‘ u 2 ¥ | } 7] Term Five DoLLaRs A YEAR. NEW SERIES. * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise t he Public, may speak free.”-— Evaiwives. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, MONDAY, MAY 16, 1887. wsaw., . : ~— out 1 ‘ “ _— THE DAILY EXAMINER. * — - - een ee ————— Srncie Cortes Two Cexrs. et VOL. i9.- NO. 299. Tie Daly Examiner TRYQN WOOLEN MILLS is issued every evening by : > . . The Examiner Publishing Co From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Uharlottetown, Prince Kdward Island, —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— Sin eel. «once c0scebe cub bceie W cute $2.50 Pee UOGURS. «cc ececnns 9250600:6¢¢e85 1.25 One meatn ..ce-. «laos desudy Ccbccede * Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. half-yearly, or yearly advertisemenis, on application. ALMANAC FOR MAY, 1887, MOON'S CHANGES. Full Moen 7th day, 9h., 48.8m., a. m., N.W., (below horizon. ) Last Quarter l4th day, 4h.,4.9 p.m., N.(below horizon. } New Moon 22nd day, 7h, 52.9m., p. m., W. (below horizon. ) First Quarter 30th day, lh., 7.7m., a.m., W. DEPOT, Cameron Block, Charlottetown (J. D. Reid’s new store. ) Men's & Boys’ Felt Hats, 55c, up Merino & Cotton Linders, 30c,up,Grass Cloths. White Dress Shirts, 70c, up. | Merino & Coiton Drawers,35e up| Table Linen. Regatta and Gingham do 30c,up Silk & Linen Handkerchiefs, | Linen’ Doylies, Merino & Cotton Socks 10c, up Waterproof Coats, |English Prints. Silk Scarfs 25c, up. Waterproof Carriage Aprons, \Cretonnes. I. R. Braces, 10c, up. Linen Carriage W raps. |Furniture Prints. Linen Collars and Cuffs. Ladies Silk Mmbvellas. ‘Towels and Towelling. Cotton Check Shirtings, 10c,up Gents’ Silk Umbrellas. ‘Turkish Bath Towels, Gray and White Cottons. Fine Canadian Tweeds. ‘Bed Ticking. Overalls and Jumpers. Fine Wool Yarns. Heavy Cottonades, 16c. Tailors’ Trimmings. Tryon Wool Yarns. | Drills and Denims. Canton Flannels. Marine JASara tt Royal Canadian Insurance Co, of Montreal (Marine Branch). Assets Slst December, 1886, $719,178.53 Income for 1886 - °- - 502,071.66 Mannheim Insurance Uo. es. SL 100 Pieces Tryon Tweeds from 'P. E. Island, and Australian Wool that cannot be beaten in the Lower Provinces. For Prompt PAYMENT our prices will be found to be as Low as the Lowest. CASH FOR Woot. Ch'towm, May 12—3 mo eod tu thur sat & wky - OF —— smATS JUST RECEIVED. a —— oO ‘TO be Sold 40 PER CENT CHEAPER than elsewhere, being bought direct from the Manufacturers. ws do Last year’s stock at 50 ceats in the dollar. NEWSON’'S BLOCK, CHARLOTTETOWN. May 4, 1887. = —— - = —— D .|Sun Sun /Moon' High’ Day's yy DAY OF WEEK! isesiseta | rises water len’h | silane tities danse at h mh m™morn;morn' h m|} ] Sunday $507 211 56) 4 1814 12] 2 Monday 4) 4 aft 68) 5 43 15) 3 luesday 48 6, 2 23) 7.4) ~ 18} 4) Vednesday 47 7| 3 39] 8°1@) “+ 20 5 Thurs lay hi) 8 465359 A 23 6 Friday 44 9 6 11/9 48) “25 7| Saturday 43' Ll) 7 26/10 61 28 S Sun lay 41 12' 8 37 iil ll 3l 9 Monday | 39 F3) 9 44/11 54 34 10 Tuesday 33; 1410 42\aft 34 36 ll Wednesday { 37| 15/11 32) 118} = 39! 12 Thursday | 35) I6:morn| 2 4} 41} 13 Friday "| 34) 18) 015253) 44! 14 Saturday 33} 19 0 51) 3 52) 47 15|sunday 32} 20) 1 231 459) 49 16 Monday 31} 21) 151} 610} 50 17 Tuesday | 30) 22) 2 16) 7 dl, o2 18|Wednesday | 29) 24/241) 8 2) 55 19, Charsday | 28; 25 3 5 8-42). 67 20) Friday | 26; 25) 3 30, 9 24 59 21\Saturday | 25) 26) 349/10 O15 1 22)/Sunday | 24) 27) 4 29/10 49) 3 23 Monday 23; 28) & Gill 13) 5} 24 Luesday 22; 29) 5 47)11 50) 7 25,Wednesday {| 22) 31! 6 37/morn! 9 26) Thursday 21; 32) 7 34) O 30) ll 27! Friday 20); 33) 8 328) 1 11 13 28' Saturday 20; 34) 9 46/158) 14 29 Sun lay 19} 35)10 57| 2 50) 16 30 Mon lay 18} 36 aft 8) 355) 18 31 Tuesday 4 18'7 37) 1 22) 5 14/1519 PITCH & FELT. JUST RECEIVED: 100 Rolls ‘Beehive Brand” Felt, 25 Bris, - "Pitch. FOR SALE CHEAP. DODD & ROGERS. Ch'town, May 7, 1&87—6i James L, MacMillan, ¥. 