aaa ~ ~——— —as-.- LTE LE LO I I ‘THE DAILY EXAMINER. i’ ‘RS A YEAR ee NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. The ‘xaminer Publ shit ie Oe ) From th thee rl rf ster and (rreas | rue Streets, (harlottetown, } = pe (ee i vard Island, RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION / ee eg »- e250! 8 a eR Ti ‘ ". mal Be, _ x POO MUOUEIS . . cc ccccese 1,25 | : er.eeeeeeaeeeeee x 7 a ee oi aes 50 ee i ict: 5 Advertising at moderate rates. | ' Contracts may be made for monthiy, quar-| ’ , teriy. hail-yeariy, or yearly aivertisemea 8, Bee ee eee Direteretepee on applicatio ALMANAC FOR OCTOBER, “J e ivi | if | Lik 1 La) in p ~~ ° ast Qual 20th day, 10h 23.3M., &.m., | ~ 7. i RR ae Eiees Mie Bee eo (gl — New .OOn 2i/th Gay, of, 5.UM., a M., N ry... isesiset rises 'water| len’h D - Sin Sun Moon Huan pae, { VONTEMPLATING making extensive alterations in my store, ear'y in the new year, which will necessitate my b mh mimorn|morn h m closing for some time, I will 2 bens bese Gin eG y o4 Per Cent Discount. FOR 10 DAYS ONLY. THIS KNOCKS THEM OUT. 1 Friday 6 35 36,10 11! 0 3211 33 2 Saturday 5 34'11 16) 1] 14 29 3) Sunday 6 32%aft I l 59 26 f 7 = GN! SmLlo OFF 5| Tuesday 9| 28] 1 54] 3 49 9 6, Wednesday 10|; 26) 235) 5 O 16 7/ Tharsday o @4i3. § 5 12 7 r 7’ ~ 8) Friday P } 3 22 ° Pe - oi 9 MY EN TIRE STOCK OF 9 Saturday 14} 20' 4 10) 8 13 8 10, Sanday 16; 18, 4 37| 8 55 2 li’ Mon Lay 17 16; 5 2 9 33110 59 | 12! Tuesday 18} 14/5 2910 8 56 L3 Wednesday 20 13! 5 56:10 39 53 14 Thu sday 2) Lh): 6 46:11 13 50 13| Friday 23} 917 3/11 48] 46 e 16 irday 24 7| 7 37\aft 24 43 17 Sunday 25} 5182011 2} 40 .— IS’ Monday oi 4:1 9 12' 1 46 34 19 Duesday 28} 2/10 10,2 37, 34 "E i ” : re 20) Wednesday 29 0121.15) 3 4) Sl se @ { i > 21/Tharsday » 30'4 57|\morn| 6 2 27 S a i ‘ UU 22\Friday — Sl 5) 0 24) 6 30 24 é : Li. 23) Saturday | 32) 311361745 21 24/ Sunday | 34; 21252) 8 52) 18 25) Monday | 35) of 4 61929) 15 —a- AND ——— °65) Tues y 3b 48; 5 17 10 13 12 27 Ws a sday 38| 471 6 36/10 53 9 283/Thursday ~ 39} 45] 7 48/11 23 3 : A : 24 Friday i] 44) 8 57)morn 6 30 Saturda; 45 43) 10 OF 6 12) 0 , ed = i — N = } $l) Sund uy § 45:4 42/10 58) 0 52' 9 57 ‘ AT A TREMENDOUS SACRIFICE. JAMES H, REDDIN, BA RRISTER-AT-LAW, SOLICITOR AND NOTARY PUBLIC, has removed to the office adjoining that of R.R. Fitzgerald; Esq., Cameron Block. sz mi INEY TO LOAN. Sept. 27, 1886—1 mo eod & wy 3 mos wiinhenibilea et All the stock of Fancy Dress Goods and Dress Cloths at 33}! per cent discount. All the Cloths and Tweeds at a discount of 33} per cent. Knit Wool Goods, Shawls and Mantles at 33 1-2 per cent discount Gray, White and Scarlet Flennels discount. Velvets, Plushes, Ribbon and all Millinery Goods at 33 1- 2| per cent discount. Ail the stock of Men’s and Boys Clothing, Gents’ Furnish-' ings, Overcoats, Reefers and Suits at a discount of 33 1-2 per! cent. - All Cotton Goods at a discount of 25 per cent. , conmnensncnaniaael The entire stock must be cleared before the first of the, THE PALACE STEAMERS New Year. You can depend on getting the BEST BARGAINS oy tan ever offered in this city. iNTERNATIONAL §.5. CO. => All Goods Sold for CASH only. Leave St . Jo ohn for Boston, via Eastport : and Port- sai oscy Nondty, Wothesiay ont foster ot Oe UV ACDONALD e s : 3 5.00 a. rm. QUEEN STREET. FA LL ARR A NGEVW e NT are from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd ause: 39.40, ist class For tickets and other information apply to . ASHARP, F. W. HALES, P. #&. L R’y., Pp. E. L. Steam Nav. Co. a6 ba or to your nearest Ticket Agent, Ch’town, Oct. 19, 86-—dy wy Oct, 9 1886-—-~eod wky | r - a A A LAR THU R & CO, Somuission Herchants, COM PETITI ON 12) ATLANTIS AVENUE, | was never keener than it is at present in the Dry BOSTON, MASS. Goods Trade. _ i 0 R093 and Produce a Spacialty. | ; am a Every One Wants Low Prices. at WE HAVE THEM. Hi ARD COAL | ft ‘No Damaged Goods, bunt this Fall’s New and Attractive Stock. 