ole at Millia, pi Perms :—~Frve Dow.ars a YEAR. NEW SERLES. Se 7] © = <n? “Dis is teue Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speax “ ‘ free.”—EvRirivEs. GHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 1890. AILY EXAMINER. SrneLe Corres Two Cente VOL. 25.—NO. 78 Che Dain Exauiner is issued Every Evening by The Examiner Publishing Co.., FROM THEIR OFFICE, “LONDON HOUSE,” QUBSN SQUARE Charlottetown, P. E. Island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : ie WI inc 0 0hd ocounes Redunckes $2 50 i I, on 6 ok 00k hci sks oe 1 25 Ce Ia bo 6 dk nibh bc cdclicdows .- O 5O s@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. ALMANAC FOR MARCH, 1890. MOON'S CHANGES. Full Moon, 6th day, 2h., 35.1m., p. m., N. E. below horizon. Last Quarter, ]4th day, Oh., 52.)m, am, EE, below horizon. New Moon, 20th day, 4h., 48.5m., p. m., W_ First Quarter, 28th day, 5h., 20.0m., a. m., 8, Sun Sun |Moon' High! Day's D pay OF WEEK!. 5 , ; M rises|sets , rises water] len’h Tea jh mjh m) after;morn h m 1 Saturday 16 415 44 040) 7 O11 3 2 Sunday | 40: 45) 1 S371 7 87 6 3: Monday 383; 46 2 37) 8 45) 8 4) Tuesday 37; 47; 3 41] 9 2s 10 5\Wednesday | 36) 48) 4461) 6 12 6| Phursday 341 49| 5 52110 so] 15 7\ Friday a2; 50) 6 SS}11 12 is &| Saturday | 30} 51} 8 5j11 45) 2 9) Sunday |} 29, 52) 9 ldjaft 16 24 10! Monday 27: 54/10 24) 0 5! 27 11|Tuesday | 25) 55/11 35) 1 30] 30 12) W ednesday 23) 55 morn] 2 14 33 13) Thursday | 22; 58)047,/3 9 26 14| Friday | 2015 59) 1 57] 4 18} 39 15\Saturday | 186 O18 216 2 42 16! Sunday | 16} 2) 3571728) 45 17; Monday | 13) 3 443) 8 34) 50 18! Tuesday 2a 5| 5 26); 9 26 54 19|Wednesday | 9 6 55210 1)} 57 20 Thursday | 8 8 6 18/10 49/12 0 21\ Friday 6} 9 6 43)/11 26 3 22|Satarday | 3} 10) 7 6|morn 7 23|Sunday 2| il 7 3!) 0 2 9 24| Monday 0) 13, 7 56} 0 37 12 25| Tuesday \5 59) 14, 8 24) 1 14 15 26 Wednesday 7} 15,9 2) 1 56) 18 27\Thursday 55] 16) 9 42} 242) 21 28) Friday 53} 18 10 30) 3 41 25 29 Saturday | 50} 19/11 12) 4 53 28 30 Sunday } 49) 2Oaft24)6 10; 31 31 Monday 15 45) 21! 1 271 7 20j12 34 FOR COUGHS AND COLDS GET A BOTTLE OF Johnson's Cough Syrup, PRISE 25 CENTS, ——AT—— A, S, JOHNSON'S DRUG STORE Corner of Kent and Prince Streets. janl7 JOHN T. MELLISH, Barrister, Attorney, Notary Public, &c., fICHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. OFFICE—London House Building, (Davies Corner), Queen St. All kinds of Legal Business promptly attended to, Money to Loan at low interest. v why ¢+¢ ES, BLANCHARD, MD. Member M.P.A., G. 8. and Ireland, OFrFic=: Corner Pownal and Water Streets. TELEPHONE. nové—dy 3meod wky pd JAMES H. GOOD, Attorney-at-Law, Commissioner, &. GFFICE—Cameron Block, Queen Square, Charlottetown. MONEY TO LOAN. febl—dy 3w 3aw wky tf BRAN. _ STORE AND TO ARRIVE:— Ontario | Roller Mills Bran, excellent quality, Selling low. liing lov AULD BROS., deod—Sm Zaw dy & wky GEORGE MUSGRAVE WORRISON & MUSORAVE, BROKERS —AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX. — Consignments of Island produce will receive Prompt attention. rad Rerexxnces: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; D. C. Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlott town. WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS, LONDON, ENGLAND. Represented in Canada by Moarvon & Musexive, Halifer. Qet, 24, 1997. Varia. Turkey Levant morocco, with cushioned | ‘boards, the edges being red under gold. It | \is bound with a flexible back, so that it lies Last Evening’s Lecture. THERE was a very good audience at the =a en THOUSANUS OF BOTTLES | hovel a | » # IVE y | ‘bere is very little news from England, | lg - = " VEN AWAY YEARLY. mean and especially from the continent, but it is perfectly flat when opened at any page; | Lyceum last evening to hear the Rev. D. merely to stop them for a time, and then have them return again. | MEAN ARADICALCURE. I have made the disease of Fits, Epiiensy or Falling Sickness a }ilc-long study, | warrant my remedy to Cure the worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving acure. Send at Once for a treatise and a Free Bottic of my infatlible Remedy. (sive Express and Post Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will cure you. Addr-ss.