t EXAMINER. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Pablic, may speak free.”—Evziriwxs. A A Ss NR hs CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1890. Sruxveitxe Corizs Two Cente VOL. 25.—NO. 98 uiher i ubiishing Co., UUREN SQUARI ' # und. “ 2 aM l 25 oe 3. ar-| 7 v ; Df 100n 5 & HARUG, iL60U. : ‘, mn - 2 tin m, } ® N { -s..) } ° \\ S 2.0 a..8 ; j Day’ at n t iter rm m i 4 4i 0 40 j Oli 4 : i I 371 7 7 6 y 46 > oy o& 40 s 41; 9 28 10} 1) 66 12} iO 3Y 15} u . i iz is} a . 5 ~ i} 45 2) } 9 9 l5laft 16 24 | } »4 0 24!) O ol] 27 pil §9))1 35) 1 30} 30 j 23, Sé)morn| 2 14) = 33] L 22 s 47) 3 9 36 | 14 20:5 69° 135 4 18) 39) 12 86 0 3 26 2 42) }6| Sunday 16 2; 3571728) 451 ¥ ‘ i. . 4 45) 5 34) 50! 18) Ducsday It} 5) 5 20; 9 26} = 54) ivi ' v 6 5 52110 Il 57 | . ' ' 0; Cours 8) 8 6 18/10 49/12 0} 21 Fri 6 9 6 43)11 26) 3} éi [ 3] 2» 5 ; . iV é O|morn i ? 7ave 3 9} 24 75610 37| 121 2 ] . ] 15) ae WW 7 15; 9 1s is ; i i vy 4 2 42 21 0 A +) 85 39'S i bz} to 28 30 Suaday 4¥ 20 aft 24) 6 If 3] 31 Monday 45; 2ii 1 17 Qji2 & Sa " ——a— | | ye ee SOHN T, MELLISH, | 7 —w76 ® 4 S54 4BARWITE 9 i *. ? = or 27% 72 seh + sarrisi bs ALLOTiIé J¢ Notary Public, We., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. | ‘ (Davies Corner), Queen Si. Al ; Leal Business pro i} tly ’ } nterest itiended | | } - QT ANCGARN WT BLARUHAKU, i, Us, : y ‘ { mF el ivain ar Member 4. P. 4., &. 8. and ireland, CAT TAT CUFT sie ; ee ee ' Corner Pownal and Water Streets. ! LELEPHONI ‘ ' ; ay 3m eod WKY pa j ' JAMES H. GOOD, | Attorney-at-Law, Commissioner, &¢. | —— OFFICE—Cameron silock, Queen Square, | Char} tvetown. MONEY TO LOAN. | i lv 3u Saw wky tl | 7 a -| THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY | OF PURELY VEGETABLE INGREDIENTS i AND WITHOUT MEECURY, USED BY } THE ENGLISH PEOPLE FOR OVER 120 YEARS, 13 ockles s2Prlis These Pills consist of a careful and peculiar admix- tnre of the best and mildest vegetable aperients and the pure extract of Flowers of Chamomile. They will be found a most efficacious remedy for derangeinents f the digestive organs, and for obstructions and tor- , pid aetion of the liver and bowels which produce in- d gestion and the several varieties of bilious and liver | plaints, Sold by all Chemists. EVANS AND SONS, LIMITED, MONTREAL. SALT! SALT! SALT! l <4 \f) BUSHELS OF TURK’ JUSU SALT, in Store. For sale hy PEAKE BROS. & CO. i ISLAND} mMcnio +t TEA AND FANCY SALE. Di ee ea Rap WANCY SALE IN st. JAMES’ HALL, bain al ON— Thursday, April 10. ; int rest to look ;own price. Londen House Buiiding,| ~ | ' ' o- WHOLESALE AGENTS : oh | thus Column —(x)—-——— MACDONALD, B. QUHEN STREET, RECEIVED . 9 ete i Ney 5 fe. , i NEW SPRING Etvsse oe c +4 GREATER PORTION OF HIS STOCK HAS THE Reem OF—— Men's Clothing, Speci trace yu Custo:1-Made Clothing, and 25 per cent. cheaper. ——_——(x) Dress Goods. A fine stock of LADIES’ DRESS GOODS at any paice you can name. We wre selling Dress Goods very cheap this Month, and would ask you in your own at the goods before you buy. oe itMBiGiDics WY. You - cannot resist About Fifty Pieces of Embroidery selling off at half price. buying these goods when you see them. Carpets | “Carpets E NEW CARPETS ex 8. S. “Stanley,” direct from England, in BRUSSELS, rAPESTRY and HEMPS, newest patterns. ——{3] » Lace Curtains, in Cream and White, very cheap. (x )— CORSETS | CORSETS !—Large Stock, new iast fall, price from 25 cents a pair up. New PRINTS, GINGHAMS and ZEPHYRS just opened. JUST OPENED—12 Cases MEN’S NEW SPRING FELT HATS, Christy and J. B. MACDONALD, QUEEN STREET, | other makers. Ch’town, March 3, 1899—eod&wky UNDUN HOUSE | EW SPRING GOODS J USD) O70 N F2..- aj Kimbroiderys New Embroiderys, New Prints, New Prints. New Shirtings, New Shirtings, New Ginghams, New Ginghams, New Sheetings, New Sheetings, > —. = ~ a New New Pillow Cottons. New New New Pillow Cottons, iT'weeds. New ‘i ' weeds. Worsteds, New Worsteds, ~——— —-—- —(x) -—_—-—-— SWART, Jarvall AT THE-——~ — STAR ‘TAILORING ESTABLISHMENT, ewe ose (x] We offer for bslance of February, ; ; 7 PWEEDS at Cost, over thé counter or made up as you wish. Genuine Bargains Call and be convinced, as we mean what we say. McLEOD & McKENZIE. | Tne . ’ Genuine Goods ! March 7—2aw pat Charfottetown, Feb, 17, 1990. for his order, and guaranteed to fit and