» - ve I & erm Pi OLLARS A LBAR * This is trne Liberty. when ¥ree Kor Wer » hi iving to advise the Public, may speak free.’ *-~Huripipes. Smenus Cops Two Cents NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. SATURDAY, FE ‘BRU A SRY 28, 1889. VOL. 2 NO. Ts “<i. ™>? ‘tT. oe - “ caeity arr ? iT Y ig t ati Sx , ssued Every Evening . »* * 3 7 The Examiner Publishing Co., FROM THEIR OFFICE, TONDON DATE ANPRW CATAR LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUAR Charlottetown, P. E. Islana. RATI OF SUBSCRIPTION . ix M a es ss ee ee ae $2 oJ eee BOS, oo en teen i 2 0 Meo cows vs > Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly quar- civertisements on ; iaif-yeariy or ear.iy 7 wawan iL AuiéN Au FUR MOON § CHANG ES, 7+} } ih way . : 7 r irst Wa wter, stu day, 4f., 029.0M., P.m., Se nil Moon, 15th day, 6n., 4.0:0., p.iu., INK. ' irc’ \luarte roth lay.7h., ‘2.7m... pm., SV ; ‘ : Ss ‘ii a teal ani OP ca, ae ee % & - oh, Dd Ws (San ‘Sun Mo nm High! Day "5 e. 4 of % 3 s : % ed RY : ‘tan, bo aoe 4 * “4 a Sy Mi DAY OF WEEK! :_cisets | rises |¥ ien’h| & tS t F we — co a beat Sent a ae oe mn m h ni morn{aitr } n 1 Friday 7 2314 59; 8 19))1 50 9 Ly ; : ra abe : : » ) : j . rill antea . 4 te £ My: > 2|Satardny 27.5 1 § 50)morn 34} Whioh will ba sold Regardless of Profits fur tha next Two Weeks. $/ Sunday ~ HY ‘ ais oe | ’ 4 Mostedmy 2 oe: ) .4 10 | 5) Taemdag ‘. G10 5) i 4i tr) |X * oT bs 4 2 iii 3) = 4) ane i | ‘9 S10 33 3 > 49 ait Ub NEW m } } ij HA ANDKERGHIBE rd ; sifriday =| 18} 9a} 2} on DBE NGW TIRS AND SILK HA iii. y Saturday 7 Mili gers 7 54 10} Sanday. 15: 32)ait 30! 6 2! &7' A1/ Monday } 22) 33) 1 18), 7 2710 1) 12) ['uesday Fy me 6k SA 4} I3iWednesday | 9 163 5 93) 7} . Chursday S| 18 4 Oo 54 10) Friday ; G6) 19) & 16710 32 13} 16 Baturday ; 1| 6 26)il 8&8 16 | 17 Sunday oO 22 7 S6/LI 40 19} is Monday 24' 8 47iatt 20 22 | ecole i} 96) 9 £9] 0 57 25 | , ae , See odantl sgl ‘ert cal a. at hucen Street, Three Doors Above Apothecarics’ Hall. a ¥ “an siAY iv wv -s ~) ’ ou ~_ j 21| Thursday | 57) 28:morn] 2 24 3i} 22! Friday 56) 30) 0 26) 3.19) 34] February 19, 1880—eod & why 23) Saturday I. B4 $1; 1 48) 4 49 7 | _— : Stidanday } 52} 32) 24816 7| 40) : i eae 4] LS ee - 25| Mo y | 51] 341 35317: 43/3 - A 3 ° fo 2 FS ES gw 8 i ~ & ~ : . | ~ ~~ | ‘ : & § es 3S 8? z y BY . 2h | uc 8 ay | 4 y} ob 4 49 Ss ved ‘| é mn : 5 : a = 2 pm Ls ® a c al f ‘ * ; + 27|Wednesday | 47| 37| 5 36/921) 50) : Bide ey rh § ; pahat JEM 23 Thursday 6 4415 38 6 15)10 12/10 4 | Pees 1 ae 2425 bem Beau Se & 2: & Ss 2 5 al | | , | | , | : ; T i Ws a > yr Gly ant be 1c? - b - Prices Low and Variety Great, J.L, WHEAT. J.G@. BRIDGE 8. L, BURR WHEAT, BRIDGE & BURR, Receivers and Commission Dealers POT: ATOES, iGGS, Butter, (Cheese, Pp uitry, (game, @c, Consiznm of Kit POTATOES soli- cited ar nd liberal advances made 44 & 46 CO. WMERCIAL S STREET, ", © wa er 3 Boston, WASH. Boston Chamber of Vommerces Weekly Official Market Re me rt sent to any fiem on application. septZs an dy law frlasgow Laud and Uslor Works, MONTREAL. ““eLe PHA Fs NT 9) ERAND PURE WwiITE LEAD man ufactares un der is now ginal proprietors sé - * Ready Mixed Paints, made ELEPHAN up in all the choicest tints. werranted to please. Every Every packet is shade matched. macd will] be great. best. “ELEPHANT ” kitce, gives beausial and Jasting finish. “ ELEPHANT © and ceilings " ELEPHANT Order eariy, a3 the Spring A Only one quality made, super- Water-color Paints wails sedes kalsomine for 9. Colered Paints, in iron cans and kez. et ee s%? Japan Colors, in ail the ELEPHATH newest and richest colors, Su- | Varnishes and Japans, “ FIEPHANT ' perior to ay ee as ” Stains and sacquers a6 ELEPHANT 53 See aie ia the only FLEPHAN guarantee of really good paint. rT) rhe meses st, for most central