lexms :—PFrv , YEAR, “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxrirrpes. Sixeitx Corres Two Cents NEW SERIES. Che Daily Examiner Is issued The Examiner Publishing Co., i Every Evening by FROM THEIR OFF ICk, “ LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, E. Island. Charlottetown, P. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months eC Cee ee eee eee Hee Hee eHee 4 50 & ve perfect satisfaction b , cu g- | ior Gents’, Ladies’ Boys’, Misses’ and Children’s Boots and Three Months. ......+-seesecreereeees 1 25) op at the most reasonable prices. One Munth.......sc0s cees eee ee O 50) Ordered Work a Specialty. £7 Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. TO THE— Three Families in P. E. Island —WHO SEND— WRAPPERS Representing the Greatest Value in Woodill’s German Baking Powder, UNTIL SEPTEMBER 3Sist. ugl3 “Army and Navy Depot.” JAS. SCOTT & 60., HALIFA>&. A Pall Stock of Wines and Liquors JUST RECEIVED. m™ (\ Cases ROYAL BLEND, 1d 75 cases ISLAY BLEND &G-£LIC, 100 Cases OLD RYE, 50 *“ CHAMPAGNE, choice brands, 150 * CLARET, 25 “* HOCK and MOSELLE, 95 * LIQUEURS—Cherry Brandy, Noyau, Curaco, Maraschino, Benedictine, 20) “ FINE PORT and SHERRY, 150 * HOLLAND GIN and OLD TOM, 200 “ HENNESSY’S BRANDY, *, ** eS? aad VY. O., 100 ** BASS’S ALE, 206 “% BURKE'S STOUT, 100 ** APOLLINARIS WATER, i100 ‘© BELFAST GINGER ALE, 50 “ FINE OLD RUM, 50 * KINAHAN’S L. L. WHISKEY, —And a Full Stock of— CHOICE GROCERIES ap24 James A, MORRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS ~—AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX —_—_— ooo Consiguments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Rerenences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; D. C. Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown. : ==1889 o> BOSTON DIRECT. Boston, Halifax and P. £. Island Steamship Line. Only Direct Line Without Change. CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON. The Staunch and Commodious Steamships “Carroll” and “Worcester,” having been thoroughly refurnished and put into first-class condition in every respect, will, during ae on of 1889, run as follows, commencing wi the “CARROLL,” Charlottetown, Thursday 9th May, at 6 p. m. One of these vessels will leave Boston for Charlottetown EVERY WEDNESDAY, at Noon, and Charlottetown for Boston EVERY THURS- DAY, at Six o'clock, p. m. Excellent Passenger accommodation, From Low rates. FARES~First-clase Passage Berth in well- furnished Cabin, $6.50. Stateroom Berth, $2.00 extra, Lowest Bates for Freight, carefully handled. “CARVELL BROS., Agents, Char lottetown, HakRISON LorING, Treasurer, 1 Bea Wet ton. which is always OHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. ISLAND. FRIDAY, EA QUARTERS. eX) ———— W E ARE NOW HEADQUARTERS for all kinds of Custom and Hand-Made Boots and Shoes. stock of Uppers, also the very best brands of Leather in the «aiming to have the best staff of w oth in fit, price and value to all w the place, — orkmen in the Province, A full line of Hand-Made Repairing of all kinds neatly and promptly done. Having now on hand and to arrive 4 market for Custom work, and we feel confident that we can ho may favor us with their orders Shoes of all kinds, which we make Boots kept constantly on hand. large and well-selected Don’t torget J. x. Bw, Knight’s Old Stand, Upper Great George Street. Charlottetown, Sept. 21, 1889—tu fri sat tf ih eptember. LARGE STOCK ——QOF—— NEW GOODS ——NOW OPENING AT—— PEREINS & STERNS. Charlottetown, Sept. 20, 1889—dy wky New New New New New New augl5—eod&wkly. LONDON HOUSE. AUGUST ———_—_(x }---—- Carpets, Carpets, Carpets. Flannels, Flannels, Flannels, a Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks, Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks, Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks. Men's Rubber Coats, Men’s Rubber Coats, Men's Rubber Coats. Ready-Made Clothing, Ready-Made Clothing, Ready-Made Clothing. HARRIS & STEWART, TE will offer the balance ata BIG SACRIFICE gains in the City guaranteed. Charlottetown, Aug. 19, 1899—tu fri wky 10: 5 Bea sn GREAT SLAUGHTER SALE Of Boots and Shoes. of our Spring and Summer Stock FOR CASH. The Biggest Bar- J. C. SPRAGUE. PALI PR ETRE i | | | | | wa me Rich and Poor, Prince and Peasant, the Millionaire and Day Laborer, by their common use of this remedy, attest the world-wide rep- utation of Ayer’s Pills. Leading phy- sicians recommend these pills for Stomach and Liver Troubles, Costive- ness, Biliousness, and Sick Headache ; also, for Rheumatism, Jaundice, and Neuralgia. They are sugar-coated ; con- tail ‘no calomel ; are prompt, but mild, in operation ; and, therefore, the