ees ote SE A TO BSE AUS agen ee NEW SERIES. ™ rT ' SF a 7a the ee mi Ui Ne jar A a & ty sbi : ut E Is asued Ewer kK vening by fhe Examiner Publishing Co., ¥) rit Nh OFFICE, LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUAR: Chariottctown, P. E. Island RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : fe eee... S2 ihree Months. ive a j One Month.... U 50} “z= Advertising at most modera rates, Contracts may be made for wionthlyy"§ uh terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements « application. ; ny inn Tt arr ' ; : i ALMANAC FOR NOVEMPER, 1889, Full Moon, 7th day, ilh., 5?.7m., a.m., N. below horizon j Last Quarter, 15th day, 4h., 23.3m, p.m, NW below horizon. New Moon, 22nd day, 9h., 31.im., p.m., NV helow horizon, First Quarter, 29th day, lh., 16.2m., p.m., F ; s Sun Aloon! High! Da uiPaY OF WEEK le cath ao . . ane ; th mib m; after! morn 1, Friday 16 47.4 41) 2 28) 4 54 9 4 2\Saturday | 48) 39/256) 619 5! 3) Aunday |} 5} 38) 3 21) 7 28 is 4] Monday | Sli 36) 343) 8 23) 45 "| Tuesday |} 53) 35) 4 6/9 6 2 ¢ | Wednesday | 54) 34) 4 29) 9 44 0 7! Thursday ; 56; 33) 4 54/10 20 j 8) Friday 57; 31) 5 23)10 54 4 9/Saturday {| 53; 29) 5 S41] 28 3] 10) Sunday 7 OF 28) 6 34iift 4 28 11| Monday 1} 27) 7 20] 0 40 On 12) Tuesday 3} 26, 8 13} 1 18 ; 13) Wednesday 4; 23}911,2 0 21 14) Thursday 6) 24,10 12) 2 46 1S) 15) Friday 7} 2241 17) 3 44 16/Saturday %| 2l)morn| 4 49 ] 17|Sunday 10} 20) 0 23) 6 3) 10) L8| Monday ll} 19% 1 30/7 9 $s! 19/Tuesday — 19} 2 39, 8 6) 6) 20! Wednesday 14; 18 3 51) 8 82 4} 21\Thursday 16) li 5 7] 9 31 a 22| Friday 17} 16} 6 44/10 2'| 8 59 23|Saturday tS} 15) 7 43/11 4 57 | 24)Sunday 20; 14) 8 59)11 49) 54 25| Monday 21; 13/10 8 morn | 52 26/Tuesday 23} 13/11 6) 035) Sy 27| Wednesday 24, A211 54) 1 24) 48 25;/Thursday BS TMiaft 31) 217; 47 29; Friday ew eS Fs. oe 30}Saturday 7 28\4 10) 1 27) 27) 8 43 i ; ' MARVELOUS pee ia Ooclvy Genvine fre of tiemoery Training. eur Deeks Levi ‘am Cae tending. Mind we ra cured 4 : very child and no rently henefite: $ inddecewm i Ralen 1a 9€4, re tun, wits On'n * Her. Wen. A. Hani. vont, the worl ned Speclast , i Dis . >imel€icrsenleof Ty aemp on, tuck ' : oar: 5. SE ankles, D bt itor of ¢ @ Christ : cate, BN. F., ‘hurd Proctor, the Scient s , ae . VW. W. *- oe, Yadze Gibson, Judah VY. ti tr, ANT Hyer, sent ; et free by J frei. A. LOIMOTTE, 237 Pith Ave., N. Y¥- GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Reverexces: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; D. C. Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown. JAMES A, MORRISON BOSTON DIRECT. Boston, Halitax and P. E. Island Steamship Line, Only Direct Line Without Change, CHARLOTTETOWN 10 BOSTON. The Staunch and Commodious Steamships “Carroll” and “Worcester,” fegutg. been thoroughly refurnished and put into the condition in every respect, will, during — of 1829, run as follows, commencing “ CARROLL.” Charlottetown, Thursday 9th May, at 4 Pp. mi. From ee ewan | . i ie ‘ a ‘ress Goods in all the new materials and | Shades, with Trimmings to match, | BR ae tiac | ees TL TT RR eek ee “xe? a ben Free Ba «% PEE SOE NRG SIG OO RR a PT Cy RI aii eet : Hen, having fo advise the Pablic, may speak So PS ec ce WARE RIETTOSE UIT fide Ga er nomprwnnare sacra EXAMINER. free.”—Evririwes. _- ase Srvore Corres Two Cents ‘ ‘¥ A xv W % ISLAND, Ss ee PE rEXN¢ 77TrhU+Yeyr i> yo POV ao i . Side VE. Sd Ate. > i; rn Aun Ball mys . cn ed 6 =a ai ahr Stock Now Ka’ 2 do} es mole ahs a x ucdinninciemstnmn ci oe iiictam S ESOS, ARE Se OP Fs Sehaea 9 Eadiad df Bb aty Ke: Ee —e fp Ree PMawmware | | R4hthGS i z & BaathS, 4 thi ws Ve MRLAVAIU cae mh UP Oe @] Se - rn Te _ > a™ 2 eT AT EeS@ t HTH GY : >» e Sa ! AL e wS ery eo { Splendid Assortment of MUFFS, BOAS, CAPES, ASTRAKAN JACKETS | FUR-LINED CLOAKS as {u)- en ' | a % sito. “py by 3 i ay 5) . = - eS 244 é 7a o a " # * $ WP = 4 if he f a” = = i ‘ 24 at i - ; 4 4 $6 25 ‘6 Geostand ¥ . k > SH 4 oct22 eod &wkly sae IEEEEENEE eae naneNEnnct ae eeceeaneatennniie . soins . . anwaneuenrs ~ . oi A * } - cy + 7 og mane = oF = St cre Bargains im wents s£Urnis Lines. a x 6. KIS\), a An Ys Me OKs 7 a S etl SY Die — aS er ef —_ - &» \. 