sosmeengeee IN PERMS :—Five Douuars a Yuan, * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evnriripus. Sinetz Corres Two Crnrs NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. ISLAND, FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1890. VOL. 25.-NO. 101 oe SE cen daa ae REX CUT ‘aes Is issued Every Evening by The Examiner Publishing Co., FROM THEIR OFFICE, LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE Charlottetown, P. E. Island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION: Rie Moi hee cc a a PS as $2 56 Thies Months. 67,5 t64505 a SG 1 25 One Months (2.5050 aes ak 0 50 48 Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. ALMANAG FOR MARCH, 1990, MOON’s CHANGES, Full Moon, 6th day, 2., 35.1m., p. m., N. E. below hoiizon. Last Quarter, }4th day, below horizon. . / New Moon, 20ch day, 4h., 48.5m., p. m., W First Gaarter, 28th day, 5h., 20.0u., a. m.,S h., 52.1m, am, E., (Sua Sun jMoon! High Day’ D' ay ov weex|Sus Sun j Moon High Day's Mi ‘Yisesisets ; rises | water| len’h h mlh m|] after‘morn| h m 1 Saturday 6 415 44.0 40|7 O11 3 2|Sunday 41) 45/137) 7 57, 6 3| Monday 33) 46) 2 37) 8 45) 8 4| Cuesday 37| 47: 3 411.9 28) 10 5| Wednesday 35} 48) 4 46/10 6 -I2 §| Mhursday 34) 49) 5 52)10 39 15 7 Friday 32 oH 6 58] 11 12) 18 §i Saturday 30} 511 8 Stl 45 21 $} sunday 24; 52) 9 ldjafel6| 24 1(} donday 27; 54110 24) 0 5i 27 1} | fuesday ¥5)- 65) 11°35) 7 30 30 ¢| Vednesday * 23) 5ilmorn| 2 14; 33 1=| Thursday 22) 58, 047) 3 9 36 14] Friday 205 59, 1 5:1 418) 3p §| saturday 18,600 3>.2)-65 2) 42 1¢| Sunday 16 2| 3 57) 7°28 45 15| ionday 13] 3) 4 438) 8 34) 5D 1g| Cues lay ll 5| 5 20) 9 26 54 i9| Vednesday 9 6) 5 52/10 1) 57 20| Chursday 8} 8] 6 IS|10 49}/12° 0 21] @rijay 6 9] 6 43}11 26 3 22| jatarday 3; 10} 7 6)morn Zz 25) sunday erry 73) 3 9 24| Monday 0} 13] 7 56) 0 37 2 2) | uesday 5 59) 14] 8 24) 1 4 1S % | Wednes lay 57} 15) 9 2) 1 56 i8 27 | Charsday 55| 16] 9 42) 2 42 21 Qi Priday 53 18;190 30] 3 41 25 29' Saturday 50) 19) Dai 4 28 3) Sunday 49| 20\aft 24) 6 10 3k 31 Monday 5. 451-20 2717-228 JOHN 'T. MELLISH, Barrister, Atterney, Notary Public, &¢., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. OFFICE—Lonien House Building, (pavies’ Corner), Gucen St. All kinds of Legal Busiaess promptly attended o. Money to Luan at low interest. adv & whey tf e ne ee B. §, BLANGHARD, Mf. D., Member fi. P.A., G. 8. and lreland, OFFICE = Corner Pownal and Water Streets. TKLEPHONE. noy6—dy 3meod wky pd “JAMES H. GOOD, Attorney-at-Law, Commissioner, &e. OFFICE—Cameron Block, Queen Square, Charlottetown. MONEY TO LOAN. fehl — dv 2 Qaw wkv tt THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY OF PURELY VEGETABLE INGREDIENTS AND WITHOUT MERCURY, USED BY THE ENGLISH PEOPLE FOR OVER 120 YEARS, 15 ckles cxmm> BD EHTS ‘JIs consist of a careful and peculiar admix- ae and mildest vegetable aperients and | the pure extract of Flowers of Chamomile. They we be found a most efficacious remedy for demecann 8 of the digestive organs, and for obstructions aed ore pid action of the liver and bowels which" pros ac in- digestion and the several varieties of bilious aud liver complaints. Sold by all Chemists. WEOLESALE AGENTS : EVANS AND SONS, LIMITED, MONTREAL. : SALT! SALT! SALT! USHELS OF TURK’S ISLAND B a 1500 SALT, in Store. For sale by : PEAKE BROS. & €O. mceh15—tt TEA AND FANCY SALE vi 1d 2 Ladies of St. James Church will ho d oa ae TEA AND FANCY SALE their ax IN ST. JAMES’ HALL, —ON— Thursday; April 10. March }—2aw pat J. B. MACDONALD, QUEHEN STREET, HAS RECEIVED THE GREATER PORTION OF HiS NEW SPRING STOCK Se a ae ri er Ws % Specially made for his order, and guaranteed to fit and wear as well as any Custom-Made Clothing, and 25 per cent. cheaper. tp A fine stock of LADIES’ DRESS GOODS at any paice you can name. We are selling Dress Goods very cheap this Month, and would ask you in your own interest to look at the goods before you buy. REMNANTS selling off at your own price. ———-( *) About Fifty Pieces of Embroidery selling off at half price. You cannot resist buying these goods when you see them. Carpets! Carpets ! direct from England, in BRUSSELS, NEW CARPETS ex S. 8. “Stanley,” TAPHSTRY and HEMPS, newest patterns. ih eS Lace Curtains, in Cream and White, very cheap. 7 ee CORSETS |! CORSETS !