i ™, ‘ P HE DAILY KXAMINER. Panu 1—Ftve Uoliann « Vue “This is true bien wei ce isin Men, having to weil the Public, may speak free.”—vuriripss, INGLE mek ces laa Se sti et a sea NEW SERIES. ISLAND, W ONESDAY, SEPTEMBS': 24, 1890. VOL. 26.- NO. 100 HARNLOTTETOWN, P.#. eS CALENDAR FOR SEPTEMBER, 1380. | Last Quaiter, 5th day, 11b.. 17.0m, p.m. EK CHTOWN MUTUAL LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. ) , Fj | | ( ! re ; sur ance Ompany. The Church and Temperance. New Moon, I4th day, 3h., 40.5m., a.» N.B. ean - below horizon i rai BOVE COMP ‘NY is. taki take | oO. 3 . wwdh ty” ~ me » | ) 4 © (% iN is faking risks irst Quarter, 2lst day, 5h., 53.0m.. p. m., S.- » ADONIS . : * s . Ee ull lo m, 28th day wh “87 om.. a NW on Dwellings, Furniture, Stocks, eter, at; Sim,—I was uot privileged to attend the ‘ise teeth. payee cr mm very low rates. Citizens ca. get irsurance at) Mission piven bythe Redemptorists | in St. : the actnal cost, instead © f paying «xorbitant' Danstan’s Cathedral last autumn and sum. v ,)32e Sap Moon Hign 1; preminms to foreigu corr ations, The under wer; bat I bave observed in the press fre- VAY OF WERE Sh ‘ ema eae ce . : . Ee a te Be : _ u }18e8 sets rises wale) sae ee \ en Ge ce signed jas be en appointed Secre®« y. my can quent references to the remarks of Father h mh mj after after u ike any others. One | ot iN apnea. ae te be seen vt his residence, Lower Great George Strubbe ou the Scott Act. lt assume that It, Moucdat 5 25.6 34/8 11 @ 913 9 ‘ahaa eaeker ane 3% { Suan, eae nie eee. a ee he has net been misrepresented when le is 2 Tuesday 27 aa, 8 35: 45 6 most delicate women ; mation alone is worth i Db. BALDERSION jrepa ted to have denounced that measure : ae Oe a}! « 9: : use them. In fact all f) ten times the cost. A aue?2—Im aw : = : . ie te Dat: Ohta alll 3) Wednesday 8, 31) 9 1) 1 2 ? fadies can obtain very }) handsome illustrated ae cate dia é . __.. jin very strong language. But those who 4) Thursday 29; 99'929' 2 9 QO! great benefit from the eB pasetees sont ieoceds do nut approve of the Scoit Act should not Pie 97/10 3 AT 10K ase of Parsons’ Fills. ct ains waluable ut ; ow = : Pe I ieee ae ad ae ae > Friday a nm ‘ ’ oe 1257 ' One bex sent post- mation, ees A CUEALLES a. 4b R KESGPR, be condemmed as Inhuiva: to the canes of §|Saturday 82) 25) 1 45, 4 0} 53 paid for 2S ching or five 8. couse temperance, and those who deride Father {Sunday 33 93111 32; 5 19 50. »oxes for $1 in stamps. L © | : . : es ea al : ; io a | ag) 21 a 6 34) 47 80 Pillsin covery box. |) oe : omEnee. i Commission ii erchiant Strubbe for what we are bound to belicve Monday ; ial a — ' ‘| We pay duty to Canada,’ Knows,’ ae ; —_ ' , e his honest convictions are theinselves to be 9 Tuesday 3), 19) 0 26) 7 43) » day, ; ae ' { blamed, The Catholic Church, true to her 10 WV inead Ri 17} i 27) 8 aa) 40 : £ a | et aad ia@tiie ad, iie ata ic i c ; © t i Thurs “ , 38} bh? 28! 9 17) 37! : } "tt Divine mission, ever and everywhere 12 Friday — } $9) 23) 2 92) 9 54)’ ga! ff AUCTION BER, ; preaches temperauce Much, however, 2 bela 5 | 4 37 2x) 97) ¢ depevds upou circumetances, and whist 13 Sa tar ay ; 40) 1}} 4 37 10 2 wt, anlattr or D . I4jsunday 41; SO S41 OF 2B; y (6 Queen St, Chariottstown, Es i F sulis One Country oF class of peuple is far 15) Monday 43) 8} 6 5611 30) 25) £. one Pi. ne - ; from being applicable to another. The 16) Vuesday 44) 6) 7 55) morn} . »Auction Sales of Real Estate, Bankrupt | questionof environment umst be considered. 17| Wednesday | 45) 3} $58; 6 1 18 Stock, Furniture, harm Stock, ete., carefully|The Pharisees pointed the finger of scorn 18| Thursday | <7) 2:10 & 0 33) 6 i 40' 6 34 11 S| 28 6 3S 11 nn | $500 Reward. i FEVAE above reward will be given by the. City of Charlottetown to any person who will give such information as will lead te the arrest and cenviction of the person or persone who felont usly set ou fire the stables of Mr. John D. McLeod, om the night of Satarday last, the 30thof August, at which dissstrous fire Mr_.Dheophilus J. Fa:quharson, an es-, teemed and brave citizen, ‘ost his life in. attempting to rescue the valuable. horses be- | longing to the said John D. McLeod. T. HEATH HAVILAND, Mayor of Charlottetown. | Mayor's Otiice, Sept. 4, 1890. 6 25 38} | | ' 7 yo 30 Tues. a¥ 31 18! Friday 48} O11 17/1 9 20) Saturday i ONS S8jaft 30) 1 ott 8 aljSsunday | 6 56) 1 36) 2 5} 5 22) Monday | 52 54) 2 28) 3 48) 2 23/ Tuesday | 53} 52) 3 32) 5 17/1159, 2iWedneaday § 54 *0) 4 16 6 50) 56 25) Thurs lay | 55) sa| 452) 8 7) 53 26) Fridey | 56) 45,5 21,9 3) 48) 27| Saturday 58) 42) 5 47) 9 49 45) 28/Sun.iay 6 8) 42) 6 IN de BO) 42! 