te ee ‘ # ® : ee 3 a ee ‘THE EXAMINEK Job Printing Rooms, LONDON HOUSE, QUEEN STREET. Job Printing ef all kinds at short notice tillhead , Letterheads, Notvheads, Pamph- ets, Posters, Dodgers, etc Teams :--Frve Dottans A Year, ee XAMIN R. * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Mon, having te advise «he Public, may speak free.”—Evniripgs. - For neat, clean, tasteful Printing and prompt attention to orders, THB EXAMINER Job Printing Depart- _— is peculiar. Don't forget it Strerx Corixs Two Ounte NEW SERIES. Calendar for December, 1892 MOON'S CHANGES. Fall Moon, 3rd dey ............. 9 53 after Last Quarter, 10th day...... eee 10 Gafter New Moon, 19th dvy............. % 49 morn Firet Quarter, 26+h day..... . 45% after Day | High Water. of Day of Week. io ——— Munth. Mocn. After. ) h. m. h m i Thursday 8 17 R46 2 Friday 914} 939 3 Saturday lo 3 | WW 2% 4 Sunday 10 46 1. © 5 Monday | 11 29 | il &O 6 Tuesday one ee 0 12 7 W edaeaday | © 34 0 57 8 Thursday 1 20 1 43 9 Friday 2 6 2 30 10 Saturday | 235 3 20 ll Sunday 3 46 4 12 12 Mondav : 2 5 13 13 Tuesday | § 45 6 18 4 Wedneaday 6 46 7 14 15 Thursday 7 39 8 3 16 Friday 8 26 8 48 17 Saturday | 9 WwW 9 32 Is Sunday 9 53 10 14 i9 Monday | 103 10 54 20 Tuesday } IL 15 ll 36 21 W ednesday | Jt 55 a 22 Thursday | 014 0 33 23 Priday 0 53 iil 24 Saturday | 1 29 1 48 25 ‘uaday ee 2 2 285 Munday | 2 51 216 27 Tneaday 3 42 4 18 25 W ednesday 4 55 | 5 37 29 Thuraday | 6 20 7’? nO | Friday 7 44 | & 20 3i | Satur lay j 8 5D 9 23 ROBERT BALLOCH & 00, TEA MERCHANTS, Mincing Lane, London. REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. M)i8139%, HALIFAX 90 S. R. FOSTER & SON, Manufacturers of Wire Nails, STEEL AND IRON CUT AILS, And Spikes, Tacks, Brads Shoe Nails, Hungarian Nails, &c, ST. JOHN, N. B. novi—t sr ESTABLISHED 1790. CLIFT, WOOD & CO., General Commission Merchants, ST. JOUN'’*, NFLD. W E have much pleasure in informing our cor respondents in P. KE. Island that we have rebuiit part of our premises (destroyed by the recent fire), and have now sufficient STORAGE and WHAKFAGE to enable us to resume busi- ness as here! ofure ) Con-ign nents + f Prodace will at all times have our best attention CLIFT, WOOD & CO. nov25—2aw © w! THE CHARLOT PETOWN Mutual Fire Insuranc3 v9. S prepared to take Risks on Proper‘y in I the City at very low rates. The people of Charlottetown can save a large sameount of money by patronizing the MUTUAL IN- SURANCE CO. A number of our leading ©' nme are connected with it, and the ree itp is ample, Full particulars can be ubt anna by app'ying to B. BALDERSTON, S: cretary ja 240 Char)ottetownr, Dee. 5, 1892— Disappoints ! QUEEN Insurance Agency. Oifice Naxt to Bank of Nova Scotia JAMES DESBRISAY, ACENT CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAN?)), Diess Lengths, |} See the lot on our | Counter selling low. EE = a —— , Cloth Jackets & | BOYS’ Ulsters. OVERCOATS. AT THE | TUS LIVED ee | ee i Sik BANDKER- MEN'S CHIEFS. OVERCOATS. [saa Gauntiet, Priv’c | UNDERCLOTE-| Gloves & Mitts ING. CLYAKS. i | » | $3 | | eur i CAPES. 0 FUR y COLLAASS. a — yo OL TIES and HOSIERY. | ) COLARS HARRIS & STEWART. { { | (Solon Phillips Square. best goous. sarang Sale eed NEW FURNITURE. (4) Yontinued daily until the whole of our immense stock is disposed of. Good work, new styles, bottom prices, at our Warerooms, Save money and get the Come one, come all. @ueen JOHN NEWSON. Charlottetown, Feb. 25, 1892. sued a ker = = = THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2”. 