- f t 5 : = “wi o \ ~~ ‘ ye a = ‘s a ee Bb = be. 7. A dearer SPECULATIC Terms :—Frve Dotears A YEAR MINER. at a i gn Sruneie Copies Two Cents ee renee a CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1889. ce a ——— nomena VOL. 24.—NO. 104. Cije Dain Examiner is issued Every Evening by The Examiner Publishing Co., ' FROM THEIR OFFICE, ' LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. RATES WF SUBSCRI ON Bix Monthey eos c..scacs $2 50 i PEON ds sa adeaviecerene ds es l 2 Qme Biomth . «Mins oes cece: on 47 Advertising at most moderate rates. Cordracts may be made for monthiy, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. ALMANAG FOR MAROH, 1889, MOON S CHANGES, New Moon, Ist day, 6h., 48.3m., p. m., W., below borizon. First Quarter, 9th day, lh., 46.lm., p.m., 8. E. Full Moon, i7th day, 7h., 35.3m., a.m., W. Last Quarter, 24th day, 25.,44.8m., a.m., E. New Moon, 3lst day, 7h., 24.4m., a. m., EB D! __jsun Sun"|Mvoon! High: Day’s mi?e* OF WEEE! -ines|aot rises | water} len’h oe n i i niattirn’ pb 1 Friday 6 43.5 41, 6 48/10 50:10 58 2 Saturday 41} 42) 7 16:11 27/11 1 2 Sunda 30 5 4\\ morn + 9 Monday 33 “Mi 8 *6| 0 1 ; 5) Tuesday 36; 47; & 28) 0 34 i} 5 Wedns sday 3t iS agi §s§ 16 7: Thursday | 38 | 9 19) 1 44 1s Si tri ; 30 51' 9 49, 2 26 I 9 Saturday 29° 53/10 23) 3 13) 24 16 Sunday oT: S6lh 714 3 2s 11; Monday 9| 64111 S56) 6 31 l 12) Tuesday 9?! 57 ait 50) 6 47 8S 13! Wednesday Zi 59; 1 52! 7 48 14' Thursday i 5 i} ,P Dai & 4] 15| Friday ~ a 1} 4.11) 9 29 44 16|Saturday 1) 2, &§ 210 9 47 17 Sunday | is 6 SLi0 46 MO) {8| Monday li 74 | 3 54 19) Trestay g 6; 8 59:11 59 57 WiWednesday | 7} 7110 15 aft 37/12 O 21| Thursday ae § $110 30) 1 17 3 22) Friday 2 9 morn i 7 23! Saturday 0 10| 0 40:3 3 wm 24/Sunday 5 68; 11) 3 48] 4 23 14 25) Monday 56} 14 2 47 55 17 26! Cucsday ' 66 16; 33a: 7 20 27) W ednesday . ; 16; 4 161 8 22 23 28) Thursday | 52) 18144919 1% a 29' Friday | 51] 20; 5181950; @& 30 Saturday 49} 21| 5 481028} 33; 31 Sunday 15 48/6.22' 6 TII1 1/12 36 = = na ene — GEO. A. ROMER, Banker and Broker, 40 & 4QBROAD! AY ANpIBMMBEW ST., New Youd Offy. Ste Bonds, Graim, Pro * leum Bought, Sold “— By _—e; > on ; } i | MontrTReAL. THE ™ <LEPHANT” BRAND | -..F— PURE WHITE LEAD is now manufactared under the control of the original proprietors. ts y * Ready Mixed Paints, m de ELEPHAN up 1D all the choicest tir ta. ivery packet is werranted to please. Every shade matehed. Order early, as the Spring de- mand wili be great. Only one quality made, the best. sé % Patent Zine Paint, snow-' ELEPHANT white, gives a beautiful and lasting finish. +6 e assy’? Water-color Paints super-! ELEPHANT sedes kalsomine for walls and ceilings 66 as 9’ Colored Paints, in iron cans ELEPHANT ard kegs. tier ” Janan Colors, in all the ELEPHANT newest and shest colors. 66 pi Varnishes and Japans, 8u- ELE! HART perior to imperted. és ti TT? Stains and Lacquers for ELEPHAN i finish and beauty. i ‘“ FIEPHAN 99 onthe package is the only guarantee of really good paint. feb2—3m eod James A. MORRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE TR Ly . “MnpeINN & MCP A MORRISON & WOSERA BROKERS | —AND~— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Rerrrences: Thomas Fyshe, Eeq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; George 7 . t Nova Scotia acteod, rer Bank Oj Chariotte Lown, ote men ee eee WARREN «& JONES, THA MERCHANTS, ) Eas? Carap asv 9 & 14 Minornc LANE, London, ENGLAND. Represented in Canada by Moragison & Moscernavc, Halifax. cRUNKS AND nan oP | 1 PROVINCIAL LEGISLATURE, uUUpUL | 1 | | HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY. oe Me er 7 F ia > Malia. | saan alee . Tuxspay, March 26. ae Hon. Mr. Sullivan presented despatches ; PRISE EF; ¥ ‘from the Department of Justice, respecting + , i mii} P 5 ves hi j : ‘pilis passed last year, whieh had been E23 ahs ® found to be wera vires in some respects. : >A Hon, Mr. Sullivan submitted a bil! en- | titled, **An Act to amend the Charlotte- itewn Incorporation Act.” He explained ithat the Act passed last year for the con- i Ataf ie allt be .