rive DoLLaks A YRak. Ss —, ie ial VEW SERIES. “Tr HARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1890. HE DAILY EXAMI * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evnriripes. NER. esiapser-enemanniancnitanineumanteshidaamaaanaieeeaneaaa? SinorF Copins lwo CENtTe 115 VOL. 26.—NO. PB. ISLAND STREAMERS, Summer Arrangements. ert wei) ts nown Steamers “ST. LAW. | ENCE” and “ PRINCKSsS OF WALKS” \LLY TRI! Sas under, Sundays ex- ov, . Le “ : x ck in the Pict mnectin there with rion ‘ 1 or New Glas- gow wis With Morning Train for Cape Hreton and Kaastern Points. Aleo at Pictou ip. m, with i. C. it. for Halifax. Leaving Pictou abeut noon, on arrival of Morn- ing train from Halifax, for Charlottetown, Leaving Sammerside on arrival of Morning rain from Charlottetown for Point du Chene and coanect there with I. C. R. Trains for Montton and St. John, for Canada and United States Leaving Point du Chene on arrival of Morning Train from St. John and Moncton for Sum- merside, and connect there with train for Chariottetown hy order, ’ W. HALES, Secy. Ch'town Steam Nav. Co. (Ltd) herd S ed te TO LAT. HOUSE situate on Sidney Street, oppo- a re e Met! 118 t Brick Church. Rent moderate ALS \ House situate on King Street, opp: site Ju ige Reddin’s. The above Houses are in good repair, Ap- bly to John Kelly, Esq.. Water Commissioner, or to the owner at Southport, EDWARD KELLY. sept26—2aw THE B. LAURANCE Spectacles and Eye Glasses, HE only Optical Goods in Canada which have been recommended by the Presidents and Vice- Presidents of all the Medical and Surgical Socieries in Canada and Great Britain. Far superior to anv other for retaining perfect vision. Sole Awent for Charlottetown,—. , G. G. JURY. Watchmaker, Jeweler and Uptician, i North Side of Queen Square, Opposite Post Officer, Cl ww Sept. 4, 189 4 ve i — ' PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST, CONTAINS NO Alum, Ammonia, Lime, Phosphates, OR ANY INJURIOUS SUBSTANCE. £0. Oey, ae MANUFACTURER OF THE CELEBRATED ROYAL YEAST CAK=: a - ee — CHESTER RB. AENEAS A. Macs EILL. MACDONALD. MACNEILL & MACDONALD, | Barristers and Attorneys-at-Law, | Solicitors, &c., | OPFICES—GREAT GEORGE ST., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. J. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest, Principa! payab!e by instalments or otherwise. sept! -iy ow 2aw vw ky 2m aan ' . ryt SHENWOOD C8. Tia} t Hil : ii is LEASANTLY situated at the junction of Royalty and Brackley Point Roads, conveniently reach¢ d by Rail or Carriage. \iains run daily to Cemete ry at 7 and 9.45 a m., und 4.15 and 4.30 p.m., and return at 10.35 a. m. and 5 25 p. m. (loca! time) Funera! trains may be had wher ver re- quired, : Pri ef f Plots as foll WS: Family Piots, 15x20 feet, on high aad j dry ground, sold at reduced price of..320 00 Plots half above size, in good locations. 12 50} Single Graves. . ok. Bb aol 2 00' : For further in! wination apply ter W il- liam Coyle, Keeper, at the Cemetery ( vitage, or te the undersigned, at the County ( ourt Office. HENRY SMITH, | : Secretary Cemetery Company. julyl7—eod 3m } : j iu SIGNS, Sailing Mouv for Remainder of Season is 4 o'clock. P. M., on Phas: day of Each Week. Peicer :eceived on Weduesday and up till noon on Thursday—positively no later — us time is reYuired to make out ship's Papers be!ore sailing. . CARVELL BROs., sept] —2w (sat tues) pat Agents. sook Papers. Account Books of very Desoription Made to Order. ee ae, : J, Lewenz & Hauser Bros, : NOW ON EXHIBITION ! A FINE STOCK OFr— | i , e tpg ba i | BOOKBIiDING IM ALL ITS BRANCHES. (x) ES” WORK DONE WHEN PROMISED. will do well to call on us while in Town. TAYLOR & GILLESPIE, Sign of the Big Book, J. D. McLeod’s Corner, Queen Street. Charlottetown, Sept. 29, 1890. | Se er me eee 6 err Parties attending the Exhibition | } Iuaelarers —_REPRESENTING— The Western Fire - Assurance Co. - Head Office, Toronto, Out. : eee eee eee ee eee ee eee ere He eee Oe! The Manchester Fire : | Assurance Co. : Head Office, Manchester, E : ‘THE WESTERN MARINE "ASSURANCE CO. - Stg. and Domestic Certificates Issued. - ‘Robt. Lamh & Co, : London, Eng. : Dundee, Scotland. . $ECHOGO CRC OHHECO HOC