very best medicine for Family Use, as well as for Travelers and Tourists. “T have derived great reiief from Aree Five years ago [I was en $0 ill with Rheumatism that I was unable to do any work. I took three boxes of Ayer’s Pills and was entirely cured. Since that time I am neyer without a box of these pills.” Peter Christensen, Sherwood, Wis. “Ayer’s Pills have been in use in m family upwards of twenty years and have completely verified all that is claiméd for them. In attacks of piles, from which I suffered many years, they afford greater relief than any other medicine I ever tried.” —T. F. Adams, Holly Springs, Texas. “have used Ayer’s Pills for a num- ber of years, and have never found any- th equal to them for giving me an ap and imparting energy and at to the system. I always keep th in the house.”—R. D. Jackson, wil on, Del. “Two boxes of Ayer’s Pills cured me of severe Headache, from which I was long a sufferer. — Emma Keyes, Hubbardston, Mass. ‘Whenever I am troubled with con- stipation, or suffer from loss of appetite, Ayer’s Pills set me right again.” —A.J. Kiser, Jr., Rock House, Va. “Ayer’s Pills are in general demand among our customers. Our sales of them exceed those of all other pills com- bined. We have never known them fail to give entire satisfaction.” — Wright & Hannelly, San Diego, Texas. Ayer’s Pills, &) PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Dealers in Medicine. SPECULATION. GEO. A. ROMER, Banker and Broker, 40 & 42 BROADWAY AND 51 NEW ST., New York City. Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Provisions and Petro- leum Bought, Sold and Carried on Margin. P. S.—Send for explanatory pamphlet. sept20—dy & wky ly L889. 1889. rQ°HE Clipper Bark “ EREMA,” 300 tons register, P. Ledwell, Commander, will Sail from Liverpool for Charlottetown about the 1st October, ‘and will carry Freight at through rates to the i : } ; different railway points on the Island. For Freight apply in London to Jouy Prr- CAIRN & Sons, 7 Union Court, Old Broad St.; in Liverpool to WiLLIAM BULLEN, 51 South John Street, or here to the owners, PEAKE BROS. & CO, Ch’town, 2nd Aug. 1889. eod tl d STEAMER “ PRINGESS BEATRICE,” CAPTAIN A. H. KELLY, Will sail from Charlottetown EVERY THURS- DAY at 2 o'clock for Halifax, calling at George- town and Souris, P. K. L. and Bayfield, Port Hastings, Malgrave and Hawkesbury, Arichat, Canso, Sheet Harbor. Returning, will sail from Halifax EVERY TUESDAY MORNING, at 7 o'clock, making same Calls. The above Steamer will make the roand trip every weck until close of navigation, This will enable Georgetown and Souris ship- ers to make direct connections with Steamers at lifax for any foreign market. Freight and Passengers solicited at lowest rates, and Through Bills of Lading granted to any port on the Continent or United Kingdom. Apply Ww. W. CLARKE, Agent, Chariot tetowr, fyig—eod tf i eomsielle sem, Aang ae ee Pe TER A SEPTEMB R 27, 1889. Previncial Exhibition Notes, Tue entry books in al) classes of live stock will be closed to-morrow, Friday, Sept. 27, at 6p. m. From the number already entered in Class 1 (horses) the show in this class next week promises to be the largest and finest ever held in the Maritime Provinces The centre.of attraction will, therefore, be the horse ring. Our successful competitors at the Monc- ton Exhibition will exhibit their prize- winners here next week. In addition to the large number entered for competition, several recently-impurted stud horses will be shown on the grounds. A special exhibit of Percheron and stand-— ard-bred horses and of Holstein cattle and calves from the celebrated farm of our en- terprising stuck-raiser, Benjamin Heartz, Esq., of this city, will form # prominent feature at our show grounds next week. The proprietor of the ‘*Tulloch Farm” will send an exhibit of his much-admired Galloway cattle. Mr. E. Rigg Brow, of Charlottetown Royalty, who has been a successiul prize-winner at Moncton last week, will also exhibit his beautiful herd of Guernsey cattle. These special exhibits will be attractive features at the great Provincial show at Charlorte- | town, The entries in the cattle and sheep classes are filling in fast. The show of fruits will be excellent and in advance of | previous years. There will be a large dis- : play of agricultural products, and the prospects are that the exhibition at, Charlottetown next week will far exceed | those of past years. {nventions. —There will be a curiously | constructed folding saw practically tested | on the field, showing that one man_ will | cut through a log or tree of any size up to | four feet in diameter with this saw in much less time and with greater