% | solidation of the statutes relating to the 83 fri © kt OLLORS, Grey Cottons, Pr ind Cottons, City had beew objected to by the Minister ‘of Justice as being witra vires in respect to OO aa, ies es _ Xs : Fated’ a ithe harbor of Charlottetown and in respect Dress Ginghams, Apron Ginghams, Shir{imgs jt the jurisdiction of the Stipendiary } sa | Magistrate in civil cases. The Minister of “ 2 . ‘Justice held that the Judge of the City h q ray; a N % ‘ ‘ ~ rE ey . - . ‘ Bed Ticking, Sheetings, Counterpanes, Table cour: stoutd bo appointed by, the Gover : : nor-General in Council. The bill was sub- © aan x me 4 : mitted for the purpose of meeting the hes, m a0 eis, x dilet COE GPs. ‘case. He said that the bills had been |drawn and prepared by the law officers of ——— ithe city and solicitors outside the legisla- iture. The law clerk of the House had TA 1 — au ‘nothing to do with them. fi: i 1 LP: | Mr. Sinclair said that the House was ac- iS, CHAP TWEEDS, CHAP CARE ine ‘countable for its legislation, and most of all ‘the Attorney-General. a . i | Hon. Mr. Sullivan said that he had been AT—— “ ——fig- aN se inj Go i mo oc an oo fj eam ltold by the Minister of Justice that there {was not a Province iu the Dominion whose Vi , . 1 : (legislation “was go regular as that of this New Kid Gloves and American Straw Hats Just Opened, Province. | , | The House then went into Committee ito further consider the bill relating to evi- {x] | dence. | After some on Karn gon = vee ‘ a > . ' 5 | Was reported an e House adjourned. Yur Steck of Room Paper Takes the Lead. | Wepxespay, March 27. The bill relating to lunatics and the SEE OUR PATTERNS AND PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY. custody of lunatics was passed a stage. | House then weat into Cemmittee on the ibill respecting witnesses in the Supreme i Court, and it was, after some time, report- 'ed'agreed to. olvE BS EB RY et | ———_—— Task NS, LEFTERS TO THE EDITOR. —— : [s}-—-— PH SEA ENS & a lg ee . aS Charlottetown, March 12. 1889—dy & wky ~ . ~ non ee -Srerr | Wagarty’s Wharf. Sin,—Now that Premier Sullivan, in his ‘place in Parliament; has declared that all ‘the wharves in P. E. Island of importance, ‘are the property of the Dominion Govern- _,ment, it behooves, our representatives at " .Ottawa, if..they cai do waything im the ' ee to urge the necessity of having *¢hem put in immediate and thorough repair. ‘The wharf knowm-as. Hegarty’s Wharf, ‘iver, iswf-gréat importance to the m. p ort Augustus, Dromore Road. “In fact there is no st River that has such ‘a large Sectwwh of couhtry leading to it. | Phe steamer also callg=at it during the ‘summer months, and titeresis a consider- lable shipping done at it spring “and fall. ‘The Local Government in their beneficence, have kept {it in a passable state up to the i present titae, , It nowneeds a thorgugh re- i pairing, and it isa great disadvantage and | injustice to the farmers of the section named if the Dominion Government dow't take Received ex 8. 8. ‘Stanley.’ idea Newest Shapes from the Best Makers be sold as Cheap as the Cheapest. wil The rings | le ba Q ys ae if . ne ; ati ; dis : ye : ap Sea Jur Suitings, Trouserings and Overcoatings, jmeecist conse gn keep tie one jatives will please note that the road lead- ing to it'frem..the Fort Augustus Road known as Hegarty’s Road, should be mac- adamized in places, as it is much cut up , we .. wg and dangerous. VALISE i A Farmer. Fort Augustus, March 26, 1889. WARRANTED TO FIT AND FIT PO WEAR. (0. ee neens () ne | Line of Genis’ Furnishings Peddlers Abroad. Srr,—In your issue of the 22nd there appeared’a communication signed ‘‘ Fort Augustus,” in-trepily to which [beg to state that the farmers.of Fort Augustus do not feel in any way thankful tothis unscrupu- <-> o zy Se snE LE SR ~~ “So 3% : 3 ‘ . ‘ ‘ : fr > : , KJ C54 lous demigo¢ fer his exaggerated statements a ? — ¥ jconcerning “®ur peddlers, with whom we Ji have been tYading for the past few years, CUSTOM TAILOR. A Eine mene mer meme, | ar* and with whom we intend to continue to trade. “4 : FARMER Charinttetewn. March 13, aNG - 0 eee NATSU SO “ “ Fort Augustus, March 27, 1839. —- Sue The Condition of the Farmers in | af) _ Dakota. & y The deplorable state of affairs amongst the farmers of Dakota is shown by the Fargo Argus, which says: ‘‘It is a serious question where our farmers are to get suit- able seed for their spring sowing. There % RT oes Pus i Ot ey eT, ee is generally very inferior, and entirely un- suitable tor seed. The failure of the crop \jast season left many of our farmers in straightened.circumstances. In many in- stances even the wheat