and best equipped Paint Factory in Canada, FERGUSSON, ALEXAND ER & CO feb2-—3in eod JamMES A, MURRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS --AND— ‘ Commission Merchants HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Rererences : Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax ; treorge Macleod, Manager Sank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown. ee ee ee RREN & JONES, MERCHAN iS, t 14 Minotne La NGLAND. WA ass A ] East C HEAP AND 9 VE, Lonnon, E Represented in Canada by MORRISON X Muserave, Halifax. Det, 24, 1887— PEba UARY, 1889. | the control of the} JUST ARRTY stitial i] BY TI FINE ~ STANLEY,” ASSORTMENT OF—— * all ae Stoek A i A Large ENGLISH, Ej bvkSelwN i ee A Dieta th. ‘Lee of Grey om 8945" 5 sePE% 7 ® 3 Cottons, e Stock of White votonn) CANADIAN AND AMERICA & SLES — ee i — 1a¥g mos =! peae ay Brow e. ~~ Canadian Shirtings and Ginghams, Black and Colored Dress Goods ¥ hh? 7a o ‘Table Linen, Nays udVers, va 2 VERY BEST VALUE IN CARPETS AND Ol ' —, - The above sold as ; Greponus Towels, Towellings, 3: : ag av a m: ol th od Ticskings, Hessians, Counter; ath Shaatinas Pahla Nanking , olserilgs, L410 Way Lis. ———— 10: — PE bought at the right t we always do sell—CHEAP. RKRINS & S'TERNS. Charlottetown, Jan. 25. IRL9Q—dy & wky LY a a] el ) juee ad — ~ =— © oD “ as -_ 7 mad — a = poe — time i NE GASE All Widths. Low ei ET BA s B AM » , 5) & SS ay De, sa 3 a 7 | - ot Aili 2 : Rg fe Be Ge s Sea & ¥ = & 9 Sue aw * cline nininmtin BROWRS Ch’town, Jan. 4.—eod&wkly. Erices. BLOCS., | | j | } i ! ste me. st blood-purifier. With its forty years of coasts suc- eess in the cure of Liood Diseases, you inake no mis- preferring Qua can take in Ayer’s Sarsaparilla to any other. ‘The fore-runner of mod- ern blood medicines, 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. T never-hesitate to recommend it.’’-—-Georgs W. Whitman, Druggist, Albany, Ind. “Tam safe in 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, Ik, “We have sold Ayer’s Sarsaparilla here for over thirty years and always yecommend it when asked to name the best blood-purifier.’”— W. T. McLean, Druggist, Augusta, Ohio, “TT have sold your medicines for the jast seventeen years, and always keep them in stock, as they are staples. * There is nothing so good for the youth- ful . ae as Avyer’s Sarsaparilla.” — R. L. Parker, Fox Lake, Wis. **Ayer’s Sarsaparilla gives the best satisfaction of any m —. I have ia tock. I recommend ‘it, or, as the Doctors say, ‘I souenatel it over the counter.’ It never fails to meet the cases for which I recommend it, even vhere the doctors’ prescriptions have been of no avail.”’—C. F. Calhoun, Monmouth, Kansas. Ayer’s Sarsaparilia, Dr. dy ©. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass, Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. £ j V ~ oes (50H NT. MELLISH, | At rmey-at-Law, Notary Public, &. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. GFFICE— London House Buiiding, ppreries’ Corner), Quecn St. | Ri of Legal Business promptly attended to. . Money to Lc mad, at low interest. a’ dy & vr tf Qn a aes) tf i: e 8 : parece ao ee Is the oldest and most popular scientific and mechanical paper published and has the largest circulation of any paper of its class in aoe world. Fully illustrated. Best class of Wood Engrav- ings. Published weekly. Send for specimen copy Price 3a year. Four months’ trial, $1. MUNN & CO., PCBLISHERS, $61 Broadway, N.