Doutaks A Y RAR, Perms :—hive This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak tree,.”—-Evripipgs. SINGLE Copres l'wo CENTS, Ta NEW SERIES 1s 188 red every evening, by The Exam From thei ner of Water and Great George oeres B * harlottetown, Prince Edward Island. KA F SUBSCRIPTION :; sis Mount ls, . ° $2 50 Three \i ntvus, ™ ° l 20 ime Month, . ’ ° 0 50 ga Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, yuarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments on appiicat ion. ' For the convenience of the travelling ublic, we have care! illy arranged the fol- egg RAILWAY TLMi —_ + lowing table of arrival aud departure of + . ' , ’ trains on the P. E. Island Kailway, accord- ing to local time Goiag West. a. M. (te Bs je Me! Charloitetown . ocnaee 6 47 9 12 4 02) Royalty Junction acelin 2a. 2 North Wiltshire........... 737 1039 509 Hanter River seactacst a Tee! 6 Bradalbane........--.--+-.8 12 1132 6687 County Line....-.-...+++- S19 1143 607) Freetown. ... «6 seer e eee 829 11 59 32 P M. Kensington...........++-.8 42 222 6 42 arvive.......9@s 3307 712 Saamerside, i depart......927 237 Misowuche.....---+-+- +++ 942 300 Wellington .......---++-- 10Q@L 329 PEs dé ccc ee coeede 1029 420 nics kcesseces + eete eee 5 42 0 ee i205 657 Tignish.......-----++---42 42 7 47 From West. a me 40 Tignish ........- 60-000 207 647 Eth vies er ose obi 245 757 SEE ss ccche ose 329 902 Ei gc cduice as $4 420 1029 Wellington......... coco Bh Dc ccenccveccoses S07 1144 GIEBUE. c0ss § 22 1207 Sammerside, ic We lepart......642 112 657 Kensington ......... it 40-7 Be cs oe on 6a..3%8 7.4 County Line...........--.- ¢33 “S27 SG Es ceteccececeds 638-337 $812 RRM MEINE, oc ccccccsece 702 315 847 North Wiitshire........... 733 S33 3G Royalty Junction.......... 747 432 947 ei os bats 802 4652 1007 Going East. A.M P.M. SED IEEE S OOO E E Tay 74 37 Ee ee eT 743 444 Es cic. cwcdecdocs cee 804 457 a ; tateive.<..:scscmmae: @ ae Mount Stewart, } ienert.......- $57 527 he ican ks cecedeoecss Gn. au EE ig: SARE ee ya 1015 617 ated. 6 5 eine oa ade st 1107 652 Th. cwcccectbeuues 1L57 67 2 oh. oll ss coladanad 902 532 Ahad dew os sane ooh dap set 1015 625 PGGEEpecsccecccvesetl 1037 642 From East. ey * ds »dtvictBe cde cet died 647 212 I ie iganal Bek oe MTL S64 oo cuc.ohocesoeds 752 354 RR 6 a 814 427 u . COs neste 842 6517 ggGiagaaaaia Sieaeet ieee $47 537 es 912 614 ee ce. ae 926 635 ial Eat. Sue 7i2 Georgetown, ............. wcbpe: ahaa Soc skcaccce whecebes 749 400 ND ok oa $42 Giz L. ARTHUR & CO. GEN HRAL lommission Merchants, 12) ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. Eggs and Produce a Specialty. daly 15—dly wkly —— ED leLeod, Sovson & MoQuarrie, BARRISTERS —AND— ATTORWEYS-AT-LAW. Uiics in Browu’s Block, Queen Square (UP STAIRS) OWhewn, Fah 12 IRAK, ene WE SELL Potatoes, Spiling, Bark, K. R. Ties, Lumber, laths, Canned Lebsiers, Mac- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Fish Kite, : Best Prices for all Shipments, Write fully for Quotations, HATHEWAY & OO, General Commission Merchants, 22 Centra *Vhart, Boston yetembers of Board of Trade Catia Fxcbange tren, Nov. 19, 1884, : ; if ‘orn and rad ner Publishing Co, 22| HREN CH CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1885. Che Daly ent SH PTHM BHR 20; NEW GOODS! Ex, Manitoban and Cliften now Opening | | FN t | Very Heavy I-land ! G f} N tt f} i 5 Ht os ; Heavy Lambs-« ool j ' —- 0: — -- ' TWEREDS, WORSTED COATINGS, BEAVERS, | | PILOTS, | } MERINOES, CASHMERES, WINCEYS. CRETONNES, | PRINTS.| & Co. G20, DAVIES Ch’town, Sept. 7, 1885. NEW SCOTCH GOODS —_—_—_—_{0°0——— Now OPENING, J piRecT FROM GLASGOW, BOUGHT BY A SCOTCHMAN—MR, PATON :— SCOTCH TWEEDS, Famous, SCOTCH SUITINGS, Nobby, SCOTCH TARTANS, Nice, SCOTCH D® ESS GOODS, Stylish, SCOTCH SHIRTINGS, Strong, SCOTCH TOWELINGS, Rough, SCOTCH TABLE LINENS, Genuine, SCOTCH CRASH, Thisties, SCOTCH SHAWLS AND WARBPS, Warm, SCOTCH CHEVIOTS, Splendid, SCOTCH WINCEYS, Cheap. OTHER SCOTCH GOODS, Various. Sales not confined to Scotchmen—all are Welcome. Prices Low! Call and see the Goods, P. S.