way = ; es ; 7 7 soiled, at half price. This is the cheapest lot of Hats and Shirts ever offered in ey Oe likroe sient uae eae ee of years in preparing to pass the entrance abofub of boteli lejonik e yunik, Bs 6 — y rel 431 2 2 5 a 0 the city. and deposits, with power to issue debentures and @Xamination. Then follow four courses of palofob fa of pul lanimalik a stunik, i ; - semareny a 7 . os 3 " 4 deposit receipts 4nd other powers usual to Loan lectures, (covering four years), and a akutol plu ka balsna in flenug, | | “ om iL | aa @ oo Pa a al grep ns om tre! os series of merciless examinations which none binom— Volapuk. ao onday 3) i 3 ZU ¢ 2s! : Jated at Halifax, 5th March, 1887. . 7 : : . : is 19 Fuesday 11! 47| 3471 8 36| 39) —_————_ —— —— JNO. W. PAYZANT. but first class men can possibly pass./The words do not look very harmenious. 3 | 96) Wednesday 9) 48 412 19 42 —_-—_—_— a Solicitor of Applicant, Brown selects say, Bellevue _or Jefferson. They contain anallusion toan old kind of j 21 Thursday 8) 50) 4 38| 9 56) 46! March 22, i887 —2mos Blissfully ignorant of the higher branches universal language, and may be translated as a8 22) riday 6) 52) 5 11027) 49 an buy Remrants and Ends at your owa figures. A special bargain in MEN'S UNDER. : > Deal ee eae crea —— jof education, destitute of the mental vigor | follows :— | 23,Saturday 4) 53) 5 27|11 0) 52 WEAR. Suitingsot every description. Scotch Tweeds and Worsted Suits made in latest Seem aig ral ink a er aa Rj acquired in studying them, he passes tWO' J once loved a maiden, a marvel to see ; : a Sanday 2| of ° — LL 33) ot style, and at bottom figures. ; } 1 a x " - years in the office of a medical man, and, And she in turn was devoted te me ; . t t 25, Monday 0; oo 6 29 morn 56 | _ 2 ee t s 5] tS after two sessions of four months each spent Of kissing her lips I contracted a trick- | Oke ae 26) luesday 458) 56,7 8 0 8 59) "Bienes bed ote . . in college, he passes the usual hasty oral Pr was a Volapuk ie as lk aaet a ; : " IV ere SE a eee > , y . 27 Wednesday 57) 58, 7 51) 0 4314 1} = CALL AND BE CONVIN CED. rs “Ty a at at os) Wry ‘a =\examination, and is dubbed M. D.—and _.diccentiaaeaiaamema tees t 2 Thorsday 56)7 0: 8 42) } 25) 4) ree 2s 3 HL et A ° that at a period when poor Smith is dread- Vv f ee 4 = 7 4 P bo ; - ome oe fs ee ER Sa meet ing his examination on three or four sub- accination. 1 2 Y | . | Eni tet at Skee S 7 in ee jecto-cuty, only too happy to excape being The merits of va ineaiod have been con av, ' BESoR PACKAGE sked. Smith, after he graduates st! . . ae ave Deen eng" . —— — eS b Le se! ES Ch, Soe Sok y {plucked mith, after he graduates, must sidered since 1883 by a German commission 6 SS cilia wea be BPR oe cn. ite ggg bg Sibel DUO a a, Was et 5p 2 PY MEE las ” ee Ch’town, Mareh 12, 1887—eod & wky | x me ee oO to general public that the SUMMER ARRANGEMENT BWST BAWRGA LN S THE PALACE STSAMERS OF THE WTERN ATIONAL S.5. C0. | bargains are genuine, and our prices the LOWEST OF THE LOW. Leave St. John for Bostou, via Eastport and Port- on every Moniay, Wednesday and Friday at Ha m Also leave St. John at 7.30 every Saturday , night for BOSTON DIRECT. gutve from Charlottetown to Boston, $6,50, Ind ; 9.50, lat clase. For tickets and other information apply to F. W. HALES, cmscetsco CHIRLDTEDAN BIOL ND SHOE FACTORY. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. @ ABHAKP, ¥. &. 1. it’y., April 18, 1887—eod wky GUARDIAN FIRE INSURANCE €0. CAPITAL - CARVELL BROS., Mareb 26—2i wky Imo ste pat can be had at our establishment. We have not the time to enumerate our bargains in Muffs, Caps, Gloves, Coats, Sacques, Robes, Collars, &c., but we invite you to call and examine them—satisfy yourself that our Oo STUARTS NEW FUR STORE, NEWSON BLOCK, CHARLOTTETOWN. Ch'town, April 14, 1887. tintin ee somf °° —OoO<—«—<_—_—— = SPRING, - = - © PRING. ‘7 E must thank our friends and the public generally for their ever increasing patronage since we have commenced business. Our Boot & Shoe Factory, in starting, had many difficulties to overcome, and we are glad that to-day those difficulties have been surmounted, and we are now well able to com- $10,000,000 | pete with the best Boot and Shoe Factories abroad. AGENTS. CARD. THE PANY . Woe and Cheapi “wu their office - PaPers dra, able Qe font respectfully nned patronage of solicited, Ch'town, Nov, 16, 1288 ¥ L. ARTHUR & CO., EXAMINER ‘ and, as they import men from the manufacty "i allorders on the most favorable terms. the public is PUBLISHING COM- having lately added to their stock Material (or Job Printing, are better to execute orders for Bill ‘ait Letter Heads, Handbills of all kinds, “S or Business Cards, &c., promptly and ¥, in the best atyle of the art. ne bat first-class workmen are employed in their printing irers, they are} WwW. L. COTTON, Manager. GENERAL UoDaission Merchants. I2) ATLANTIS AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. —_—— eee ee Hg28 and Projace a Spevialty. Some of the advantages purchasers have in buying from us are,saving of freight,ordering goods when you want them (not six months before), getting them without delay—which saves carrying a large stock which deteriorates on the shelves. Our leathers are bought directly from the tanneries, thereby saving commissions which many factories have to pay. We are more determined than ever to give the BasT OF SATISFACTION and to merit the whole of the Island’s patronage. We hope to vee many new industries arise, thereby increasing the prosperity of the DORSEY. GOFF & CO. _Ch’town, March 15, 1887.