> THE DAILy EXAMINER. leaus :—-Five DoLLARS A Y RAR, NEW SERIES. — - “This is true Liberty, when Free Burn Men,-having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxiripes. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. TUESDAY, AUGUST 27. 1889. SE VOL. 25.—-NO. 80. The Daly Examiner [s issued Every Evening by The Examiner Publishing Ce., FROM THEIR OFFICER, “ LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, Charlottetowa, P. E. Island. KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : ee eee Se ered Gs 6 oo ik heehee as ect e sce 1 2 Que Meet. «soo. Habeden ss cts . 0 4M Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. SPECULATION. _—— — -—- GEO. A. ROMER, Banker and Broker, 40 & 42 BROADWAY AND 5! NEW ST., New York City. Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Provisions and Petro- leum Bought, Sold and Carried on Margin. P. 8.—Send for explanatory pamphlet. sept20—dy & wky ly $10 $5 $3 -TO THE— Three Families in P. £. Island —WHO SEND—~ WRAPPERS Representing the Greatest Value in Woodill’s German Baking Powder, UNTIL SEPTEMBER 5st. ug!3 RHMOoOV ED. HAVE moved my office to the Brick Build- ing on Water Street, formerly occupied by the Merchants Bank of P. E. Island. FRED. W. HYNDMAN. aug 22, 1889—lw To Let. oe —— & CONVENIENT COTTAGE and Garden adjoining the residence of James D. Possession om a ~ Mason, Richmond Street (west). given on the Ist September. For particulars apply to J~D. MASON. Ch'town, Aug. 24, 1889—Iw eod further Fischer Piano For Sale, (WHE Subscriber offers for sale his beautiful FISCHER PIANO, which has only been in use sixteen months, and is as good as new. It was used with great acceptance at the late Promenade Concert, and may be seen at my Rooms, 235 Kent Street. J. HERBERT LOGAN. aug. 22, 1889—6i eod ~ WANTED. PROTESTANT NURSE to go to Mon- A treal 3lst August. Apply to Mrs. Geo, Peake. aug 23~—1w wkly fo —— NIARVELOUS | MEMORY wares . DISCCVERY. Ooly Clenvine Sratem of Memory Tratning. eur Books Learued la one reading. Miud wandering cured. Every child and adu't greafly beneficted. Gcsst tudacements to Correspondence Classes, P- epectns, with Opinions of Dr. Wim. A. Ham- mond, the worud-famed Speciziist in Mind )iseasex, DvilclQ-reenleaf Thamp-on, the great Prareh i 4. M. Buckley, D.p.,ed torof tne Christta i ‘. Y, Riehard Proctor, the Scientis , . W. A+tor. Judge Gibson, Judah P. . tt, 20 Lothers, sent post free by Veo. A. LOISETTE, 237 Fitth Ave., N. ¥- Lb JaMEs A, MORRIEON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISCN & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS ~—AND-- Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Isiand produce will receive prompt attention. Rerekexexs: Thomas Fyshe, Eeq., Cashie Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; D. C. Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scutia Choarhottewwn, WARREN & JONES, t Pia MERCHANTS, 1 East Onear ann $ & 14 Mincine LANS, : Lonvon, ENGLAND, Represented in Canada by Mogrnux & MosGuave, Halifar Uset. 34 jan7... HOURS--FROM SBVEN TO SIX. Charlottetown, Jaly 31, 1889. ———— a . ° August 9, 1889. —TO GET THOROUG your orders with us. February 25, 1888—eod & wky All kinds of UPHOLSTERE LOVKING GLASSES, No trouble to show goods. — FURNITUER WAREROOMS, Ohm lottetows, Jan, 3}, 1889 This step was unavoidable, and as a cui CHOICE SELECTION The Best th The latest in WINDOW BLINDS, and all kinds of WI FURNITURE and Fixings at cost. Can suit all tastes, at NEWSON’S McLEOD & McKENZIE, Star Merchant Tailors, Have entered upon their Semi-Annnal Season of giving Rar: Bargaits. £0 le ee \WE PURPOSE TO CLEAN OUT, IF POSSIBLE, THE BALANCE OF OUR SPRING AND SUMMER Wear, At prices we have not hitherto offered, in order to make room for cur FALL IMPORTATIONS. ; , iwegueuce you umy anticipate rars PlUlns, . McLEOD & McKENZIE. oOFr— FANCY SLIPPERS etcieheN ek GOrr BROS. HLY RELIABLE AND— SOOD-FITTING GARMENTS, —IS AT—— B. S. DAVIES & CO’S Halt orn TAS ALWAYS A LARGE STOCK TO SELECT FROM, == AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE CASH PRICES. (0) ——— MR. KEITH, the popular and efficient Cutter, is at the | head of this Department, and with a good staff of workmen you are sure of getting the very best satislac ion when leaving B. S. DAVIES & CO., CAMERON BLOCK. FURNITURE! THES CHEAPEST YET! SOL ene Calland Inspect, and get Bargains at Auction Pricas for Cash 70: THE CHEAPEST PLACE ON P. E. ISLAND. Veo, DRAWING ROOM PARLOR SUITES, best value, BEDROOM SUITES at lowest prices, D GOODS at Bargains, PICTURE FRAMING, 125 varieties, very cheap and nobby, opposite the Post Office. JOHN NEWSON. if f p Ask For Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and be sure you get it, when you want the best blood-purifier. With its forty years of unexampled suc- cess in the cure of slood Diseases, you can makes no mis- take in preferring Ayer’s Sarsaparilla to any cther. The fore-runner of mod~ ern blood medicines, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is still the most pop- ular, being in great- er demand than all others combined. * Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is selling faster than ever before. I never hesitate to recomwend it.’’