¥. | ARCHITECTS & BUILDERS Edition of Scientific American. A great success. Mach issue contains colored lithographic plates of country and city residen- ces or public buildings. Numerous engraving: and full plans and specifications for the use 0 euch us contempiate building. Price $ a year, 2 cts. a copy. MUNN & INN & CO., PUBLISHERS. may be secur- ed by apply- ing to MUNN & Co., who have had over years’ experience and have made over 100,00 applications for American and For- eign patents. Send for Handbook. Corres- pondence strictly contidengial. TRADE MARKS. In case your mark is not registered in the Pat- ent Office, apply to Munr & Co., and procure immediate protection. Send for Handbook. COPYRIGHTS for books, charts, maps, etc., quickly procared. Address MUNN & CO., Patent Solicitors, GENERAL OFFICE: 41 BROADWAY, N, Y- ESTATE OF ROBERT BELL, ALBERTON. TRUSTER’S SALE. (FVENDERS will be received by the undersigned until MOND AY. 25th inst., at noon, from persons disposed to offer for the following belong- ing to él st wy of Robert Bell, of Alberton, P. Island vi Lot }.- Dry Nacia: Hardware, B soot : and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Clothing, Groceries, Tinware, Crockery, Gl assw are and other miscellaneous goods, contained inthe new store and Ware- xinand Poplar Streets in es (on leased land) Horse Road, Lot 1 houses situated on M loerton, Lot 2.—The Lobster Factor and the conteats thereof at and at Lot 11. Lotu3.—The Farm. Stock and Implements on the h me stead in Alberton, Lot 1—The Hot usehold Effects on the Home- stead, and also the “* Hall Shares.” Lot 5.—The 3usiness Premises, consi isting rofa weil situated Corner Lot in Alberton (78x20), on w hic h the re is a nice new Store and Ww arehouses with every yore for a first-class business. Lot 6.—The Robert Bell Homestead in Alber- ton, stikoctdten a acres of land, on which there $a rst class Dwel ing, OQuthouses and two ex- oles it Barns, all well fenced. Lot Lit wo well-fenced Pasture Lots on Elde Street, in Alberton. . Lot 8.—An excellent Farm on Cascumpec Road, about two miles from Alberton, cousisting of 62 acres of land, all cleared and well fenced. A title, free fri ym all encumbrances, will be given to the purchaser on compietion of the pur- chase. Invenries te and applic ation to Mr. Stock Lists may be seen on Alex McLeod, Alberton, and the undersigned at Charlottetown, on and after 18th inst. Tenders may be made for one lot or mere, or for the wheie. t er. TERMS—20 per cent. cash; balance, half in six and half in NINE months, with approved security a The undersigned will noi be bound to accept the highest or aay tender. | i LEWIS CARVELL, Trustee of the Estate of Robert Bell, ‘ Get LN nn by wee py yore at li, df Foorva 7. 1*89 2462 732s may hoe fourd o bi oe BSP fie at GEO. ee PRE 2a BR LOWELL & Co's Newspaper ‘Advi tising Bureau (10 Spruce Street), where bet ee, mt Local and Other items. Kees.—The Je/egraph says that fresh eggs are coming down in price in St. John, ret: ail- lng in the stores at 16 cents per dozen. } eileen Goop Apvice.—An pekanee says: —If you have a place of business, be found there when jwanted. No man can get rich hy sitting ; around stoves and saloons. | - | Important.—Remember young ladies that March 1lth is the last day that answers to Woodill’s German Baking Power conundrum | will be received. Cannot we win the five dol- lars? bak ats New Horei.—The corner stone of a new hotel for women was laid in London a short time ago. The occupants will be allowed fo ,do their own cooking and housework, and ¢! rent of the rooms will be from $1.25 t 0 $2.50 ‘per week, ' oii re DsowNeD IN a Went. On Thursday morning last a lad namod Reuben Stevens, while drawing water from a well on the Sandy | Point Road, near St. John, slipped and fell ,head foremost into the well, He was found deo d soon afterwards. : Ls 1 afte | ards - | «© T have used Ayer’s Pilis for the past 30) | years, aud ain satisfied I should not be alive to-day if it had net been for*hem., They ,cured me ot dyspepsia when all other reme- ‘dies failed."