OOS 2ORHOBOEOOEOS. beer OUR eer eee ee eee eee. 6 eee eee eee Cee eH OREO OHHH HERETO HHH CHHE HEHEHE HEHEHE HS HEHE HESS !very low rates, | : The N. S. Sugar Refinery (Ltd). : | | HALIFAX, N.S. | Sugar, Golden Syrup, &. | | eee ee ee eee er eee e eset eeseeeeeeeses | : BUYER & EXPORTER : | : | | J. F. CARTER, : Beverley, Mass. inn cei ; Canned Lobsters, Macker- : el and Salmon. ee | be OFFICS & SAMPL: ROGM---G\MERON BLOCK, ~*™° ‘outh Side of Queen Square, Charlottetown, P. E. 1, a i ‘ pl tn ber 29, 1890. L | E hibi f —--—-(x }—_——_ ILL FURTHER NOTICE the Exhibition of HOME-MANUFACTURED CLOTH- ING will be continued at 140 QUEEN STREET. The articles displayed to which your special attention is directed are READY- MADE OVERCOATS, in Melton, Nap, Worsteds, Beavers and Tweeds; Blue and Black Nap REEFERS; Scotch and Canadian Tweed SUITS ; TROUSERS of Domestic «nd Imported Cloths. In CUSTOM TAILORING we are prepared to make up the best-fitting garments at living profits. Here will be shown you Pilot Cloths, Worsteds, Chinchillas, Scotch Tweeds, Fine Beaver Cloths, Fine Trouserings, Canadian Tweeds. in GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, we have Fine Neckwear, Lambs’ Wool Underwear, Top Shirts, White Shirts, Cloth Gloves, Knitted Gloves, Kid Gloves, Waterproof Coats. Woolen Underwear in Scotch and Canadian make, Umbrellas, Silk Handker- chiefs, Collars, etc., etc. Courteous attendants will be at your command. Doors open from 7 a. m. to sos >, A. BRUCE, GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT. 1 Ar, Bots Beat ‘he Al FALL BOOTS! FALL BOOTS! SOLID = “ATHER. i}. Mm. x a) | . Rvery Pair of our Make warranted Cheapest and Bast at GOFF BROS. . Boot Store and Factory. ———--~ (x)— SHORMAKERS !--Goff Bros. is the p! and Findings. é‘heap ace to get your Sole Leather, Tops eod&wky—sept24 Bags, Hessians, &. | i ee DOES CURE CONSUMPTION ‘In its First Stages. Palatable as Milk. Be sure you get the genuine in Salmon } color wrapper; sold by all Druggists, at ; 50c. and $1.00, SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville. | Seedsmen and Grocers. AD ll Vy J E EXTEND a cordial invitation to our customers in all parts of P. E. Island to call on us at our Store, QUEEN STREET, during Exhibition Week. Hundreds of Farmers who are strangers to us sow our Seeds year after year ; we shall be glad to make their acquaintance. During Exhibition Week we shall give extra value in all kinds of FAMILY GROVCERIES. — stuck is large and select, and our prices ow. Call on us for Fruits, Pears, Apples, Grapes, Bananas, Oranges, Lemons, etc., Choice Confectionery, Rankine’s Celebrated Biscuits, ete. *¢8 Highest Price Paid for Eggs."™ | — GEO. CARTER & C9., Market Square, Queen Street, - |Charlottetown, Sept. 24, 1890—dy lawéwy CHTOWN MUTUAL HE ABOVE COMPANY is taking zisks on Dwellings, Furniture, Stocks, etc., at Citizens can get insurance at the actual cust, instead of paying exorbitant premiums to foreign corporations. The under- signed has been appointed Secretary, and can = seen at his residence, Lower Great George Street. B. BALDERSTON. aug22—3m 2aw Ie Ef It ——-YOU WOULD SAVE—— Trouble, Expense, i | | — ASK YOUR GROCER FOR— " V oodill’s||Baking German ||Powder, j PURE AND WHOLESOME, / oct Army and Navy Depot. JAMES COTT & CO., i | Grocers and Wine Merchants, ‘117 & 118 GRANVILLE STREET, HALIFAX, N.S. A Full Stock Now Landing of Superior Goods, | 3Q) CASES CHOICE WINES—Cham- pagne, Hock and Moselle, ' 950 cases Fine Claret and Sauterne, 1300 * ; | } Hennessy’s Bran''v, X, XX, XXX, 400 ‘* Fine Old Scotch Whisky—Royal Blend, Is'ey Blend and Williams, 100 ** Old Irish Whisky—Jamieson and Kinahan LL, \100 ‘* Fine Old English Rum, 100 ** Holland, Old Tom and Plymouth Gin, 250 dozen Fine Sherry and Port Wine, |200 barrels Ale and Porter, quarts and pints, 300 dozen Apolinaris Water, | 10 barrels Belfast Ginger Ale, ‘And a full stock of FINEST GROCERIES, including Tea, Coffee, Sugar, ete. sept27-— 1m (ane or Owners of Vessels wanting : to charter, and parties wanting to buy or sell Cargoes of Produce, can apply to the undersigned at his desk in the hall of the Custom House, or apply by letter to P. O. Box 274. ! J. W. HODGSON, Customs Broker. Ch’'town, Sept. 26, 1890—1m eod "| supernatural aids of religion. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. and Temperance. | The Church No. 2. Sin,—Father Elliott continues : ** The | supernatural influences of religion, joined | to the drink-wounded natural character of | man, are like a noble (ree whose bark has. been girdled at the root. What, indeed, is | the bark compared to the wood, or to the | sap, or to the fruit. But the wood must die, and the sap must stop, and the fruit! must rot unripe if the bark be cut one To confine one’s self to the assiduous ad- ministering of the sacraments, the faithful | preaching of the ordinary Sunday sermons, and the usual sacerdotal labors for the sanctification of the people, in an average city parish of America, without an aggres- | sive crusade agains going, all night long. ‘A house may be laid upon solid foun- Gations, built of enduring materials, pro-) portioned and adorned by a skilful archi-\ tect ; but let the drainage be defective, and it is turned into a house of death in which miasmatic fevers slay the inmates. So is a city parish presided over by a priest who ignores the prevalence of drunkenness. If asked by his bishop or the missionary what are the people’s chief faults, he perhaps names missing Mass, neglect of Easter duty, failure of parents to instruct their children or to send them to Sunday School. In this he names the effects, and does not even suspect the one only sufli- cient cause of these sins, and of the worst of the others—the drink habit. There are not a few such good priests in America, | well educated and devout men, who have many drunkards among their people, and have never preached a temperance sermon. I am persuaded that the reason of this is a delusive idea of the able sufficiency of the Such men are neither cowards nor sluggards, but are oblivious to the need of bringing into play the moral forces of nature in order to secure the fruits of supernatural religion. If asked to take a leading part in an aggres- sive attack on saloons and saloon-going, to organize or {lore-organize a temperance society, they answer: ‘I really have no time todoso. Iam kept too busy by my regular clerical duties—my confessional, visiting the sick, paying off my debt, etc.— to attend to outside matters like that.” They tether themselves in their sanc- tuaries, and go round and round their lives long with beautiful churches and fine houses, and a drunken people. The solid ground of the faith, the high privilege of the sacraments, the noble brotherhood of the christian society —what do they avail to multitudes of the dwellers in a beautiful temple beneath which flows the miasmatic sewer of the drink habit. “Another view of the case is that which arises from the duty which the Church owes to the community at large in distinc- tion with that which she owes to individual souls. This duty has been continually in- sisted on by Pope Leo, as, in these times especially, something of the utmast import- ance. The farther the public life of men recedes from the morality of the gospel, the more assiduously should the Church en- deavor to win men back to that best guar- antee of civil welfare. The Church of Christ is the only divinely-appointed public guardian of the moral law, that law which is a condition of the happiness of nations as well as of men. Now, this office involves the necessiy of keeping up a good name for the Catholic parish of every town in the land—the necessity as well as ihe duty. What'God made theChurch tobe to thecivil community, that will the civil community instinctively demand that the Church shall actually be. The parish priest has no less an obligation to win the respect and to earn the gratitude of the non-Catholic commun- ity about him than he has to break the bread of life to his own parishioners. The wise doing of the one secures the perfor- mance of the other duty. Yet, how many of our priests absolutely confine their ef- forts, their very thoughts, to their own ecclesiestical subjects, and that in a strictly exclusive sense’ ‘You are the salt of the earth,’ applies, in their view, only to the