—Our LONDON GOODS will be ready this week. WEERS & CO., Market Square and Queen St. Ch’town, Sept. 7th, ’85—wky MAGNET SOAP, (WARRANTED PURE.) f¥NIICS SOAP is made from the BEST MATERIALS, and is! Superior to any similar article manufactured. For gereral’ household and family use it SURPASSES all others. | => Et will be to Your Interest to Try it. FO?) SALE WHOLESALE BY FENTON T. NEWBERY. July 22nd, 1885-—6mos ROYAL GANADIAN INSURANGE CO. AT E.G. oO- OOO. os. 4: 8 mF ap nnveecpticcnnnl) HEAD OFFICE—Montreai. HALIFAX BRANCH - J. Scott Mitchell, Agent. Q=ase-— Risks Eaken on Mest Favorabie Perms. AGENT FOR PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND: Fe ti. ARMAUD, MYEROTANTS RANE OF TTALIFA® ee —— $2,000,000 Oh? sn. Jan 1998 PHARIOTTETOWN SISH ARD DOOR FACTORY | Penke’s No. 3 Wharf, R. PALMER & ci. PROPRIETORS. oO We are now manufacturing and will sell at the lowest cash prices ; Sash e ors, Window and Door Frames. Architraves, Spouting and Conductor Moulding, Bullueters, Newel Posts, Stair Rails, Twists, &. Me ditt 4 We ere prepared to do all kinds of Jobbing, in Planing, Jointing, Morticing, Tenoning | i | Jig and Fret Sawing, Turning, &c. All kinds of Goi hic Wiadows for Churches made at shor'est notice With new end first-class Machinery, and the latest »ppliances, we cen insure ulmoet satisfaction to al! who favor us with their patronage. Oh’ town, Sept. 22, 1886—wkly 1 year ee {’ } to $i6 AT THE 100 Pairs Men’s Tweed Pants, $1.25 and up. Very Heavy Tweed (all-wool) Pants, $2, (Halifax Herald.) | Asthe Hamilton Times, the ablest Grit ATEST NOVELTIES from Europe, the journal in Canada, has repeatedly pointed | United States and Canads, in— (out, ‘* Reciprocity” isa word not known RIDICULOUSLY LOW PRICKS,, 00 esse to the Free Trade lexicon. It wholly be- longs to Protectionist belief, and can only | Tweeds and another‘arge invoice of Kid consistently be advocated by those who be- Gloves, Corsets, &c. |lieve in Protectionist doctrines. ‘To, the | From Toronto, 50 Suits Boys and Youth’s ,™9n who sincerely believes in the political Clothing, $2 85 up. | economy taught by Richard Cobden, ‘‘ Re- | 50 Suits Black Worsted Men’s Clothing, | ciprocity ” treaties must ever appear useless ' $8.75. worth $i2. and illogical. Nevertheless we find the 20 Tweed Suits men’s Clothing, $7.50, $8.50) Halifax Chronicle parading the following resolution adopted by the recent Toronto ‘convention of aged and infirm Grits, as UP. something worthy the admiration of the our people of the Lower Provinces :— Men and Boys’ Clothing, Worsted Suitings, | Overcostivgs, Tweeds, Suitings, Tryon ‘Tweed Pants, make, $2.75 Heavy Winter Unaderclothing only 64c per! ‘* RESOLVED, That the course of the Dominion | Government in neglecting or refusing to take any steps towards obtaining a Keciprocity Treaty . Fa | with the United States, and in surrendering to Shirts. 65¢ up ,the Americans the free use of our valuable sea Heavy lop Shirts, winter weights, 8% up. ree wipers soe is censurable in ' ny ala To the highest degree. his convention urges that it est Novelties xd State : : : . ; C La “ as : . in United States Hats andj, in the interest of Canada that the largest possi- aps a panic pric 4. af ble measures of reciprocal trade should without iteavy Glengarry Caps, very stylish, 25c up delay be arranged with the United States.” to 50c Very Stylish Cardigan Jackets for suit. Under Pauts and ile | Passing over for the present the ridicu- > VOL. 17.---NO. LL, where I found now and then a person able to give m3 some accoun’ of the summor oniwinter life of the pecple. To begin with external and material things, te average home of Labrador generally c n- sists of a rough board dwelling, with two roems and a garret, a sma!l dock and siore- house for receiving, cleaning, curing and storing fish, and two or three open fishing boats. Ail these buildings perch like anxious water-fowls on the bare rocks ; shey never impress me as homes, for they make for themselees no niche or place in ‘the surface of the earth ; you expect them to be washed or blown away at the next gale—as they sometimesare. For the sake of beimg near the fishing-grounis these shelters are generally established on some |outlying island offering a mooring or else a |beach for the boats ; they seem to be ban- ished from the earth as far as possible sea- ward. They stand up gaunt, stark naked in the gales, in the midst of a desart of sea and rocks. In the best places there may be ina hollew a little sand, enriched with decaying fish, where a few turnips and cabbages jmanage to show themselves during a brief jseasou. You get a gleam of hope and of ovly 85c. The largest stock of Tweeds in the market, lous spectacle of a convention of alleged | horror on beholding a gaunt scaffold about Free Traders demanding ‘“‘reciprocal trade” jeighteen feet high; but it is not a gallows that Canada could not with dignity make any further advances in the matter. 