7 ie - oe y <“ = \ oe samen j — “ar J er — aeaed eae . 3345 i Seg — + Lo eye a OLR WAS as sig i} - . a =, //)\ ‘ ~~ 0 4 AT iY = : : 3) i } — a. es | j x ’ i7? _—— AA, ‘ Me? j Wise f // f 4 1 SAS | a /; rs | : ' * : — \ re : € bm calle me hee ~ as -- a Z. SAAS ACOBANAAR GAY "HOOM DOWIQIGxT Suing suruSavg joi = FERED 6 in! more BS SY ee ie Ny - Cen’ SSE = 5 3 > . ** i = ~ os 1 mE ae ef ic eo 4 if ~- ae 8 SS se eS a ae 2 i | as “all a. © Ses - 2 P <y > = m ee eae s ® es 2 S&S \ a = Peew so i ‘ a a oe Gta OE 2 ~ me 4£26"26 > eet as Oo eisec a S. ~— FR t on Sm3 ron & — ££ > = ft Vass we s se a 26s & au & Hi 92sery = wi SeHots -: 2 +, £.28 .& @ S$ & - me SP wy - " = FJ o™a* 5 oS ee .« we - Zz — oe oe n~ > @ ~~ = eke. = = = @o Fee’ 2 A | z Reaves Ss = em = @ 0g <2 a = bs Cc CF Se Ae = = i : 2 woe. as — os io ae am i] me i a e O mi eee 5 Sa Jd WOYG 78 opeyl szmg E. ISLAND ‘20T}ON mewIre’ \ | ETRY TO PLEASE THE PUBIC AND SUCCEED. ee s/t ' where the doctors’ DAY, NOVEMBER 9. 1889. SS VOL. 25.—NO. 140. ~ em ASk For Ayer’s > irsaparilla, and be sure you get it, when you want the best blood-purifier. With its forty years of unexampled suc- cess in the cure of Blood Diseases, you can make no mis- take in preferring Ayer's Sarsaparilla to any other. The fore-runner of mod- ern blood m@dicines, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is still the most pop- ular, being in great- er demand than all others combined, * Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is selling faster than ever before. I never hesitate to recommend it.” —George W. Whitman, Druggist, Albany, Ind. “Tam safe ir. saying that my sales of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla far excel those of any other, and it gives thorough satisfac- tion.”— L. H. Bush, Des Moines, Iowa. “ Ayer’s Sarsaparilla and Ayer’s Pills are the best selling medicines in my store. I can recommend them conscien- tiously.”’—-C. Bickhaus, Pharmacist, Roseland, Ill. “We have sold Ayer’s Sarsaparilla here for over thirty years and always recommend it when asked to name the best blood-purifier.”— W. T. McLean, Druggist, Augusta, Ohio, “T have sold your medicines for the last seventeen years, and always keep them in stock, as they are staples. ‘ There is nothing so good for the youth- ful_blood’ as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,.”’— R. L, Parker, Fox Lake, Wis. ‘‘Aver’s Sarsaparilla gives the best satisfaction of any medicine I have im stock. I recommend it, or, as the Doctors say, ‘I prescribe it over the counter.’ It never fails to meet the cases for which I recommend it, even prescriptions have > Calhoun, been of no avail.”—C., F. Monmouth, Kansas. Ayers Sarsaparilla, Or. J. ©, Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass, Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. “NOTICE. — SP ae rene ae reling tished the Agency of the Uniform Collecting Co., I beg to inform my frieods and the p»blic generally that I shall continue Insurance an General Agent, and respectfally solicit a con- tinuance of their support. JAMES P, COOKE, Cameron Block. Agent for the American Decorating Ce., Boston ; the William Willar inside and Slid- ing Blind Manuf ctory ; the Byam Manufac- turing (o., Toronto ; the New Hamberg Flour Mills, Ontario. lw—nov5 Horses, Carriages