TERMS Five NEW SERIES. The Daily Examiner ENGLISH CONFECTIONERY. bot The finest assortment of English and Canadian Confectionery fer The Examiner Publishing Jo. Christmas trade we have ever offered. BEEN & GOFF DoLLARS A YEAR, is issued every evening by From their cflice, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— oe —————— | MENGE MEAT, Six months ...... ssoesenenees smn Choice Brand, for Sale at Three months. waeocdeces osnens »25 oan : 38 CE vn oc ovcnce coseecoeceseesees 50 | BLER & GOFE =. Advertising at moderate rates, - —- - $$$ Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- | Canned Salmon, terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisemenis, | on application, Sandwiches, Peaches, Pine Apples, NOW THEN FOR ——OFTER OF—— —_————— oO ——————— E have on hand one case Cloths, one vase Gents’ Furnishings, sent by mistake, We are manufacturing | statesmen. and sold to us at a big advantage rather than return them, these cloths into _ A. BRUCE’S This is true Liberty, when Free-Born Men, having to advise the Public, may spéak free. --uririprs. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1886. ‘Srtcu Copirs Two CENTS. VOL, 18--NO. 65. Imperial Federation, in Re!ation to already assumed the dignity and power the Future of Canada. of aself-governing State, and itis vow —-— about time to sever the apron sirings, | —— meee PAPER READ BEFORE THE LITERARY AND and become both theoretically and prac- SCIENTIFIC INSTITUTE, FEB. 4TH, 1886, tically independent. I believe that is the destiny of Canada, while she will — ‘shake hands with England in perpetual My remarks on Imperial Federation, kinship, aud rejoice in a citizenship of which bids fair to become ere long the birth. BY S. M. BENT. ea Bae" ge J /question of the day, will be but as| One-third of Canada is of French popu- CLOTHING Ry CER] o FURNISH i NGS a drop in the ocean, but I believe they' lation, who do not forget the contest of represent the present opinions ‘of the 126 years, balf of them passed in war- people as a body, and the same views fare, between England and Fran:e for which have been taken by many leading the possession of Canada ; 1,000,006 It needs to be studied by our more are Irish, and many of the remaiu- young men. We have heard much of der are of Scottish descent, and you all the British, or, as we may call it, the know that the Scotch aod Irish have no — —=—=== Corns, Tomatoes, Peas, &c., choice SUiTs AND © Vv i ce CG 6 A 7s S, positive side of the question; let us, for love for the governing power from which ALMANAC FOR FEBRUARY, 1886. ‘brands. MOON'S CHANGES, New Moon 3rd day, Lib, 25m, p. m. Firet Quarter Lith day, 10h, 33 7m, p. m. Full Moon 18th day, 2h, 2 5m, p. m. Last Quarter 25th day, Ob, 58 8m, p. m. High! Davs BEER & GOFF. COFFEE! COFFEE! and ground—fine Fresh roasted Sun | Sun !Moor AY O rtEz : as "poem vabeas ’ . ‘ . o|PA* Or wi _risesisets | rises waterilen'h. | quality; also Essence Coffee and | ond Bee mort 9 oe, 9 31 (Condensed Coffee & Milk. onday i¢ ov oO A IF « é 2| Tuesday | 27/5 1} 611/10 4 34 | BEER & GOFF. 3) Vednesday 26) 3) 6 50/10 5 | a7 | ms ditharsdayy” | 38] | Taalit hi) a ee sender | ori 4) ~~ CRANBERRIES. Gjsaturday- | 21} 7} 8 2i)morn | a} ioe ol sae Sa «6s, 30; bris. Cranberries and Fox- & ’ onasay S « : a! : } 9) Tues iay | 17] 11) 9 46, 1 23 54 | berries at 10} Wednesday 16 13) 10 ih} pe a 57 | 2 x. ‘ Ds ee 11/Thursday | 14) 15/10 oi 2.46/10 1 BEER & GOFF’S. paltridag | 12]. than So) 8.45) 4] 3 Saturday id . —— ‘ex Many) | 9 009 6s) 10) CANDIED PEBL. 1S Monda, S 21) = Be mT he + ' ‘ * : <s 16 Tuesdsy | 7 23) 39) 850, 18) Keiller’s Celebrated English Cit- 3: a ase | 8 oe) SE goto 30, 23\Fou, Orange and Lemon Peels at aie +| ort a B71 121 96 oon 19| Priday L ow ae CSE BEER & GOFE'’S 20) Satarday 16 59) 28) 8 12} 6) = 21 Sunday | 5@| 30) 9 24) aft 23} = — $2|Monday | 56) 31/10 29) 1 18 3s SPECIALTIES, 23) (tuesday | 55 33} Ll 41) a = on eee) ss wel 0 44 344, 45| Corned Beef, 20cts. per pounds Zo hursday ” a0 “ ies : : : : 96| Friday : 49 37| 143) 452) 43) §moked Beef (shaved) 24cts. per 27| Saturday 47; 38} 237| 6 11; 51 6 455 401 3 26) 7 1910 55\pound s Bologna Sausages, licts. per | pound; Ox Tongues (English), Pea Soup, Xc., at BEER & GOFF’S, 28 Sunday i ; j i i ' } : WARBURTON & SMALLWOOD,| — NOTICE OF CO-PARTNERSHIP. Pure Spices, Essences, &e charging only FIVE PER s : making and trimming Overcoas ; from $5 to $7 for making and trimming Suits wit) Good Trimmings and GO OD WORKMANSHIP. CLOTH, by the yard or piece, Ver, Cheap. Overcoats, made to order, not called for SELLING AT COST. This ought to convince you that therds money lost if you don’t purchase from us, LL OUR CLOTHING IS MADE ON THE instead of buying imported clothing. PREMISES. No $3 UOvercoats. The Custom Tailoring, = the management of MR. JAILES McLEOD, leads all others for Al work. Our past record is sufficient Prices in this department will be four! lower than ever. guarantee to secure your future confience. patterns that will be found the very ting you want. D. A. BRUCE, TZ QULAEN Ch’town, Dec. 3, 1885.