—Me ROOT, 4.Cc., Branch Office, i86 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO ‘valuable china, and their salerooms are c r i ‘always crowded with autograph and _bric-a- 3 - ‘ qi “ hi £ | brac hunters and bibliomaniacs. The ac- OUuncl ( € ica opeclia is S ‘counts of the manuscripts sold are always § interesting reading. One thing that sur- ‘prises one about some of them is how they came to be in an auction room at all. For | instance, there isa letter from - a of ig Vigi haplat ; j Y j Ye idge to Prince Edward of Saxe- loses His Visit at Charlottetown, at Hotel Davies, on Saturday Evening, (ymbridce to Tree i aringham on the March 1st, after whieh he can ba consulted Fres as follows : 13ch December, 1871, th critical day of the Prince of Wales’ illness, and entirely on the subject of his condition on that day. This letter realised $5. Even a discouraging re- Hotel, ply from a great man to an intending pub- lisher may be converted into a marketable March commodity. For $20 were paid for a char- sg eT CRAPAUD—Jol 's H acteristicletter from Carlyle to his pub- CPORIA, CRAP: —vobnnson 8 £10- jisher, saying : ; tel. March 9th and 10th. | “*]fthe author were to re-write his manu- ALBERTON—Mrs. Bell's Hotel, March setae cudinditel it greatly (steaming ont at 12th, least one-third which may be termed aqueous) putes between labor and capital. shown himself to be thoroughly aware of the distressed condition of his poorer sub- jects, and he proposes an international con- ference to draw up rules in aceordance with pelitical economy, for the avoidance of fur- ther difticulties in the lebor market. * *# | The are no sales attended by so select a company of conniseurs as Messrs. Sothe- ‘bey’s in London. They are the gentlemen ‘to whom are entrusted foi sale, manu- ‘scripts, rare editions of books, and old and el CS WITH CANADIAN HEADQUARTERS AT MONTREAL, P. @., j tas jage) ; Health is the Greatest of Blessings.: nen river Ny - March 3rd and 4th. Mey > SUMMERSIDE—Clifton Bagnall’s Hotel, name, it might really be a book capable of iu- SOURIS—Cox’s Hotel, March 17th and teresting various people,” ; 18th. | ‘To secretaries of public dinners the pro- - MOUNT STEWART—Mrs. Clark's Hotel, spect is opened up of an opportanity of > March 19th and 20th. turning an honest penny from some of their - MONTAGUE BRIDGE—Mrs. McDonald’s correspondence when they see that seven : March 2ist and 22nd. ‘guineas is paid for a letter of Lord Tenny- : GEORGETOWN—Mrs, A, Aitkin’s Hotel, gon’ excusing himself from attending the > March 24th and 20th, | Balaclava dinner in 1875. Some of the - pickerings of Shelly’s domestic circle may A FEW OF THE DISEASES be inferred from his letter to Godwin, TELE HEART AND CIRCULATION, WITH COMPLICATIONS. TREATED. “ Heart Disease. Ii. Organic Heart Disease. (LL. - 13th and 14th. from you the trestment and consideration ' which I esteem to be justly due to me were 7 Functional Dropsy. destroyed by your letter dated the Sth.” TIGNISH—Capt. Galtant’s Hotel, March and call it Eaglish Puritanism, or some such | jand Spottiswoode, A special feature of |the binding is the combination of materials land the harmony of rich coloring of silk and leather. The book is enclosed in a handsome silk-lined case, with lock and key, the whole of the work being the pro- duction of the Queen’s Printers’ own print- iuy and binding works, The book bore a suitable inscription on a panel of leather inside the cover. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR, Birds of Feather Flock Together. Sir,—At last night’s sitting, the Com- mons disposed of Dalton MeCarthy’r anti- French language bill, after seven days’ and seven nights’ hot discussion, and among the names of members voting aagainst Sir John $8 Thompson's amendment, we find | Messrs. Perry and Yeo, of Prince County, |P. E. Island. Yes, we find these names and these men separating themselves from the leader of their party and Hon.E.Blake, aud from the French Leaders and ministers iu the Government. these great statesmen are roosted. By the: vote recorded, we tind them perched on the fast withering branch, with such peace de- stroyers as Charlton, Colonel O’Brien, proving true the adage that couche, Messrs. Laurier, Blake and Mills in excuse. | Nor can they puint to any other just man) or reason for sucha vote, as it was delib- erately giver, with a view to aid McCarthy in his anti-Catholic crusade, and strengthen the hands of those who are seeking to shat- terthe bonds of our great,Confederation, as well as the peace and progress of this Dominion. Such men, in virtue of their intolerant bigotry, relying on the aid (at times) of such statesmen as Prince County can boast of «fen jump when angels would but lightly tread; and but for the “The hopes { had conceived ot receiving} 1V. Varicose Veins. ($100). The circulatory organs include the heart, the arteries, the veins and There is a great run on the letters of the capillary vessels. heir diseases, though not numerous, are extremely serious in their literary people, like Shelley, Lamb, or nature. Th " 0 he letters to Cols- HEART.—I€t is impossible to glance through even the smallest newspaper without see- ae Losi aa - pd of a critic- ing notice of a sudden death—of a man or woman, apparently in the full flush of health and se Cislobé te Seurth of a Wile "I strength, being snatched away to an untimely grave. As there is no organ more important nt ; cP? than wn sina so there is none in which diseases may be so suddenly fatal, and the appal- rot. peut ee Oe Sonar ling frequency of deaths from this cause, and their terrible nature, force the subject upon our Mest tacy, aud returned It wi me me botice and demand our attention. written in the beginning : DISEAS#S OF THE STOMACH.—Indigestion, Flatulenee, Sour Stomach, Weak | Stomach and Chronic Constipation are the common heritage of the people of America. We eure them certainly and speedily. : : THE LIVER.—The largest organ in the body, and one of the most important, is more | often diseased (in this climate) than any of the vital organs. Few people are completely | 2 : : free from some form of Liver Complaint. The symptoms are too well known to everybody; Ninety-five dollars was paid for a letter to demand special mention at our hands further than to eall attention to the weary teeling, of Lamb’s m which, referring to his sorrows sleepy, dul feeling after meals, sallow, green skin, pain under the shoulder blades, and cull and afflictions, he says: ‘‘I am recovering, pains in the right side, with alternation of costiveness or looseness of the bowels. See our God be praised for it, a healthiness of reports of cases cured ‘mind, something like calmness; but I want CHRONIC DISEASES OF THE NASAL PASSAGES AND RESPIRA. more religion.” There 1s some Mood for TURY ORGANS. seek lige hapten vtec Bene cong ge by ; ot ; ss ; | referring to his pecuniary difficulties. The fl. Hay Fever. Ili. Laryngitis. 1V. Bronchitis. V. Asthma, VI. Con- jetter is not dated, but the water mark of sumption. VII. Emphysema. VIil. Paeumonia. ‘the paper is 1835. ONE IN FOUR.—When it is known that twenty-five per cent. of the human race perish | * + from diseases of the respiratory organs, it will be evident to the most careless that such death! 