—eod & wky - Si —_ ———— THE LIVSRPOOL AND LONDON AND GLOBE INSURANCE COMPANY. eee, (>, Assets, Ist January, 1886 - - - 10: ta” FIRE RISKS accepted upoa the most Favorable Con ditions and at Lowest Current Rates. R. R. FITZGERALD, $36,606,822.03, oS ~ AS} 33 hy Or: X HATS! . O MATTER what competitors may say in their advertisements, it is apparent to the Ie be out of all reckoning, the better man of! 2 bess int ‘aetna ' Ss alsa the two, and the laws of every other Pro-|} Eh 9 a | vince in the Dominion “practically acknow-' a VERE Abs: vince in the Dominion practicaliy acknow BAKING-POWDER ledge his superior qualifications ; but the’ ; laws of P. E. Island do not. Brown is told bea a, F at Halifax, Ottawa or Toronto that he must 4 bs Se pass the matriculation examination of the STOVE POLISH rf .s ny) + Mi ‘ rs it Proviucial Medical Board, spend at least one session more at college, and pass an . eee COFF a exainination before the Board of Censors ;' Ve ce ~ or what is worse, because harder,graduate at ' i he PICES McGill, Laval, or some such institution. Leas $3 1937908 Thus it would take two years of literary Sit] study and two more of professional study, | : ; with successful examinations passed on. Ty eet iboth, to put him on a par with Smith. ARD P. E. Island is his only Province of refuge. | ‘ . " ss) r * 4 S 2 GOLD MEALS 1SHVER MEDAL S BRONZE WEDALS ae MUS: pugerte (There he and that gentleman are equals, PB ow B ER mT HERBS dc legally and socially. Truly, sir,this is wrong | fcmrcgaetng STITT Th om Rey ae and unjust to the aspiring and ambitions, Seat iia say a S534 (whose four years of additional study, and fis eon tah Deng ; Rasci inseparable additional expense, are ~* PURE GOLD MAN FG.CO NNER ee cera Di-! “Sa FRONT ST. EAST, TORONTO; plomas obtained at British or Colonial institutions afford prima facie ‘evidence of superior preliminary and pro- fessional attainments on the part of those who hold them. If lam in error, sir, I hope some one will kindly correct me, but I am a Canadian and feel proud of the high stand taken by Canadian graduates in every quarter of the globe. ) At the examinations of the Royal’ College of Surgeons of England, and at) those of the British Army and Navy, the graduates of McGill University have ever held their own against all comers. Then is it not unjust to have them hedg-! edand elbowed by the ‘eight months) men” of Bowdoin or Ann Arbor or of any | other diploma-mill in the United States. | It is to be hoped, Sir, that the medical | fraternity will look into this matter, and be true to themselves and the laity, as well | by limiting the wholesale importation of half-fledged M. D’s. into our Province. We | have honest, fearless and liberal-minded men in our Local Government, who, | feel assured, will do their part in this matter when asked to do so. The leading medical men of Charlotte- | town are surely sufficiently public-spirited to take active and practical steps in this matter. Who will be the first to call a meeting of the fraternity and take the necessary steps to secure the passing of a bill through both Chambers! I do not) belong to the profession myself, but I look! upon it as one of the noblest and most dig- uified on earth. I have set the ball rolling, and I hope that you, Sir, will open your} columns to free discussion on this important | subject. I feel sure that you will, and that) \with me and thousands of others in this} country, you will thankfully and cheerfully PR _ a 3 CANADA AND WEST INDIES. Tenders for Steamship Lines. 7 ENDERS will be received at the Finance De- partment, Ottawa, up to and including the ist day of May next, from persons or companies, for the performance of the following steamship sers ices, VizZ.:— ist. a line of mail steamers sailing from Halifax to Havana, thence to Kingston, thence to San- tiago ae Cuba, the ce to Canada; and (2nd) a line of mail steame:s between Canada and Porto Rico and adjaceut Islands. ‘Trips to be made by each line fortnightly. Steamers to be of a size sufticient to carry 2.000 tons of cargo and to be atleto steam twelve knots an hveur, averaging notiess than eleven knots an hour. The con- tract in either case to be for a period of five years. Tenders wi'l be received for the above services either separately or together. Tenders to be marked on the outside ‘“‘Tenders for Steam- ship Service to West Indies.’ The Government of Canada do not bind themselves to accept any tender. By command, J. M. COURTNEY : Deputy Minister of Finance. Finance Department, Ottawa. 7th Feb., 1887—febi9 Jaw til april 30 SOOTHING, . CLEANSING, HEALING. (NASAL BALM by STOPS ie concede that Faw San a : et 7 ‘** A wise physician skilled our wounds to heal, Is more than armies to the public weal.” Yours, EASY TO USE. to the throat and excessive expectoration caused by Catarrb. Sent pre-paid on receipt of price, 50c, and $1. Address FULFORD & CO., Brockville, Ont. FOR SALE. . i $22 Ten Shares in ‘The Examiner Pub- * , j lishing Company, each Share representing 3100 in the Capital Stock. ‘THE undersigned otfers for Sale TEN SH ARE (ali paid up) ef the Capital Stock of THE EXAMINER PeBLIsaIne CoMPANY. Will be sold in lots of one or more shares, to suit purchasers, For farther particulars apply to CIvITAs. Statistics show that more people die of consumption than from amy other cause. Slight colds are the true seeds of consump- tion. Beware of the slightest cough. Adam- son's Botanic Balsam stands without a peer. Trial size 10 cents. dy wy lw ——— Wuart can be more disagreeable, more dis- gusting, than to sit in a room with a person who is troubled with catarrh, and has to keep coughing and clearing his or her throat of the mucus which drops into it. Such persons are always to be pitied if they try to cure then- Jan, 3y 18ST. Agent. , gives and fal. But if the t Dr. Sage’s Gh'towm Nov. §, 186000 | eatiterhs rémbbdy Wierd eed bo tamara few | —-three members of which were anti- vaccinationists—and these are the conclu- sions which have at length been announced: The period during which vaccivat.on pro- tects against smalipox varies greatly, but as arule all persons should be vaccinated every 10 years; two well marked vesicles are necessary tou insure successful protec- tion; animal vaccine is preferable; no spe- cial disease or increasing death-rate can be traced tothe practice of vaccination; the operation should not be performed during epidemics of scarlet fever, measles, diph- theria, whooping cough, typhus, or erysipelas; infants should not be vaccin- ated until three months old; and the great- est care in cleaning and disinfecting instru- ments should be observed. a Drifting Sands. Near the sea the shifting of sand by the sea is a familiar sight, and the drifts are often known to encroach on cultivated fields, forests and villages. Striking examples are found on Lake Michigan, where the whithered tops of a forest are visible above a sand-drift, and in Norfolk, England, where farms and houses have been covered. The same phenomenon occurs in deserts, the great sand-hills being not only carried about by the wind but even : forced beyond the proper limits of the sandy wastes. The extensive Registan desert in Central Afghanistan is reported as being steadily pushed northeastwaidly, and calcula- tions have shown that its present rate of pro- gress will cause it to overwhelin some of the | most fertile and prosperous districts of the country in a few thousand years. The Ape. Apes probably rank neat to man in general intelligence, and, though they iack persever- ance, tere seems to be no reason for doubt ing that they might be trained to do a variety of useful work. Thisisthe opinion of Ma. dame Clemence Royer, the French translator of Darwin, but she points out that the do mesticated apes would require great quanti- ties of such food as fruit, bread and eggs, that the process of educating them would Ss cost ly, and that for many generations the climate of Europe would be too severe for them. She suggests that the experiment should be tried first in tropica! countries, where the apes might aid in cultivating coffee, cocoa and cot- ton. —__$_—_—>- <a The Drummer. A commercial traveller tells the Chicago Herald of a drummer who cannot write. Down in Missouri, the other day,” said he **] ran across one of the queerest cases I ever heard of. It was a commercial traveller who can neither read nor write. He is one of the handsomest and liveliest fellows lever met and can barely write his own name. 3esides, he dosen't want to learn. When his customers give hinn orders he bas them write out lists of the goods they desire, and such letters as he has to “get off he coaxes hotel clerks and other travelling men to write ior him. Heis a lightning salesman, too, and one of the most popular men in his territory A Snake Story. Grorge Marion, a farmer of Rensselaer Inl., found his dog barking at a snake near a hole in the ground. He dug down and found bushles of snakes stiff with cold. When all were killed and classsified, it was found that they were 140 in all, 113 of which were blue racers, and 27 were bull snakes. ho other kind of serpents were found in the den. Soun after imethur gest of 67 sntkes was fount