wear as well as any | mission to brew beer in the Territo:ies under - result, besides in a great measure al!aying the REMNANTS selling off at your) barley on 12th Jane, and reaped a good crop ‘to ail, held on to his capture, and sent for a SPECIAL LOT OF STAPLE tained with the sole object of selling the | Prohibition in the Northwest. | | FACTS AND OPINIONS STATED BY OFFICERS OF THE MOUNTED POLICE, THe working out of the prohibitory liquor law should be successful in the | Northwest Territory, if anywhere; for! there there is a large and well-organized body of police, who have little to do se long | ‘asthe law is not violated, and who have, ‘therefore, an interest, as well as a duty to perform, in maintaining it, The reports of the Police Commissioners and Superin- tendents, are, therefore, interesting to everyone. | Commissioner Herchmer states : ‘*The liquor question is in nearly the s:me position it was last year. There is stili a con- siderable outcry against the enforcement of the Act in the various towns, but not nearly jas much as last year. The facility of ob- |taining permits for the sale of four per cent. beer and the great improvement in the qual- jity of that article has, to a large extent, less- ‘ened the demand for stronger beverages, and 'I thiak there has been much less drunkenness }in the country; certainly the free use of four )per cent. beer in the police posts where can- ‘teens have been estabiished for its s»le, has ‘made a very great difference in the conduct of {the men. It is generally conceded that per- i | proper resthictions would have a beneficial jconsiderable discontent that undoutedly ex- ‘ists. Barley grows well, andin some sheltered places, hops, but at present they are unsale-’ jable. Home breweries would keep a consid- | erable amount of- money in the country and lafford a market to farmers for grain which | they could with great advantage grow, as it ‘can be sown long after the season for sowing 'wheat and oats expires. I myself have sown {on 10th September.” Superintendent Cotton reports ; “The ‘liquor laws,’ as the prohibitory clauses of the Northwest Act are often called, have given rise to considerable discussion. Iu the e+rly days prohibition was a necessity. It wes an important factor in maintainin peace among the Indians. The half-bree element also benefitted by it. “The construction of the main line of the Canadian Pacific Railway proceeded quietly, and the total absence of all serious crine— notwithstanding the sudden influx of thou- sands of rough navvies--was remarked with astonishment. This was again and again borne testimony to by prominent railway men who had had experience in other countries. Even with the efficient police suryeillance maintained, such happy results could not, I think, haye come about but for the prohibit- tory laws existing. That these laws were sometimes broxen, even in those days, is an undeniable fact. Such, however, was the ex- ception. not the rule. ‘Looking back over the history of the Ter- ritories, it cannot be gaid that prohibition was a failure or that it did not bring with it many good results. ‘‘Now, however, the situation is changed; towns and settlements have sprung up all over the Territories, The white population, in discussing these changes, has ventilated the subject freely and fuily in the Territorial press. Asa police force we have nothing to do with the different moral interpretations put on the Act. “It must suffice for us to bear testimony to the fact that a prohibitory law dges nat give universal satisfaction.” The consequenee is that in these days, when lawyers must live, the prohibitive law is practically inoperative. Of the thir- teen cases of breach of the prohibitive liquor law which have arisen within this district during the year, ten have resulted in conviction. In one of the remaining cases the liquor seized was found to be covered by a permit, which subsequently arrived, and in the other two cases the liquor was seized but the owners were con- spicuous by their absence. The two last mentioned instances are as follows :—On the 9th December, 1888, Sergeant. Ross seiged 100 galions of Montana whiskey, which was ‘‘cached” on the prairie about nine miles to the south of the town. He brought in thirty gallons of it, but having ro