1s Store, a quantity of Best MARD CO.4L, See onr DRESS GOODS for genuine Bargains. | Egg and Chestant Sizes. Soe ovr FUR GOODS for genuine Bargains. | ga Cheap for Cash. Sse our WOOLEN GOODS for genuine Bargains. CAPT. J. HUGHES, Water Street. | See our COTTON GOODS for genuine Bargains. | See our whole stock of STAPLE and FANCY DY: GOODS for 606d GOODS j ytown, Oct. 4, 1Ra6—im eod nied BARCLAY & UV, GENERAL CM ni ni AT juission & Shipping Merchants, | | ‘91 Atlantic Avenne, Boston. Our MILLINERY DEP ARTMENT is the Largest oe 3 in the city,and our Trimmed Millinery, as — et 2 in this m te At LOWEST PRICES ee () Most Complete al, leads for Style, Attractiveness and Low Prices. SIGH yeara’ experience 4”v ifty th d bushela P. &- # usu ae ved i vast fall, Ove Prtrons | z aan . Ves chartered Tr potato | * i. Wri ; “ko se” a a shia at st wt notice. VV vir? for mi ot 3B 3 = $ “A : , aga : %- : > ” 2 tikes ” tuyos M ax tkerel, Can- ¥ 2 aw”. Speciaiss + OGY | A : e € ) ‘ ; Ch’ town, Ost. ly, 1886, ny ned Lobsters, ig 5. dane 17, ‘36-3’ eod (CURE AND SEE FOR YOURSELVES, N order to hold our customers, we are driven to oifer these large discounts and have decided to seli at these figures, although we can‘t afford ;to do so because our profits are smaller than Liry Goods Scalper'’s, who handle all kinds of {small wares. Our stock of merchandize is «)l fresh and new, and is not the accumulation of twenty years, Our goods are ull marked in plain figures, which will prevent any deceptian being practiced upon the purchaser. Overcoats reduced from $12 to $8. Men's Suits, old price $12, now 3¥. Ladies‘ Circulars, 75cts. All-wool Flannels now at 20cts per yard. Draggets, 22cts per yard, Tweed marked $1.25, now 75cts per yard. Gents‘ Scarlet Undershirts, all-wool, Sécts, worth 7Acts. Men‘s ‘Pop Shirts, now 75cts, regular price, $1. Lad lies’ Jersey Jackets $3, worth $4.59. Men’s Kubber C oats $1.75, worth $2.50, Blankets $1.99 per pair Best Blankets $1. aU, W orth ¢ $6.50. REID BROS. CAMERON BLOCK, Ch‘town, Oct. 20, 1886—3mos GEO. £ FULL is now offering balance of the Daur Upt St —OFr— at 33 1-2 per cent OVELCOALS ANd Other Clothing) sr passage aways dangerous At a Discount of 30 per Cent. A SPL ENDED ASSOR’ TMENT OF GENTS’ FELT HATS, some at HALF PRICE and some as low as 25 CENTS. Shirts & Linders, Trunks & Valises, AT A GREAT REDUCTION. me me 8000 Yds OF DRESS GOODS in Plain and Fancy Woolen, Cashmere and Win- ceys, at from 6 to 10 cents per yard below their real value. Velvet and Plush ‘Trimming to match, 30-cent TEA for 25 cts. Ee We guarantee to give you all full valus for our money in all ee GEO. £. FULL, Sign of “RED LION,” QUEEN STREET. Sept. 29, 1886— Sora, why PERFLCTION & EACELLENCE WOODILLS | GERMAN BAKENG POWDER RETAILS EVERYWHERE Cans, 8, 14, and = Cents — 6, i2. and 2 euts. Oct. 20, 1886. 'is27 = - = 1886, ee WX Kk, KENNY, Dry Goods and Shipping, HALIFAX, CANADA, T & KE. KENNY, (fF. €. MAHON) Ship Awners and Brokers, General Uommission Merchants, isi GRESHAM HOUSE, Rishepsgate Sircet, LONDON, E, C., Eug'end, Sesit’s and Vaughaans Codes March 29, 1886+, * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Evnirives. ISLAND, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26. 