and Sleighs EO? saALe "oF oH ‘ business as © Soe Geom & N “R. E. J. HOUGSON having no farther 4V iL use for his Horses, Carriages and Sleighs, will sell them, together with Furs, Harness, &c., by private sale. They may be seen at any time at his Stables, oct28—tf New. New. New. E have recently secured from Mr. Me- a Y Gain, of Glasgow, Scotland, from his personal instructions, the secret of making the following fine Cakes, Pastry and Rolls. Knowing them to be of excellent quality, we intend baking some of them daily with our already large line of goods; Bath Buns, Scotch Perkins, Cheese Cakes, Seetch Oat Cake, Louise Cakes, Scotch Scones, Rye Scones, Coburg Cake, Eccles Cakes, Cookies, London Buns, Vienna Rolls, French Rolls, French Horns, Rose Puffs, Rock Biscuit, Scotch Short Bread or Cake. A. © C. QUIRK, City Steam Bakery, Priace Street. Oct. 19 1m eod. . uo ¢ na T Me. ais S, HEARIZ, Organist of Will Methodist Brick Church, take a Limited Number of Pupils on the Pianoferte. For terms, ete.. apply at the DUNCAN HOUSE, corner Water and Prince Streets. 1O9 9 Octle — on Our Factory has been running over six years, and having thoroughly studied the wants of the people, can please them every time. Ask for the following brands, and get value for your money : Maple Leaf, Prize Bar, XXX,Mottled, Silver Bar, Extra Pale, White Rose, Yellow Rose, Dainty and Esland Boquet. “rere be es | Pasa ce fo c3a! gia i ASH ys Gs oe -{) 4 e = a ot, 2 va BES se hAg gS ees j Eas iAiv: 3 a ts si ———(0)—_—_—— Watt 1 ae : One of these vesselg ww) Char A Will leave Boston for and oncen SV ERY WEDNESDAY, at Noon, DAY o‘tetown for Boston EY ERY THURS. + & Six o'clock, p. m. ranzcellent Passenger accommodation. Low Pr tarnished Gilrst-class Passage Berth in well- xtra, in, $6.50. Stateroom Berth, $2.00 Cash Paid for Tallow and Grease. we ONS cence emma oe heme . . west carefully handing!” Freight, which is always CARVELL BROS., Ageats, Charlottetown. A at Loma, Treasurer, Laws” W ‘ Hastan. 2 I QV SONS, PROPRIETORS. FACTORY—Weymouth Street. OFFICE= King Square. NOTICE. -AVING decided to wind up my business on the Island, I have to request the ail amounts due me, either by payment of the 1ith of book account or note of hand, by December. All amounts not settled by that date will be handed to my Attorney for collection, J. J. SEAMAN, Ch’town, fOct. 31, 1889. ae eae em ee ri A. YY ARR ai , 2] tag Yee $4 7a 9 THe ee chi. Gi] @i8 88 8, FSS #3 eee Seniat ‘2 ta ae Sirs maa sae eid) Sisay Ulheebkd hy a > 4 aa ‘. ee 1. * A fbavorite and Most Valuable Remedy fer all Throat and Lung Diseases. It has cured hundreds of cases considered hopeless. It soothes, heals and strengthens the diseased or irritated Throat and Lungs in a Very short time. Just a few doses will cure afresh cold if taken in time. Price 50 cents per bottle. For sale at the Drug Stores, W. HAWKER & SON, Proprietor, oct26—~—Jmi Zaw (tues wat) why novl0—ly dy St. J . N. w. and treasure. REV. PRINCIPAL GRANT TREAL CALEDONIAN SOCIETY. (Montreal Gazette. ) Rey. Principal Grant, on rising, was re- ceived with an ovation. His opening re- marks gave the keynote of his speech— patriotism. The most philosophical and best historian of England had, he said, given us not only a good book but a good phrase when he published ‘* The Making of England ;” for the phrase suggested an or- ganic connection of the past and present of the nation. The historian saw that the struggles of the dim past were not, as Mil- ton supposed, mere battles of kites and crows, but the struggles of vital forces to- adjust themselves to their environments, fires in which the constitution of the coun- try was purged and tried, the unconscious but heroic efforts of the people to attain their