8, GRADUATE OF i Qutario Veterinary College, Toronto. Office in connection with Kennedy & Stewart's Livery Stable Great George Street. Ch'town, April 21, 1887—law & wky -FrOr- BOSTON. SUMMER 1884 YGEMENT THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. er leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- land, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at | 6.00 a. m. : } Also leave St. John at 7.30 every Saturday night for BOSTON DIRECT. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, $,50, 2nd Class ; 39.50, Ist claas. For ticketa and other information apply to G A. SHARP, F. W. HALES, Pr. & L Ry... P. ©. L Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. April 18. 18&&87—eod wky CA E04? EXAMINER PUBLISHING COM- THE i r PANY,” having lately added to their stock | Prices are away down. of type and materia] for Joo Pristiog, ate better than ever prepared to execute orders for Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Handbilla of all kinds, Visiting or Business Cards, &c., promptly and cheaply, in the best style of the art. ; None bat first-cldss workmen are employed in their office: and, as they import their printing papers direct fro:n the manufacturers, they are able to fill all orders on the most favorable terms. Tae continued patronage of the public is respectfully solicited. Pa OT eah ver CUbtowns Novws 16) 18% ice BRITISH WAREHOUSE = QUEEN STREET. (fo V——_—_—_—— cember 15th, I886, and continuin until the whole is disposed of, at LARGE BISCUUNTS FOR CASH. pages? sepa Nereee ee Ch’town, Dee 14-—-wkv DON'T FAIL TO READ ABOUT THEM (I a a SEE THEM | Sag new stock of HATS is just opened, and DISPOSED OF.” BE ————— 9 ——--—— “MUSI We have the Largest and most Complete stock of HATS ever seen in the City and our Try us, try us. We can beat the Island. s@ WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. ee ee () ee in Es PROW SE: SIGN OF THE BIV HAT, 74 QUEEN STREET, Ub'town; April 12, 1387—tbt & wky EATENSIVE GAM SALE ! OF MANNHEIM. Capital Subscribed, £400,000 stg.—$1, 946,666.00 Capital paid up,~ £100,000 stg.— $486,666.00 Reserve Fund, Ist Jan., 1886, £103,000 stg.— $501,266.00 Cash Assets, Ist Jan., 1886, £276,793— $1,347,058.00 Risks on Cargoes and Hulls taken at cur rent rates. Sterling Certificates issued, payable in London and the Continent. FENTON T. NEWBERY, Agent for P, E. Island. Charlottetown, P. K. L., April 28, 1887. —bi & eod 3wks wky Imo Fire Lustrale, Imperial Fire Insurance Co., of London. ESTABLISHED, - - 1830. Capital Subscribed, £1,600,000 Steg, Capital Paid Up - - 700,000 Assets - - - 1,581,574 ma <> anew Hartford Fire Insurance Oo,, ESTABLISHED. 1794. Capital Paid Up - - $1,250,000 Assets 1st Jan., 1887 - - 5,065,946 Net Surplus - - - 1,789,986 Insurance effected at current rates. I have decided to close out the ppypoy 7 VEWRERY whole of my stock of Staple anit" TON T, NEWBERY, ‘Fancy Dry Goods, commencing De- General Agent for P, EF. Island. Sub Agents :— J. Ex WYATS, Summerside, J. J. HUGHES, Souris. Ch’town, April 28, 1887—6i & eod 3wks wky Imo THE ee eye eeneeene enteeamennne eee NEW WANZER LAMP (PATENTED ‘A GRAND SUCCESS. NO CHIMNEY. ‘Perfect Combustion. A CLEAR, BRIGHT LIGHT — Burns a Moderate-sized Wick— j | Gives a Splendid Light without | } using half as much Oil as those Lamps with large Wicks. Attachments for Heating Water & | Making Coffee, Tea, &c. GOFF BROS., | AGENTS. Ch’town, May 5—eod & wky | 1 For Sale at the Gas Works, | BXCELLENT HOUSE COAL, also some spe- ' 4 cially prepared Ashes, at S0cts. per load, or 2ets. per busnel and a»oat 59) bris. at cent per bushel. For making