pe THE DAILY EXAMINER. lr} DonLARS A YRAR, ———— NEW SERLES. ind’ “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men. having to advise the Public, may speak free.”— Evriripes. CHARLOTTETOWN. P. 5. ISLAND. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5. 1887. Srincie Corres Two CEnts. VOL. 21.-NO. 114. Cie Jay Examiner every evening by Publ shing Co From theu corner of Water and Great Ge rye Streets, | harlottetown, Priv Kdward Island, The rk aad —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— aix raonths eeeeesCeceseeeeseceee $2. 50 Three mooth- ake ochvenieaee a ewapiet 1.25 Que BOOMER . ccc cs cveceveteccccocecece 50 Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. haif-yearly, or yearly advortis-menta, on app” atiou. " AUMANAG FOR OCTOBER, 1997, MOON'S CHANGES. Jalt Moon Ist day, Lih., 34.8m., p. m., S. Last Quarter 10th day, Oh., 44.9m., a.m., 5. E. New Moon 16th day, 6h, 22.5m., p. m., West, below horizon First Quarter J3rd day, lh., 33.3m., East Full Moos 3st day, Sh., p.™., 1S.tm., p. m., East, oe ee Ye FALL ANNOUNCEMENT. 0 Perkins & Stern Have much pleasure in intimating to their numerous i customers their i that are now to hand, and all departments are now filled up with the Latest Designs and the Newest Fabrics at the very Lowest Prices. o-———_—_ Dt . Sun Sua |Moon! High! Day's yy, Dat oF wes risesjsets | rises |water| len’h h matirnimorn’h m l Saturd Ly 6 315 35 8 B10 32:1] 33 2) Sunday 5, 34, 6 1O Li 42 2y 3 Moaday 6| 32) 6 36 11 14 26 4) Tuesday S| 30 7 2Ir 4 22 Sj Wednesday | 9 2S) 7 32iaft 15 19 | 3, Thursday 1g; 26°58 & 0 50) 16} 7, Friday | 12) 24 8 44) 1 27 2] 8 Saturday 13} 22 931\2 9 y Sisanday 14) 20:10 25) 3 1 6 10! Monday | 16} 18\tl 25) 410) 2 1}! Luesday 17 16 morn} 5 33/16 9 i2)\Vednesdlay } 18) 14) 0 33) 657) Se 13, Vhursday 20 i3| 1 46, 8 4 53 M4 Friday 21) 11;}3 1) 854) 80 lijsaturday . @ 9) 4 18) 9 45 46 I6/Sunday 24; 7) 5 38/10, 20 43) 17; Monday ; 25) 5 6 57)11 10) . 40 18 Tuesday 27}... 4} 8 14/11 57 37 iWednesday | 233} 2} 9 30imorn| 34 0: Thursday | 29) 0/10 40) 0 34) 31} 21 /Friday | 30l4 57/11 43/"1 19) 27 @2\ Saturday al 55\aft 26; 2 9 24 23 Sunday } 32} 53)/122)3 4 2! Perkins & Stern Sept. l6—dy & wky ROS. # Monday 34; 52) 2 1-41) 1s 2 Tuesday 35; 50) 2 34! 5 27 13} 26, W ednesday 36) 48 3 1) 6 33) 2 97 Thursday 38} -47| 3 29) 7 40) y 23\ Friday 39; 45) 3 58) .8 27) 6 29 Satarday 41) 4454169 6 3) 30 Sunday | 43) 43) 4 40) 9 41} 0| $l Menday 6 45'4 42) 5 1/10 15) 9 57) L. ARTHUR & CO,, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, RECEIVERS _OF Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS Poultry, Potatoes, Fruit & Vegetaule<s. 12, 144 Commercial Street, BOSTON, MASS. May 1*, 78° _—— - . —_$—-— --$ -FPUuR #-()-8-7'-O- N FALL ARK tL GEMENT. THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. mee ae te Leave St. John for Boston. via Eastport and Port- and, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 8.00 a. m. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd » 99.50, let class. Por tickets and other information apply to G A.BSHARP, F. W. HALES, P, EI. R’y., P. E. L Steam Nav. Co, or te your nearest Ticket Agent. Sept, 24." 1387-004 wky c eeeeeencenmnmnenineemeees I Dire BY THE Bilt, Halifax and Prince Edward Island Steamship Line. The Only Direct Line Without Change. Charlottetown to Boston TRE staunch and commodious steamships Car- refurnishen he orcester have been thoroughly y a ut int ~at-c ' : Very particular. P ito first-class condition in will ton’, the Season of 1887, one of these vessels for Boston ene Street Wharf, Charlottetown, 2c, our o’ ‘k " y 1 of each Week, ax y clock, p.m., on THURSDAY Ston fo . a ‘ . y at noon for Charlotietown every SATURDAY, LXCelle a: Rates ent Passenger Accommodation! Low PARES. Seon Abin, $7.50; Stateroom Berth. $9.50. fuliy handled fo" freight, which is always care- CARVELIL BROTHERS, EL - Agents, Charlottetown, ARRISOW Loning, Managing Owner, Lewis Wuart July a, ray « Bostun, Novelties in Dress Goods. Novelties in Mantles, Novelties in Wool Goods Novelties in Fur Goods Novelties in Fancy Goods. FALL AND WINTER. Colored Moire Plush. Colored Checked Plush. Colored Fancy Plush. Colored Plain Plush. Dress Goods! Dress Goods! Dress Goods Dress Goods! ‘Ol—-———- SEER BROS. Ch'town, Sept. 15, 1887. NEW FALL G8SB —— MACDONALD. ne oe re () mee J. ib. Every department full of the Newest Goods. Everything New in Ladies’ Dress Goods. Everything New in Ladies’ Jackets. Everything New in Ladies’ Hats and Trim- mings. Tremendous Stock of Ready-made Clothing. Every Inducement to Cash Buyers. Goods Bought Right. Our Prices will be found Low. J. HS. Ch’town, Sept. 26, 87—dy wy—pat NEW DRY GOODS, New Goods for this Season’s Trade PROMPT. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey Conghs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have been speedily cured by the use of ADAMSON’S BALSAM after all other medicines have ¢ i ' from either recent or chrome coughs or bronchial atiections, ean resort to this great remedy, comident of obtaining i Bpeeuy Tt Do not d y t atonce FOR SALE BY ALL PRUGGISTR. Bottled at St. Stevens, N. } > propriet Py. W. RINSMAN & Ct cists, 343 47H AYE., N. Y. Ors, We ask the public to remember tes we sell Watches as cheap as ‘anyone, TH f Bj p AT ~ |LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. - Those wieeies Again. | Sir, —‘* Q. C. Com’r,”I observe,attempts ‘a reply to my letter of the 29th ult. He ‘says that it was not necessary for Prince ‘and King’s Cnunty Commissioners to go to , Charlottetown to leave for their respective ,County Exhibitions. Very well, if he can af ’ show how Commissioners residiag west of “Lo all who have sense to estimate that , Summerside, for instance, could have avail- which it is really worth, said Mertoun. ed themselves of the free passes that were much of the animal impulae about them, as to #ive% t Commissioners belonging to. Char derive pleasure from sensual gratification, wen natn I 7 stand ree oo a may perhaps, like the animals, feel pleasure in pap t. do i, © wriggies out of the tight emniuleteton = place in which my letter placed him by Mordaunt liked neither the doctrine nor the 84Ying_that Prince and King’s County example. He thought aman who discharged Commissioners had only to meet the special his duties towards others as well as the good vat any regular station most convenient to old Udaller, had a better right to have the them. How very thoughtful and cousider- sun shine fair on his setting, than that which;ate! Is it likely that a Commissioner from he might derive from mere snsensibility. But | Tignish, after paying his way to Summer- he let the subject drop, for to dispute with his’ side, would go as far, say, as Kensington to father, re always the eilect of irritating him;' meet the special? And besides, who was ae 1e adverted to the condition of the |to know when the special would arrive at The hulk, for it was little better, was now oe Poo It was advertised to leave in the very midst of the current, and drifting , the city at 9 a. 7s but that was all that was at a great rate towards the foot of the preci- known about it. Specials are not run ac- pice, upon whose verge they were placed. Yet |otding to the time table, and therefore it was a long while ere they had a distinct 20 one could tell when the special in ques- view of the object which they had at first'tion would be at any station along the By Sir Walter Soott. CHAPTER VII. (Continued. ) | We warn the public against those who offer Watches for sale"and take very much less than asked. | An instance came to our notice the other day where $35 had been asked ‘and $20 accepted for a Watch that we and other regular Watchmakers ‘sell for less than $15. Since then, ‘several similar cases have been brought to our notice, | Our object is not only to sell goods: but to supply articles, whether Watches or Jewelry, that will best answer the purpose required by our ‘customers and to sell at such a price ‘that it will pay them to buy from us. B, W. TAYLOR, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, Sole Agent for the Sale of Rockford Watches Cameron Rlock, Charlottetown. Sept. 15, 1887—2aw & wky A CA RD. ‘Yoall who are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early devay, loss of manhood, &c., I will send a recipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE, This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America, Send a self-addressed envelope to the REY. JOSEPH T. INMAN, Station D, New York City. C. C CARLTON, AD. Lk Go oe es —AND— ‘Commission Merchant, SOURIS, P E. I. | Oct. 3, 1887. ——— i i se te a we Wns ha da PEAS 5 a aA ng OW Coes eh) ye PAO NCTM Ue yey SC) ee ae \rSTOVE POLISH 2 LZ 8 >F BORAX CURRY POWDER CELERY SALT me MUSTARD: OF Ode te eee mater 2 GOLD MEDALS 1 ISIWVER MEDAL | ae pera VOM) Te Bee MALL LU UL ieee PURE GOLD MANFG.COS¥ es oe on - 1k - i ee eee ee 2 ek oe PUBLIC NOTICE, PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that it is my | intention to apply at the next meeting of the City Council of Charlottetown to have my new Hotcl, in course of erection, on Water Street, exempted from taxation under the provisions of the po section of the 48th Victoria, cap. Dated this ]4th day of September, A. D. 1887. | defence, for they could see her port-holes. She} ‘should he die now, will he not escape