ease than two) men van perform similar work in any other | way. Inventions recently patented by I. Beecher Crosby, of Bonshaw, will be ex- hibited, among them a patent carriage break. This useful machine, which is’ automatic in its action, will be practically tested on the show grounds, as will also Mr. Crosby’s harness attachment invention, | which will be shown in the Exhibition | building, attached to a miniature horse and harness. ; A Terrible Experience. MAKVELLOUS ESCAPE OF A CREW—DRIVEN 800 MILES IN LESS THAN THIRTY HOURS. One of the remarkable relations concern- ing the late storm on the Atlantic coast is that of Pilot Murphy, of the New York fleet. His boat was cruising off the lower New Jersey coast, on Monday, the 9th inst., when he was put on board the inward bound bark Guldringe. The sea was smooth, and there was no indication of the tempest that was hastening from the south- ward. With Tuesday’s rising sun the breeze freshened to a gale, the gale turned into a hurricane; top, fore and mainsails were hastily and safely lowered, the helm put up, but a_ sudden turn of the blast put the ship oa her beam end. Every man was thrown into the seething sea, but every one by desperate effurts suc- ceeded in gaining some parts of the rigging, which he clutched with despairing energy. Through the remainder of the day and all through the hours of the wild, dismal mght the sailors clung to the shrouds, the tem- nest tearing overhead and the wild foam- lashed waves boiling about and overwhelm- ing them. Wednesday morning sunshine and peace came once more, and, better still, the ship righted. Food was found, the pumps manned, such tattered sails as we left were put up, and then an observa- tion was made. It was found that the ship was in latitude 26, off South Florida, having been driven 800 miles in less than thirty hours. Her head was again turned toward New York, where she has arrived. sintviasaessiiiie deal A Deadly Collision. PERSONS KILLED, ONE MORTALLY WOUNDED, AND SIX SERIOUSLY INJURED. FIVE Cuicaco, Sept 24.-—-The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific passenger train, which left the main depot at 5.35 p. m., for Blue Island, was crashed into by a freight train at the Lake Shore and Pan Handle cross- ings, near 87th Street, Englewood. The passenger train was at a standstill, one coach projecting over the crossing. Into this coach, containing about sixty persons, plunged the freight train, travelling rapid- ly. The wreck of the passenger coach was instant and complete. The first estimates made during the confusion put the number of deaths at 12 to 14. Half an hour after- ward four dead bodies had been taken out of the debris. Most of the people in the coach were residents of suburban towns in Washington Heights and Morgan Park. When a thorough search was com- pleted it was found that three ladies and two gentlemen were killed outright, a third man was in @ dying condition and six others were seriously injured. The killed are all of Washington Heights. The engineer of the freight train failed to shut off steam, and the box was blown out by the shock. Not a person was killed by the force of the shock. Every life lost was solely attributable to scalding. The wreck appears entirely due to the criminal carelessness of engineer Seth Twombly. The passenger train was running on time, and signals were out at the semaphore. The | engineer and fireman of the train leaped | and escaped uninjured Twombly took to flight and has not been | heard from. It is stated he was addicted | to drink, and the presumption is he was in- toxicated. } Wirn a feeble appetite and Zimperfect di- gestion, it is impossible for the body to} secure the requisite amount of nourishment. | Ayer’s Sarsaparilla not only simulates the de- sire for food, but aids the assimilative organs in the formation of godd bloud end sound | tissue, ' VOL. 25.—-NO. 106. i. 0, 0. F. The sovereign grand lodge of Odd Fellows has indorsed the action of the grand sire in enterdicting the promiscuous publication of the degree floor work, and provided for the appointment of a com- mittee of five to prepare a plan of floor work for the various degrees. The con- stitution was amended to provide for the election of officers of the sovereign grand lodge annually, instead of biennially, and permitting state and territerial grand bodies to make laws disyualifying persons engaged in the sale of intoxicating beverages for inembership in the order. At the recent grand parade of Oddfellows at Columbus, 0., grand sire Underwood was thrown from his horse and narrowly escap- ed serious injury. He was taken into the National Exchange Bank, where