usually reserved for The newest, most central and best equipped TF ak at 66 < 99 | :3 some wheat still in the hands of farmers, Se nanan ttn oil : JUS? A 4 5 but the quantity is limited and the quality FERGUSSON, ALEXANDER & CO a = ¥ ——A FINE ASSORTMENT OF—— ti Horse Notes. The trotting stallion Pancoast ts reported’ dead. The horse was struck by lightning | last August and partial paralysis ensued. | Pancoast was purchased at a cost of $28,- 000 at the Glenview sale in 1886. An exchange says : W. F. Todd, of St. | Stephen, N. B.. has been offered $80,000 for his mares, the get of Emmeline, and has refused it. This offer has been made by parties in Kentucky. There are eight of the mares, and Mr. Todd gets at least $3,000 for each of their offspring. Consid- ering this, he sees more money in keeping them and raising good stock than in aceept- | ing what many people would consider a fortune in exchange for them. William Redding, who has been engaged of late in shipping trotters tothe Cuban market, will soon leave with the most valu- able consignment that he has yet taken to Havana, among the lot beimg the four-year- old filly Bosque Bonita, for which he paid $10,000. It is said that in the case of this animal she will be taken to Cuba, and along in June shipped to France, it being the idea of her owner that more money is to} be won there taun anywhere else, and yet he does not care to ship across the Atlantic at this time of the year, although the voy- age to Cuba can be made with comparative safety. Gen. B. F, Tracy, who has been appoint- ed Secretary of the Navy by President. Harrison, has decided to sell at auction his breeding farm and all the horses he owns. General Tracy has been an earnest and en- thusiastic studeat of the breeding pro- blem, and long ago foresaw that from trotting sires and dams only can fast trot- ters be secured, and with this idea in mind he has followed in his breeding operations the families whose inembers have bean suc- cessfui on the turf. Hé was a great advo- eate of the Woodford Mambrino family one reason of this, perhaps, being that in Mambrine Dudiey he possessed one of thg fastest sons of that horse. The stallion Woodnut, which Mr. Robert Steel, of Philadelphia, paid $16,000 for not long ago, has arrived at his new home, and it is said by horsemen who have seen him that he is better looking than antici- pated, and the general impression is that he is one of the best of the Nutwood family, and as his record of 2.16} is the fastest of the grade of a Nucvwood, it will be seen that the eastern men did a wise thing in securing him. Had Mr. Steel been successful in ali his plans he would also have purchased Stamboul, having ask- ed a price on that horse and been willing te give as high as $40,000 for him. This, io ever, would not buy Stamboul, and his subsequent sale to a San. Francisco eure man for $30,000 is now a matter of history. It is no wonder that Mr. Hobart,who never stops at prices, was willing to give this money for Steinboul, as twenty-two of his colts brought at auction in New York an average of $4,000 each. Mr. George E. Hughes, Charlottetown, owner of Apothecary, 6465, and proprietor of Greenvaie Farm, has issued a beautiful catalogue of his handsome and finely-bred young horse. The Agriculturist says:—Apo- thecary, already well-known to most of our readers, is a soa of Hernando, 2891, and Morena, daughter of Almont Mambrino, 761, son of Almont, 33. His granddam is Stump-the-World, by GParson’s Abdallah, son of Abdallah, 15. Apothecary ‘* traces three times to Hambletonian, 10, through Abdaliah, 15, twice to Pilot, Jr., 12, four times to Mambrino Chief, 11, and twice to the great Almont. This in itself would make his pedigree gilt-edged,”” while it en- dows him with speed. stze, style, finish, pure gait, stamina, and docility. Of Her- nando, his sire, it is unnecessary to speak at length, as his name is familiar to every istand horseman as that of a grandly-bred and individually, splendid horse, whose progeny are famous wherever known. Morena is a handsome aud stylish bay mare of 1100 pounds, that shows an admirable way of going, and, if handled for speed, would justify the prediction that she cculd easily enter the 2.30 list. Apothecary, now in his third year, is a rich bay with black points, 15$ hands high, weighing 1100 pounds, and in every