destiny, to lay broad and deep the foundation on which a goodly super-struc- ture was to be raised. It takes a long time to ake a nation, and the most important part of a nation’s history is that in which its social and political feundations are laid. in proportion to its sum of virture, of man- ly courage, of truth, of self sacrifice, will be the beauty and permanence of the strue- ture. We are engaged in THE MAKING OF CANADA, that great onward structurs, bounded on three sides by three oceans, and on its fourth by the water shed of the continent. {t is a fitting question to ask what contii- bution Lo this great work ought so be ex- pected from Scotsmen and the sons of Scots- imen, What lessons are suggested by the history of the fatherland, and what is our duty, for by that pole star we must steer, The grip of honor “has always been binding upon the Scottish people. Individuals have been traitors, but the heart of the people has always been sound. ‘Their fathers were wise men, and therefore had a keen sense of the value of money, but they never bar- tered their national honor, which is the uational dife, for money. The politics! history of Scotland before the uaion with Haugland was cited as proving how tenaci- ous the Scotch peopie were of national honor, Edward the Longshanks was a great statesman, but his hammering at the Scot- tish people had only resulted in making them the toughest and most enduring nation- ality that Europe had ever known. (cheere). ~Rivers of blood have flown because Edward had tried to force the nation, and free- men will not yield to force. They will neither be bullied nor bribed. In those days Wallace must have seemed the ‘ worst kind of crank, for he was swayed by seuti- meats rather than by gold or place, and when he came to his sad end the politicians of the day must have said, ‘* We told you so.” Yet Scotsmen of after years would uever give Wallace or Bruce a place below that of any other man. Henry VIII tried to effect a union by a royal marriage, but the people would have none of it because the overtures were rudely made. They hed no objection to the wedding, but they dd object to the woving o’ it. The same thii.g happened when Charles I. tried to force a liturgy upon the Scottish people. They had no objection to a liturgy, but they did object to having it forced upon them. In a word Scotland would not consent to a union until promised that the national honor was fully and scrupulously satistied, Scotland’s laws, her church, her educational system had to be preserved. England had ‘to take her king from Edinburgh and take Scotland herself without the sacrifice of one jot or tittle of anything she valued. THE HONOR OF CANADA, All this was a lesson for us. Our first thought must be the honor of Canada, for nothing could compensate for a stain on the national honor. This is an indispensable condition when vur foreign relations are considered. He liked our neighbors well ; he could not do without their respect. But they would not respect us unless we re- spected ourselves. Sowhen they suggest aunion, he took it asa compliment, and at the same time when they talked of union he took it to mean, not a part, but the whole of the empire to which we belong. (Cheers.) When a people who had resisted the right of secession made such a pro- posal he took it to mean that they meant all or nothing. They must take our Queen and al] that is involved as wellas us. Then, indeed, would peace and good will reign upon theearth. Then, what a grand con- federacy is presented to our vision—the great mother and all her daughters united for ever, Until that can be accomplished we will keep the citizenship we have. At any rate the Scot wiil, for has not he been