1892. nS ut y ee FB HGUSE, MONTREAL. We have this season is- CATALOGUE © of! Goods suitable for Xulas PEELS | and will be pleased to for ward the same fo any ad dress on application. HENRY MORGAN & CD., MON PTREAL. dec—tts tf our entire sock cf CLOCKS, TACLES, &c, Stem Set, &c., lower than has ever been offared of the United States or since Adam was a baby. For iastence:—SOLID SILVER WALTHAM WATCHES, Stem former price $18.00 and $25 00, now $13.00 and $16 00; CLOCKS, enes $5 00 and $6 00, now from $2.00 to $4.00; RINGS, BROOCHES, EAR KINGS, SCARF PINS, &, in like manner. Special attention given tu the Cleining and Repairing of Waiches, Jewelry, Compasses, Xe, say, Hello There, deinequatinaiescligliteneveneeocs BIG BARGAINS ARE THE ORDER GF THE DAY, : y onnoeengeiinl eneee aan ad EEN Auction Sales and S'aughter Sales and Big Discounts of all kinds the whole country i im a general uproar for Bargains, so we have decided to sell WATCHES, JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, SPEC- tv the public in the history i Ae, SUT, North Side of Queen Square, opposite the Pust Office. Charlottetown, Dec. 15, 1892—3m tu th & wky Wind and Stlvercid, $5 ; Clocks, THE vAlLY EXAMINER AL Square, Children always i Enjoy It. ie of pure Cod Liver Oif with Hypo- Phosphites of Lime and Soda is almost ¢9% palatable as milk. A MARVELLOUS FLESH PRODUCER it is Indeed, and the Iittle lads and lassies who take cold easily, may be fortified against a cough that might prove serious, by taxing Scott's Emulsion after their meals during the winter season. Beware of substitutions and imitations. SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville. a ae am 8 (ah1l8~eod Cutlery a» Silverware ——-AT THE CHYY HARDWARE STORE. eS ) Special Ssle for the Holiday Trade now on SPECIAL DISCOUNTS FOR CASH. R B.NORTON&C Charlottetown, December 12, 1292. (x1)—-—— 0., QUEEN STREET. QILLETT’: PURE ao a ‘ NH hé, a POWDERED / ivu7%s f , PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST. Ready for use in any quantity. )’or making Soap, hundred Othet y Softening Wat °. Disinfecting, anc : uses. can equals 2 pounds Sail Soda. Sold by Ail Grocers and lruggicts. BS WW. Gra Lerr, Torcantc CAUTION EACH PLUG OF THE . indeed, was it that it gave his parente many yr e ‘ avy an anxious hour. He would recouat imagin- IS MARKED aia little fictions of his imagination and actual > | fact. This characteristic was strong with we ® | Shelley throughout his not very long life, and I¥ BRONZE LETTES. NONE OTHER CENUINE. jan2—-dy & wky DECEMBER 29, 1892. Our Farmers’ Difficulties. A coRREsPoNDENT of THe EXAMINER states, with much furce, a number of the causes of the difficulties by which our farm ers are now beset. which our correspondent complains, that faraiiis easly make a good livelihood and grow wealthy, is false and foolish. Under the most favorable circumstances, the life ofafarmer is l.borious ; and he must, i! be would succeed, be coustant!y economical Let any one who fondly imagines that this is not the fact *try it himself”! Now that machinery is so generally used, and that the competition of Western farmers is 80 keen, our farmers have need for the exer- cise of high intelligence and all their talents for good management. They need specific knowledge, and they need united effort. The dairy movement will, directly and indirectly, teud to the supply of both these needs. We regret that Premier Peters has, appareatly, forgotten his pro-|, mise to supply a travelling dairy. Perhaps he imagines that the work of the road- making machine in the last aucumn will make up for his neglect in this respect. If so, he is mistaken. The instruction vf Wales College is all very well in its way. But it is evident y inadequate to the needs of our farmers. Much more to the purpose is the policy of the Dominion Government, plied with seeds of improved quality, and the Experimental Farms. The practical } i efforts of the Dominion Government to Canada. But let the Government do what cursor of a better day, the spirit of enquiry now abroad among them. that some of them, at least, are fully alive to the conditions of ‘tthe situation” in this Province. THe