2. It is notoriously dishonest. ‘‘censure” the government of It pro- ; poses to Canada for the want of a reciprocity treaty with the United States, when the men who ARREN FLAN] passed it knew very well that no such j treaty could at any time have been obtain- whom everybody knows as the successful ed. It calis on the Dominion Government manager of the Largest Hotel Enterprises of America, says that while a passenger from New York on board a ship going around Cape Horn, in the early days of emigration to Cal- ifornia, he learned that one of the officers of the vessel had cured himself, during the voy- age, of an obstinate disease by the use of , e Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. o Since then Mr. LeLaNp has recommended AYER’Ss SARSAPARILLA in many similar cases, and he has never yet heard of its fail- ure to effect a radical cure. Some years ago one of Mr. .rLAND’S farm laborers bruised his leg. Owfng to the bad state of his blood, an ugly scrofulous swelling or lump appeared on the injured limb. Hor- rible itching of the skin, with burning and darting pains through the lump, made life almost intolerable. The leg became eunor- mously enlarged, and running ulcers formed, discharging great quantities of extremely offensive matter. No treatment was of any avail until the man, by Mr. LELAND’s direc- tion, was supplied with AvyER’s SARSAPA- RILLA, which allayed the pain and irritation, healed the sores, removed the swelling, and completely restored the limb to use. Mr. LELAND has personally used Ayer's Sarsaparilla for Rheumatism, with entire success ; and, after careful observation, declares that, in his belief, there is no medicine in the world equal to it for the eure of Liver Disorders, Gout, the effects of high living, Salt Rheum, Sores, Eruptions, and all the various forms of blood diseases. We have Mr. LELAND’S permission to invite all who nay desire further evidence in regard to the extraordinary curative powers of AYER’S SARSAPARILLA to see him person- ally either at his mammoth Ocean Hotei, Long Branch, or at the popular Leland Hotel, Broadway, 27th and 28th Streets, New York. Mr. LELAND’sS extensive knowledge of the good done by this unequalled eradicator of blood poisons enables him to give inquirers much valuable information. (ostensibly) to ‘‘ arrange’ such a treaty *‘without delay,” just as if it were in the power of any one country to force a reci- procity treaty on another. If the men who passed that resolution were not fools, they ‘must have been knaves. If their resolution were not a piece of foolish bunkum it would be as much a vote of censure on the late Government of Canada as on the pres- eat, for certainly they both alike ‘‘ neglect- ed” to force a reciprocity treaty down the throat of the United States. And the probability is that all future governments in this country will be open to the same terrible indictment. It is conspicuously inconsistent with it- self. After ‘‘censuring’” the Government for ‘‘neglecting or refusing” to take any steps to secure # reciprocity treaty with our neighbors, it in the very same sentence de- clares them ‘‘censurable in the highest de- gree” for taking such a step. Asis well known to every person of any intelligence in Canada, the liberty accorded the Am- erican fishermen of, concluding this season's fishing in our watérs, was conceded at the specific request of the Government of the United States, under a distinct pledge that if that was done that government would use its best endeavors to have negotia'ions re- newed for the arrangement of reciprocal traie between the two countries. If the Government of Canada had refused that re- quest they might have been open to the censure contained in the fizst sentence of the above quoted resolution. But they did not refvse it. It was the first intima- ion that the