particular does credit to the grand trotting families of which he is a representative. With *' a fair fieldand no favors,” he will, we feel sure, demon- strate his ability to perpetuate, size, style, and speed, and this, with his excellent breeding, wili make him a most desirable horse for this Province. i + i Re Personal. Hon. J. A. Chapleau will reach home about April 8th. Count Herbert Bismarck is arranging for the Emperor William to visit England. Dr. R. P. Howard, Dean of the medical faculty of MeGill College, Montreal, is dying. The Rev. A. McWilliam, A, M., at one time minister of St. David’s Church, George- town, passed away at Huntley, Scotland, on the 9th March, inst. We are pleased to learn that Mr. Daniel 4 2 s 1 bread, was sold to meet immediate and pressing emergencies. Jt is yet more than tive mofths until harvest, and we are in-| Uy 5 formed on authority that we deem most re-! liable, thatit is not improbable that ship-; _ ‘ments will have to be made into North| ee Dakota and Northern Minnesota to meet our bread wants prior to harvest time. The em & ie jf * , situation at best is a critical one, and our) = os Aw : farmer friends, who have wheat sufficient ie ; to bread them till sfter next harvest, should | ust be induced by specious arguments to) sell it in the hope of being able to replace’ oo . t y : Whish will be sold Regardless of Profits fur the next Two Weeks ee ee ee ee i] are likely to prove very costly to those who) ene ; Cae? SRE OUR NEW TIES AND SILK HANDKERCHTBIS, |, “ate: sports snow oe ee kote ial 7 Manitoba it brings from $1 to $1.08. : f x i“ rr Seeding operations are going on through- ee out Manitoba. (gauciecs? — a Shes The Mexican Government has taken steps Ea r= to prevent the introduction of American lard, which has officially been announced en Street, Three Doors Above Apothecaries’ Hall. @ucen Street, oo es February 19, 1889—eud & wky McLean, of Mount Herbert, father of John McLean, M. P. P., who has been seriously ill for some time time past, is now out of danger. iL. At his residence, Georgetown Royalty, on the 2lst inst,, after five weeks of great suffer- ing, Captain David Parker, in the 54th year of his age. He leaves a wife and three children to mourn the sad loss of a tender loving hus- band and father. He was a most agreeable neighbor, an honest and brave man, and died high licens: . innholders ai at $1,000. look older than : © is. Local and Other Items, eee Masoyic Temrie.—Montreal is to build a Masonic temple to cost $100,000. TERRIBLE Scrrexine.—Terrible suffering is reported among the Irish who recently emi- grated to Buenos Ayres. Hie Lic-nse.—Taunton, Mass., will try The aldermen fixed the rate for 2,000 and common victuallers ——~>_ -— A gray beard «> . man under 50 makes him The best die to color brown or black is Buckingham’s Dye for the Whiskers. —__~»_—-- OnTaRIO EMIGRANTS.—An exchange reports that a thousand emigrants from Ontario ar- rived at Winnipeg on Friday last, making 2,500 in 11 days: - STABBING AF¥YRay,—During a drunken row on Brussels Street, St. John, on Sunday morn- ing last, a man named George Mullen wae stabbed inthe hack with a knife. Charles Louden has been arrested for the stabbing.. —_——_ For purifiying the blood, stimulating the appetite, and invigorating the system in the Spring and early Summer, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla _ is unsurpassed. Be sure you get Ayer's Sar- saparilla and no other, else the result may be anything but satisfactory. ty - scrnansillle nahin ANoTHER WARNINe.—Here is anothe warning to cigarette smokers: A young man in Massachusetts who smoked fifteen cigar- ettes a day has fallen heir to his uncle's library, which contains nothing}lighter in the way of mental pabulum ,than the works of Emerson. aoindicenin No medicine has had greater success ia checking consumption, in its early stages than Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. It stops coughing, soothes the throat and lungs, and induces? much needed repose. Hundreds have testified to the remarkable virtues of this preparation. I) iok's Sacteey 1. PARNELL Funp —The St. Patrick's Seciety ot Fredericton. N. B., on Sunday last voted $50 sterling to the Parnell defence fund. | That will make about £200 sterling sent by the society to Ireland inthe interest of the home rule cause during the past two years, which is certainly a splendid showing. SN More Asour Frertivizers.