—eod wky 2m: JENT. *VER COST! and from $4.50 to $6 for STREET. We have on hand a few Suits end A large portion of our Neckwearias been manufactured to our special order, from —~-—— oe Pure Spices, Cream Tartar and esignes -¢ this day entered into The madieengeed Rove Oe ie ond Orit «| Baking aiiedens of artnership, uod BEER & GOFF’S. Warburton and Smallwood, Barristers, Attoraeys-at-Law, HO Notaries Public, de. ORANGES, LEMONS, GRAP&S. Office—Uameron Block, Queen Square. al oo ee a on Great Britain. alt entans Fa pr eek mere BEER & GOFF. which does the largest business of any Life Insurance Company in the world. 4 A : S i N S . Dec. 3—law wky 3 mo A. B, WARBURTON, B.A., B.C.L. | c, R. SMALLWOOD. L. ARTHUR & CO., clon Reodless. SER & GOFF. GEN BRAL BEER & GOF 250 boxes received—Layers, Val-| earn the pleasure of calling on our customers @ short time. We hope to receive your liberal patronajas heretofore, | Ch’town, Jan. 26, 1886. a Better Value Than Ever | TO THE WHOLISA'LE «TRADE. DORSTY, GOFF & CO, | UR new samples of BOOTS and SHOES f spring will soon be fout, and we will have ‘O Printing. Commission Merchatts| aArPuns. 12] ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. kins, Pippins, Xc., at BEER & GOFP’S. we American Baldwins, N. 8. Ttom- Book, Mercantile We are better than ever prepared to? out every descripiton of best facilities to execute ali orders for —AND— | Fancy Prints: Picturesque Canada, &e., &e., Regs and Produce a Specialty. July 15—dly wkly PASTRY FLOUR. cr U T ‘ O Ni very choice quality. C A 7 BEER & GOFF. aa Deo. 11, 1985. EACH PLUG OF THE MYRTLE NAVY ~ & B. IN BRONZE LETTERS. é “Gh None Other Genuine.) . Fe. Oct, 20. SURE. FOR SALE. PROMPT. ERY, with ite Steam ‘tting Machine, Stuf is offered for Adamson's Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey. Asthma, which lead to Consumption, speedily cured by the use of all other medicines have failed. recent or chromic coughs or bror resort to this great remedy, ¢ Baer e ier, 8p Engine, iler, Sp! fing Machine and ur Plant eae | ane formerly operated oe ae ar 7 Kingen, of the late Sufferers from eith i i i ot delay, t it at once. Aye exiousd & Co., of this city. It is} speedy a =e : 7 we ee ia . “Kin ” 2 f Fo SALE AL | firm of Mc the most modern principle, and se an Gh Geavenn, HB the proprietors, } d up on the has hitherto paid a large percentage on ©) ] oca ists no better in- F, Ww. KIN@MAN & 0O., I ugg! sts, T pital NT $43 4ru AvE., XN, Y. 2,3, 5,10 and 12 pound packages, ADAMSON sa Riss AWONDERFUL REMEDY Coughs, Colds, and have been . of ADAMSON’S BALSAM after nchial affections, cam onfident of obtaining vincial Exhibition snd executed sisfor| iy Satisfy All cavonil of the leading business men the city, will abundantly testify. gw Our Styles are Original andsty. | Call and see our Speciaens. Paper Ruling a Specialty. | 3a ats Color © Work JUN COOMBS IS Queen Street, Dec, 26—2aw w2m. ~ BVEYONE CAN can SA. MONEY fine finish and good he workmanship B BUYING er and One Thousand aré ovner articles, FROMM vestment for their money, either by Bank or Manufactory, can be offered. ; ; ; istely. Possession given immedia Le ; CKINNON, | MARY J. MA Exeentrix. packs, 12 names, for $1. ms eaels 1886 pack and agents outfit with 2 Ch’to wn, Oct. 17. - talo 4 UBSCRIBE for THE WEEKLY EXAMI trated catalog SS NER. The latest local forsign a. ©. KIN can aways be found therein. 50 Lavely New Style of Chrome "3! THE P. E, 130 FURNITURE WAREROOMS, / MARKVRIGHT & CO. ue of Tricks and Novelties, fo at . ciNNTY, Y wrmouth, N. 3.—mar \Ch’town, Dec. 3, 85 wky Book-Gindine, Having lately imported a choice stock of Fine Lesthers and other materials for Book- binding purposes, we are prepared with the za Printing ant Book-Binding. Binding Magazines, Music, Works of Art, Law Books, illustrated Papers, | as Specimens of our work shows, at tro-). | 4), Highest Style of the Art, and at prices Blank Heok Manufacturing, and Banks, Merchants and others, can get Better G if Work, for the same money at our Establish- a pe y timent, than at any other house in the Trade. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E I call and examine the Jat stock of Household Furniture, &c., &c., ever shown in Chdetown, and also discover that they and get Good, Reliablene-made Goods of undisputed value, Staple Furniture, Bed Mattresses, Fancy$Goods (for Xmas), Picture Frames and Mang, Mantle-mirrorefand Mirror-plates, Bagatelle Boards, Hame Oil Paintings, Framed Chromos, } a few moments, take up the Canadian, na / taal forefathers fled to escape persecu- negative side. I do~ not wish, at the) tion and landlordism, and I tell you they outset, to predict that there will never/are not iu love with this Federation be an Imperial Federation, for when the|scheme. There is no demand for it present forms of Government are out-| from Carada ; the press, aimost to a grown, long after we are dead and Unit, opposes it. Canada does not cry, gone, the idea may be consummated ;|*‘ Federate or perish.”» She does not but I do not believe that Canada will) want a second-hand aristocracy, or cole ever become a component part of that|nial peers, or a swarm of English civil Federation. service employes thrust upon her. Sir No! it comes from England alone. Very few colonists have as yet espoused it. Eagland, governed by landlordism, is failiog. She has driven millions of Irish, Scotch and English to America, where they are becoming independent, and the landlord class would like to get control of them again, to prop up the failing years of England. Those who have shaken off the dust of Great Britain from their feet, do not wish to be pur- sued to their new homes by the old form of Government. England’s progress in many respects is not equal to that of her Colopies. She is old; they are in their prime, and she would drag them, back a quarter of a century. Better to have half a dozen healthy young vations, related to each other by the common ties of kindred, tongue aud progress in according to situation and circumstances, than one unwieldy, cumbersome empire, with such divergent and clashing interests as the one proposed. Then will the dream of one class of political economists —Free Trade—be as uear realization as under Imperial Federation. On paper, the scheme of Imperial Foderation looks very nice and very grand. ‘Her morning drum beat, cir- cling the world and Lheping company with the hours,” is beautiful @p theory. “Far away hills look saints their beauty vanishes with near approach. It is a fit subject for the poet, the dreamer, or the enthusiast. ‘‘Poetically,” says R. E. Gosnell, “it is nice to think of a Dominion upon which the sun never sets, and such an allusion never fails to bring down the Shouse ; but practically, such a dominion represents a world of interests, which can never harmonize. + - - : It has all the conveniences that stirring poetry, beeutiful word painting, fervid eloquence and noble sentiment afford, and our Opponents have. not failed to make the most of the advantages offered. But these simply form mirages which lure-ou thirsty travellers after fame, to disap- pointment and danger. The fiction is so grand that one has not the heart to dis- pel it; but duty marks the way to its destruction. A political confeder- ation looks well on paper, but it is one of these schemes which, if adopted, would prove to be a disastrous waste of the writing material upon which it had been elaborated.” We cannot substitute poetry for political common sense. The very tendency to aggrandizement is bad. History teaches us _ that the territorial aggrandizements of Egypt, of . Persia, of Greece, and of Kome, “who in their turn ruled the world,” wrought the ruin, not only of each empire as a whole, but of their constituent parts, and now all that remains of them is but a memory, but ruins over which flit the shadows of the night of empire, and breezes pregnant with death and destruction. That is the gloomy euding of ancient dreams of magnificent kingdoms. But history re- peats itself, and we have no guarantee that federated Britain would not be over- taken by like fate. Suppose the union ac- complished,and, to use a far fetched meta- phor,that the empire should seek to control the entire world, might she not meet the fate of the kingdoms of antiquity—utter disintegration ? We are are growing, and cannot afford to be hampered by a cumbersome union. We have within our borders all the ele- ments of nafiovality. We have exi:aust- less agricultural avd mineral resources, great fisheries and growing towns, built up by increasing manufactories. We are connected withthe Mother Country by the ties of blood and tradi- tion. Canadais in much the same posi- Why should she join it? Does the, Francis Hincks said we are better off as cry for such aunion come from her?) We are for a long time to come. Canada has no desire to become one of a number of mere satellites revolving around Eng- laud as a central luminary. Thep the members of the Federation League raise a very pretty cry of **Loy- alty and Patriotism.” Article 1 of the Draft Constitution of the proposed Union says that “The Constitution of the Federal British Empire is to be based on the loyalty to the Throne of Her Most Gracious Majesty and her suc- \cessors.” What is loyalty?’ asks an in- dependent Canadian journal, and this is the answer it gives :— “Loyalty is obedience to constituted authority, ; whether that authority is right or wrong. But | constituted authority may be forced on a people | against’ their will, and then active ‘loyalty’ be- } comes a crime against the nation. Patriotism, on ithe other hand, may be defined as obedience to | the popular will, whatever that will may be. 1? for instance, the Irish people to-morrow said that they did not want Home Rule, then the trae | patriot would support the will of the peepie, whe- | ther that will was in accord with his own views iornoet. Of the two, Loyalty and Patriotism, the arts and science, each governing itself jatter is, by far, the higher virtue. Now take the cloud of English *‘ ycunger sons’ Who are in this country ; these men are loyal, but they have no | patriotism as far as Canadais concerned. They jare ‘loyal’ to English interests before any other ‘interests in.the world. What do they care for *Canacla, except to make money out of it! A great ;/ many of them donot come tostay. ‘hey simply |squat here to make, what they cannot do at home, a living. But as men who define their ‘loyalty’ as England first and Canada after- wards, then the Government of the country is uilty of treason to the people by employing hem.” So much for *‘loyalty.” Joseph Howe, in his letter on the organization of the Empire, io 1866; said:—‘“A — great many persons are content to drift on without forethought or statesman-like provision. for the future, but others holdthat it is the duty of the parent state to prepare the outlying provinces for independence —to so organize as to inspire them, at ithe earliest possible moment, with the ambition to desire to dissolve the national connection and set up for themselves.” In the same letter he warns us that federated England might at any moment declare a war, without consulting us, which would sweep our fleet from the seas. Now, if we remain out of tedera- tion, there will be no such danger. Says Alex. F. Pirie; of Toronto, writiny in the North American Review:—*Depend- ence means danger; separation means security.” © The colonies will prosper by separation. Families do not lose strength by marrying, and doing for themselves ; they scatter that they may live, and colonies Occupy an analogous position. They have an antagonism of interesis, such as would not be conducive to their sharing the same home, under one rovf, as itjwere, The empire strengthened itself by conceding responsible Govern- ment to the colonies. Let them, as they increase in wealth and population, and become able to take care of themselves, assume independence. Whiat an advantage this would give Canada, I shall under- take to show further on, Imperial Federation is but a second tower of Babel, built by enthusiasts to reach the vain heights that only dreamers think of. Its builders are—whom? In England, **Buckshot” Forster, its chief, Childers, Labilliere, Ear! Dunraven, Geo. Baden Powell, Howard Vincent, etc.; and in Canada, after Prof. Schur. man and Rey. G. M. Grant, only a few place hunters, dazzled by English hon- ors,or mellowed with wine at English banquets, aud a number who have kissed Victoria’s hand, or won the honor of writing P. C. after their names. I chal- lenge any man to show that the people of Canada are ia love with the scheme. I have lingered too long over general- ties, and now I will come down to a few sclid arguments. (To be continued.) — Sa i ~ en NOTES. Not the promissory, bet facts about We.comeE Soap, an article that does not con- tain one particle of the adulterations used to reduce the cost of “ Pure Goods,” but does tion as that of a ‘married child to the’! ‘old folks at home” still dear, but} independent, and only to return to the old hearthstoue by some unnatural course! of events. She does not wish to lose her! ideatity as a nation, Family compacts: become distasteful in time. : stamped on every bar. She has Davi & Cos possess the value of legitimate Washing Ualities, (he demand for which proves the aivantage pained by the nse of the genvine over Soaps of doubtful f characrer. None shouid be deceived evon by Rod and Yelluw Wrappers, or any of the imitations of the WELCOME, a8 @ pair of cissped hands is Made by Uvrtis, oo RS oe ee mee