‘We have no hesitation “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise :ne Public, may speak free.”—Evririvzs. AMINER. Siveie Corres Two Cents VW SERIES. GHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1890. | VOL. 26.—NO. 80 ORSE POWERS | THRESHERD, SHAKERS, —_—_AND—— We Every Farmer in need of a Thresher should buy the best, and should therefore examine our Machines, built after the latest American plans. di, in claiming that they are the best yet offered. We will put them in competition with any Machine made. They thresh fast and clean, and are easy on horses./: Write for prices and terms to MARK WRIGHT & CO, LID, MANUFACTURERS Charlottetown, FP. H. Island. Charlottetown, Aug. 15, 1890. ee I bios. Cheap Hout St BOOTS AND SHOES. Halifax and P. E, Island STEAMSHIP CO. (LIMITED. ) STEAMER “PRINCESS BEATRICE,” CAPT. A. H. KELLY. ILL sail from Chariottetown every Thursday afternoon, at 4 o'clock, for Halifax, calling at Port Hastings, Mulgrave, and Hawkesbury, Arichat, Canso, Isaac Harbor and Sheet Harbor. Returning will sail from Halifax every Monday night, at 10 o’clock, making same calls, and Souris. The above steamer will make the round trip every week, making same calls until the close ' of navigation. : Freight end pissengers solicited at lowest | rates, and throvyg' Bills of Lading granted to any port on the «ontinent or United Kingdom, Apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent | Ch’town, May %. 1890. WEST INDiA STEAMSHIP LINES, Halifax, Sermuda, Turk’s Island and Jamaica. | TUE Ss. 8S. “ALPHA,” 8. Osborn Crowell, . Commander, is appointed to sail from Halifax on the ° 15th DAY OF EACH MONTH er the above ports. Returning, will leave Kingston, Jamaica, on the 27th of each month. —_ ae The S. S. “BETA,” Angus N. Smith, Com- | mander, is appointed to sail from Halifax for } Havana, Cuba, on the Ist DAY OF RACH MONTH, leaving Havana for Halifax about 10 days later either direct or via port or ports on north side of Cuba. Excellent passenger accommedation amidships. Through Bills o® Lading granted from Charlotte- town by S. 8S. “ Princess Beatrice.” ‘ Further information will be given on appli- cation to eo ®W.W.CLARKE, Agent, = Charlottetown, July 26, 1890—tf i Furness Line of Steamers HALIFAX TO LONDON. Date of Sailings for Above Line. S. S. ULUNDA will sail from Halifax for London on or about.......... May 25 i i ' Ss. S. DAMARA Wi ape erway June | S. 8S. ULUNDA et rer ee July 7 S.S. DAMARA Pee ud July 25 S.S. ULUNDA ea Aug. 2 S. 8. DAMARA mos ee temas Sept. 8 In addition to the above, we will have sail- ings once every month via Boston. hrough Bills of Lading granted from Char- lottetown and all points and to any port re- uired, . Canned Lobsters carried at low rates. In- surance low. Ss. S. ULUNDA and DAMARA have superior accommodation for passengers. Saloon amidship. Staterooms large and airy. Saloon Fares $45.00 and $50.00, according to location of Stateroom. Ten per cent. re-/ duction on return tickets. For any further apply to — W. W. CLARKE, mayl3—pat uf Agent MAGlG HEALER ®! ie, West Caper, August 4, 1890. RS. ROSS,—I wish to inform you that' . your ‘*Magic Healer” Salve has} roved a sure cure for Salt Rheum. A young ady residing in my house tested the Salve, and found it the best article she ever tried, | after using other Salves without doing any ood. I recommended her to try the ‘‘Magic Healer,” and before using half a box, the Salt Rheum disappeared. I cheerfully furnish the above facts, and remain, yours, ALFRED McWILLIAMS. |! aug18 | } Binder Twine. | 1 TONS PURE MANILLA—Wholesale only. CARVELL BROS. | augl9—2w pat i cellent place of business, on the line of Railway in the country. Store and Ware » sell the Stock with the store. Terms very duce, ete. lottetown. Aug If) 1880 ord w Charlottetown, July 26, 1890, RL SO LOLOL LOM MOL OM OL AL OAM CL EL LL CL LO Ce ; refanded. 