transport for the rest, and being assured that if he left it he would see it again no more, spilt it on the spot. The thirty gal- lons which he brought in were destroyed in my presence. On the 13th April (this is probably unique in North-West experience) our Indian scout, ‘* Star Child,” found a ten gallon keg af whiskey in possession of two men in the river bottom here and took it away from them. They tried cajvlery, threats and bribes, but he was impervious Sergeant Ross, who brought it to the bar- racks, where it was destroyed. ‘‘ Star Chid” looked about for the men for a long while, but never succeeded in identifying ijthem. ; ** While on this sub- ject I may, perhaps, be permitted to say a jfew words onthe question of police Jus- ‘tices, now before the coyntry. For my | part, 1 have always avoided trying any cases whenever | cou'd possiby doso. Since | have been here I have accepted the situation | because there has been no help for it. In former years it has been within my ex- /perience that local justices have refused to try liquor cases onthe ground that they jcould not runthe risk of injuring their business. On one occasion I visited an out ‘station in connection with a liquor case— ‘found a local justice there, who was disin- ‘chned to have anything todo with it; re- presented to him that it was his duty to try ‘the case, but that if he would not do so I iwould. He finally oonsented, and convict- ed and fined the defendant.” Superintendent Perry says : | Another year’s experience has given me no y pe ‘cause to change my views on this question, as | ‘The permit system, at present fails to re- gulate the use of intoxicating liquor amongst a certain class. Permits are nominally issued for domestic use only, but too often are ob- liquor thus imported. It appears to me that either the actual granting of the permits, o ithe recommending of them, should be vested ,in a board appointed for the purpose. in each plicants. In this way the present abuses of the system would be greatly modified. “The following table, showing amount of liquor imported into the district, is taken from the list of permits sent from head- quarters: Gals Wines and spirituons liquors..... 00 Malt liquor........... ideuedisnes ae Four per cent. beer for sale............. 2,500 Railway Accident. Aw accident happened to the Tignish accommodation train, which left Charlotte- tewn yesterday morning at 7.15 in charge of Conductor Thompson. east of Tignish, the flanger, a box car and three passenger cars left the track. two engines remained on the rails, and went on to Tignish, arriving safely. No When one mile The “Ninety per cent, of the spirituous liquors| damage was done to the flanger or box car, was imported by residents of the town.” Superintendent Melilree says :— ** Liquor is obtainable and sold to the in- j itiatei in every saloon in Calgary ; and in a place the size of Calgary, where there are civic authorities and local police, and where they make no attempt whatever to interfere w:th |‘ sible for us to do much towards lessening it. The saloons are searched occasionally and pienty of liquor found ; but, asa rule, it is covered by permits. Some of the permits are ancient, but a permit is a _ bermit, and it is quite impossible to prove that the liquor found was not im- ported under the permit produced. Permits have not been granted to saloon-keepers for some time, but many people who are granted permits leave thea in saloons or turn them have a fuli supply of other people’s permits, and as it has been ruled that liquor legally brought into the country can then legally be in anybody’s possession, it is no use to move in the matter. All we can do is to endeavor to prevent lipuor being imported in large quantities, It isno use trying to deny the fact that the sentiment of the greater part of the country is distinctly adverse to the statute on this subject ; we get no sympathy with our efforts to put a stop to the trafic, and it is the most disagreeable of the many duties we have to perform. During the past season two large seizures were made—one at Laggan, on 4th March, of G11 gallons, was found in a car of lumber. Oa the 17th October 392 t labelled as 4 per cent. beer. In al! $20 gallons t were spilled in this district during the last twelve months, representing