Celtic or Teutonic colony of the busy city, in a corner of which they dwell; or to the ‘exiles’ scattered throughout a smaller town. Nay, priests are sometimes found to privately sneer at the efforts of public- spirited citizens to lesson the number of saloons, to break up gambling dens, to se- cure the observance of Sunday laws; and in spite of the earnest exhortations of this the,American hierarchy that priests and lay- men should do all in their power to aid such movements. Those who deem them- selves but Celts transplanted or Teutons transplanted are too absorbed by backward glances regretfully cast across the ocean, to seriously grapple with an American evil present everywhere about them. This is true also of their use of theologians, The theorizings of distant men on distant facts are respected by some priests more than the positive injunctions of the American hier- archy itself, stamped wich the broad seal of Rome. I have often been met with the allegation of customs tolerated in Europe as an answer to the express decrees of the Third Plenary Council at Baltimore. All priests who have been active advocates of the total abstinence movementand the anti- saloon movement, will tell you often they have been knocked about with theological “stuffed clubs,” stuffed with words and sen- tences written in *“‘temperate wine-drinking France,” or Italy, or ‘‘sober, beer drinking Germany;” as if this land were Italy, or Germany, or France; as if moral theology were not a practical application of prin- ciples; as if the bishops were not the di- vinely-appointed legislators of the church to judge of circumstances and apply prin- ciples. Unless a religion makes men _bet- ter men and better citizens, its insignifi- nane in his paper read to the Catholic Truth Conference at Birmingham—a most terrible because a most undeniable confession of the infection of the body Catholic with the drink plague—‘‘ how can you expect conversions when a Catholic prison chaplain can assert that, of six or seven thousand women brought into the prison yearly, more than eighty percent. are Catholics?’ Can we deny this of American penal institutions? Alas! no. I remember witnessing the horror uf an American bishop, after a visit to such a place near one of our large cities, his hor- ror and his shame that a prodigious major- ity of the inmates were unmistakably of our own people, though in population we are not one-third of the city. This moral cess- pool, filled from Catholic ‘‘homes” through the open sewers running from the saloons to the police courts, daily revealed in the press, is the extinction of the hope of con- inst saloons and saloon-|verting the ‘* other sheep not of this fold.” is to water and preserve a tree all} What the above authority, in addition to day long whose bark is gnawed by a beast|his quoted words, says of England is true of America: ‘‘ The people of this country understand nothing of supernatural vir- tues, they see not the life of the soul ; but they do see and do hear what takes place next door and inthe street. They know and appreciate tig moral virtues, temper- ance, honesty, € These must be our motives of credibility and the notes of the true Church. The conclusions are ob- vious.” re ‘If drunkenness were prevalent in a bad priest’s parish, ‘‘ Like waster like man” we could say. But the poisen of the sting is that the evils we have been considering are often enough found in the parishes of our best priests, judged so by the standards of education and piety ; and that, in the midst of it all, the sober Catholics are not led to show their hatred of drunkenness publicly. The case is totally dif- ferent when the priest preaches openly against saloons and against convivial drink- ing, and gets his sermons into the daily press ; where he joins reform movements, lends his name and influence to public efforts for the suppression of drunkenness and its occasions ; joins with all and any citizens, Protestants, Jews and Gentiles, in every lawiul effort for the relief of human misery and the elevation of men. In the parishes of such priests Catholic laymen take heart. They soon become conspicuous for their political virtue