—T. P,- Bonner, Chester, Pa. | Ayer’s Pilis are sold by all druggists. S Siccalidentint {| More Gotp Discoveries.-—Creat excite- ‘ment prevails at Port Hood, C. L., owing to a repsrt that gold has been discovered in ,paying quantities at coal mines, Mabou. | Leases are being rapidly taken up and a com. pany to operate the mines will be organized ‘in New York. - A Wannixe.—The seven-year-old daughter of Mr. Charles McCaffrey, of Omemee, Ont., | inet with a terrible accident a few days ago. | While running and endeavoring to catch upon a sleigh in company with others she missed | § her footing. ‘Lhe sleigh passed over her leg, | ‘crushing jit so badly that amputation was! ‘necessary, { lott i j . Born anp Diep Tuere.—-The Lunenburg! | Progress has been informed that about 98 | years ago, one Andrew Taylor was born in the | poor house at Hali ifax, and, on Friday, the 15th inst., the same untortunate died in the poor house ‘of Lunenburg Country. A life, with a poor house at each end of it, is a rarety in this county, and it should be. sal oa DisFiaguRep FoR Lire.—A soa of Mr. Archibald Lennox, of St. Nicholas River, Kent Co., N. B., working in the woods re- ;cently, placed his axe on the limb of a tree. The axe fell and striking him on the nose, cut that member nearly in twain. Dr. Isaac W. Doherty found it necessary to put in eighteen stitches. The unfortunate man will likely be disfigured for life. Cuurow Parties and Ciuristian Unitry.— Large part of the space of Tre Examiner to- day is occupied by the report o preached at the service held at - Church, Charlottetewn, Jjm connee the last quarterly meeting of the i teDé Soyres, My A, _ St. Mark” s, St. John, N. Bs We publish # tio . imon by special request, and have no .ioubt that all our readers will find it excellent read- ting for Sunday afternoon. i ee ro er Mrs. Winslow’s' g Syrup shoald always be used when! being teeth, It relieves the le anffere: it produ ces naturai | uiet slee P ny relieving cl id rom pain; a i the little cherub awakes ss brig ght as a button. St pleasant to taste. It igoothes the child, sofvene the gums, allays all} he bowels, and at once; r the r Os i very Association of Prince Edward eat az ‘the f, eas 2 Ts a CHURCH PARTIES ‘AND CHRISTIAN UNTIY. 4 Sermon Preached at St. Peter's Church, Charlottetown, by Rey. J. De Soyres, H. A. In cessariis Unitas —In Non Necessariis Libertas—In Omni- bus Caritas. “* But wisdom is justified of all her children,’ (St. Luke VII: 35). IT is not my purpose to discuss the textual questions, interesting and important though they are, attaching to this verse and the parallel pas- age in St. Matthew. There, as you remember, the last Revision has substituted the words: Wisdom is justified by her works ; and the latest editions of the Greek text of the New Testament have thought it needful to place a mark of doubt against the concluding words in St. Luke. Lut apart from textual doubts, there have been varieties of interpretaticn among those even who hold, as 1 hold, that the authenticity of the words cannot be shaken. Some commentators of repute, both in early and modern times, have taken the words in an ironical sense, The Jews are the ‘‘children of wisdom,” in their own esti- mation; but, the true wisdom, the Word, is justified from their misconceptions, and also the iesser wisdom embodied in John the Bapiist. But other commentators have more correctly in- terpreted the words as meaning that the Child- ren of Wisdom, those who have attached them- selves to her, and are Christ’s disciples, give cause and proof in their lives to justify the wis- dom they possess, But two points of sadn ess, even in this view, are obvious: Firstly, wisdom is impeached by mankind and is in need of justification, Secondly, to effect this justification 1, she must needs generate sons who