29 ‘We desire, therefore, to assure your ma- information rows W A OLESOMEN ESS ii: that such statements are wholly in- ;correct representations of the sentiments =_—s ere 2 Love's Dawn. I tock Cold, | _-- I took Sick, In wandering through waste places of the I TOOK world I met my love and knew not she was } mine, SHE j A But soon a light more tender, more di- vine, , Filled earth and heaven; richer cloud- curtains furled The west at eve ; a softer flush impearled The gates of dawn ; a note more pure and nine eres: Rang in the thrush’s song ; a rarer shine Itake My Mea’. Varnidied the leaves by May’s sweet sun E take Mx uncurled. ; : AND I AM ‘VIGOROUS ENOVG! VO TAKE To me, who loved but knew not, all the air ANYTHING I CAN LAY MY HANDS ON; . Trembled to shocks of far-off melodies, getting fat too, vo~ Scott’s § As . the summer's rustling thrills the mulsion of Pure Cod_Liver Oi! $ | a ; ; and HypophospiicsofLimeand § | When Sorteaeapes strike their boughs,asleep Od@ NOT ONLY cuRED MY Eutine ent Consumpsic: bur voiLt ME UP, AND IS NOW PUTTING | And then, one blessed day, I saw arise | FLESH ON MY BONES Love’s morning, glorious,in her candid eyes. John Hay, in the Century for September. AT THE RATE OF A POUND A DAY, TAKE ITJUST AS EASILY AS FDO MILK.” ” } ” Scott’s Emulsion is put up only in Sa'mon , The * Thunderer” on Canada. color wrappers. Sold by all Druggis‘s at \ aah. itis and $1.00. IT REVIEWS THE LOYALTY RESOLUTIONS, AND CONCLUDES THAT CANADIANS DO NOT WISH TO COMMIT POLITICAL SUICIDE AND MERGE THEIR COUNTRY IN THE AMERI- CAN REPUBLIC. LPL LOLOL LOO LALO LOLOL ALO LOLOL LM ME SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville. (From the London Times. ). So much and so often do we hear of the political aspirations of the Canadians from ‘others, that it is a novelty as well as a | Pleasure to learn from their own lips what they really desire. Anyone who reads the | recent despatch of the Governor-General, ‘forwarding a loyal address to the Queen, ‘will find therein sentiments widely differ- ent from those which are attributed to ‘Canadians by acertain part of the American ARD. ISLAND DIRECT. | press supported by Mr. Goldwin Smith. Every murmur against England, every PRINCE EDW cease ee | word of dissatisfacti ttered in Toronto FALL TRIP, 1890, '2: Quvvce, every casual expression favor. ing a preconceived idea of the existence of THE Al CLIPPER BARQUE an annexation psrty, is carefully recorded. ; To England and all parts of the United ‘States is telegraphed every sentence appear- | ing to support this theory ; whether it is uttered in the Dominion Parliament or in = : a Provincial Legislature, by a responsible 420 Tons Register, Coppered, and classed Minister or any angry member of the Oppo- at English Lloyds, sition, matters little. Of the deliberate JOHN WALSH, ©@MMANDER, |¢xpressions of unshaken or unshakable loy- vat er a2 <a alty and the rebukes to ayitation against W ill be on the berth ae Liver pool on or about British rule we hear little and even the the 10th of September, aad sail on the 20th of! Soseaal loyal iiddvees to Har Majesty by the September. | a For Freight or Passage apply in Liverpool | House of Commons of the Dominion Par- to William Bullen, 51 South John Strect, or} /iament is slurred over as if of no more here to consequence than the random words of a , nameless politician or a sensational journal- jist. What tells for this preconceived theory ‘counts twice, if not more ; ALL THAT iS AGAINST iT IS IGNORED, | It is well known that it has been of late }the tactics of a portion of the press in the ‘Onited States to push this question into a |prominence which it does not possess in GUARANTEE if after wearing Canada. A committee of the senate was : : ‘nominated ostensibly for the purpose of the B. & A. CORSET for 10 days inquiring into the relations, fiscai and other- the purchaser does not find that ® °f the two countries. Such has been the extent of the enquiry, so various have it is the most comfortable and _ been the witnesses, speaking as to matters . . Bc sa political, military and commercial, that it perfect-fitting Corset she has ever really seemed at one time—though now we worn, it can be returned to the know otherwise—as if Mr. Hoar’s com- mittee sat for the purpose of collecting merchant from whom it was evidence on the subject of the benefits of . annexation and the feelings of the Can- bought. and the money will be adians. This investigation did not pass unnoticed in Canada ; and Mr. Mulock, a * mcmber of Parliament belonging to the NONE GENUINE unless stamped Opposition, took occasion, with general ‘ . . ‘concurrence, to move an address which D & A CORSET would enlighten Americans as to Canadian FOR SALE AT opinion and be ‘‘an authoritive