29) Monday i 29: ' NOTICE S HEREBY GIVEN that a first-class One Tenement House, situate on Prince S'reet, next to Thomas Alley’s, Esq, will be to let and possession given the first day of Septem- ber next. The above House has been in pos- session of Rupert B. Norton, Esq., for tour years, and occupied by Dr. Warburton the present year, both ef whom built new houses of their owu. The above House is first-class in every respect, and will be provided with a good Stale and Coach House. Apply to John Kelly, Esq , Water Commis- sioner, or to the owner, EDWARD KELLY. augl4 j THRE BS. LAURANCE ! | Spectacles and Eye Glasses. TH E only Optical Goods in Canada which have been recommended by the Presidents and Vice-Presidents of all the Medical and Surgical Societies in Canada and Great Britain. Far superior to any other for retaining perfect vision. Sole Agent for Charlottetown,— G. G. JURY, Watchmaker, Jeweler and Optician, North Side of Queen Square, Opposite Post Office. Ch'town, Sept. 4, 1890—2aw SHERWOOD CiAkeTEAL. LEASANTLY situated at the junction of Royalty and Brackley Point Roada,! conveniently reached by Rail or Carriage. —_ | Trains run daily to Ceme'ery at 7 and 9.45 a. m., and 4.15 and 4.30 p. m., and return at 10.35 a. m. and 5 25 p. m (local time) Funeral trains may be had whenever re- quired, Price of Plots as follows: Family Plots, 15x20 feet, on high aad dry ground, sold at redace:! price of $20 00 Plots half above size, in good locations. 12 50 ee SOONER. 6. fC a Te foe ccd es ceb stan 2 00) For further information a; ply to Mr. Wil-| liam Coyle, Keeper, at the Cemetery Cottage, . or to the undersigned, at the County Court Office. i- HENRY SMITH, Secretary Cemetery Company. _july17— eod 3m NOTIGS PO PAXPAYT 3S, HEREBY give final notice to all persons who have not paid their City Real Estate | Tax, Personal Property Tax and Poll Tax for | this year, 1890, that they must pay the same! gn or before the 30°h of September, inst., for | giter that date all defaulters will be adyer-| tised, execytiong issned and placed in the} hands of the Sheriff tor collection without respect of persons. Agents of Banks and Fire and Life Insurance Companies are also re- uested to attend to their Licenses this month. ll who pay their taxes betore the Ist of October next will save costs. ROBERT VANIDERSTINE, City lax Collector. _ptli—wfs pattsm K.P. €. Cares Dyspepsia t abtended to. at our Saviour. ‘** Behold a man that is a » “Cousigninents solicited. Vrompt returus| glutton and a wine drivker, a friend of pub- g@aranteed and good references given. licans and sinners,” said they. Still it will * aug6—2m eod not do to quote the miracle at the marriage in Cana of Galilee ia justification of the use With all due pe | TT 1 Cima. ? TF of intoxicating liquors. Re. ISLAND I oA ALR, respect to Father Strubbe, I bow with rw salt o-Hy greater deference to the opinions of Bishop McIntyre (whose record on the temperance mer Arrangements. question is well known), and of his priests, nlicdio~canee who have worthily seconded his efforts to kK, seal kaewe ne ont Law. eradicate the vice of intemperance from SENCE” and © PRINCESS OF WALES”) Prince Edward Island. rake DAILY TRItS as under, Sundays ex- Father Strubbe is reported to have said z Charlottetown at rix o'clock in the|that Catholics have no need of the Scott orning for Pictou, connecting there with COME *i p.m. with L. C. R. for Halifax. ; ; Picton about noon, on arrival of Morn-| previous experience. ; a from oe rade wigan: ay std tries the use of wine and beer is as common , umnveraide ou arrival ot Morning] ag is that of tea and coffee on this side of connect there with I. C. R. Trains for|the Atlantic ; and it is possible that Father none St. John. for Canada and/Strubbe’s fellow countrymen, and those Point. du Ghene on arrival of Morning | With whom he is best acquainted, are not ’ min from St.John and Moncton fur Sum-/ prone to the vice which assails us in a snore WES Wale fer America, For it cannot be denied that the , Ry order. sin of intemperance is the besetting one of | F W. HALKS, Americans and Canadians, and the Catholic portions of both communities are not excep- | . Secy. Ch’town Stesm Nav. Co. (Ltd) tionstotherule. Father Strubbe evidently , PP Geeamer “Kgerton” at i0 a. m. for New Glas.