achieve Yes, there was a tone of sadness running through the whole address of | Jesus to the multitude, It was a sad occasion, tif we accept the view that the Baptist’s question meant a momentary wavering of faith, though this is not certainly establis hed. It was sad to confess that, against the resistance of the world, the Kingdom of God must manifest itself with violeace, breaking through the external cover- ings of the Old Dispensation. It was sadder to deplore that neither teacher—neither the Fore- runners, nor the greater One whom he proclaim- ed, could escape the contradictory scorn of their methods. But, we must UNDERSTAND THE SITUATION of the Jews before we condemn, It was indeed a hard and puzzling ordeal for the Jews to have to judge, at the same time, two characters so diverse, and, to their mindsy., so contradictory, as those of John the Baptist and Jesus Christ. Let us place ourselves in their position. When they had, to some extent, over- come their repugnance to ‘John’s s unconv entional life and words, had reconciled themselves to his farthur ; that a higher and greater “beac now be theirs. And the new Instructor seemed to. reverse all that men be ‘en learned, Where John had ab- stained, he enjoys. Where the old teacher had left liberty, he imposes new and stringent man- dates. Where John had alewered questions of : casuistry with spec ific instruc tion, Jes sus leaves them to their own conscience ; He declines to be a judge or a divider, He refuses to be named one of the prophets, He retires when they would fain make him king. Vhat wonder that some, against John the | pein, relieves wind, reguiates t Bapiist’ Ss Ge sire, made amen lves his sect rather jis the best Kapwo remedy for diarrhe Ga, | than his disciples : just as, later, Paul and Apol- | whe isuig irom teething ot other | } los and Peter were to be disteetgnh by partisans | Catuse bw CRn yr S.. CENTS <a ivle, Be | y vho regar« led them not as teachers, but as the igure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's ae ae figure-heads of their [aciions. a nen a thar trind fApril 1 » 8) WAad others solved the difficulty yet ynore ex > Ae = Aine | peditiously by rejecting both teachers, rejecting i Personal, at once that burthensome baptism which involv- | Sd ed repentanee, and the dicipleship which claimed | Sir iiector Langevin intends visiting the the Cross. No far-fetched excuses were needed ; | Pacific coast this summer. Princess Louise has become imember of the Anglo-Australian Society of Artists. Dr. Bliss, the phys ician who attended the late President Garfield, died at Washington ; on ‘Lhursday morning. Sir John Macdonald has temporarily as- sumed control of the Department of Railways a honor ary! and Canals, owing to the iliness of Hon Mr. Pope. A beauty show will be heid in Paris in April, in which women representing the Africau, Asiatic and Caucasian races will par- | ticip: ste. The first prize will be $6,000. Thomas N. Doutney, the temperance evan- gelist, is now at work at Brantford, Ont., holding revival services in Wycliffe H: ul, the headquarters of the Y. M. C. A., and bei ing assisted by the heads of the various temper- ° ance organizations, Mr. Spurgeon, the well-known London preacher, has a beautiful residence known ae Beulah, Upper Norwood, with extensive grounds and handsome conservatories. A silver casket from the Queen is one of his moat precious household gods. The Prince of Wales is said to hava wit- tnessed the overthrow of four ministries on his J various visits to the French Chamber of Dep- uties, and that, in consequence, his pre sence is looked upon as unlucky. © abinets in France fall so frequently that many more vis- tors besides the Prince must look upon a cris- is as part of the regular programme, Lord Rothschild