_ enemas - a Se “ This is true Liberty, when Free HE DAILY EXAMINER. Born Men, having to advise the Pablic, may speak free.”—Evriripes. Srnete Corres Two Canes TTETOWN, P. acme CHLARLO A tne fine EE heat off the , —. prompt snies. palm, Bonnets. Shapes, beauties Real ine Silks. vervthing new and handsome i this line of goods ie a 7 ] > g> ) , ‘ piss Me Qi AR RIE, whese work cannot be excelled, has' } jarge of this Department, UMBRELLAS. some Good things Food kind—Silks, Glorias, Alpacas and Ginghams. ‘ANLEY BROTHE Charlottetown, June 9, 1891—eod & wky E. ISLAND. SATURDAY, JUNE 20, 1891. —— A a — a ne ae VOL. 28.—NO. 26 ay BROS. DRESS We nave made this season’s display of DRESS GOODS stable, and if Large Variety of Fabrics, Dainty Designs and Finish can make a display notable, then ours must easily fe. \x) GOODS. We make the closest prices to ensure VIUILLINERY. Eiats, lowers, Feathers, Ribbons, ete. Laces, of thése handles are, which cap the to lay up against a rainy day, Every ix] RS, BROWN’S BLOCK. “IENDAR FUR JUNE, 1891. J MOON'S CHANGES, Sew Moon, 6th day, 0b., 13.3m. p. m., S. bist Quarter, Mth day, 8h., 22.5m a. m., NE, below horizon. i] Moon 220d day, Oh, 59.7m., p.m., st Quarter, 28th day, 7h., 3.6m, p.m, NE, 8. ' j below horizon. Bt ___ {Sun 'Sun |Moon! Higa! Days} DAY OF WEE) . he : Irises seta ; rises|wat'r:! leah | ih m/h mimorn| after! h m| Monday 4.17.7 38] 1 48: 7 39,15 20) Tuesday 17; 29; 2 8| 8 32 22 | inesday | 16) 39,219 918; 2 usiay «=| «16; «40'253,10 2 24 ily | 15] 41} 3 21/10 42) 96 star lay 15} 42 255/11 24) 27} und ry 15} 42) 4 37|\morn| 27] louday 14) 4315 299' 0 7 29 4 Puesday 14, .44; 6 39: O 45 30 4 ednesday i4 4:7 33; 1 2 HO | ih Ly i4 45' § 40 2 8} 3k | Friday 13} 481 9 45/ 2 51) 32] Saturday 13) 46)10 50, 3 42; 933) 4 Sunday 13; 47/11 53, 440) 33] Monday 13!) «47laft 57) 5 43} 34 | MH Cuestay 3: 4812 O} 6 46 34 | liWelnesday | 13) 4813 6), 745) 35| ub Lay 13) 481414 8 32) 35; le I} 49° 525° 9 17) 35) Siturday 4} 49°6 37/10 1] 35] BSunday 14} 49] 7 48/10 45} 9-35} Saday 14] 49) 853.11 29) 35] a ntay 14) 50] 9 45 aft 14) 35 EWelneaday | 15! 59/10 30' 0 58] 35 STiday | 15) 50/11 3,146) 35 ies 16] 50,11 39) 2 33) 35 S yeuday =| (16) 50/11 52) 3 29] 34 “ery 16) 50imorn | 4 28) 34 “) Monday | lv} S|0 8) 6 2 3: “tueaday = | 1617 491 0.34) 7 7\'5 13 | | HEALING. tastant Relief, Permanent Pepe Cure, Failure | “any so-called @ ee ¥ 8ymptoms of Impossible. iseases are B ti, Catarr is6é feath, hawking 4 ps i . ; 7 : stg, eral feeling § 4 troubled J» Ste. li you are Kind “Sa With any of these or Guage dred symptoms. vc u hat ee arth, and should tose Lo (ean tin : 4 A 2 , San proc uring a bottle ot etl Bata, Be warned in rant pected co! i. coms cata, followed ¥ pus mption nd death. *' druggists, or sent, Ain feceipt of price B® addressing | Valediciopy Address livered by Mir. D. F. Morrison at the com inenzement exercises at St. College on Thursday :- The flight of time has once again brought us face to face with this most sulemn day of each scholastic year. All through sum- mer days and winter eves we met, we labored and we played within these old and classic walls. Each day the silken band of friendship stronger grew, and bound us closer in its sweet and gentle folds. Each day, as from the pure source of truth, tlowed, swelled and stronger grew the crys- tal streams of friendship, sympathy and fraternal love. But stranger sounds ere long will burst upon this scene. Soon the voice of parting will be heard ainid these halls. Ere to-moriow’s sun shell have winged himself to rest, the parting words shall have been spoken, and the schvlastic year of 1890-91 shall bs numbered with the past. Sianding upon the portal of the depart- ing year, Jet u3 east a retrospective glance along the incidents that marked its course. Never, in our opinion, has such solid