1886. SC AL! French Finances. The financial situation is the most en- grossing subject at present in France. The | budget commission has knocked the budget 'on the head; how the Minister of Finance | will survive this demolition, remains to be seen. No two persons in France appear to be agreed as to the condition of the revenue, and the current debt of the nation. This indicates confusion. There is a consensus of opinion that a chronic deficiency exists; it is respecting its amount that opinion differs. M. Clarigny, in the Rerue de Deux Mondes, says that since five years there exists an ‘‘effective insufficiency” of expenses over receipts. The average an- nual total of this deficit he estimates at 608 million francs, or £24,000,000 sterling, or more than one-fourth of the total revenue of the United Kingdom. The same high authority further states that the true float- ing debt of France, and whose payment is exigible at the present moment, «amounts to £140,000,000 sterling, or something like two-thirds of the war ‘indemnity paid to Germany. If to this be added the figures of M Seigfied given at the recent congress held at Bordeaux, the exports of France have been diminishing during the last ten years, at the rate of 100,000,000 francs yearly, the picture is sad. These figures, says the writer, may well cause the Budget Commission embarrassment, and the friends of France anxiety. It is plain she cannot continue this rate of expenditure, simul- taneously competing with Germany, in her gigantic land army—a necessity for a contin ental power—and Englai, in heromnipotent navy and almost bonudless colonies. The commission has decided to adopt an income tax, which will be about as popular as the hew poll tax in Tonkin. Paying taxes, philosophers say, is what distinguishes man | from all other animals. It is to be hoped! that if the income tax be established, and which is still among the glorious uncertain- ties —though everything happens m France the collectors will not include, as in Ger- many, Christmas boxes on revenue. Other financial doctors propose not to tax incomes, but eapital which is not fluctuating and not personally inquisitorial. ——$_——>-- A Bleak Home. On the map of Iceland may be seen a speck of an island called Grimsey. It is the most northern, and consequently the coldest, of the Iceland group. Eighty- eight people—nay, more—live onit. They have tried to keep a few cows, but the win- ters are too hard for them. Two horses, and a few sheep with very coarse fleeces are the only animals of the kind on the island. A good uinister, Peter Goodmanson, lives in this iemote place. He is a poet and an astronomer, and is employed to take obser- vations for the Meteorological Institute at Yopenhagen. Once or twice a year some of the islanders visit the mainland, but the stormy seas, covered with icebergs, make On one side of the island, which is a high precipice, countle ss birds build their nests, and the collecting of eggs is one chitf mef@is of liv- ing for the little settlement. Men are let down over the face of the rocks by ropes. They wear suits thickly wadded with feathers to save themselves from being hurt onthe sharp rocks. Each man carries a pole to help himself with, andja ladle for scooping up nests that he cannot reach with his hands. There is in his frock a great pocket in which he can put 150 eggs. There he works with the sea roaring be- neath him. Many accidents occur and many lives are lost in this business. ——-———— aie <-> EE = About Annexation. Those Reform orators and writers who are so fond of talking about annexation should ponder over the following remarks made by the Springfield Republican, a jour- nal whose utterances carry great weight : ‘*The readiness with which writers in Can- ada speak of annexation to the United States whenever they get into deep po slitieal waters is amazing, the assumption being that Uncle Sam has had for a long time an old-fashioned cushioned rocking chair placed upon the border all ready fora Dominion occupant. It never has oc curred to any of them to think that getting out of the Dominion Confederation is one thing, and gejting into the American Union quite another.”’ Annexationists never take into account the possible unwillingness of the United States to open its arms to us, although it is a very important considera- tion. ee eS een The New York Mayoralty. Whether Mr. George’s presence in the field be the cause or not, the regular parties in New York have this year made a remark- ably good selection of candidates for the Mayoralty. The Democrats have chosen Mr. Hewitt, a man of national reputation, who has made his merk in the Federal leg- islature. The Republicans have slected } SINGLE Corres Two CEnTs. VOL. 19.—-NO. 1238. (When Shall I Step Advertising ?" Ten successfu business men were asked when, in their jndgment, it would do to “stop advertising.” Heer their answers tou “My Lord Wes’,” and take their advice - Ist, ‘“‘When population ceases auuitiply and the generations that crowd on after you, and never hear of you stop coming on.” 2nd. ‘“‘When you have convinced e very body whose life will touch yours, that you have bet- ter goods and lower prices than they cah ever get any where outside of your st re. 3rd. ‘‘When you perceive it to be the rule that men who never advertise are outstripping their neighbors in the same line of business.” 4th. ‘“‘When men stop my king fortunes right in your very sight, solely through the discreet use of this mighty agent.” 5th. ‘“‘When you can forget the words of the shrewdest and most successful business men concerning the main cause of their pros- perity. 6th. “When every man has become so thoroughiy a creature of thabit that he will certainly buy this year where he ught last year. 7th. ‘‘When younger, and fresher and punkier concerns in your line cease starting up and using the newspapers in telling the people how much better they can do for them than you can.” 8th. **When you would rather have your own way and fall, than take advice and win. 9th. ‘‘When nobody else thinks it pays to advertise.” 10th. ‘‘Judicious and persistent advertising is the keystone of success, therefore don't stop, or others will get ahead of you. And advertise in THe EXAMINER. sommntieieesitiesaittaastasiaiiiitia, alls The DPimecasiens of Heaven. And he measured the city with a _ reed, twelve t The length and breadth and Lie heighth of it axe eyual, kev. xxi: 16, nousand furlongs. ; 4 Twelve thous and furlongs 7,920,000 leet, which being cubed, 496,793.088,000,000,0060,- 000 cubic teet. falf of this we will serve for the Throik = ‘od and the Court Heaven, and haif the balance for streets, leav- ing a ar of 324.798.272.006 600,000,000 cubic feet. de tiis by 4,096, the cubical fect in 2 room "Ie feet square, and there will be 30,321,843,750,000,000 rooms. We will now suppose that the world aiways did and always will contain 990,000,000 inhabitants, and that a generation lasts 33} years, making in all 2,970,000,000 evcry century, and that the world will stand 100,000 years, or 1,000 centuries, making in all 2,970,000,000,000 in- habitants. Then suppose there are 100 worlds equal to this in number of inhabitants and duration of years, making a total of 297,- 000,000,000,000 persons, and there would be more than 100 rooms, 16 feet square for each per son. sncinis~/eanaicetiteintiaddeidilindieeniag New Use for Cattle. A new use for cattle has been apparently found in Prussia, where a band of ** smug- glers ” employed a cow in their attompts vo avoid the tax on lace. A