Governmeat of the United States had ever given of their w:l ingness, op any terms, to renew such negotiations, end it was very wisely accepted by the Government of Canada. For a Grit con- vention in Toronto to condemn the Do- ininion Government for taking that step to secure reciprocity, was a piece of unalloyed impudence, and will be so regarded throughout the lower provinces. There is not a constituency interested in fishing in the lower provinces, but could be triumph- antiy appealed to by the Government to support them in that action. Whether we secure reciprocity or not asthe result of it, there can be no doubt in the mind of any candid man, that it would have been most unwise in the Government of Canada to have refused to accept Secretary Bayard’s offer. PREPARED BY Dr. J.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists; $1, six bottles for $5. If environment moulds a people, then the Labradoreans should have strong traits. The climate, the unique features of the country. the undisputed supremacy of the zea, the isolation from the world—all their circumstances, indeed—are s0 strongly marked as to be irresistible. The popula- tion of the Canadian part of the coast— down to the boundary line at Blane Sablon —is of French origin, Canadians and Aca- dian ; the Newfonndland part of Labrador —the Strait of Belle Isle and the Atlantic mer Ped coast—is inhabited by English-speaking people. Moravians and Esquimaux are found in the far North. The French Can- adians consist of two classes; a part of them come here every spring to fish for the merchants, and return every fall to their jfamilies and small homesteads between Collars and Searfs in great variety, ! such a treaty. In this respect the Liberal«1 45c wp, all wool. with a neighboring Protectionist conntry, | for the ending of life, only a platform for The largest stock of Suitings and Over- which they know can only be obtained at coatings in town for sale at the smallest pos- | the expense of our trade with a Free sible margin, at a saving of from $2 to $5 per | Trade neighbor, we wish to call more special suit. Perlect-fitting garments guaranteed or | attention to the dishonest and contradictory the money refunded. | character of the above resolution. A very large stock of Overcoats and Reef-| 1, It insinuates what is false. The mio $9.55 up. | Dominion Government has never ‘‘refused” one on aeatoien®: of nor SA oe ‘‘neglected” to take steps to secure a to of So eas Pea e ow | reciprocity treaty with the United States. A large stock of Winter Flannels, 18c up. — the ee oe Rat pe A large stock of Gray and White Cottons | a ere a a eee (36 inches) fur 5e du ube VOrbons! open offer of reciprocity with the United oT Rey sien td Miguel States, and has always stood ready to avail am very full stock of Gent's White. Shirts, | jtself of any opportunity of negotiating 75¢ up. Rovp Shit, faa ep net ems. ~ BPs 5 | Conservative party have ever occupied a unr Valine 756 u SRE, HIRT Se | position much more friendly to reciprocity P P than that occupied by the Grit party, an oN oO which after the failure of Hon. George Ik Radediiteed BROS. «| Brown’s mission in 1874, took the ground CAMERON BLOCK, Sept. 16, 13585. | keeping the frozen fish for dog meat. The ‘interior of these homes is not quite so dis- \tressing as their surroundings, for the ‘human hand in-doors can make its mark, which is not always a clean one. The furniture, diet, constumes, are rough and |common-place; but the people are courteous avd kind, and they observe well their religious rites. Their isolation is such that they keep the run of time by marking the days of the week on the door-post. An ‘exception to this dreariness is to be met here and there, at a lighthouse or at the home of a merchant. I asked an intelligent fisherman how he could content himself in such a place. **Well, sir, lL expect we're fools to stay here. ‘The worst of itis, our children are growing up «s ignorant as we are—just like the duge. Hardly any of us can read or write. Our houses are too far apart to get the children together for school, excepting at Esquimaux Point, Natashquam, and Mutton Bay. Then, too, we can’t see the priest more than once or twice a year, and that’s very inconvenient about dying, for pleurisy and consumption