pro- gress been made in the various departments of our curriculum, while our more arduous labors were seasonably interspersed with dramatic entertiininents and inanly out- doot erjoyments. All was bright and fai:, everything give highest promise of continued joys, when, unheralded by any warning, came the chilling news | that, far removed from those whom he so ,deariy loved, our venerable Bishop had pas el away. Who might now portray the lerief that darkly gathered around each 'brow! Who might speak those tenderest ifeelingsthat awoke within each breast! ;Au our j ys ceased, and were no' as grief like a gloomy spectre stalked around. To- day we miss him from his occustemed | place. We miss those silver locks and that ‘approving smile. ‘No more amid these haus may his familiar form be seen, nor shall we hear again on earth that voice, so low, so earnest, and so calm. And though NN eee: _— a LONDON HOUSE. ee YOU know we sell Wen's DONT Boys’ Clothing ? DONT OU Buy till you see ours DON’T -— ea buy cheaper COME (x) HARRIS & STEWAR LONDON HOUSE. Charlottetown, May Lt, 1891. John McLeod & ——-—+{1)——-—- and AND SEE the Stock, look if Over, —- Best Value in Summer Overcoatings ! Best Value in Scotch Tweed Suitings ! Best Value in Trowserings ! ——__1) HAVE A MAGNIFICENT STOCK OF THESE GOODS. Prices away down to suit the times. is directed to our $15.0 This is fully 20 per cent. lower than re rer before offered the same quality of goods. — es TWEED SUITS from $12.00 up. We defy competition. We guarantee first-class fits. , JOHN McLEUD & CO., Merchant Tailors, Upper Queen St. Chariottetown, June 3, 1891. W" Special attention WORSTED SUITS. —al FOR GC cot Ce OUGHS EARS CL.DS. i EDS "PER BOT TLE : ONG & 0 ONG & CO. PROPRIE"ORS St. John. N. B Oup Sr i 4 A RE YOU WANTING A CHEAP Se RE YOU WAN TING A GOLD OR SILVER wart , RE YOU WANTING A GOOD TIMEKEEPER A GOLD ENGRAVED RING A DIA MOND or other Set RING ANYTHING IN JEWELRY YOUR WATCH REPAIRED + YOUR JEWELRY REPAIRED °R YOU WANTING YOUR JEV i Ril t oe eat) WANTING ANYTHING ENGRAVED if so, CALL AT s r 1 CW TAYLOR'S, NORTH SIDE OF MARKET SQUAR Charlottetown, May 14, 1891. RE YOU WANTING RE YOU WANTING RE YOU WANTING RE YOU WANTING * works of a Supreme Being, infinite in all 0 and $18.00 the gloomy portals of the tomb have closed , him from ovr cyes, yet never h Je memory | lasts shall we Surget his ardent love and ‘deep solicitude for the professors and | students of old St. Dunstan’s Oollege. Nor were the events consequent upon the un- expected demise of this illustrious Prelate such as might «afford us consolation in that most trying hour, for by the bigh decrees of an all-wise Providence our esteemed Reetor and present Bishop was called from Following is the valedictory address de- | Dunstan's | | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. ON ee aif, TEN POUNDS Te \ ny . = ) mae ' The License Question. ge} [a IN } “ik,—Yvuur correspondent signing him- i Sa Tt eee ; seif “No License,” according to his own PAE e “A TWO WEEKS : declaration, is unable to say that my plea Wa ee =| i I 1 for a stringent liceuse law isa very strong 4 MSN THIRK OF iT iT one. However, so far as his correspond- ence is concerned, | may feel myself per- fectly justified in claiming its strength; and I eonsider the public quite justified in adhering to my reasons until such time as they are proved to be wanting in sulidity ; t fsa Flesh Prod ( ne questior but thae’ there can be SCOTT'S SLO LORE MO MO om Before proceeding any further, 1 would, 4 f * in all friendship, ask ycur correspondent to ae ; be assured that [ am not engaged in the ae liquor traffic, either by buying, selling or Be f Pare Cod Liver drinking, noc has any liquor dealer the least sympathy from ime, for they deserve Git and Cf Lime and | es , | } } } | Hypophosphit no sympathy unless it be for their amelior-!