clean, drs and durable tracks and carriage Grives. the former is most valuable, May 5-2 wkg Prohibition and Trne Temper- May 425A887. ance. PoTators——Supplies are coming a little more ied freely and extreme prices are not so easily St, —Through the kindness of a friend 0btained, but receipts continue to be well sold I have been favored with a copy of your ne ne ‘‘ebrons command 95 per bu., issue of the 2nd inst., in which I find = een bes md Bm Pras eg — communication over the signature of ‘True eae. That ba “i os and £0c, pet be. Sumadeudien? _ Eee: ere has been a further decline in y a ol : Kggs under the influence of liberal receipts, Vith your permission for space in your!and 13c. was a full selling rete yesterday for columns, | wish to offer a few remarks on | Eastern extras. Western sold at 12 and }2}e. said comments. I must confess that your Market closed quiet. readers are very apt to be led astray in re-| Fisa--With very light receipts and the gard to the efficiency of the Scott Act, so! backwardness of the Southern catch, the called, as if the whole fault lays in the Act | market for Mackerel has gained more strength itself, and not in a very great measure to 284 holders refuse to accept previous selling LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. | Boston Markets | the neglect of —it may be in some degree of T. T. himself, and the officers of the law, whose duty it is now, and always has been | to enforce that Act the same as any other in the criminal code, that comes within | their jurisdiction. Had this been always done since the ad-! option of the Act, and not as in some cases by spasmodic efforts, I am strongly inclined to believe with many more of the temper- | ance community, that T. T. would not now. have any cause to complain of its being a} failure, neither wuuld he have cause to | complain of temperance men being * ‘zealots ;"’ yet if he takes the trouble to read Galations chap. 4 v., he may there learn a lesson. Sut 1 come new to his charge that **Pro- hibitory measures have failed wherever | they have been introduced and will ever | fail.” (/) Verily, “this is a Daniel, &e.,” | &c. No doubt he has authority for making | such an assertion without giving the proof, | but this is avery poor way of establishing his cause. Now, Sir, with all due deference to T. T. and his eulogium of Summa Theologica and St. Thomas of Aquino, allow me to produce some instances [ have under my hand, showing how Prohibition fails (/) where it has been tried for sonie time past. The following among many others 1 can produce ought to convince T. T. that his assertion is lacking the essential element— { truth. In a paper published in New York, and from which I now quote, an Atlanta cor- respondent, writing of the result of Pro- hibition, in that city, says :— ‘Real estate men say that rents and pay- ments for property bought on the instalment plan by the poorer classes of people are easier to collect now than ever before at this time of the year; and they say that money that form- erly went into the saloon is now applied to the payment of debts and building of homes. “In this State, i. ¢., Georgia, the Supreme Court has recently decided against the claims for compensation. ’ Another item from the same State. The ‘sale of *‘agaric”’ or *“‘new era beer” has met with a sudden check in Atlanta’ In a recent case the Judge, in charging the jury, said :—‘‘If agaric is a name used as a device to cover a concoction of whiskey or brandy or other form of alcohol, and if new era beer is a disguise of -Jager-beer or other intoxicating malt liquor, the acumen of the law is keen enough and the straight for- ward common sense of a trial jury is sound enongh to penetrate through such attempts to evade the law and reach