—Large Stock, new iast fall, price from 25 cents a pair up. New PRINTS, GINGHAMS and ZGEPHYRS just opened. JUST OPENED—12 Cases MEN’S NEW SPRING FELT HATS, Christy and J. B. MACDONALD, Ch’town, March 3, 1890 —eod&wky other makers. ’ QUEEN STREET. Gi SPRING GOODS jt New Embroiderys Wew Embroiderys, New Prints, Bicol New Prints. New Shirtings, New Shirtings, New Ginghams, New Ginghanms, New Sheetings, New Sheetings, New Pillow Cottons, — New Pillow Cottons, New EFweeds. New weeds. New Worsteds, New Worsteds, aes ——>—(x) OE Pee WE ARE OFFERING A SPECIiL LOT OF 75 Silt Leiglls ah TW 09 10 30 PER CENT, DISCIUNT ON REGULAR PRICKS. ——_——(x) ed <g> Call and examine Stock and get prices. The Best Bargaius ever offered. JORN McLEOD & CO. Chasioteetown, dlarva 22, 1800 3 | AGUIDENTS WILL HAPPEN, Moral -''1 sure in tha Travelers,” Travelers’ Insurance Co. OF HARTFORD, CONN., Largest, Safest and Best Accident Vommpany in the World. ASSETS, - - - $10,383,060 SURPLUS, - - - 2,041,000 A POLICY GRANTING: $1,000 in event of death, $1,000 for loss of two eyes, $1,000 for loss of two hands, $1,000 for loss. of two feet, $1,000 for loss of one hand and foot, $333 33 for loss of one foot, $333 33 for loss of one hand, And $5.00 per week for disabling injury, costs a PROFESSIONAL OR BUSINESS MAN but $3 09 per annum, and pro- rata for larger pvlicies, These Policies cover all kinds of accidents caused by external, violent and accidental means, and limits of travel cover ali the civilized.portions of the globe. For further information apply to “PENTON T. NEWBERY, Agent for P. E. Island. mcehl1—Im eod Electric Gas Lighters. N°? unsightly wires, no attachments, no waste matches, no danger of fire, can b: used by a child, no battery, always ready for use, convenient to handle, can be carried from jet to jet and used miilions of times, and thus effect a saving in the end. Price $5. Por sale at Watson’s Drug Store. mehl9 CABINET MAKING. xiv Ee 4 ESURNITURE Repaired and Upholstered ; ’ Patterns and Models made to order ; Shop Fitting and General Jobbing. Orders solicited. Corner Pownal and Grafton Streets, one dvor west of Fish Market. R. D. PYKE, mch24—3i pd TO Let. | HOUSE WITH STABLE on Pleasant “£4. Street, at present occupied by Miss Tweedy. Possession Ist of April. WILLIAM DODD. mcehl9 “The Master and the Soul,’ (AN EASTER CARD), BS THE REV. W. 3B. SING, Rector of St. Luke’s Cathedral, Halifax. For sale at W. R. WATSON’S. Price 10 cents. Proceeds for Charity. mehl9 Molasses and Sugar, NEW CROP, Direct Cargo due here first open- | ing of Navigation. } ae ' Pundheans.) ; : : MOLASSES 300 50 Tie ces Silat ore Ai Beale Choice Quality, 300 Barrels SUGAR, At lowest current rates while landing. CARVELL BROS. meh21-—-2w 2aw pat THR WEATHER DOES, Wever Varies. janlé College Education. (The Week: ) Js a university, or let us say a college education, » thing to be desired for its own sake, or only asa means to an end! Is it a thing to be coveted by all, irrespective of native abilities, or is it fit ony for the select and clever few? Is ita training ideally desirable for men and women as such, withuut regard to prospective occupa- tions, or is the College performing its proper and highest function when it is preparing a ‘limited number for learned professions and pursuits? Most of those who have given any thought to such ques- tions are familiar with the ideas of Sin William Hamilton and other educationists and philosophers whose views agree with his. Are such views not only Utopian but erroneous? Is it a mischievous, as well as an impracticable dream, that leads euthusiasts to hope for a good time coming when higher education, the highest educi- tion -available, shall be regarded as the birthright of the race; or to put it in a somewhat less _ startling shape, when a _ Oollege education shall be deemed of value chiefly for its own sake, 2s a training of the mental and moral powers necessary alike to the performance of the highest duties and the enjyment of the highest pleasures of life, a development ot the true manhood and womanhouod, and so a boon to be brought as far as possible within the reach of all? May the gradual shortening of the hours of tuil, and the up- ward extension of those educational faci i- ties which are now within the reach of all, be regarded as tending towaids a state o! society in which the best culture may be had by everyone, whatever his occupation, whose mental faculties are suflicient!y aroused tv make it an object of desire ? These questions are not so impracticab.e or visionary as they may seem, since, so far as we are able to see, the whole duty and relation of the public to the universities and colleges turn upon the answer. They are old questions, but still unsettled They have just now been suggested afresh by the following passage in the current number of the Bystander : _ “A university education is a very good thing for such as can really turo it to account. Of these there are two classes; men who in- tend to devote their lives to svience or learn- ing, and men who, though they do not in- tend to devote their lives to szieuce or learn ing, are capable of making good use of the fruits of high intellectual training in other walks of life. Both of these Classes are lim- ited, and the second, perhaps, is fully as iimited as