strong 10 months’ old cow was wrapped round with a quantity of lace valued at $1,000. Over this was fitted a false skin, so iInggpious sly construct- ed as to defy detection. They passed the cow quite easily at the customs office, the man there admiring her size and beauty, some of the excise oflicers even offering her bread. The owners of the cow were kept in suspense, while the cow quietly strolied on, quite unconscious of the numerous whacks and pokes she received from the smugglers, who wanted to hasten her gait. However, all things have an end, and the cow was at length got out of the dangerous vicinity of the excise men, much to the re- lief of her owners. _ nL ~~~ A Gigantic Tower. The final estimates for the gigantic iron tower which is to be a feature of the French exhibition of 1889 is now ready. The State will contribute 15,000,000 francs and the remaining sum of 6,000,000 francs will be furnished by the contractors, who will ac- quire possession of the tower*for twenty years. There is still some dispute about its height. The difliculty will shortly be solved in this way :—A captive ba! loon will be let up to the } proper he ight and four cables, reaching down to the ground, will represent to the eye the four edges of the tower. At intervals flags will be Hung to mark out the positions of Ue several storys. —_—_ ashibanins Long Distance Telephoning. Long distance telephoning must be set down as having suffered a crucial test w hen the Chinese minister at Washington talked in the Chinese language with the Chinese Consul in New York, three hundred miles away, last Sunday. The wires stood the strain and transmitted the chopstick inflec- tions perfectly, and the Oriental diplomats were much pleased A <9 Cod Liver @i}, with Hypephesphites Seott’s Emulsion of Pure Mr. Roosevelt, who is ail personally that a/ candidate for so myn | an office should be. | His chances of success, however, ate con- sidered p roblemati ak and depen. on the | number of votes Mr. George is svle (draw from the support of his Democrat ic | Oj ponent. This 1s not likely to be suf® jclenqly large to serve the Republican’s pur- | alata: | « th t & —=- Apvice to Moruers.— Mrs. Winslow's | Soothing § Syrup should always be used when |children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural, | quite sleep by relieving the child from pain; ¥ ' | | and the little shrub awakes 458 brig rht as a 'bntton.” It is very pleasant to taste. it | | soothes the child, softens the guns, allays all pain, regulates the bowels, and is the bes: : | kno ,emedy for diarrhecea, whether arising ' from teethin: : x other causes. Tw enty-five i leents a bottle. Be tie and ask for Mrs. | Winsloc’s Soothing Syrup, aud take no other] kind. feb4 eod wk' << + A superior lot of ott 22 tf! KEEP yvur feet warm. Felt Boots at Dorsey Gott & Co's, ¥OR LUSG TROURLES AND WASTING DISEASES } : nd Ny (rieais. a y ‘+’a Emulsion is the frost preperation of I kind ever brought to my net 1 tions of the lungs and other wasting eases, We UL 0 ider it our? eliable a wales iu # pe rfect!y cicgant aud agretcaine ” form A A The London Standard says that Mr. Gladstone's latest contribution to the Home Rule controversy is not likely to strengthen his position ; but contends that the fact of the Irish Parliament of 1800 being bribed is no reason for abandoning Ireland now to the tyranny of the League and to American c nspirators. a Horsford’s Acid Phosphate. ONE OF THE BEST TONICS. Dr. 4. Atkinson, Prof. Materia Medics and Domnato! a in (Cx liege ot Surge nud ; s, “altimore, Md., says: **) ikes la p e ~asatit drink, and is one of our beet wrlos in the shape of phosphates in soluble form.”