| ACt,—that they have the sacraments and 4 zs #éw, and thus with Morning Train for Cape|other means of keeping sober. This is his $ . ; mints 4 D5 ov . ° ° r RR = ‘ : c =} Feton and Wastern Points, Also at Pictou) opinion, and probably. is warranted by his —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—-——- — —- —_—- —- In European coun- luly5—aod 4m misapprehends the state of affairs amongst £8 us. ‘I'he supernatural aids‘afforded by the i Ne | @ | Catholic Church are powerful; but there a are certaim natural remedies to be applied We can turnish anyone, from dat before the supernatural can be effectual. f_XHAT desirable Brick Residence situated} Father Damien did not depend entirely ‘ e . The House is frost-proof througliout. Coach | for the alleviation of the Hawaiian lepers— K ast pol KR t to West Cape, with — re shan Wena ae Rich. he did fully as much work as a carpenter, mond Streets, The property runs back 160 and re 7 rer. - he did =e feet, and is 48 feet wide priest. Catholic missionaries first instruct For further particulars apply on the pre-| he savages in the arts of civilization before niece te they attempt tochristianize them. Miracles MRS. KENNEDY, |are not worked in the case of those whom - ¥ Bee ‘ | jane27—dy the remedies of the physician or the knife fifty per cent. 28 icaper t? Mahi any Geeanes of the surgeon can cure of their infirmities, Cities which neglect sanitary precautions Potato Baskets. cannot expect immunity from disease, and it is idle to ask God for health while we are iNDIAN POTATO BASKETS content to drink from poisoned wells. & t “IS] [have been deeply impressed in i 3,008 for sale at seo ree a s CARVELL BROS, Ch’town, Sept. 13, 1890—2w 2aw pat New Goods clean and sweet, ten to Bankrupt 4tock on the market. what I may call a remarkable article in the September number of the Catholic World, the leading Catholic magazine in the Unit- ed States. It is from the pen of the Rev. Walter Elliot, of New York, an eminent member of the Congregation of St. Paul the Apostle, better known as the Paulist Furniture! F rniture! for every ; ; ' all grades, all ’ styles, all prices. : room in the house Fathers. In language which he has weighed well, and about which there can be no misconception, he ‘**speaks outin meeting” about this wide spread vice. He offers no apologies, he does not ‘* hum or haw” or attempt to ex- plain away, but, in words which, he says, have burned him painfully in the writing, Lowest Prices ever quoted. Best goes to the root of the matter at once. pasate values ever shown. MHigh-priced. WwW YO esto the root of the matter at once, | dct . nie " “ee Seedichenesio ote, come 2008 ‘ and low-priced goods. | steamship Co ’ midi ‘tad Catholics of Prince Edward Is. | seit land, and that the baneful traffic is largel in their hands. Probably these words will a &/ ray 4 x I give offence ; but they come from a Roman VV e have I HE REGULAR LINE, Catholic who believes in the truth of what a he states, and whose sole desire is to benefit THE IRON STEAMSHIP his co-religionists however much he ma We must make Aa clear- regret exposing theirshame. It is wit We want your trade. the stock. 4 . this object in view that I ask your kind VA L - NY am i A indulgence, Mr. Editor, while I proceed to a 7 quote some rather lengthy extracts from wT ies are hard and Money: VY J Father Elliott’s contribution, intitled, ANCE a : ‘*The Church and Temperance.” | 1600 TONS, After noting the objections raised by | many Catholics to a distinctively Catholic : ci temperance movement, because, like Father mn | j » t . te i f ’ . ’ ’ em ° CAPTAIN F. C. MILLAR, Strubbe, they consider the administration e 2 W II.!, leave Company’s Wharf, rear of Custom} of the sacraments and their devout recep- . y > P House, ST. JOHN, for NEW YORK, via] ,; : We can give you more FOr YOUN: Mr itouse st. JOuN, for NeW YORK vial tion” attendance at mass and hearing the 'City, Massachusetts, word uf God, enough to secure the attain- ment of any virture, Father Elliott lays scarce. money, Ww K a3 Dy LEiKV K ° than you eee Friday, at 3 Pp. M.,| down the following principles :— ‘* Before you have the Christian you must first have the man.” W Dy WE A 8 BE | Returning, Steamer will leave Pier 40,E.R.| _‘\ Before the grace of God can do its work | (foot of Pike Street), New York, every TUES. ~_— must have good natural material to | DAY, ati p. m., for Cottage City, Mass., Rock-| work on.’ . aes. Me. eaeivors ren aie e ” to| ‘* Religion does not start with nothing; it it will pay you to and from all peints South and West of Sew must have a man to begin with, and what zak. and from New York to all points in the/makes the man is his reason, and what un aritime Provinces. Cheapest fares and lowest rates. |. Shippers and importers save TIME and MONEY LJ ordering goods to be forwarded by the New ork Steamship Company. Tickets sold at all stations on the Intercolonial Railway. For further information apply to FRANK ROWAN, Agent, 228 Prince William Street, St. John, N. B., Or to N. L. NEWCOMB, (Eastern Standard Time). can get elsewhere. Mik TAKEN. investigate. makes the reason and the man and the Chris- tian all at once is intemperance.” Father Elliott then goes on to say : — ‘* Wherever the Christian pastor finds a ten- dency to excessive drink in his parish, he is confronted with the absolute necessity to an- tagonize it before he can hope to succeed in any way eee oe he preaches ; how, . o when, and to whom he administers the sacra- : ne "eenekees; New York. | ments; how he shall edify by his conduct ; all july that he does and says, and prays and preaches, must be a two-handed endeavor to place clear manhood in reach of the divine gifts on the Now is the time to buy. @urs the place to get Bargains. sicidianiiaa --{x}---- vilietianvinns iK WRIGHT & Ci Charlottetown, Sept. 5, 1890.—2aw wy LU aes must bees ’ ap gg if he has absolved ‘ONS. in Bags containing 224, 100}men addicted to drink. Drink maddens the 4 poe ace e : intelligence which the faith seeks to enlighten ; CARVELL BROS, | hence the instruction from the altar must con- & sept8—2w 2aw pat demn fearlessly the drink habit which is the oa __.____________-_______. fenemy of reason’s sovereignty. Drink darkens with despair the soul which hope would illumine with courage ; drink demonizes the K. D.C, is Guaranteed. — altar. If his right hand offers the saving ab- ) @ / solution for sin in the confessional, his left heait which love wouldennoble. . What manner of supernatural! faith, hope, and love shall exist in w parish derionsed ey intemper- ance and infested with saloons. ‘*We call drunkenness a brutalizing vice. Precisely so. And men brutalized by intem- perance, and their children brutalized by its hereditary and its evil example, must first be Lumenized before they can be christianized. Civisize first and then christianize, or rather civilize in the very process of chriatianizing. ‘“Sucramenta prepter homines is a theologi- cal maxim—the sacraments are for the sake of men. Give yourself men, then, say the advo- cates of the temperance movement, that the sacraments may avail them, The more manly —that is to say, the more sober, intelligent, conscious of human dignity, and self-reapect- ing your people are, the better use they will m*ke of the sacraments. Before regeneration comes generation ; men were before the sac- raments. Their native virtues and excellences were bestowed upon them by God, that the sacramental life might the more readily elevate them to union with the Deity. Exactly io proportion to the manhood of a people will the sacraments woik a divine work among them. ** Now comes the horrible truth. In all the cities of the Union a large proportion of these wretches (drunkards) are Catholics, To deny this is a great weakness; it is folly to try to conceal 1%. Mr. Powderly ought to know whether the working classes are given to ex- cessive drink, andat the last convention of the Catholic Total Abstinence Unionof America he affirmed that nine out of ten of the supporters of the saloov are working men—the very class which forms nearly the whole of our Catholic community. In many cities, big and little, we have something like a monoply of the bus- iness of selling liquor, and in not a few some- thing equivalent to a monoply of getting drunk. Scarcely a Catholic family among us but mourns one or other of its members os a victim of intemperance. This is lamentable. I hate to acknowledge it. But the conceal- ment of such a deadly thing by us eliminates the most necessary element from the discus- sion—namely, the facts of the case. This would be far worse than petty vanity; for Catholics to refuse to face this fact is to with- draw, defeated, from the controversy with the rum power. It would be a public and an of- ficial lie to conceal such a fact. The Catholic Church in America is grievously injured by drunkeness, Yet who will say that the sacra- ments have not been duly administered, the word of God—on the routine lines, at any