ae — Dontars A YEAR, Lk A A SS AE: ea ea ot SE Ree So aOR I rR te amet. THE “ Phts is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Pablic, may speak ry Ae CHARLOTTETOWN, P. ISLAND, SATURDAY, NOVE VAILY EXAMINER. ; “ <aentsingranasianditceeastnanattsanpsonnsboneaier ———— eames free,” —EvRiripzs, Sineie Corres Two Cxznrs _aP —NO. 1 VOL. 27 MBER 22, 1890. — ca 23 Ris : . NEW SERIES. mM. ee ee m Duluth, Minnesota, i ving LOLOL ON A OO OO AO LO OE Curonte Couey Now! for if you ao not it may heeome eon- sumptie. For Consumption, Scropjula, General Debitity and Wasting Diseases, there 13 nething ike NE UST RECEIVED:—A Full Line of ANNIE S. SWAN’ | {Xe = SUG Thera i ‘ tow'e your ‘VAG HEALS! L wish to*xpress my on tit you by testimonial, which : : t twhl assist you in . . y hand severely with 2 ‘ t HAVE n eure:] p nd, makioga long mill deot | pplied you MAGIC] BELA Et At OF mau after thi ‘pp — “ to g o work, and in three iup ~ truly. 7 LONZO WW. LAVERS j | . * sae ‘ ‘ CHARES [. HORRISON, Commission - Herchant AND Pe mw pO dt TEER, Aye or St J } Dye Work St. Joha, N.B. G gen’ for Prince FE rd Island for “Lea VW as Machines & **Ideal”® Chuins » Chopinttatawn P R ] eed Db, UNAPOlbeLowh, ‘ i ' 106 Qu Oct 7 ACURE IS GERTAIN mami BVEmt CASh— ha thtal Min: 4) : ft: Wier a Faithfal Tral is Give wane 5 CO " WOODILL’S Yorm Lozenges. OVig 4 Na A Cor Sry a Paice of the D. & A. COR- S=OT*, and you will breathe casy. If you once try them you will be convinced that they are WELL MAD?, Es\syY FITTING, GOOD SHAPT. | For sale at PERKINS & STERNS, Cheap Dry Goods tere. —ti fg € im) Yat BS a 4 >” eee , Vp tae ; ;” arth ax: a ae eo Py Pe pox idop ats 7 > : 3 ty. gi “{ *«? 3 AF . ; = se ee Se: P.. <a wy co : hae fe €S 274 >, . ms Tex " a r a im. ont * t aA os ee if wee ay : rt Sy , —-— han LEE H ~~ nr Op “ty Go VAT. | fh} IN] ~ Me tN a a ‘Y iatlascnaniaocnsiiaaisel < - fev ie Sim! > EL ear SWHOOPING “<¢ f <% _ « sess Oe gn « re ; “8F.09 YEARS IN USE. | a = 65 im ‘as PRICE 25°PER BOTTLE «cz. | or VL S”, " = =: ECc3) tO mboeu. C43 ake : ‘ reas PYTHOSE twe berutifully situated Lots ad-_ i joining the Court House, 100x100 ; al-o two of ens, samne Siz *, On the hill opposite Dt eo} Me!ntyre’s residence. These Lots command | a beautiful view, and are desirable sites for; private residences. Price low. Apply to JOHN COOMBS, Charlottctown, C. CARLTON, : Souris. Orto C. ecti4—eo ? J. H. BELL, The Leading Custom Boot and shoe e-/ continuation of 'B ‘Tweed and Worsted Suitia IPs Xe ) - WORKS, said to be superior to the Pansy Books. ; These who have the Elsie Series should get the Mildred, a | Klsie. We have a large stock of late works iby the following good authors: Edna Jiyall, Chas. Kings-| ley, R. M. Ballentivne, W. H. G. Kingston and Louis Rousselet, | Purses, Pocket Books and Card Cases. ‘We keep a full line of STATIONFRY at lowest prices. | PRINTING and BOOKBINDING in all branches. Get our prices and see our work in this line before you rlace your i“ rder, HASZARD & MOORE, ll, BROWN’S BLOCK. Yad EFORE ORDERING YGUR FALL SUIT, OVERCOA1 : ULSTER, call and examine oar immense etcck of NEW CLOTHS, 1 ? | Stop that , f re BR ite: md 2 UL Te Orr Cod Liver 01! and HYPOPHOSPHITES Or Taiamoe ancl Sodcia. & fed stan ah U | i better than other so-called Emuisions. A wonderfu) flesh producer, " _ - vv Tr SCOTT’S EMULSION is putupin asetmon cotoriwrapper, Pe buld by aul ‘ ‘ | suvreand yet the gente, Deaicre at 00. and $1.00, SCOTT & BROWNE, BellervMle ee CRO LOLOL LOLOL LO AOE LO AL Na OLE ALO ALIA CLI LO OL: ‘ | | It is almost as palatable as mi!ik. Tar ( t { { t t ; { ‘ ‘ SO Re . . “ 4 . Dissolution of Partnership. TEXMIE Partnership heretofore exigting b-- tween DAVIES & SULHERLAND has been dissolved by mutual consent. Ali debts due the Firm must be psid te Mr. LH. Davies, at the office of Davies & Haszard. L. H. DAVIKS, J. M. SUTHERLAND. Charlottetown Novy, 15, 1899. CO-PARTNERSHIP. The undersigned have this day entered into a partnership as Attorneys and