—Eighty thou- sand paunds of bones formed part of the cargo of the steamer Wingate, from Alexandria, Egypt, which arrived at New York a day or twoago. These bones are to be used as a fertilizer. They vere gathered from the deserts of Exypt. Some of them are haman bones atid some bones of camels and horses,. © We! Journauistic Enrerprise. —Mr. Charlea K. Osgood, a reporter on the Biddeford, Me., Standard, and Miss Viola Cook, a Biddeford young lady with no parents and an ample fortune, eloped to Dover, N. H., last Wednesday and were married. The young lady Jived with an aunt who was op- posed to the marriage. Imacine Tuem Frevines.--While the Michigan Central express was passi Wel- land, Ont., on the 22nd inst., at full ; th little seven year old girl, who, with her par- ents, was a passenger on the train, stepped off tothe ground. The distracted parents, who saw the terrible accident, beeame almost frantic, and appealed to the train men to stop the train, but they refused todoso. At the next station the father got off and walked back to the scene of the accidént, where he found the child lying unconscious in a ditch. The family then went on to Suspension Bridge. sili P. E. Istanp Hosprrac.—The Treasurer of the P. E. Island Hospital has received the following : 38.80 from Pownal Hall Co., pro- ceeds of a lecture by G. M. Harris, Eaq.; $5 from Wm, Nicholson, Esq., proceeds of a con. certat Dandas; $3 per Mrs. R. Johnson from a friend in New London—money saved by giving up the use of tobacco; $1.50 from Capt. Wim. Gordon, Brudenell ; $30.95 from St. Paul’s Church, hospital Sunday collection; $8.50 from Montague Methodist Church ; $22.1 from Valleyfield Presbyterian Church; $11.79 from Tryon avd Bonshaw Presbyter- ian Churches. isles eecane Oxrcans Ov or PLacz.—Holyoke, Mass., presents a case which will set the medical traternity all over the county in a discursive mood, ‘There isa young girl there aged 12 years, who is in the enjoyment of the most perfect health, notwithstanding the fact that three of the most important organs of the human system are placed in her in direct op- position to all the laws of nature. Her heart, lungs and stomach are each in positions direct. ly opposite to those which are occupied by those organs nominally. The doctors claim thet this country, and, mayhap, the world, does not present a parallel. Acarnst Carp PLayinc.—Pastor McKin- ney, who hag charge of a Baptist chureh in Ansonia, Coun., recently preached against card playing. He was decided in his opinion that a Christian oughé not to play cards, even whist, in which he could see no science, and laid down these five points: First-—Christ- ians should not play cards for amusement, be- cause itisa waste of time. Second—They should not play cards because it dissipates the mind. Third—They should not play cards because the example to others is one that is injurious, Fourth—They should not play cards, because it leads to gambling. Fifth—They should not play cards because ‘** Whist,” the Christian game, as generally played to-day, is gambling. nei ANormer Love Tragepy.—A young ‘officer in the German navy, a son of Herr Goebel, a prominent railway magnate of Bavaria, recent- ly became enamored of an opera singer in trusting in Christ his Redeemer. (Guardian please copy.) | Waar is a Sxeteton.—One of the questions put to the schoo] children of) Cambridge, Mass., the other day was :/} ‘© What is a skeleton ?? Am@ng the an-} swers were these : ‘* When anybody dies the flesh dries up to the bones and makes a si:cleton;” ** When you die the doe make a skeleton of you;”’ ‘* When you| row into a skeleton you are semt to! Cultege to practive on.” Hamburg, one Mile. Langener. Hefpersuaded her to abandon the stage and take up her abode vith him. The girl consented and for some tine they lived together in luxury, the young man spending 4,700 marks upon ber within a few weeks. Un Friday last Goebel gave a bad jimitation of the last act of “the Crown Prince Rudolph of Austria by shooting, his sweet- heart and himself in the head. He succeeded in killing himself, but the girlis still alive, : lthough vb ysicians ettending her have elight ‘or CaN ‘hopes of saving her life. ——— Men:’ felt hats, chree cases new styhes just ~ tl ot Westy & Stewart's, ne ere