described as a man who will keep the Sab- bath and everything else he can lay his hands on. (Laughter.) We cannot take any other position. A man may give away everything he owns, his money, his life, may sell himself as cheap as he pleases, but at best the individual is only a leaf on the tree. The tree must not be sacrificed, national honor must be kept inviolate. They must say with thg laureate : ‘* Britons, hold your own.” SCOTTISH PRE-EMINENCE IN GOOD WORKs. | Another trait in Scottish character was. then treated of —that of sobriety of judgment | _ and hard common sense by which they are | best known, and which made them good colonists, good servants, good masters, good merchants, good bankers, good engineers, | aud good politicians. It is this which has | given them wealth and the proud position | they hold in our country. Numerous in- stances of Scottish canniness, bristling with | humor, which caused roars of laughter, having beea cited in this connection, the speaker went on to state that it wae danger- ous to argue from caricatures. When can- hiness meant practical sagacity and self-. control, no quality was so indispensable. The first lesson for & man to learn was that waste and want are synonomons, The man who scoffs at Scottish penuriousness should remember that wherever it was needed they had been prodigal enough with blood “or certurtes they hyd been A Patriotic Address. ‘close allies with the French. } BEPORE THE MON- | They knew ‘the Scotch well, and did not call them Their verb was, ‘‘fier comme i t history also showed that the Scotch knew how to spend well ar to save well. in our hospitals and asylums in our churches and schools, in our col- leges and universities, we all could Jearn that lesson. In Halifax the names of George Munro, Alexander McLeod, William Young, would ever be connected with Dal- heusie; in this city of Montreal we found Greenshields, Redpath, McDonald and Smith building on the foundation laid by another Scotchman, MecGi'l; further west we found the same thing—Car Fleming, Gilmour, Michie, A and a thousand more in connection with 's. It was all the same of sacrifice, hum citizens giving with the same enthusiain as .nilliogaires, but at what a ter sacri- fice. The principals and presidents of Dal- housie, McGill, Queen's, Torontv and Man- itoba universities were all members of Caledonian societies, and nobody had ever accused them of working for lucre, because they had not got the chance. The leason of all this to those engaged in the making of Canada was plain. Let them teach their children that economy is a virtue and ex- travagance asin, Cultivate in them a holy horror of debt. Apply the same lesson to public aifsirs, and send to parlisments, lo- cal and federal, men who will set their faces against any addition to our publie - burdens, for the greatest peril which t hreat- ened the national life was, to bis mind, the steadily increasing sum of national obligas- tion, LET US ALL BE CANADIANS, The speaker then turned to the lessons to be Jearned from our environments. They were only one of several races engaged in the work of making Canada. Therefore, it would not do for them to be Scotchmen only. They were only one, and not even the first. That place belongs to our French-Canadian fellow-citizens. (Loud applause.) They first won Canada from the forest and the savage and they have sanctified the'soil by the tears ard blood, the devotion and thervism of tea genera- tions. Their Valhalla is crowded with the figures of knightly nen and saintly women, of martyrs faithful to the death, and of ex- plorers dauntless as they who sailed in quest of the Golden Fleece. In the pre- sence of Cartier and Champlain, of Moissoneuve and Doulac, of La Salle