| (is without a rival Sree bh ation. If | advocate a license law, it is not rained a pound a day by the use out of any deference to the liquor dealers, of it. It cures ; but that some means may be attained by CONSUMPTION { which the extent of the traflic can be re- SCROFULA, BRONCHITIS COUGHS A duced. } COLDS, AND ALL FORMS’ OF WASTING nts. Bat it does not follow that, as he says, | oe ae dedakienil ti AS MILK. :. hecause | am not engaged in the traffic 1) >” made Dy Scott & Bowne. Bellevit>. Salmon should not progble ” axpeult about it. 1; BB . See a #1.00. think it isa matter which should concern ere every upright citizen of Charlottetown ; it, ig & matter concerning which, if «we do not trouble ourselves and find a _ suitable remed:, we will ere long fiad to our surrow that ¢t will trouble us to a far greater ex- tent than we might wish to bargain for— and perhaps under such circumstances as would render us powerless to combat the evil. If we do nut troub!e ourselves about it, then, may I ask, who will? Perhaps the liquor dealers themselves! 1 feel quite roposed Sailings OF THE ST¢AMERS OF THE LINE. - \ r ~ BLACK DIAMOND safe in saying that they would prefer mat- AYA ters to remain as theyare. For, siace they haptinys are determined to sell so long as they are ee YSN permitted to do so, why should they desire! ~ cw mah bas to have any restriction placed on their un-| g-ae3AaEd rg RS Aer hallowed occupation 2? It is, therefore, OSS Ss, SI Or gl ate Oe Sid. evident that it is our duty to grapple with Lott ee ; - the question without delay, in order to ef- ROM Montreal for Charlottetown, Syd. ney and St. John’s, Newfoundland :— fect some favorable change. Again, I can- not admit the propriety of allowing the pre-; BONAVISTA June 26th sent state of things to continue for a time, | eo ean oounieun July 16th as your correspondent would desire, in Fe ..-. August 6th order to more correctly contrast the results} J’;oun Montreal for Charlottetown and Syd- of the Scott Act with those of ‘*free rum.” | ney only For we have had the Actin Charlottetown: COBAN July 2nd for nine years, and surely no one willdeny} = « “” 15th that period to have been sufficiently long); o« 70000 “ 8th for the testing of the Act. Now, in cose: 1 fa: aan we should permit the free rum system to) . PRARE BROS. Os ’ junel7 Agente, continue for some time, will such a course | show that the Act was a success in Char- | amongst us to ascend.the Episcopal Throne and exercise the awful duties of his high oftice. But while we grieve at his de- ‘parture from amongst us, we bow our heads | }to the divine wall of an all wise God, who ‘raises up custodians of that Church which eghceen hundred years ago he confided to ‘the care ofan homble fisherman by the | water, of anciert Galilee. Stepping be- ‘yond the guarded precincts of this institu- | tion to take our place in the ranks of those whotizhtthe real battle of life, our hearts are sorely oppressed wit many fears, for we | recognize the number and greainess of the | danger which will beset us cn cur way. [r- religion and impiety daily growing s‘rong- er, and encotraged and fostered in many modern universities, become fierce and ag- gressive and strive to overturn the noble edifice of Truth and break down the crystal battlements that guard the awful sanctuary of the Almighty’s throne. Having never ascended to the sparkling fount that springs from the Rock of ages, but having drawn the poisonous draughts from the murky stream of unbelief, those advocates of ad- vanced thought, with, intellects darkened land the power for good nearly destroyed, fail helplessly into the most «#bsurd errors, rejecting everything that their own reason cannot comprehend. They spuro the lof- tiest truths of christian doctrines, forgeting that powers of the human