4 mid the quantity of rubbish and trash, may be the lot of any. The question of real importance to those suffering from any form of ‘jp own off by the press each year in the the above mentioned diseases is: = c an you cure me? We answer: ‘Our record in the shape of novels it is not easy to make a ne ae Se Dent OreEuEne ee ee Se 'selection. Among new and untried names, CHRONIC DISEASES and for ole who has not much yime for light reading, the better way is to get these I. mente Meee ree books only, which one can feel reasonably of Life. . Chlorosis. . Leneorrheea. Fiat . Uteri. X. Flexions and Versions, XI. Inversion. XIII. Cancer. | ware may be perused a at and at XIV. Inflammations (Uterus and Ovaries). XY. Tamors,’ XVIL_ least some amount o profit. mes = Sure Penal SVIIf Barr ‘ to be the case with Stepniaks riovels. There Vaginismus. XVI1i. Barrenness, b ked in ti sot thn dt i i blll is a ring of truth and reality about them ° ’ Le 7 P ag ant > Ps > ace ¢ ) “s ie ‘ , Our success has een very marked in the treatment of the diseases peculiar tc .which makes ‘them impressive, and these and girls. Over two-thirds of our patients are ladies. Old, young, married and single, can} (| Feeds a : Serve consult us on matters peculiar to their sex, however delicate, in perfect confidence. | characteristics Se absent = his last, Uhe Career of a Nihilist.” His account CHRONIC DISEASES PECULIAR TO MEN. of these people is singularly interesting— BROKEN DOWN.—It is a sad but unavoidable reflection that thousands of men, who their ——. aap et or a they should be the bone and sinew of the country, pillars of society, of the church and of the are lighting fot, . ‘life c oul u cmp State, are broken down both physically and mentally before they have reached the zenith of of property and life, their obedience, their usefulness, Early indiscretions, the result of ignorance and folly ; over-exertion of courage and indifference to danger and to mind and body, induced by inordinate ambition ; dissipation and exposure, are continually death, are very remarkable and, so far as it working the ruin of thousands, whose ability, energy aud integrity the world needs to pre- 1s possible t» tell, the writer's statements serve the equillibrium ot civilization. seem to be in perfect harmony with facts CIRCULATION.- If ever I marry a wife I'L! marry a landlord’s daughter, For then | may sit in the bar, And driak cold brandy-and-water.” I. Catarrh. TO WOMEN, IV. Menorrhagia. V. Change IX. Prolapsus) PECULIAR Ill. Dysmenorrheea. VILL. Displacement. XII. Ulcerations. XVI. Pruritus. Cali if possible, but if unable to do so, write to land eyents in recent history. Apparently > oe “he a +. ; jabgolutely without religion, having BE. GEO, A, RAENES, Medical Rireste | abolished all ceremony of marriage, Canadian Headguarters— 494 St. Urbain Street, Montreal, P.Q. Laboratory—Notre Dame and considering assassination not Street. Corresponding Department—49# St. Urbain Street, Montreal, P. Q. February 25, 1890—dy & wky tf CC ERE only pardonable but meritorious, the | Nihilists are enabled by their devotion to what they believe to be the good of their country, to live sober, temperate, seif- denying lives, seemingly free from all crime, except such crime as they consider a virtue. This state of things, if it really exists as it is described in the book, way jvery possibly be due t» the tact, asserted 'by one of -the characters, that ‘‘illegal | péople (i. e., Nihilists) don’t live more than two years on the average,” and thus the fervor of conviction is not left to cool, and no sordid or mean motives have time to creep in and undermine the single- mindedness of the converts. The book is 8 re-printed by Harper Brothers in the Franklin S.,,uare Library, and is well worth the twenty-five cents it gusts, . * ae A BO An interesting book was presented to the President of the French Republic on the last day of January, by Messrs. Eyre and Spottiswoode, the Queen's Printeis in Eog- ‘land. Mr. W. Hagh Spottiswoode, a mem ber of the firm, who was accompanied by the manager of the Bible Publishing House STAR TAILORING , in making the presentation, expressed the hope that the President would accept this 2opy of the Bible as a mark of personal re- spect, and as a souvenir of the memorable exhibition of 