Sclicitores, under the style and firm of DAVIES & HASZARD. Charlottetown, Nov. 1890 ene dy eod | 7) a or ¥ : 1 wre > . ‘ i as, Beavers, Mel-| ‘ és a x on r, ~ ions, Naps, riezes, ete. L. H. DAVIES, ’ F. L. HASZARD, OLIVER RATTENBURY. Ciarlottetown, Nov. 15, 1899. nevlj5—dy prs lw wy prs 3i A full line of Latest Designs and Patterns of TROU SERINGS. Our stock excels in quality and variety any thing we have heretofore shown. We offer you the Largest Assortment of Cloths in the City to select from. Call and see them. JOHN ee ND TO LET. NEW DOUBLE TENEMENT HOUSE on Euston Street will be ready for ten- ants on the lich of November. For particu- lars apply to _————o cemeeenend, K Poerene WecLEOD & CU. ROGERS BUILDING, ©PPER QUEEN STREET. MRS. J. W. MITCHELL, Charlottetown, Sept. 26, 1890. Euston Street, Qrto D. R. H. MITCHELL, nov8—tf Guardian Office. HORSES BOARDED For the Winter. | NLEAN, warm, ventilated Stables. Care- J ful attention. Horses handled for specd. Colts broken. Feed and exercise as desirel, Terms moderate, Td tor Cooking. For further particulars apply to J. T. WINANS, 46 Great George Street, Charlottetown. Stables in rear on King Street. octl7-—dy 2m eod New Tannery. LONG BROS., Tanners and Curriers, ——DEALERS IN—— Hiides, Calfskins, Sheepskins, Horse Hides, Tail-Hair, ete. Market Rates paid for Hides, ete. MALPEQUE ROAD, Opposite Ch’town Woclen Mills, oci6—3m eod PICKFORD & BLAGK'S WEST INDIA steamship Lincs. fialifax to Bemerara via Intermediate Pcerts. Telephone CQORONBI he LF nae eal moon cter sey = nis See = ae er ew Oy ot Pa3 "| PAO ied We invite intending buyers to inspect our stock and compare values before purchasing It will pay to do so. Our Stock comprises the Latest and Best Goocs in the Market. DODD & ROGERS. Charlottetown, November 12, 1890. ilbi tion. ———(x)—__—— ai ICE the Exhibition of HOME-MANUFACTURED CLOTH- STREET. IT IS INTENDED TO SAIL THE 5. §. LOANDA, KERR, MASTER, On Thursday, 11th December, 1890, ILL FURTHER NOT ribitio ING will be continued at 149 QU EEN » which your special attention is directed are Worsteds, Beavers and Tweeds; Blue and The articles displayed t READY- MADE OVERCOATS, in Melton, Nap, ack Nap REEFERS ; Scotch anc Domestic »nd Imported Cloths, In CUSTOM TAILORING we are prepared to make up the best-fitting garments Canadian Tweed SUITS; TROUSERS of . . Waker of the Province, PP NOW READY with a guvod selection of LEATHERS and TOPS for the Fall and Winter trade, and woull respectfatly invite all who require a first-class Boot or Shoe to taspect our stock and prices befure placing their orders, All our goods are guaranteed not to squeak, also to fit weil and comfortable. Orders always filled up totime <A full line of our own make kept constantly on had. Quality the highest, prices the lowest. ed PPAIKING of all kinds promptly attend- oO, J. i. BELL, Upper Great George treet, at living profits. Here will be shown you Pilot Cloths, Worsteds, Chinchillas, Scotch " oie. Fine Beaver Cloths, Fine Trouserings, Canadian Tweeds. In GENTS’ FURNISHING Top Shirte, White Shirts, Cloth Coats, Wovlen Underwear 1n Scote chiefs, Collars, etc., etc. ? Courteous attendants will be at your comman Admission Free. FOR DEMERARA, calling at Bermuds, St Thomas, St. Kitts, Anvtigua, Guadaloupe, Martinique, St. Lucia, Ba: bados, Trinidad—returning via the same pots and St. Jchn, N. B. : The steamer has splendid accommodation for first-class passengers. Tickets will be issued at low rates, Freight and Passengers S, we have Fine Neckwear, Lambs’ Woo! Underwear, Gloves, Knitted Gloves, Kid Gloves, Waterproof hand Canadian make, Umbrellas, Silk Hundker- d. Doors open from 7 a. m. to p. m. : ' “4 ue: A. BRUCE, =“ ED. eo : 49 W. W. CLARKE, Agent, GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT. novl5 Charlottetown. Ch'town, Sept, 6, 1890 3:n 2aw (thu sat) Charlottetown, Sept. 39, 1890, t Contributed by the W.C.7'.U. of Charlotictown. a “4 mevtt ont he on defy anyone to intemperance and Insanity. CSS