the core and truth of the matter.” The offender in this case was acquitted for want of sufticient evidence, but as soon as the verdict was announced, Judge Van Epps again ad- dressed the jury, saying:—*‘lf agaric is an alcoholic beverage a concoction of whiskey or brandy, or some other form of ..intoxi- cant, with something else, its new fangled name will-neotsave at. -If the new era Leer is a product.of malt and hops, and an intoxicating liquor, the fact that it. is scudding under such a press of modern canyass in the name selected for it will mot save it. The grand jury will soon meet—a sworn request,” The recent decisions of Judge Van Epps and Recorder Anderson, have convinced the wine-room proprietors, one of whom has been tined $1000 for violating the pro- hibitory law, that it will be too expensive aud inconvenient for them to continue the business. The Journal of that city says **Many of the wine-room proprietors are seriously cousidering the idea of closing out 1886. and retiring from the business, and leaving about half a dozen of the principal oues to conduct the sale ot domestic wines by the bottle.” And still another paper, the Constitution, ‘says: ‘Atlanta isas dry this hioriing #8 lany city or towa in the State of Georgia, and the dryness is due to the Wine-room men’s voluntary refusal to further violate the law actually or apparently.” Thus prohibition does prohibit in the city of Atlanta. On this same point I also adduc:> the fact that ‘‘Judge Van Epps, of the Circuit Court. of Fulton County, Georgia, in his giving judgment against an Atlanta wine- room illegal liquor seller, recently said : ‘** The Legislat ure did not propose to ex- change the devil for a witch and to set up wholesale prostitution by wines in place of wholesale prostitution by whiskeys.” He sentenced the offender te pay a five of 31000 and in default thereof to be put to Jabor on public works for one year.” , Again let **True Temperance” learn that | prehibition does prohibit. In reference to ‘‘True Temperance’s” allusion to scripture authority, I would kindly direct his atien- tion to only one passage on the subject, and in my estimation it goes further than prohibiting, berause it reads :—‘‘Look not upon the wine when it is red,” &c., &e., see Prov. 25, 31. Now, Sir, if a person never looks upon the thing thus forbidden they will not be likely to go astray by its use. Trusting that the facts as stated alove may teach ‘“‘True Temperance to give the proof ior his assertion, and not leave them so bald, he may yet accomplish more govd than in his production of the 2nd inst. [ remain, Sir, Very Sincerely, A Trek PROFIBITIONIST. prices for the small stock which rema‘ns un- sold. Nova Scotia No. 1 are not offering under $14.50, and some are held at $15. No. 2 are firm at $13.50 to $14. Dealers are more willing to buy No. 3 at $8 to $8.50, but a little higher range is asked. A lot of 30 bbls of new salt Mackerel was landed at New York on Friday, the first of the season. Fares of fresh continue te be brought into New York and Philadelphia, but the fish run very small in size and poor in quality. No receipte of salt Mackerel at Boston for the week ending Friday. Expert of Wheat. The export movement of wheat and wheat flour from the United States. Atlantic aud Pacific ports, is now. nearly equal to 3,000,000 bushels weekly. Of the quantity of wheat aud wheat flour on pass- age for the United Kingdom more. than 76 per cent. is from the United States, indicat- ing moderate supplies from other quarters of the globe. The weekly domestic con- sumption of wheat and wheat flour for food and manufactures is about 5,400,000 bushels, and this, with about 3,000,000 bushels per week for export, is diminishing the reserves about 8,400,000 per