rate—faithfully preached right in the very communities referred to? Yet from Catholic domiciles—iniscalled homes—in those cities and towns three-fourths of the public paupers creep annually to the almshouses, and more than half the ciiminals snatched away by the police to prison are, by baptism and training, members of our Church. Can anyone deny this? Orcan anyone deny that the identity of nominal Cath- olicity and pauperism existing in our chief centres of population is owing to the drunkenness of Catholics? And can anyone on the north side of Hillsboro Square. fyjjon the administration of “the sacraments 4 deny that this has been the horrible truth for something like thirty-five years, or ever since the Father Matthew movement began to wane? Yet no one will affirm that the cause is a lack of churches and priests, ora want of any of the supernatural aids of religion. This detestible vice has been a veritable beast in the vineyatd of the Lord, making its iair in the very precinct of the buildings containing the confessional andthe altar. . Whether it be the christening of the infant or the burial of the dead, the attendance at the or- dinary Sunday Mass, or the celebrating of such feasts as Chritmas and New Year's and St. Patrick’s Day, the weakness and the de- gradation of our people have yoked religion and love of country and kindred, the two most eievated sentiments of our nature, to the chariot of the god Gambrinus and the god Bacchus, whose wheels crush down iato hell a thousand-fold more victims than ever perished uncer the wheels of J rnaut, ‘*The regular administration of the aids of religion to a population defective of so essen- tial a natural virtue as restraint from exces- sive use of drink, is like scattering good seed upon the matted sod of the unbroken prairie, or rather upon the ash heaps of the foundry dump. To attack the vice of drunkenness from an entirely supernatural point of de- parture is to begin with the beginning. In- temperance is primarily a sin against nature, and the resources of natural virtue should be first called upon to vanquish it. A man should be sober whether he believes in God or not. To overcome drunkenness, the only faith a man need have is belief that he is a reasonable being ; the only hope he need have is one for a tolerable existence in this life ; the only charity, self-love. Experience and obser- vation prove that these lowest of even the natural reasons for sobriety succeed in reform- ing multitudes of drunkards of every creed. Drunkenness, therefore, is a vice to assail which the priest must go out of the sanctuory, if he aol make his apostolate integral ; and to make it successful, he must associate with him persons and things not entitled to stand in any holier place than the sanctuaries of pure and upright nature, a happy home and a well ordered state. * * * In every case the attitude of the priest, although it can never lose its supernatural force, must in addition take on the natural. As a fellow-man of the drunkard he must appeal to him ; as an equal citizen of the civil community must he antag- onize the saloon-keeper, and all this both in | public and private. ‘**T am not ordained a priest to keep a laundry; but if a class of my people are too dirty to go to church, I must set to work to get them cleaned—unless I am a mere eccle- siastical official. So with the casein hand, I ain no policeman, but if a class of my people are going to hell through the Sunday back entrance of the corner saloon, I must at once set about becoming more than a policeman; ae rate I must be so to the keeper of that saloon.” 1 submit, Mr. Editor, that whatever one may tnink of the Scott Act, what I have quoted goes to show that Father Strubbe spoke merely for himself and not at all for the Church, when he declared that catho- lics had no use for the Scott Act, and re- lied entirely upon the sacraments and other supernatural means, in combating the vice of intemperance ; but with your per- mission I shall, in your next issue, give further extracts of perhaps more striking application. Meanwhile, I subscribe my- self A Roman CarHo ic. St. Matthew’s Day, 1890. —~€ The Fremdenbdlatt has a scathing article on American egotism in desiring to exclude European products while preserving Euro- psan markets. ee see iptete Sse peg Seapees tt Sagi o- S E EE cae going theta es oS warn enema Yr ne: ops nesses ma tanle ar caauts Sanilante ome fact aedies Senet, erates ws ca saaletgien Fp ea eh Maa a