are very head- strong. And there’s no doctor at all, nor any roots or herbs for medicines, We keep alive on pain-killer and salts that the trad- ere sell. It’s a hard life, aud we don’t live to be very old We have to do all our own work—jack-of-all-trades, youknow. When we came here first to live, my wife and I cut ail the timber in the winter for build. ing these houses, sawed it by hand in a pit, and in the spring rafted it down the river.” ‘The social season of Labrador is the win- ter. There is no fishing thea to keep peo- ple at home; cutting wood and a little hunting are the only occupations. Winter lasts about eight months; when the chan- nels among the islands and tie bays are frozen over, dog teams can run up and down the coast for three hundred miles— from Mingan to Bonne Esperance. People then go visiting; they carry no provisions, for everybody keeps open house, and the little cabins are often packed with people and dogs. The winter homes, as a rule, are back some miles from the coast, where wood is handy. Several families who fish at Whale Head live on a swamp in winter, where the tread of a man along the street shakes every house. The Abbe Ferland says that in his time—about fifty years ago —the hospitality of the coast was such the people on going away from home used to leave food, and sometimes even money, on the table, and the doors unlecked, that needy travellers might enter and help themselves. But the advent of more travellers in these days has led to more cantion and lees generosity. It is not surprising to find all seamen superstitious; the irresistiole and whimsical forces of the ocean must appear to them supernatural, and their changing fortunes mnst often seem the resnit of some n- fathomable mystery. Could events so ‘supernatural as those told by the Ancient Mariner be so appropriate to a landsman ? These fishermen are not behind other sea- faring men in either the number of their superstitions or the faith they repose in them. 3ut Labrador, in time, will doubt- less produce still more astonishing results in this regard ; for what other region on earth offers such elemental powers, such weird scenes, such impreasive hardships and horrors? Here is a region without a mile of road in three thousand miles of coast; 1 never elsewhere appre- ciated a wheel and a horseshoe. Some of ihese people have no idea of the shape and size of a cow ora horse, and they flee like hares at the coming of a stranger. I have stated elsewhere that lawlessness often pre- vails, and that those who are in need do not hesitate to break open stores and help themrelves. But their most astonishing traigs are laziness and improvidence here in sight of heart-rending hardship and want. Labrador, however, was formerly a sea of plenty; fishing, sealing, trapping, gave even the indolent a sure though a miserable living. In a few weeks the average man could fish enough to exchange with traders for the necesearies of life. This enabled him to idle away three-fourths of the year, and reli@ved him of any sense of rew- poneibility. But now fish, oil, and fur are no longer soabundant, The average family spends about one hundred dollars per year to get only the absolute necessities of life ; and yet the government is obliged very often to distribute flour and pork to prevent actual starvation; and it offers free passage aud work to those who will leave the coast. Is fully up to the Highost Standard. Is giving Very Great Satisfaction. Is certain of being Continued in Use by all who try it. FRED. A. JONES, HOTEL DUFFERIN, ST. JOHN, N. RB, Sept. 91, '8D. Quebec and Gaspe ; others live here per- | The lesy depend upon the industrious, the manently, own little isolated esteblish-| provisions are shared, and if navigation is ments, end fish on their own account. The | tardy, the first sail is watched for in the Acadians have collected in two principal’ gnring with esgerness.—C. I. Farnham, im settlements, Esquimaux Point and Natash- Harper's Magazine for October, : quan, where they have their echoois, | priests, churches, and some other features | of village life. | Scarter anp Wurrs Frannet, solling I was fortunate in being storm stayed at very cheap, at J. B. Macdonald's. afew of these French Osnadian homes, septl4—dy wk pat __——s + - a ee,