mind are finite and, therefore, unable to comprehend the His attributes. Walking in an atmosphere poisoned with such dangerous doctrines, have we not reason to fear for the preser- vation of our spiritual life; yet it is ours to hope that the salutary instructions received at the hands of our directors, while in this institution, may sink deep into our hearts and produce fruit conducive to our final preservation. Friends, professors, and students, we soon must part. When shall we meet again? We shall go forth from those cherished scenes to enter upon diverse paths, but all tending towards the same goal. Far out upon the sea of life strange winds will fan our cheeks and other stare will look down upon us from on high. Away will have passed all the happy scenes of earlier years and the dim shadows of early friendships shall have vanished from our minds. The voice of warn- ing passions shall be ever in our ears, and the wrecks of humanity shall be ever before our eyes, yet amid the troubled strife shali shine out clear and bright, that pure celestial light thet guides us safely to the haven of eternal rest. Who have bravely died, who ignobly lived, all will be known on that eventinl day, when the angelic trumpet sounding through the silent regions of the tomb shall proclaim to an assembled world that nature is no more and that the final judg lottetown, Certainly it will not. For we know for a fact that under tho Act the number of those engaged in the traflic was exceedingly great, and, consequently, what-! bi ever will be the outcoine of the free rum Worth its Weight in Gold.” syetem, the above fact will not cease to be true. What we want} is something better than either ‘“‘free, ‘It is worth ite weight im gold to take away that scalding feeling in the throat,” is whit a young lady recently said of ‘* DYS- PEPTICURR.” The scaldiag feeling is Heartburn. No one need euffer a day with it when it is so easily veliewed and quickly cured by “ DYSPEPTICURE.” jal5—lw rum” orthe Act, and this, I contend, is a stringent liceuse law. Although lam not, and never was, en- gaged in the traflic, 1 may nevertheless be permitted to express my ideas with regard to stringency in a license Jaw. Bafore doing so, however, | would have it uader- | stood that I am open to any suggestion that, may be offered as a more effective remedy for the evil, provided that such be proved as more efficacious. Now, in the first| place, it is my persuasion that no liquora, ' inxtoxicating or otherwise, should be sold | without a license. In the second place,!_ _ the sale of intoxicating liquors should be : placed directly in the hands of the govern- Tanders for Steam Heating, ment, suca that no person could make the sale of intoxicating’ liquors a private enterprise, but should be [ employed by the Government with a yearly salary. Then there should be certain from pereons willing to contract for the erec- hours for opening and closing. Thase dis- tion of Steem Heating Apparatus, low pres- positions would remove all abuse on the SUN ls the ape orem | rien aan ae part of those employed in the business, for oe ne) Cer Tt ae teen ait cae they, eo employees, would have nO ‘Vhe following are the approximate dimen- interest in keeping their doors open Seyond gions of the Building :— NDERS will be received by the under- signed until SATURDAY, 27th inst., > = the specified time. Length of Church......cesseseee: 127 fret. Aguin, in these taverns there should be Width of * ......ssseeeseseee 58 * no other enterprise carried on, such as Average Hei it of Ceilings. ....... 33 boarding houses, private drinking rooms, Length ot Vestry Room.........