week. In tep weeks (to July 1 next) this rate of sup- plying home and foreign wants would call for 84,000,000 bushels. The exports of wheat and wheat flour from the United States, Atlantic and Pacific ports, from July 1, 1886, to April 24, 1887, have been equal to about 128,000,000 bushels of wheat, a quantity equal to all our surplus from the crop harvested in 1886. Present exports are being madé from the reserves on hand July 1, 1886. Estimates of the size of the reserves carried over July 1, 1886, range from 75,000,000 to 85,000,000 bushels. (pinnnogeelianiiiietininediinaiiiensnaia, New Application of Paraffine. It has been lately discovered that it renders leather waterproof. Being coated several times with paraffine and oil, it is exposed to heat,by which it rapidly absorbs the mixture. The leather thus heated gives wut, when struck, a .wooden sound like gutta-percha, an: lasts much longer than ordinary leather made into boots and shoes. Parattine is of excellent use in pre- serving the polished surface of iron and steel. When warmed and rubbed on the metal, and then rubbed off with a woolen rag, it acts like varnish, and preserves the polish, whether it be light or blue. = érip’s Wizdom. False friends, like ice, melt away at the approach of hot water. The bluntest men generally make the most cutting remarks. Lying is as hereditary as the gout, and both are almost incurable. When you commit the ‘t.’ Beauty is often drawn by a single heir. No woman rails so bitterly at unpunc- tuality as one who is, by accident, punc- tual— just once. Love, like small-pox, and leaves scars. matrimony orit is easily caught A girl’s heart (that is after she has at- tained the age of eighteen) is like’an hotel bed: you may never discover the previous occupant, but you may be pretty sure there has been one. Men are geese: women are ducks, and birds of a feather flock together. The road to ruin would be more plea- sant were it not so short, and if there were fewer exorbitant toll-gates. The better a man knows himself the more indulgent he 1s to the faults of others, If you wish to discover the extent of fe- n.ale malice just incur the jealousy of an unprincipled woman. — oe Apvice to Morurrs.— Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural juiet sleep by relieving the child from pain; ind the little cherub awakes as “bright asa button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, regulates the bowels, ond is the best known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teething or other causes, Twenty-five ents a bottle. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Hoothing Syrup, and take no other kind marl7 eod & wky ——_- A farmer once called his cow *‘Zephyr,” She seemed such an amiable heifer, When the farmer drew near, She kicked off his ear, And now the old farmer's much deyphr. a + W. A. Goopenoven, 158 East St., New York City, states that in October, 1884, he suffered so with pneumonia that his physicians advised him to leave this severe. climate, which he did. In the following year, 1385, he was taken with another attack and feared he would have to go away again and give u bnsiness, but by advice he tried Adamson's Balsam, which has entirely cured him. It is ermission that we publish this. Trial with his { i dy wy lw bottles 10 cents. ——_~ ee a oil it It is reported that six English detectives, } Charlottetown, May 13th, 1387. The thermometer registered 84 in th yenile in Monetun Ua Tuesday: i «© | busy asce who arrived at St. Louis two weeks ago, are rtaining the character and extent of the Leah Wetwual Lagenmaaten ER FORE en ie aa Ose Siareemdpartaghnmnae t.ho aman deeming ce® Penn, pails nf = De ane eabe otepamglitge atta at: a a a: ie scieeemeemenenaiemnsmasiraiesen summmaekaiemes ame oe