EXAMINER is about to publish a series of articles on ‘‘ Dairying a specialty in P. E. Island,” written by one of our most intelligent farmers, who has made a careful study of the subject. These articles will, we have no doubt, be widely read and discussed by his brother farmers throughout the Province. ‘ are succinctly set forth by our correspondent |i ** Argus,” he has overlooked the fact that the prices received by our farmers in the past farmers in the United States. higher here than in Chicago, oats ruled they ought to have been, the fact was due to conditions over which Canada and the Government of Canada had no control. instead of horses and the McKinley tariff are causes contributing to a depression of pricee, which could not, in any way, have been avoiced by Canadians. Personal. An English paper recently announced that Lord Rosebery was paying his first visit to lreland. It seems extraordinaay to think of this statesman and leading Home Ruler having actually never seen the country within a few miles of him, about which he has had to constantly speak for years. \ et he has visited Australia 14,000 miles away. Mr. Edwerl Farrer, late editor of the Globe, is writing a series of articles on the condition of Canada for the New York Sun. Mr. Wiman, who has taken on himself the trouble and expense of circulatiog them, says their ‘evident motive is to lessen the liber- ality of treatment in matters of trade relations with Canada” by the new United States ad- ministration. ‘The gang are still showing her enemies where to stab their country. A son of Mr. Goschen, lately Chancellor of the Excheqner, must be rather a cool young man. The statesman was unable to attend an important meeting and sent young Goschen co apologize. With charming self-confidence the young man informed the committee ; ‘My father can’t come to-night. so he sent me instead. I think I wiil do quite as weil Don't you!” He issaid to have done very well indeed. The poet Shelley, asa boy, was possessed of a marvellous imegination. So wonderful, ary scenes and conversations as though they were actual, and it really seemed as though he were unable to distinguich between th: frequently gave rise to unfortunate complice- tions between himself and those who did not understand bis nature and habit. Boys’ overalls and rubbers, just the things The use in the big cities of electricity|ery. eee = Wait and See. John Kendrick Bangs, in Harper's Young People. “It's a great thing, Jimmie boy, when you don’t know what to do and can't find anyons to tell you, to sit down and do nuiiing, because if you did some- thing you’ be likely to find out afterwards that it was the wrong thing. When I was The assertion, of}young, in the days when I wes what 1 used to be, | once read a poem that has | ngered with me ever siucs. It was called **Wait and See,” and this is ths way it went : ‘Wher you are puzz'ed what to do, Aad no one’s nigh to help you out, You'll fiad it for the best that you Should wait until Time gives the clew, And then your business go about : Of this there is no doubt. ‘Just see thecow! She never knows What's going to happen next, so she Contented 'mongst the daisies goes In clover from her head to toes, From care and trouble ever free; She simply waits, you see. * The horse, unlike the cow, in fear Jumps to and fro at maddest rate, Tears down the street, doth snort and rear, And knocks the wagun out of gear— And just because he does not wait is woes accumulate, D. Crockett, famous in the past, The same sage thought hath briefly wed To words that must forever last W herever haply they be cast! ** Be sure you're right, then go ahead,” That’s what D. Crockett said,’ ” afforded by Professor Harcourt in Prince LETTERS TO THE EDITOR, — The Merell Cheese Factory. Sir,—The shareholders of the Morell according to which