AEB. THOS Wes, NeerlaNan, Oly oT . | too true. On the other hand, he could ab- ; ‘ : stain altogether. ; Intemperance is a form of insanity, and jjxed, an a soo: pRB gar there is uo use denying it, and an intoxi-’ would Dr. Norman Kerr call such a case as cated man is, for the time being, moraliy this? Hardly disease, certainly not ineanity; irresponsible, The poison has slowly but and yet even I, thongh I loathed the fellow, surely deprived him of the power of think- conk: aot feel sure that he was thoroughly ing and acting with judgment, and when responeible at all times for his conduct, Ws actually intoxicated, a man of excitable | doctors are never tired of talking of our own temper is capable of any crime, and should benevolence and self-sacritice. Well, I do scarcely be heid responsible for the misery ,2%* call on the profession to sign the pledge, he infl.cts on others, nor for the outrages oe rae . f to the temperance platform; of which he is guilty. The confirmed | {") S8'cly ® larger Proportion of us might : show by our exhortations, and in our personal drinker is one stage further advanced; and, ; ’ personm , | ye tu | practice that we thorough! tan instead of being occasionally unable to con- P mongniy samepeineey Stans ; : la disastrous thi int es “ec trol himself, he is always insane, and on! * ng istempetance ie.—An “Old his forehead the seal of madness is impress- | Oxonian,” in the Provincial Medical Journal, ed. The cccasional drunkard may some- times—the confirmed inebriate can never— be regarded as retaining the power of act- ing sud reasoning sensibly. The former, as soon as he is sober, deserves, aud should receive, condign punishment uot for the | mischief done during his fit of temporary madness bat for wilfully destroying his ; moral responsibility, and raaking himself a ‘terror to his neighbors. The latter, on the other hand, must be treated as a confirmed crimina!, convicted of a repetition of ser. ! How to Ship Eggs to Great Britain. In view of attempts being made on the part of Canadion exporters of eggs, tu open up trade with Great Britain, the following buief summary prepared by the London, England, correspondent of the Canadian ,Grucer and General Storekeeper, Toronto and Montreal, will be of value :— | ious offences against society. Bat he isa source of evi', and cpable of injuring uthers; and i §would only be right to him- self, as far as he is cuncerne’, and just to the community, to remove him from the /temptations which he lacks the power to resist, and lock him up in an asylum, where he would have the chance of being reformed. Medical men of the highest standing, state, from long experiesce, that not five confirmed drankards in a hundred can be reclaimed aad cured, whatever the Lonpon, Nov. 8, 18990, SOURCES OF SUPPLY. The trade here is eagerly competed for by the neighboring continental countries, such as France, Holland and Demark, every facility in point of quick despatch and Cheap freightage being given by the respec- tive railways aud steamship companies, | In many cases the egys get into consump- jtien within a week after leaving sources of supply, thus ensering the produce arriving in such a condition as to secure the full ad- vantages Of the market, care and skill given to the treatment.| 7, Cider to reduce lay-dawn cost, every 7 inebriate they ment a man ‘attention has been paid to econueey tn eal- who has been incesasntiy drinking, lection and cheapness of packi E for years, and so has destroyod! packing. xpe : his moral responsibility, and undermined | his self-control, so that the sight and smell of stimulants make him forget every good resolve. As long as he can resolutely pass the open dvor of the public house, or re- move a glass of wine from his lips without MARKET, tasting it— s» long that is, as he can restrain} It may be imagined, in a country like his appetite and be abstemious, though only, our own, which gives but little attention to for a day—he cannot be