1889. ‘The President, in re- ply, was pleased to accept the volume, and eins ‘ e expressed himself delighted with the artistic We offer for the balance of February, a SE ECIAL Lot OF STAPLE beauty of the binding, at the same [WEEDS at Cost, over the counter or made up as you wish. Genuine Bargains {time intimating his desire to deposit the Genuine Goods! Call and be convinced, as we mean what we say. book in the National Library of France. | | - The Bible is one of the Queen’s Printers’ McLEOD & McKENZIE. THE——— —_— At ~—— tj Westmingter Abbey and in several of the philanthropy and superior minds and wise council of such men as Laurier, Klake and Mills in the discussion just ended, much harm would have bea wrought by the crusaders, The evi] bill and the undis- guised designs of its promoters has done good in this instance, viz., it brought out the great miads and enlisted the aid of the Leaders of the (apposition, who rallied around the Government’s chieftaMm in the direction of justice and peace, Many and marked were the compliments paid by Sir John Macdonald and the Hon. Minister of | Justice to Messra. Laurier, Blake & Co., | for the signal services rendered during the past seven days. Dalton McCarthy thréat- ens to bring up the matter again and again. No doubt he will do so aided by the fifty votes recorded against Sir John SS. D. Thompson’s amendment. Not that Mr. McCarthy can ever hope to carry avy such measure, but for the purpose of engender- ing a creed and race fight which might, in the end, turn to his special advantage. OTTAWA Feb. 23, 1890, é&ill Nets. Sik,—-l observe by late papers that Dr. Mclatyre and Dr. Robertson are trying to get the Government to pass a law forbid- ding the use of gill nets. While l agree with some of what they say against the practice of seining, I cannot aliow their re- marks on the use of gill nets to pass un- challenged, Gill nets are used chiefly in eatching herring. Will our two represen- tatives at Ottawa explain to us how herring can be caught, except by gill nets. Herring cannot be caught by hook and line as every- body knows. They can be seined, but that is a must objectionable way. We want the herring as an article of food as well as for bait, and we must have our gill nets too, as the preper means forgatching them. If Drs. Mcintyre and Robertson can induce the Government to prevent us from using our nets we many as well give up fishing al- together, aud try some other calling. FISHERMAN. Red Point, Lot 46, Feb. 22d, 1890. iu Memoriam. That grim monster, Death, has again visit- ed our midst, and carried away in his chilly embrace another of New Glasgow's promising sons. Howard T, McKay, after a short ill- ness, borne with Christian faith, succumbed to that fatal disease, consumption. He was a young man, being in his eighteenth year, and possessing rare abilities, which he intend- ed tu consecrate wholly to the Lord. He at- tended Prince of Wales College fortwo terms, passing out with second class honors in the spring of 1886 In July he began to teach, - but on account of failing health he was forced to return home, when he gradually decliaed until he passed peacefully away on the morn- ing of the 17th February. During his illness he always manifested a cheerful disposition, never complaining, but bowed meekly to the will of the Lord. It was a sad morning to the parents and brothers and sisters of the de- ceased when he bade adieu to this terrestial sphere; but we tegl sure.it was the happiest of all te iim, for then he heard the voice of that loving Saviour whom be had learned to serve, cailing him across Jordan's stormy wave to that celestial home of unbroken rest. Therefore, let them not mourn as those with- out hope, bat wait for that glad re-union when they shali go to meet their dear one who has passed on before, and be with the re- deemed for evermore. —Com. a NS I rc min Pasha has written to a friend that he has declined the Khedive’s