a dairy station has been Dairying C.mpany are responding nobly to established and successfully operated at} the first csll of 25 per cent. of their shares. New Perth, our farmers have been sup-| ‘Ye have no doubt but that the full amount vf the firs: call will be paid in at the time : : specified. have laid before them, from time to time, | rest assured that a cheese factory will be in the results of the most recent tests made atj operation here next spring. The unanim- This being the case, people may ty of the people on this matter is marvel- ous. Faith in the business as a great ,' : means of improving our stock and maintain- improve our methods of agriculture are, We] jing the fertility of the soul is the power feel sure, appreciated by the farmers of/ that moves us on, this Province as of every other Province in|POndence with 'h» Department at Ottawa with refereuce © (he operation of the fac- : , _., | tory next season, avd it will, the success of our farmers wil! |facturers re cost vi appsratus, &c. The depend upon our farmers themselves. We} final meeting cf shareholders will bebeld in have great pleasure, in noting asthe pre- Mount Mary School, Morell, on Tuesday, 17th January, at 6 o'clock p.m, when all correspondence will be submitted, all final aud the desire for improvement which is] arrangements made, site chosen, by-laws The excellent}adopted, &c. All shareholders who have letter which we published yesterday shows|P#id their first call and signed the stock We are now in corres- with several manu- book will be entitled to vote. We hope for a very large attendance. H. D. McEwen, Secy-Treas. Lot 40, Dec. 27, 1892. Murray Harbor North Notes. Christmas went off quietly here. Very little is talked about row but ‘cheese factory.” All are on tip-toe for the enterprise, and seem anxious to get off ei und their fathers trod, and th While the causes of the present difficulties ce oe which a ba centilie daleg: ng and profitable stock keeping. We have plenty of temperance agitation and talk around. The Oause is making ° : things uncomfortable for the Trade ! fall were—if not all satisfactory —generally a smash-up was never dreamed of before. as high or higher than those received by} He to whom ail praise and honor is due Pork ruled |lives in Sturgeon, and need not be named. We must say that he deserves credit for , 5 his earnest, strong-hearted work ; and he higher, and hay sold at a good figure. If) win) not be forgutten by the friends of horses and potatoes have been lower than| sobriety and good order. Such Our pu’pit has been filled for the last two Sundays by Rev. A. B. McLeod, for- merly of Mount Stewart. Mr. McLeod made @ great impression by his fine deliv- Old friends were glad to see him, he having visited us before about seven or eight years ago. ms ao Fairfieid Notes. Rev. A. J. Mclatyre, the public-spirited pastor of St. Columbia, intends having a public hall erected near his Church, and is making « free gift of all the lumber requir- ea for its construction from off the tarm attached tu the Church. The parishoners are vow engaged cutting and hauling the required lumber, and ali will be in readi- ness to begin building operations in early spring. This hall, when completed wiil supp y 4 long felt want in this community. Mr. John Conwhy moved into his new re- sidence last week. It is one of the neatest farm cottages in this part of the country, and reflects much credit on the designer and build- er—Mr. Thomas McMahon. Mr. William J. Campbell, lately returned from Wisconsin, U. 5., has purchased a suit- able mill site from Mr, Clement Mclsaac, with the intention of erecting grist and carding mills thereon. Mr. Campbell had great experience in the milling business out West, and will, I hope, be successful in his new enterprise here. The weather for the last few days has been extremely cold. I fear the Gulf stream, which some writers predicted during the mild weather last winter was moving nearer to us, still remains in ite natural latitude. Cuar. —_——-2-a Words of the Wise. When our actions do not our fears do make us traitors. Shakespeare, They are never alone that are accompanied by nobie thoughts.