and public spirit. If drunken Catholics are upcast to them, they can answer by pointing to flourishing Catholic Total Abstinence Societies; they can offset the Catholic boodler with the Catholic re- former, and the Catholic saloon-keeper with the Catholic temperance hall. ‘*The .priest without a good temperance society, but a a ee society, in a parish fuli of flourishing saloons, is like a lawyer who has a good case but lets his antag- onist get judgment by default ; or he is like a certain kind of bankrupt, assets in the form of securities far in excess of debts, but the secu- rities cannot be realized on. Show that you hate drunkenness and saloon-going publicly, for tle vice is public, and the good rame of a public society, like the church, can only be safe-guarded by public conduct. If you have got good fraits of sobriety to show, show them ; they should not be all hustled away out of sight into pious sodalities.” I offer no apology for having trespassed on your space at so great length ; [am sure your columns could contain nothing of nobler senti- ment or purer morality than the extracts I have giveh from one of the most notable con- tributions to temperance literature which I have ever met with. The situations in the United States and Canada are alike—the rum power rules and Catholics are notoriously among its slaves. This is strong language, nevertheless it is true. Let others in high positions follow Father Elliot’s example, and fearless of whom they may offend, grapple with the enemy. It will not do to be content with measures of defence. The conflict must not cease until the tyrant has been dethroned, and his allies driven from the positions in the counsels of our country, which, to our disgrace, they are allowed to occupy. A Roman CaTHOLIc, St. Matthew's Day,$1890. ——, News Notes. Jay Gould, Russell Sage and Deacon White, three of the best judges of the financial and business situation in the United States, think the duties of the Mc- Kinley Bill will stimulate production in the country and so benefit labor, and that internal competition will bring about a re- duction in prices. The Victoria 7'imes attacks the Dominion Government as an enemy of the develop- ment of Canada’s resources because it re- fused toa United States vessel a right the law does not give it power to grant, that of catching whales in the Gulf of Georgia. How a United States ship catch- ing whales in Canadian waters and taking the product direct to a United States port would develop Canadian resources, is not just apparent on this side of the continent. The report of United States Consul Ryder, of Copenhagen, regarding 4 series of experiments recently made in Denmark, on the relative value of different foods in swine feeding will be of interest to Cana- dian farmers. The excellent results ob- tained from the use of roots and potatoes possess especial interest to hog-raisers in a country admirably adapted as much as Canada is to the growing of root crops. The carrying power of _~ tracts in Australia has been diminished by the abun- dance of rabbits from 30,000 to 3,000, and the value of farms has been enormously re- duced. In the years from$1882 to 1889 the Government of New South Wales spent £732,236 in experiments in trapping and poisoning, and became convinced that such devices were vain, A reward of £25,000 has been offered for the best mode of de- stroying the animals, and 1,400 plans have already been received and rejected. The commissioners are in favor of @ propagation of a disease among the rabbits and of the enclosure of the land. 4+a« a Dyspepticure—ls not a palliative, but acure; it first relieves, then controls, and finally entirely subdues the irritation and in cance must be its only enduring guarantee of perpetuity in the state. ‘‘How can’ you flammation of the stomach that causes indiges expect conversions,” demands Canon Mur- ‘tion and dyspepsia. je oe Wc gia BEA i Get FI ME ROO ERS PNR agi jo oo gam, INE RN an BB a segue f FR AR oo ENT ORR RIES Sie AOSTA ms etn apa ee cea Recep agen? womans emernsarldiiaimaee~mernats ati hae a Mtge aaa: mE CLE NAGAR LAE ATL TE EIN Lin EAE LEI ee ee te aca se mS a meagy a~ i é % 3