misan- + JOHN J, DAV FKS, ; Sept 15, voaw wy 41 seen as a black speck amongst the waters, and | then, at a nearer distance, like a whale, which | now scarce shows its back-fin above the waves, | now throws to view his large black side. Now, | however, they could more distinctly observe the appearance of the ship, for the huge} swelling waves which bore her forward to the shore, heaved her alternately high upon the surtace, and then plunged her into the trough | or furrow of the sea. She seemed a_ vessel of | two or three hundred tons, fitted up for. had probably been dismasted in the gale yes- terday, and lay water-logged on the waees, a prey to their vielence. It appeared certain. that the crew,finding themselves either unable to direct the vessel’s course, or to relieve her by pumping, had taken to their boats, and left her to her fate. All apprehensions were therefore unnecessary, so far as the immediate loss of human life was concerned; and yet it was not without a feeling of breathless awe that Mordaunt and his father beheld the vessel — that rare masterpiece by which genius aspires to surmount the waves, and contend with the winds, upon the point of falling a prey to them. Onward she came, the large black hulk seeming larger at every fathom’s length. She came nearer until she bestrode the summit of one tremendous billow, which rolled on with her unbroken, till the wave and its burden were precipitated against the rock, and then the triumph of the elements over the work of human hands was at once completed. One wave, we have said, made the wrecked vessel completely manifest in her whole bulk, as it raised her, and bore her onward against the face of the precipice. But when that wave receded from the foot of the rock, the ship had ceased to exist; and the retiring billow only bore back a quantity of beams, planks, casks, and similar objects, which swept out to the offing, to be brought in again by the next wave, and again precipitated upon the face of the rock. It was at this moment that Mordaunt con- ceived he saw a man floating on a plank or water-cask, which, drifting away from the main current, seemed aout to go ashore on a small spot of sand, where the water was shallow, and the waves broke “more smoothly. To see the danger, and to exclaim, ‘He lives and may yet besaved !” was the first impulse of the fearless Mordaunt. The next was, after one rapid glance at the front of the cliff, to precipitate himself—such seemed the rapidity of his movement>-from the verge, and to commence, by means of slight fissures, pro- jections and crevices in the rock, a descent, which, to a spectator, appeared little else than an act of absolute insanity. ** Stop, | command you, rash boy !” said his father; ‘‘the attempt is death. Stop, and take the safer path to the left.” But Mor- daunt was already completely engaged in his perilous enterprise. “Why should | prevent him?’ said his father checking his anxiety with the stern and unfeeling philosophy whose principals he had adopted. ‘Should he die now, full of generous and high feeling, eager in the cause of humanity, happy in the exertion of his own conscious activity and youthful strength— thropy, and remorse, and age, and the con- sciousness of decaying powers, both ot body and mind? Iwill not look upon it, however —will not--I cannvt behold his young light so suddenly quenchdd.” He turned from the precipice accordingly, and hastening to the left for more than a quar- ter of a mile, he proceeded towards a riva, or aleft in the rock, containing a path called Erick's Steps, neither safe, indeed, nor easy, but the only one by which the inhabitants of Jarlshof were wont, for any purpose, to seek access to the foot of the precipice. But long ere Mertoun had reached even the upper end of the pass, his adventurous and active son had accomplished his more desper- ate enterprise. Hehad been in vain turned aside fiom the direct line of descent, by the intervention of difficulties which he had not seen from above—his route became only more cireuiteus, but could not be interrupted. More than once la:ge fragments, to which he was about to intrust his weight, gave way before him, and thundered down into the tor- mented ocean; and in one er two instances such detached pieces of rock rushed after him, as if to bear him headlong in their course. A courageous heart, a steady eye, a tenacious hand and a firm foot, carried him through his desperate attempt ; and in the space of seven minutes he stood at the bottom of the cliff, from the verge of which he had achieved his perilous descent. The place which he now oceupied was the small projecting spot of stones, sand and gravel, that extended a little