is popular in London among the poor, ‘“‘He isa good ‘un, he is,’ said an omuibus driver, passing his palace, ‘‘Tf all the bloomin’ swells was like him they should have my wote and interest.” ‘How's that?” ‘‘Why, every Christmas he gives my mate and ime a brace of pheasants, and so he do allof'us wot passes his door. Good old Baton.” Professor Goldwin Smith is in Ottawa, the guest of Dr. J. G. Bourinot, clerk of the paid a protra: ted visit , and had a | House of ¢ Commons. He 'to the press room on 2 ss sday last : | talic with the boys. In convers¢ ation he said ihis mission here was simply a one. | His intention was to visit the library of Par- liment and study the Canadian pamphlets there for historical purposes. 1h* poriiament- tary library, Mr. Smith says, ts the finest he |has ever seen, and it was owing to their hav- iterary egdver- K. | ing no library worth mentioning in Toronto a ee 7 Rew. Jenat he was obliged to come to Ottawa. woman or band are but sharers in her heritage. ideals and different syst a very moderate measure of ingenuity sufficed. The one teacher could be rejected because he anienasih himself from senile the other be- ;cause he shared its joys and sorrows, ‘‘/or Son the Baptist came neither eating bread nor drinking wine, and ye say, he hath a devil. The Son of Man 1s come tating and drinking, and ye say, Behold, a cluttonous man and a wine-liober, the friend of p ublicans and sinners, But wis- | dom is justified of all her children, She is justified from them, from their own per sonal insufficiency and weakness which sink into ‘oblivion, while that, which is her gift remains eternal, For the children of wisdom are many, Sometimes they misuse the gift; sometimes they do not even | comprehend its value till late, nor their own re- Nevertheless, TER THE JEWEL sponsibilities. i SOONER OR LA’ SHINES OUT, j etting. And wisdom is justified zz and 4) her children, for, though they meet with disdain at first, then opposition, then erhaps, a seductive and deceptive rush of favor, Saeed by neglect ; yet at last, long perhaps after their death, they are recognized in their true character, scions of the royalty of truth, That difficulty of choice between different ems has lasted through all ages of the Christian Cc hurch. Parties have cl hanged their names and their watch-words, but in essence they are continued in unbroken de- scent. It is easy to denounce parties, and most easy to denounce those which are not our own ; but it is better to understand their reason of ex- istence, and the forces which maintain them. “« There must be heresies (or factions) among you,” said St. Paul, “that they which are approved may be made manife t;” an ‘d much more must there be one-sided cx mnceptio ms of Truth, earnest, sin- cere efforts to maintain and propa aene that which we know to be Truth, believe to be the whole Truth. From the time of the Reformation there have been certain great divisions of Protestant Chris- tianity, regre table as having caused so much of mn spite oF rude i al nd controversy and bitter musunderstanding, but each from its own side having striven for some 1 ¢ ; ) 4 y im Pp ortant rat h, 1egiected, Or Opposea, or mis- conceived by a contemporary Church, First of these, in order alike of chronology and impor- section (at first indeed representing ikeformation itself ) whose glorious function it was to state once more to a deceived and ignorant world the true source of salvation in Jesus C hrist. To narrate the his- (Comttrwed. on fourth page.) a . £ 43 ne wiole spirit ol the or) inconvenient directness in commanding un- pleasant sacrifices, their troubles were not over. Instead of establishing them as his disciples— ‘their. to pace with him a th Regie NN RN REE ENTERS cnenttenennemnRee mre se nn en) ees