deliver- PERKINS & STERNS’, “oP ote’ 9 NOTHING COULD BE MORE PRECISE THAN ITS Cheap Dry Goods Store. TERMS. aug9I—tf ‘We have learned with feelings of en- tire disapproval that various public state- ‘ments have been made, calling in question the loyalty of the people of Canada to the ‘political union now happily existing be- tween this Dominion and the British Em- —_—_AND pire, and representing it as the desire of the pee EY people of Canada to sever such connection. ee tenes - SES L. C. OWEN. Uh’town, Aug. 14, 1890—f m w tl Ist sept and aspirations of the Canadian people, who jare among your majesty’s most loyal sub- ‘jects, devotedly attached to the political ‘union existing between Canada and the ; Mother Country, and earnestly desire its continuance.” The address besought her to ‘*accept our assurances of the contentment of Your Majesty’s Canadian jsubjects with —SECURED IN USING— and the rest of the British Empire, and of the same.” If anything was lacking in this |remarkable address to convince the most ' sceptical it was supplied by | ‘THE ELOQUENT, ENTHUSIASTIC SPEECHES in which it was supported by members of| because we belong to a country which has mastered nearly the whole world, and be- cause the constitution of that country is based on an experience of centuries and assures the liberty of the people. We are loyal because we find freedom, justice and peace under that constitution. We do not believe—for my part, I do not believe, and [ know that I express the views of my con- stituents when I say that they do noi believe in the republican form of government under which a president or an executive becomes an autocrat for four years after an election.” The speaker concluded by citing the saying of a distinguished Canadian, Sir Etienne Pascal Tache, that ‘‘ the last gun that would be fired in defence of the British flag on this continent might very we!] be fired by a French Canadian.” Such expressiins outweigh a thouscnd arguments, and neu- tralize anything to the contrary to be found in the 1,200 pages of tne senate’s report. _ All this may sound very strange to those who cannot understand that any body of in- telligent men shoul” not be solieitous to be- come with all speed good gitizens of the United States. It appears, nevertheless, perfectly natural language, if we consider the questions put in the Dominion House of Commons to those who counsel revolu- tionary changes. What is to be gained ? Can Canadians hope to enjoy an ampler measure of liberty than is now theirs ¢ WILL THEIR LAWS BE BETTER. the administration of justice purer, than at present ? Will their fiscal policy be more in accordance with their own wants than now? It is unnecessary to determine whether the speaker in the debate was right who said of the government of the United States ‘‘ Our constitution rests on a far higher basis of liberty; we are more in touch with popular sentiment, and the peo- ple have.a more direct control of those who serve them in a public capacity.” It is enough to ask what solid gains would come in a train of a coalescence of the two coun- tries. None have been named by those who keep up this discussion. True, the matter is in no mean degree one of senti- ment. But the writers who exaggerate every passing expression of impatieuce or criticism forget that the patriotic Canadian has no ambition to see his country lost in the vast population of the union, reduced to the political importance of Lowa or. Cal- ifornia, and rewarded for abdication. by sharing in some minute degree in returning a president. Why, it was asked more than once in the debate at Ottawa, should a young country with admirable resources and full of promise COMMIT POLITICAL SUICIDE, Why should she by her own act disappear from the nations of the earth? The as- pirations of the most daring politicians lie in very different directions from those towards which a hamdful of theorists and malcontents would lure them. It is true that some Canadian politicians, of whom the Toronto Globe may be taken to be the mouthpiece, desire that in regard to com- mercial matters they should be able to make their influence felt at Washington less cir- cuitously than is now practicable. Some of them may dream of a distant time when Canada will be strong enough to take her place among the states of the