way into the sea, which on the right hand lashed the very bot- tom of the precipice, and onthe left was scarce divided from it by a smali wave-worn portion of beach that extended as far as the foot of the rent in the rocks called Erick’s Steps, by which Mordaunt’s father proposed ' to descend. (To be continued.) THRE is an eclipse this year that the as- tronomers failed to note. It was the eclipse line. He further states *‘ that all Commission- ers were treated alike as far as possible.” By this he admits that all were not treated alike, and that is exactly what | complain- ed about. And because I wrote as I did he accuses me of being actuated by a ‘‘ miserable spirit, etc.” | have just as good grounds for accusing him of being actuated by todyism and servility. His bluster about patriotic motives is characteristic of the source from which it emanates. Patriotism is a fav urite theme with persons like your correspondent ‘* Q. C. Com’r.”” But they are never so patriotic as when they are well paid forthe article. Yours, mAs BP. Oct. 3, 1887. The Trot at Peake’s Station. Srm,—-The Patriot of the 3rd inst. incor- rectly states that Mr. Kennedy’s mare ‘*Nellie T.” won four of the five heats trot- ted at Peake’s Station. The judges gave her butone. We agreed to abide by the decision of the judges, and had it been in his favor | would not have complained. He seems anxious to have another match, and I am ready to accommodate him. Although I have never refused to start ‘Scott Act” in any race, [ would like in justice bo my horse to match him with a trotter, and not with one that runs half the course each heat. If Mr. Kennedy will agree to trot and not run his mare, and have Dr. Jen- kins as referee, I am ready to match him, and he knows where I live, I may further say that his driver, Steele, besides acting unfairly in other ways, fouled my horse, and might have killed Mr. Hayden his driver during the last match. As Mr. Steele is notorious for foul driv- ing, I think it but fair another should drive the mare next time, as the life of a man or a valuable horse should not be exposed to his rashness or worse. Yours truly, ALBERT DUNPHY. Charlottetown, Oct. 3, 1887. Kings Couvty Exhibition Notes, Considerable horse trading took place at the Exhibition at Georgetown, among the traders present being Mr. James Keegan, the well known horse buyer, and Mr. Wm. McKie, of Charlottetewn. Mr. Keegan purchased the celebrated breeding mare Sunflower, for which a handsome sum was paid. Mr. Ewen McGregor, of Montague, sold his first prize filly to Mr. W. Robert- son, ot Charlottetown, and many other horses changed hands. The sale of Gov- ernment Farm stock realized handsome prices, and King’s County farmers showed that they are bound to have good stock,and are willing io pay for it. Among the stock raisers who took first place at the King’s County Exhibtion the exhibit of Mr. F. G. Bovyer, of George- town Royalty, was noticeable. He had thirty entries of live stock, and took over $60 in prizes. John Robertson, Esq., of Inkerman Farm, had two barrels of Island grown apples in the Drill Shed that attracted a good deal of attention, and he readily sold them at high prices. The Cornwall Cheese Company also, had samplesof theircheese at the King’s County Exhibition, and, no Sdoubt, will materially increase their sales in consequence. Give Them a Chance ! That is to say, your lungs. Also all your breathing machinery. Very wonderful machinery it is. Not only the larger air passages, but the thousands of little tubes and cavities leading from them. When these are clogged and choked with matter which ought not to be there, your lungs cannot half it their work. And what they do they cannot do well. Call it cold, cough, croap, pneumonia, catarrh, cansumption or any of the family of throat and nose.and head and lung obstruc- tions, all are bad. All ought to be got rid of. There is just one sure way to get rid of them. That is to take Boschee’s German Syrup, which any druggist will sell at 75 cents a bottle. Even if everything else has failed you, you may depend upon this for certain. a Your Early Flowering Hyacinths should be planted at once. A very fine stock now on sale at G. H. Haszard’s. 4i eod—octl Ir you want a very nice dinner set, or tea set, or chatber set be sure you will get it at the cheap crockery store.—W. P. Colwill. sept28 dy wy 2w of Adamson’s Botanic Balsam over all com- | petitors. It cures coughs, colds and all dis- eases of the thuout; chest antl lungs. Price 10, 3 nfl 75 vents. dy wy lw FEATHER CURLING, cleaning, ete., done with neatness and dispatch by Mrs. C. MeMil- lan, opposite Railway Round House. se27 lidy liw OE A ome or