the first. ‘To seud an ordinary boy to cuilege is not only to incur great expense on his account, but to expose his character, and especially his habits of jadugtry, to no sm.il peril.” Tf this ba the true view of the matter, it should dampen the mischievous ardor of educational enthusiasts. A most serious responsibility is devolved upon those who are obliged tu decide whether they or their children and wards belong to either of the two exceptional classes indicated, since to make a mistake, and thus expose a charac- jer to peril, isa very serious matter. The obvious inference is, since the most san- guine can hardly venture to hope that the great majority uf our ordinary college stu- dents belong to one or the other of the two limited c.asses, that it becomes ordmarily a duty to discourage, rather than encourage, scholarly ambition. We cannot pursue the subject, but we cannot dismiss it without suggesting the query, whether, if the case be as described, it does not argue a serious fault in the Character of the University education itself, and whether it is not. both possible and natural to conceive of a true higher education which should stimulate and strengthen every good mental and moral quality, the habits of industry in- cluded, and so fit the man or the woman for tha better discharge uf duty in every sphere of life, however humble. itn ie ans ane News Notes. The Cocapali Indians in Lower California are said to be on the warpath, and massa- cres are feared. : The bill establishing English as the official languige has passed its third read- ing in the Manitoba Legislature. A letbar to promote the new temperance erusade, signed by Archbishop Walsh 2nd others, was read in all the churches in Ire- land on Sunday. Honolulu advices say King Malietoa has | by proclamation excluded Hawaiians from the Samoan Islands. The king had pre- viously excluded the Chinese, Gutthorn Oslong, a Swede, and a faith- eurist, in Brooklyn, was indicted on Satur- day for manslaughter in the second degree for allowing his 10-months-old son to die without medical attendance. The Amercan tug Mogul has been libelled at Victoria, B. C., for alleged in- fraction of the Canadian customs liw, and bonds tu the valve of $800 have been de- posited pending an appeal to O tawa.. The trouble arose over the towing ofa schooner. The North German Gazette, Bismarck’s organ, says the resuls of the recent el-c- tions for members of the Reichstag and the loss of his oid influence were the real rea- sons for the resignation of Prince Bismarck. Nobody, the Gazette says, asked him to re- consider his resignation. The great Hungarian painter, Mankaczy, whose works are well known and appreciat- ed in America, is painting an immense picture for the Vienna Museum of Art. The ;icture is intended to form the ceiling of the entrance hall, and the bold perspective has been contrived with an art worthy of any of the painters of the Ren- aissance period. The figures of Michael Angel», Raphael, Laonarda da Vinci and Paolo Veronese appear in the foreground, while seated at the bick is Pope Julius }1. inspecting the plans of the architect Bram- ante, whilst the striking head eof the artist himself emerges from behind a baulstrade. Heavy sole leather just received—prics 20o- ‘ger 3. by thre site, —God Tis,” The Best Newspapers. Geo. P. Rowett & Co., proprietors -f the American Newspaper Advertising Bureau, No 10 Spruce Street, New York, have issued a pamphlet containing a choice selection of newspapers for an advertiser to use, who pre- fers to confine his advertising investments to such as are likely to pay him best. This catalogue names all the greatest and all the best new: papers. The selection made in- cludes every religions, agricultural, or other class weekly, having a regular issue of so many as ten thousand copies; all the great monthlies, the leading dailies in all the largest cities, and aims to name the besi paper in every county seat having a population of so much as three thousand, avd every other town, village or city having so much as five thousand population, provided a paper is printed which issues as many as a thousand copies a week. ‘The total output for a single edition of the publications named in this Catalogue of Pre- ferred Newspapers is between fifteen and cighteen milion copies, and is, therefore, more than enough to place a paper regularly with every family in every State and Territory. ‘Che number of American newspapers is now so large that the great advertising agencies do not find it wise to attempt to specially repre- sent them all, and at the list meetiug of the Association of Newspaper Advertising Agents it was resolved that each member should pre- pare a list which, while enumerating the best papers, should name only about one in ten of all