called a confirmed dairy culture, there is on extensive sco drunkard, although he may be seriously in- for foreign supplies. Supplies all find a juring himself by excess, and may frequent- | Teady demand, prices varying according to ly ba intoxicated. Not so very long ago I the condition ot the trade. Competition always fclt indignant when I heard intem- serves to keep prices at a moderate level ; perance called a disease ; it seemed to me the fact, also, that goods have all to be to infply thit the drunkard was regarded |sold directly on arrival, alsv tends to lower with too much levity and that the danger rates. would arise of drunkenness being com-| Supplies so far have not overtaken de- wiserated rather than coudemned. Amand, but circumstances pvint to the fact friend tells me that an inebriate in his ‘that any large influx of eggs would have to neighborhood, having heard of the new be introduced with the greatest caution,and theory, has been encouraged to drink with | by those firms possessing a knowledge of redoubled persistency, urging in extenu-,the handling of the trade. ation of his conduct that he is the victim of PRICES, a disease, not ofa vice. Thisis a danger! ‘fhe:e vary according to the season of the which medical practitioners must not over-'year, but may roughly be said to vary on look ; and the excuse that intemperance is best selected qualities from 93s to 108; me- a disease must not be allowed in all cases— ‘dium 7s 6d to 83 6d. Small parcels of Can- nor, indeed in any case, unless the pat-!adian, as a novelty, have found buyers as ticu'ar ci cum:tancis show the plea to be highas 103 to 10s 64, but with regular well founded. At the same time, the con-'supplies prices would eoon find their own rience has shown suppliers the most profit- able modes of working the business, com- bined with the reduction to the lowest cost of outlay in placing on this market, in a good merchantable condition. viction is gaining strength that whatever inebriety may be at its commencement, it certainly develops — sometimes rapidly, sometimes slowly—into a disease whully ate man descends are ouly too easy. Strict moderation is in many cases followed by occasional excess ; one stage more, and he is sometimes seen intoxicated ; a little later and he is a habitual drunkard. Still, he cm at first control himsalf by a strong effort. This power suon deserts him, and he becomes an irresponsible inebriate, possessed by an uncontrollable craving for ihe poisunous liquil ; to obtain it he sacri- lices wife and family, position and friends, even his own body and soul! In the meantime he becomes poor, miserable and neglected. But he dves not repent. Mad- ness and disease claim him, and tighten their hold till they drag him to a prema- ture grave. Inu Great Britain and Lreland it is said that from thirty to seventy thousand persons directly or indirectly every year sink into the drunkard’s grave— victims of a sensual, ruinous and degrading appetite. Lotus take the smaller esti- mate; it is large enough to fii one with horror, This fearful termination of a lon career of vicious indulgence is only the grand climax ; years of reckless iutemper- ance generally precede it. Probably ic would be within the mark to allow that eight years, on the average, intervene be- beyond the unhappy sufferer’s con-, tr], and then it becomes a_ terrible. dix ase. The steps by which the moder- ‘level. OBSTACLES TO BUSINESS. These are chiefly due to the necessarily onger transit, as compared with Cuntinen- supplies. Whatever facilities of cheap and- rapid freight transit are provided by those steamship lines anxious to pioneer the trade, the undoubied extra cost which must of necessity be incurred before regular channels of outlet are found and the trade shapes itself into a groove, would necessitate thit the eggs shouid be laid down here in au equaly fresh condition as the best French qualities, to insure them obtaining that average level of price which we