and Verandraye, of Lalemant and Brebceaf, of Montcalm and Levis, they stood with un- covered heads. That race is still full of the old virility. All Canada honors judges like Dorion, poets like Frechette, orators like Chapleau and Laurier, patriots of the stamp of Joly, and writers like Chauveau and the Abbe Casgrain. These add new lustre to the old glories As long as the race duces such representative men as these the extension of Canada will only give it room for new triumphs. On us on them alike is one racred obligation. We must be more than Frenchmen; more than Scotchmen. We must be Uanadians There can only be one Canadian nation, and all the races that have made Canada their home must contribute tu its making. Dreams of anything else are folly and attempts to real- ize these dreams treason. Against treason all true Canadians must unite. The game of seccession has always been tried on this continent, and the result of the experience should be enough for alltime. Let us teach our boys and girls Gwelic or French, but if it were only that they may beat the ‘*slow Saxon” we should teach them Eng- lish, too. Ouroutlook must include all in: terests and all classes, and make allowance for the prejudlees and room for the virtues of others. Let them put their foot down upon the demagogues who would tnrn a Scottish vote or seek for places in cabinets or post offices on the ground that they are Presbyterians. They want no Sco‘tish bar- nacles at any rate, no sham representatives. Let them gain positions by brains and ser- vice, and let the best men win, nolmatter what their nationalities. A high regard for the national honor, saving common sense, a wide outlook and a generous recognition of the claims of those who work with us on behalf of the common weal, and add to these lowland endurance and highland fervor and what more was needed to make a country? STAND FAST FOR CANADA, A remarkable incident during the con- struction of the Canada Pacilic in the midst of the Rockies was then narrated, The men at work seemed to have met in- superable obstacles and were afraid that their work on which so much depended would have to be abandoned They tele- graphed to Montreal fur instructions. The president of the company telegraphed as his answer two words-~‘*Craig Eliachie.” That was the keynote of Scottish character. it was a watchword which had done good service in India as wellas Canada, ‘Stand fast, Canada,” against all enemies, especial- ly those of our own household, who would strike the flag or stain the national honer; against factions, animated greed and party spite, reckless of the burdens they impose on the country or the difficulties they are preparing for our children: against’ the stray bigots who revive the feuds of the old world, and the fanatics who are sleepless enemies of civil and religious liberty; against all who would divide that they might destroy. Stand fast, Canada. ‘The rev. gentleman on resuming his seat was rewarded with tumultuous applause, long continued. <b «& wero Were ir Came From.—A Quebse says that with regard to the typhoid fever and diphtheria now prevailing 2 there it has been established that no less than 23 were infected with d by leet ened milk supplied oe eae several cases of that d iv h cae isease in his ouse, and who engaged to nurse a child that was suffering feom a severe attack of diph- theria, vesels in which the milk was carried were washed with water taken from a well emitting noxious — The was allowed to go to his house w the s of the diphtheria to his own” and trdm the vtritd tre mather tank i Z & eri en93 3 ean. ae - a A A A A 7 Oe a ig EN NE ae eu maa ~ pe BO in i a ow ares a5 Aager te ores hie’ f Zo aw ARIS re ra ee ones ee - i os ————