which are published. It has been ful y dzmonstrated that fully one-half of all American newspapers emanate from less thin seven hundred offices, and that a list of more than ten thousand newspapers can be made up, among which no single one prints regularly so many as athousind copies. Vo have dealings with this myriad of small pxpers cannot be thought of by the majority of advertisers, and advertising agencies find transactions with them to be the reverse of profitable. : Tue carefully selected list which is now issued by Geo. P. Rowell & Co. is the first which has been put forth in accordance with the resolution of the Association of General Newspaper Adveitising Ageut-, itis issued by tie oid.si, best equipped, and most favorably known of all the agencies, and is likely to invite careful examination. and eviticism from both advertisers aud puab- lishers. Geo P. Rowell & Co. have a more throughly perfected system and better facili- ies for conducting the necessiry negotiations with newspapers and watching the fulfiliment of advertising contracts than has ever been attempted by any other house in this line in this or any other country. At their adver- ising bureau, which wasestablished in 1865, have originated mest of the meteods of con- ductiug such a business, which have proved to be permanently successful. They have issued the American Newspaper Directory for twenty-two years > They now advise their advertising patrons that it wil always be well to confine advertisement orders to papers selected from the Catauligue of Preferred Papers here referred to, unless the advertiser has some conclusive reasons of his own for using others. The population of every plice where a newspaper ig published is stated in the Cata- logue ; county seats are designiied, and the circulation rating accorde | tu every piper by the last issue of the American Newspaper Directory is given. Out of the seventeen thousand papers named in the Directory, only about two thousand are selected ; of these it is, perhaps not necessa'y to add that Taz Ex- AMINER is given the prominence to which iis merits entitle it. Watering Horses. It is claimed that when horses are fed grain before watering,the drink subsequent- ty taken will wash the grain out of the stomach into the iutestines. Culor 1s given to this view by the fact that a horse’s stomach is exceedingly small c»mpared to his size, and especialiy so whcn it is recalled that the horse consumes coarse food as well as dves the ox. Ex-Secretary Russell, of the Massachusetts State Board of Agrical- ture. informs us that while in Paris he saw old horses slaughtered after eating a mess of oats and receiving directly afterwards around drink of water. Mr. Russell states tht fresh oars were found in plenitude in the intestines where they had been carried by the moving water. A horse will often drink all that his stomach will hold if empty—some three and onz-half to four gallons. As the horse’s stomach is never empty, either of water or of hay, it is easy to‘believe that water will pass through the stomach at once. This cannvt occur as a stream or central curreat, as it must be diffused in the-mass of the stomach, forcing out the liquid already in it, as well as the ‘finer matters of the stomach. It might not follow that fresh fuod, if coarse like oats, would be moved, but the eyes of Mr. Russell must be accepted as competent witnesses, The only question that could arise wo 1d be upon the conditions. He does not give us facts eaough t» enable us to state. that they were normal. It can readily be seen that under special conditions such a result might oecur when it would nct under nor- ‘mal conditions—for instance, the ratio of grain tu hay that had b en fed, the con- dition of the stumach as t> its relative empt- ine:s, and the t me of the pricr watering. Uf the conditions were be rial then the cats that were seen to have been moved intothe ‘jutestines were reduced, in all probability, ‘in their nunitive value, but not ful y molli- ified, as digestion goes on in part after leav- ‘ing the stomach and may possibly be com- plete, although not so likely to be so jdigested. If the horses in question were underfed and allowed to or caused to go a long time from previous drinkiug, then the fact that oats were found ia the large in- ‘testine may msan nothing at all fur horses under normal conditiuns. aati cee cae te caret ‘For Rickets, Ma-asmus, and all Wasting disorders of Children | Scott’s Emn'sioa of Pure Cod Liver Oi," with Hyphosphites, is unequaled. ‘The rap- idity with which children gain flesh and strength upon it is very wonderful, “1 have used Scott’s Emulsion in cases of Rickets and | Marasmus of long standing.” In every case the improvement was m wked.—J. M. Main, M. * New Yurk, Gold by ull druggists, 00a oara