esti- ‘mate Would pay Canadian exporters. The ‘question, after ail, turns on the blunt point, whether quality for quality, aud price for ‘price, Canadian eggs can show equal or bet- ter value as compared with those supplies which have so far served this market sv well, A further difficulty would be found in ,the inexperience the Canadian shippers possess as to the various details of selec- tion and packing demanded by the trade ere. | These can only be acouired by experi- ‘ence which will have to be bought, and it will not be until shippers have been able to grasp full details of the various require- ‘ments of our trade, that full market value can be obtained for their shipments. PACKING. That the requirements of this market are tween the formation of the habit of drink-| not understood is shown by the one or two ing to excess, aud its appalling termin- ‘sample shipments, either arriving in in- ation in death. Therefore, there are at least geniously constructed boxas, compartment- 560,000 drunkards in this country at this ed, or in ordinary sized barrels, both pack- moment, who will die prematurely—the ing being of far too expensive a character wretched victims of an uncontrolled appetite. |to compete with the more economical and Dr. J. J. Ridge, however, in a calculation of ‘at the same time more effective method his which I saw a year ago, puts the figure at | a round million. In addition, there are, per- haps, as many persons who,occasionally drink to excess; Dr. Ridge also estimates the num- ber of these at another million. Many «f them eventually swell the ranks of that de- graded class from which they would now turn with loathing. My attention has of late been drawn to a pitiable case, that of the son of a well-known clergyman, whom I placed in a house in the neighborhood where I reside. As this man caused me extreme annoyance, | could not help watching him with great care. This inebiiate had sacrificed to} his vice all that makes life most precious; he was cast off by his relatives (acd with perfect justice) with loathing by them all. His mother’s sad death a few months ago made no impression on him, or, at any rate, ouly for a few ‘lays; and he then went off drinking for three weeus., He looked healthy, stroag, and well, and seemed hot to have any of the appearance of the drunkard about him, though he had been intemperate fuily a dozen years. As for self- control he appeared to me to have it unim- paired; but as far as I could judge he revelled in the horrible delight of drinking. He was a confirmed villain without one redveming trait. When he chose, he could de without | drink for days, though he would deliberately begin to drink just when he chose to do so. Without any moral sense, or good feeling, or priaciple, he seemed much to resemble an animal, He used to boast that if he chose to ,adupted .for bringing eggs to this market .from the Continent—which is as follows :— Each case contains tiwelve long hundred (120)—1440 eggs, backed between thin lay- ers of straw. These cases are farther divi- ded into halves by a double cross-wise par- tition, which allows of the cases being cut into halves on arrival—this method being found to ensure safer transit. Each half of the case contains 720 eggs, packed in layers of about 180. GENERAL PROSPECTS. Provided shipments of supplies are con- trolled, and shippers generally avoid show- ing too great an anxiety to cultivate busi- ness, we have every reason to believe a rade can be effectually worked up on a sound basis. It is certain, however, that before establishing their business here, Canadian shippers will have to pay their footing and proceed very cautiously in their competition ageiust those other suppliers who possess a highly organized system for fighting fresh comers. ne te Dyspepticure—-Is not a palliative, but acure; it brst relieves, then controls, and firally entirely subdues the irritation and in- flammation of the stomach that causes indiges- tion and dyspepsia,