offer of the gover norship of Eastern Soudan with his residence at Suakim, and that he is resolved to return Seriver, Tyrwhitt and Dalton McCarthy, | Soothing Syrup should interesting to note the firm stand that the/|this flexibility is due to the fact that it is id. Gregory Macdonald, of St. Margaret’s, German Emperor istakingin settling the dis-| sewn with silk, a process originally intro- | deliver his lecture on ‘' The Jesuits.” The He has; duced in the book world by Messrs. Eyre |chair was occupied by Mr. D. O'M. ‘Reddin, jr., President of the Benevolent Irish Society, under the auspices of which the lecture was given. The discourse con- sisted of a brief and concise history of the Order from its inception to the present time, showing i's objects and aims, the description of meu composing it, their zeal and energy in the missionary field, and the many persecutions an | privations they suffered from in their vilorts to spread the Gospel among the unenlightened. Canon Littledale’s article in the Encyclopedia Brittanica came in for a goud share of at- tention towards the close of the lecture, and the different allegations made against the Order and those composing it by per- sons not in a position to know whereof they spoke, were shown to be fallacious jand in the highest degree inaccurate by |reference to a pamphlet written by Father ‘Drummond, himself a member of the Order, and in which the aims and teach- ings of the Society are clearly and forcibly set forth. The lecture; which was well written and well read, occupied almost two hours in its delivery. The lecturer was, on motion of Prof. Caven, seconded by Mr. But let us see where James H. Reddin, tendered a hearty vote of thanks, which was suitably acknow- 'ledged. +010, — —-— — ADVICE TO Moruers.—Mrs. Winslow’s always be used . - : oe , birds, | when children are cutting teeth. It re- & 2. The question is fhow will Messrs. \lieves the little sufferer at once; it produces Perry and Yeo justify their vote with the | patural quiet sleep by relieving the child electors of Tiguish, Egmont Bay and Mis-/fpom pain; and the little cherub awakes as Certainly they cannot guote/} + bright as a button.” it is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regu- lates the bowels and is the best known remedy for diarrhoea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Besure and ask for Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. Marl %dyeodwkyly Apples. Barrels APPLES, in! splendid con. dition, i0 febl8 —Gi eod E. H. NORTON & ©O. Schooner For Sale. ‘ene reat calling Schooner “ MORNING LIGHT ” is for sale, She carries ‘about 80 tons of coal, and trims well with all under deck. Her Sails, Rigging, Anchors and Chains all good. For particulars enquire of F. L. McNutt, Esq., or D. Small, Esq., or here to the owner. PETER McNUTT. Malpeque, Fb, 27—3aw HAVE YOU GOT THR GRIP ? = USE HAWKER’S TOLU AND CHERRY BALSAM. It acts like a charm. Also use Hawker’s Pills with it. Price 50 ceats. HAVE YOU HAD THE GRIP? Then use HAWKER’S NERVE AND STOMACH TONIC to build up and strength- en the system. It is the best invigorator. Price 50 cents. Fer sale by Druggists and General Dealers. eod & wky—feb]7 Herring. Pv {\ Barrels Prime Herring, 40 Quintals Codfish. E. H. NORTON & CO, feb18—6i eod OLD LONDON CAFE, JUST OPENED, With all the Delicacies of the Season. ¥ BEG TO INFORM THE PUBLIC that I have just opened the above Cafe, and have secured the services of one of the best Cooks in the Proviace, and it is my intention to see that everything will be done to cater to the wants of ali my patrons. Come and try our Cook, JOUN JOY. febS ru WaNTeR DORR i BY Ties to Wadeial and re-conquer that country for English Cathedrals; it is bound in the finest celebrated Lectern Bibles, now in use in Charlottetown, Feb. 17, 1890. Germany. abe te Bie ate a lea a ee a Ee < » sesnespsicenegints ee te ie ; nf tint cngtne. ” Na a , aoe socal a ittarcbng spas ee