eaith. To the most hopeful that future is remute, and is still shapeless. The path to it lies, if we are to believe representative speakers in the Dominion Parliament, in cherishing the connection with England, which gives much and takes away nothing. The last thing which they think of is to dig a grave where- in to bury their political hopes. Two pre- dictions about the political future of the American contiaent are almost coeval, and they always recur together—one as to a future in which the union will be disinte- grated, the other a time when Canada must gravitate towards the union. The first has been emphatically falsified. The fulfilment of the second is, according to the Dominion Parliament, equally remote. News Notes. A good many cases of typhoid fever are reported to exist in Ottawa. The miners’ strike in Belgium continues to spread. It is reported that a peace protocol has been signed by Guatemala and San Sal- vador. A rumor is current in Paris that Ismail Pasha, ex-khedive of Egypt, has been poisoned at Constantinople. The report of the New England hop crop shows a considerable shortage, particularly in New York state. California has 90 per ‘the political connection between Canada| cent of a full crop. The New York Sun says an English syn- their fixed resolve ¢o aid in maintaining) dicate is endeavoring to obtain control of the tobacco warehouses. A despatch from Buenos Ayres says the situation is improving and confidence in the government is restored. The Manchester ship canal is a great en- all political shades, by French Canadians no|terprise which English capital and pluck less warmly than by members of English! are bringing to a successful issue. As has descent. We recommend those diligent! been well said, the project is not so dazzling collectors of evidence of disaffection tostudy|to the mind as the anama canal which SL " ? a " “A - m % Fa iD ‘ ] vs ; J Mi cd aa nae a Se RR eee Steer eA OM = Ce ee Hee a | re fons - ns ’ A ” , ’ a liberal. Every convenience for shipping Pro- | first of October next. A person of some ex- melancholy reminiscences, now yield to! berience, v-2ll recommended, will be preferred. ' none in Address X. Y. Z., Examiner Office, Char. 4?Plications to be addressed to Ch’town, P. KE. I., July 19, 1890—eod tf \the debate, and to note the indignant de-| Prench genics has in charge, but is quite \nials that there exists any general dissatis-\as practical and will probably be more faction with English rule, or any desire to | successful. It will convert the metropolis ‘seek repose from internal troubles in closer! of the cotton trade into s seaport, and it is {connection with the United States. The’ an interesting fact that ships are being con- | most significant speech was that of the structed with the special view of passing jseconder of the motion, Mr. Amyot, a through this canal. Last October one of ,Canadian of French descent. He told with these vessels of 6,000 tons burden, as large pride, as he well might, the gallant deeds' as the ships that ascend the St. Lawrence IS THE REPORT OF THE side by side with British soldiers. If he with masts so arranged as to clear the spoke of errors from time to time committed, | bridges over the canal. By the latest finan- For Sale or To Let. Dominion fovernment Analyst, _of his countrymen fighting in the early days to Montreal, was launched on the Tyne, | sey which England, forgetting diversity of lan-| diture up to date has been £7,583,343. ‘guage, religion and race, has shown to hia) Se %: 2 . . _ . ° ° to al - GOOD BUSINESS STAND in an ex:| P ii! Island Hospital ,he also bore testimony to the impartiality | cial report of the directors the total expen ‘i ' —— —— houses all complete, and very convenient. Will WANTED.—A skilful Matron and Housekeeper kinsmen, who, notwithstanding their undy 7 First Belle—* I should advise you, dear, for this institution, to take charge about the 18 affection for France and a heritage of not to marry him. You know he is so much above you, and— Second Belle-- ‘** Oh, certainly, darling |! I ought to take LOYALTY TO THE ENGLISH CROWN. your advice. You are so much older than ‘* We enjoy a constitution which we admire, I am that it seems quite motherly of you and we are proud of being British subjects to tell me.” BENJ. BALDERSTON, Secretary. bead 7)