a total waste of & large sum of money.” Superintendent Deane tells ys that beyerage. These breweries were closed early inthe year by the Inland Reverue Depart-}¢ ment, and thirsty ingenuity soon discovered thing to handle. From one point of view this is distinctly an advantage to mankind—the initiated can obtain a decent glass of liquor— sold, which, I believe, would only find a mayket now under extreme pressure. * . The first section (declaratory) of the prohibi- liquor or intoxicant shall be imported into, é&c., &c., or had in possession in the North- west Territories, ‘except by special permis- sion, in writing, of the Lieutenant-Governor,” but there is no penalty provided for the en- forcement of this broad enactment.” Settiers in the Northwest. KespecrineG the condition of settlers in the Northwest Territories, the Assistant! t Commissioner of the Northwest Mounted Police reports that the season has not been a favorable one in some portions of the Territory for agriculture, particularly in that part east of Regina, the extreme drought having resulted in very poor crops. Still, even in that section some of the good farmers had fair crops, and those in mixed farming have not suffered much, as butter, eggs and poultry have been a fair price. + ‘ farmers had excellent wheat, and I think Edmontan, but in all the territory mention- ed, except Edmonton, oats were a failure ; measure owing to indifferent cultivation, asj! in many cases fair crops were obtained by farmers who atteuded to them. Battle- ford had no crops of any description, kav- | than any other part of the country. potatoes. Hat there was a small crop of oats and | oats and potatoes for these posts in the 1 eastern portion of the Territory and Mani- toba. crop of oats and potatues, and those who. planted wheat had generally a fair crop. | Che absence of mills at Macleod and Cail-- gary cause farmers to pay little attention to } wheat. South-east of Medicine Hat a colony has been located this summer of about 6) families, mostly Austrians. A oonstable of German origin is atationed there, and he | reports them very industrious and content- | ed, in common with have lost a good deal of hay owing to) means. An Icelandic colony is increasing in the Red Deer country, about 100 miles north of Calgary, and the Mormons at Lee’s Creek have increased considerably this year, and settiement. They are the best workers in the Territory and produce quantities of butter of high ciass, for which they get from 25 to 40 cents per pound. There is | no doubt but that from one point of view they are good settlers, but the general im-, pression exists that they are polygamists. | They have purchased a tract of land from the Nerth West Coal and Navigation Co., and next year a large number of their peo- ple will settle there, In spite of the poor crops in certain sec- tions, there should he very little suffering as work has been fairly good this year. The low water precluded navigation, and all freight had to be hauled by teams, and the Long Lake Railway employed a great many men and teams. Cutting ties and. timber for that road will afford work to many people this winter, and the men ob- tie deat and etotitern plrsionle of Manitoba. TRG aL ae continue this work on short days. chased from the following men : Janis, George Mooney, Joseph McDonald, About Regina and Mvose Jaw the good! 4 McCulloch, Thomas Mooney, Daniel Me- fair wheat Was grown at Prince Albert and! Donaid, Hugh McDonald, Runald McPhee, John McDonald and Wm men potatoes were also a very poor crop, in a, munity to nced no certificate of character ing apparently suffered from drought more he refers to. oe : , We picture of the breakwater built by the Me- only secured 1,400 bushels of oats in the Kenzie Administration coming ashore under settlement, and our men have to do without Kennison’s, as it did the first storm after it At Maple Creek and Medicine Was built. At Calgary and Macleod there wasafair, ~ dence, age. Rare most settlers, they ee VALUABLE PROPERTY situate but the trucks underneath the passenger carriages we ¢ badly broken. trainmen weie hurt, None of the A wrecking train eft Charlottetown at 8 45 last night, and sssisted in replacing the cars on the track. The regular train will arrive at the usual ime this afternouu. We have not ascer- the traffic in intoxicants, it is next to impos-| tained what caused the accident, but it is = to be due to the spreading of the rails. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. pees King’s County’s Mis-representative. Sir,~I see that Dr. McIntyre is at his vld talk about *‘bummers and heelers,” and over to saloon-keepers, so that they always|devotes part of his slangy remarks to me. Last year, he says there were five thousand dollars expended on Souris breakwater, whereas the truth is there was only a lictle over one-fourth of that amount expended last year. As for his personal attack upon me, I care nothing for what he may say, except hat I want him to stick to the truth, es- pecially when he makes his attack behind my back and in a place where I have ne means of defending myself. that I had two of my sons employed on the work. work on it, and | ‘ workmen to say whether he was not as gulions were found in a car at Calgary,|, . aa It is not true For a short time one of them did leave it to his fellow- apable and did his work as well as any of hose employed. Besides his unmaialy at- tack upon my son, he has gone further, and attacked all the men who were hired at the break water. great many of them are boys, including his “Last year hop beer was the prevailing| own. Here are his words: “A When their farm work is over they Every wo or three. days they have to leave «ff . ; work, as the spray is driven in | ;outh- that permit liquor was, after all, the safest east p Red ae pray iven in by a south Below is a list of the names of the men employed: George Rice, James en Richard Lyons, Edward Lavie, . : ames D. Aitken, Richard Keefe, Nathan instead of the fieryZpoison that used to be Keefe, John McLellan, John ‘T. Cantwell, Albert Angus McLellan, tive statutes provides that no intoxicating|Coflin, James Keays, Janies Whitty, John McPhee, Charies Lavie, Daniel Campbell, Donald Leslie, Joseph Kennedy, Peter Melsaac, Charles A. Kickham, Massey, Ronald Morrison, Fidelle Cheve- rie, John A. McCormack, Arthur Lyons and Archibald McPhee. ne ask, can he find better men for the McDonald, Michael Fitzpatrick, Wiliam Woods, John Frank Where, I would labor required than the above? There is not one boy among them. dustrious and competent, and every one of All are able-bodied, in- hem gave goud value for the wages receiv- ed, and were only paid for the time actual- ly at work, and were not paid for stormy days when they couldn’t work, as Dr. Me- Intyre meanly insinuates. day's work was too short. He thinks their They worked en hours a day and that is all that is ex- pected of any laboring man. The material used in the work was pur- Jchu Me- John ohn Mooney, Donald Campbell, Knight. These are well enough known in the cent- rom me. They are respectable, honest men, and were paid only ordinary rates for the material. I kaow nothing about the photographs Possibly one of them is a Surely the Doctor can employ his spare potatoes, bus at both these places the time in Parliament better than in accusing people do not devote much time to agri- : his neighbors of idleness and dishonesty in culture, and we freyuently have to buy our order to deter the Government from grant- ng money for needed Islaud works. JOHN CANTWELL. Souris West, March 22, 1899. _ DIED. On the Ilth inst., at her brother’s resi- DeSable, Sarah Currie, relict of the ate Donald McNevin, in the 83rd year of her Her end was peace. Chanee. Pownsl and King on the corner of prairie fires and want cof sufficient fire Streets, known as the “Terrace House,” is guards. These people have considerable 20W in the market, and wili be sold at a bar- gain. propert further description is unnecessary. This property is so weil known that If not sold at private sale before the Ist day of Mey next, it will on that day be offered at Public Auction, Fov further particulars apply to the ewner have made great improvements in the 5) ¢heo premises. MRS. CATHERINE MoKENNA mehll--dy law wky a FOR SALE. i RUSSIAN SEED WHEAT, a very successiul yielder. JGHN NBW=5ON. marehl “The Master and the Soul, (AN EASTER CARD), BY THE REV. W. Ss. BING, Rector of St. Luke's Cathedral, Halifax. For sale at W. R. WA'TSON’S. Price Pom Prodédds fdr Crrarity. mech ie ree eS : \ Lani 4 J * | satin aaee U oa