Dr. J. W. Clemmer washed the wounds and tempor- arily dressed them, but the wounded man came out shortly after the procession started, his head bandaged, and resolution written in every feature. The thousands applauded the General as he rode down High Street and out Broad, though they were anxiously sympathetic for fear he was overtasking himself, and aking too little of his injury. The 18-year-old amendment to the con- stitution making persons of that age eligible to membership, was defeated by a vote of 102 to 60. The grand sire has appointed October 19th as a memorial day, which appointment has been re-enforced by proclamations of the grand officers of the several jurisdic- trons. . Fifty-eight thousand dollars was con- tributed by the order,to the Johnstown, Pa. sufferers The next session of the’sovereign grand lodge will be held at Topeka, Kansas, in September, 1890. News Notes. Kighteea inches of snow has fallen Mount Washington. on Monday last was the 27th anniversary of President Lincoln's emancipation procla- mation. The Hamilton Times announces that the Grand Trunk line between Toronto and Hamilton is to be double tracked. Phe’French Republican expect to have 369 members in the new Chamber of Deputies, against 201 oppositionists. The negroes of Todd county, Kentucky, and Montgomery county, Tenn., have organized a company to conduct a fair in which none but blacks will be allowed to take part except as spectators. A report comes from Chicago that the United States Glass Company, of New York, has purchased ol] the window glass factories in the West, and that the 55 window glass factories in the United States will be placed under one management. The year 1889 has already made itself unfortunately memorable in Canada, by disasters. Quebec has been visited by two of these terrible vccurrences, the present catastrophe under Cape Diamond having been preceded four months ago by the St. Sauveur fire, in which Major Saort and Sergeant Walleck lost their lives. In February the railway accident at St. George, Ont., in which nearly a dozen lives were lost, was succeeded in April by the horror at Hamilton, when twenty persons were killed by atrain leaving the track. It is sincerely to be hoped that we have heard the last of these accidents for this year. Australia is not going to be satisfied with a champion sculler. A champion giant will probably be the next contribution to the world’s great from the Antipodes. In the colony of Victoria the other day a Scottish settler named McLean was summon. ed in court for not sending his little boy to school. He appeared in court with the little boy, who turned out to be a consider- ably bigger man than his father. The lad’s age is 13 years 6 months, height is already 6 feet 6 inches, and he is growing favorab- ly. Being of the age prescribed by law for children to attend school, the parent had to paya fine, but appeared to derive consolation from the physical possibilities of his offspring. The Lond n strikers are said to be very grateful to «heir Australian brethren for the generous subscriptions sent by the lat- ter in time vf need. It is believed to have opened the eyes of workmen at home to the value and strength of British kinship abroad. Says the Pall Mall Gazette: **Amid al! the controversial clash of this prolonged and embittered dispute, one thing stands out distinct and clear, and that is the fact that the strike has done more to strengthen the British Empire than any other incident of recent times. For the first time in the history of British labor the working man has discovered the importance to him of his kin beyond the sea. The subscriptions which have poured in from nearly every Australian colouy to the dockers’ exchequer have wrought a transformation in the whole attitude of the laboring classes towards the empire.” Things seem to work together for the benefit of the unity of the empire. ore an Loxpon, Sept. 23.—Stevedores on the East India docks, who quit work yesterday, on the ground that the dock companies were not engaging old hands, as agreed, went back to work t »-day. New York, Sept. 24.—The Graphic, an afternoon picture paper, has suspended pudlication, and its office is in the hands of the sheriff. Tancier, Sept. 24.—The Spanish cor- vette Nevara has sailed for Riffia coast. On board the corvette is a commission from the \Sultan, charged to order the immediate re- lease of the Spanish sailors recently captur- ed by the Riffians. Relations between Morocco and Spain continue friendly. ‘fhe Sultan declares his determination ty avcede to the just demands of Spain, poe ee es a a a ate ao rypensee wes en 2 oa Oe a Salads ry e r retin pare nes