—Sir Philip Sydney. No pleasure is comparable to the standing upon the vantage ground of truth—Bacon. Trath is as impossible to be soiled by any v»utward touch as the sunbeam — Milton Sometimes we may learn more from a man’s errors than from his virtues.— Longfellow. Sweet mercy is nobility’s true badge.— for this weather, selling tor 85c at Geff Bros, VOL. 30.--NO. 150 EMERY O. PENDLETON. A BATTLE WITH DISEASE! The Enemy Routed!! SKODA WINS! Extreme Nervousness, Loss of Appetite, and Rheumatism, DRIVEN FROM THE FIELD! MR. EMERY O. PENDLETON OF BELFAST, ME., NOW 45 YEARS OF AGB, WAS A MEM BER OF Co. I, liTH REG. ME. Von. He SERVED WITH DISTINCTION DURING THE WAR, REC’D AN HONOLABLE DISCHARGE AND IS NOW A RESPECTED MEMBER OF THos. H. MARSHALL Post, G. A. R., OF BELFAST, ME. SIX MONTHS SINCE WHILE AWAY FROM HOME AT WORK, HIS HEALTH BEGAN TO FAIL RAPIDLY, AND HE WAS SOON OBLIGED TO LEAVE OFF WORK EN TIRELY. He Says: “Coupled with all my old army troubles, i lost my appetite, had 4 distressing an Journing sensation in my stomach, ex treme nmervousmess, so bad that the least excitement would cause large drops of sweat to stand on my body for an hour ata time. Anything ata sudden, would riuee me to start BETTER aos me Combal “ not rost nights, Lost flesh ra ily and became much ema- ciated. In addition to all this, a severe Rheumatic trouble from which I have suffered severely ever eince my discharge, causing my limbs «>¢ joints ‘vo »well badly set in. I was obit coc -o ole up werk, and became vouch dfscour. aged. Get THA ting no better, 1 was in BM Seen to try SKODA’S DISCOVERY. Ithada wom-| §dertul effect upon me. | beran to feel better after using itonly a short time. I have now taken four bottles. My Rhea-§ mation has all di . Appe- tite has returned, ave gained much in flesh and strength. Nervousness ef gone. Am able to sleep well nm ts, And am again working at my trade COLD as Blacksmith. I feel that I asa esiteedy cured from all these troubles Yours truly, EMERY 0. PENDLETON, SHODA‘’S LITTLE TABLETS For Headache ani Liver Trouble, With the Discovery they cure Rhaeunmsa- tiem. Mild, safe, ficient. Far superior to any pill. Once used you will have no other. S@ina box. Price 35 cts. SKODA DISCOVERY 60,, Wolfville, N.S, Ladies’ and Gentlemen's PINE BOUTS | JUST RECEIVED, FIVE CASES FINE BOOTS & SHOES, mokono dl tic Dongola, Goat, Calf and Cordovan, wipes a une OXFORD, BUTTONED AND LACED, Beautiful Fitting Goods. R. K. JOST, Stamper’s Corner. Charlottetown, Dec, 13, 1892. eee eaten sneha NOTICE. ARTIES holding tickets or books for the Stal - lion “ Parnell” will please retarn them to the owner before the 30th of this month, on which day he will be disposed of at the owner's place of business. P. P, GILLIs, dec5--eod tl 30th The Telephone Company p._E. ISLAND. the Telephones would find 'alking mach mere satisfactory if they would observe the foliowing rules :— Ist. Speak with the mouth about four inches from the transmitter. 2nd. Speak in a moderate tone of voice, not too loud, an ar ard. lace the tctephene 80 a8 to Cover the ear just as if you wished to shut out ail ether sounds’ Do not press too hard on the ear, It is possible to talk and be heard when *tand- ing back tw» or three feet from the tran«mitter if you shout loud enough, but it is not a pleasant mode of conversation. is entirely una . and is a useless waste of wind and Inngs, besides ~~ annoying to all within range of your Shakespeare. p §ROB ANGUS, ay Manaxze ts. eR ) Lv