-+- e1." etc., but merely the sale of liquor over the Width of wanaeeseeees 254 “ bar, aud notiing else. This would prevent Height Ceiling “© eesee-serees oat the detestable practice of carousing abvut a Leugth of Side Cha Pel. ..se ees eeeees 3s * liquor den as is too ofteu the case in the Ms > “+ of as He SER SIERGUY = " ordinary rum shop. _Heig it Ceiling ens 3 Then there should be a trustworthy ia-, ——ALSO—— spector employed by the (rovernment with Separate Tenders will be received till same a fair salary to see that such dispositions date, for Heating the Parochial Houee at the be carefully complied with. same place by Hot Water. These are the mere outlines of whit 1 The House is a Two-story Brick Building, would call a stringent license law, as re- 44 feet by 30 feet, and 10 feet ceilings, with gards the sale of ‘* intoxicating” liquors. #9 4ttte. But tenderers are expected to But with rega:d to the sale of non-intoxi- #8¢ertain the exact figures for themselves. cating liquors, or what are commonly he undereigned will not be bound to accept known as ‘temperate drinks,” although the lowest or any tender. their sule might be made a private industry , by those who wish to do sv, nevertheless they should not be sold without a license from the Gevernment. Such a licens’, of course, should not be paid for, ana the only reason for its being required is to prevent that fraud which was so com- mon under the Act. By this method the Vernon River, Jane 6, 1891—eod wat jour government would have full cognizince of every individual eng+g-d in the ssle of any, P,E, ISLAND RAILWAY beverage, whatevec 1t might be, and con-| By order of Church Committee. PATRICK DOYLE, Pastor. ment is now at hand. Let us hope in con- clusion, that then will take place our final reunion after which no parting word may e’er be spoken, but having spent our lives in the preparation for future hapiness we may attain the destined end of ovr creation, 246+ >+se > For Over Frery Years Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothiug Syrup has been used by millions of mothers for their children while cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once ; It pro- duces natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain, aud the little cherub awakes as ‘bright asa button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regulates the bowels, and is the be» diarrhe ., other eauses. centa a bottle. Twenty -fve Syrup,” and take no other kind, mar? 3i eod & wkv Ivr —_—_~.-—-—-— . st-known remedy for whether arising from teething or Be sure and ask for ‘* M:s Winsloe’s Soothing Ladies’ bl uses, a nice range, at J. RB. sequently, stiould it happea that any one DYOMIINION DAY. hoidiag a free license for the sale of beverages, | would attempt, on the streng:h of this, to sell | intoxicating liqaors, he could, and should be | mulcted with a seve @ penalty, pecuniary or’ otherwise, end be rendered incapable of holdiag a ficense to sell even temperate d ink, 1a ; Ti.ese suggestions, brief though they b=, if Dominion Day, July Ist, calmly considered, are sufficient to saew that to and on July 6, 1891. EEURN TICKETS will be issue! at one first-class fare to and from all Stations on this Railway on 39ch June, instant, and on good fur return up the liquor treffic can be brough: within) J. UNSWORTH, bounds. If any better method cin be! Superintendent. suggested, I will certainly uot be the last to, follow it. However, som tling must be} done without delay, aud 1 again express a) hope that our Legislacure, if they have the, interest of our citizens at heart, will ‘he provident enoug’ to pass a l quer law that may bea benefit to the prigh. citizons of j Charlottctown. Railway Office, Charlottetown, | June 18, 1891. / dy pat Gieod wy prs ————— SN | alia ‘ ; ss a Trl. i a i. es @ AR ONTARIO BRAN landing to-day, and will be sold tow, CITIZEN. 26, Charlottetown, Jue 191. cence TL LD ALLL Seep. —Haszard's Improvel turnip seed AULD RRO3 IC eo Macdonald's. j18 4i at R K_ Brace’s. nay is