--George W. Whitman, Druggist, Albany, Ind. “‘T am safe in saying that my sales of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla far excel those of | any other, and it gives thorough satisfac- | tion.”—L. H. Bush, Des Moines, Iowa. | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. The Sewage Wells Question. Srrk,— Your leader in Friday's ExaMiInek headed *‘ Sanatory,” could not fail to meet the approval of your numereus readers in the city. That those blind wells to which you referred are being used to carry off the fouled water from various households in the city, is only too true, and the pernicious practice calls loudly for prompt attention on the part of the Board ef Health aad sanitary officer. A few weeks ago, through the medium of your columns, | briefly referred to the same subject, and pointed out the danger to which were exposed the citizens who still derive their supply of drinking water from the pumps. The Water Com- missioners should, therefore, prosecute the work of supplying services with all the ex: pedition possible, and provide every citizen with the pure and safe water from the pumping station. Still, it must be borne in mind that supplying such pure water, great as is the boon vn the score of health, is unly a partial remedy, whilethe ground air and ground water are being cunstantly “ Avyer’s ea 7-9 ag and Ayer’s Pills are the best selling medicines in my store. I can recommend them conscien- tiously.’”—C, Bickhaus, Pharmacist, Roseland, Il. “We have sold Ayer’s Sarsaparilla here f6r over thirty years and always recommend it when asked to name the best blood-purifier.”— W. T. McLean, Druggist, Augusta, Ohio. **T have sold your medicines for the last: seventeen years, and always keep them in stock, as they are staples. ‘ There is nothing so g for the youth- ful blood’ as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.’”’?— R. L. Parker, Fox Lake, Wis. “Ayer’s Sarsaparilla gives the best satisfaction of any medicine I have ix stock. I recommend it, or, as the Doctors say, ‘I prescribe it over the counter.’ It never fails to meet the cases for which I recommend it, even where the doctors’ prescriptions have been of no avail.””—C. F. Calhoun, Moumouth, Kansas. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass, Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. PARTNERSHIP NOTICE. E:H. NORTON &CO. ne entered into partnershipand pur- chased the business lately conducted by Mr.A. McNEILL, we are prepared to carry on the bnsiness of Auctioneers, Commission Merchants and Money Lenders. Auction Sales will be carefully conducted, and all returns, whether for cash or credit sales, will be made immediately after sale. With a very complete knowledge of the trade of the Province, and close personal at- tention to all business entrusted to us, we fee sure of giving our patrons every satisfaction. E. H. NORTON, Late of Norton Bros., Wholesale i Merchants, WM. McNEILL. Hardware Referring to the notice of the above Firm, to whom I have transferred all my iuterest in the Auctioneer and Commission business, I have much pleasure in recommending them |to the public, confident that all consignments ‘and business antrusted to them will meet , with prompt and careful attention. | A. MoNEILL. Charlottetown, Aug. 10, 1889. Norweod Farm For Sale, AUCTION, Sota TOE iin ‘Thursday, Oct. 8rd (Exhibition Day), AT 10 O'CLOCK, A. M., The property of the late George Wright, sitn- ated in Charlottetown Royalty, 24 miles from The Dwelling and Farm Buildings will be offered with 60 acres separately, or with all the land as may be desirable. | Terms and conditions on day of sale. GEO. J. WRIGHT, aug2 —2aw wky tl sle $. PETER’S SCHOOLS, Head Master tev. JAMES SIMPSON, M. A., assisted by the following staff: | BOYS SCHOSL. Rev. FRED E. J. LLOYD, tev. T. H. HUNT. B. A., Mr. JOHN T. BRYAN, Mr. E. J. HODGSON, Q. C. SERGT-MAJOR IRWIN, Drill Instructor. | GIRLS SCHOOL. The MISSES DESBRISAY. Michaelmas Term opens Monday. Sept. 2, Pupils prepared for matriculation at the Universities. Fexs.~Boys’ School $24 per annum; Girls’ School $15 per annum. A reduction made for brothers or sisters. : Applications for admission to be made to the Head Master NDOW aug. 5, 1889—1m eod e ee : ; . Serre Piano For Sale. Second-hand Square Piano, Mahogany Frame, a good instrument, will be sold |poliuted with the products of such blind | wells and sinks. In orderto the maintain- | ing the health of the city fa any safe de- | gree, the surface must. be keptunbevken, and the ground air and ground water kept free from every possible source of contamina- tion. How, it may be asked, can those two factors, at considerable depths from the surface, though polluted, possibly affect the public health ? Briefly and plainly thus : Owing to the slowness of the movements of ‘the ground water towards the lowest levels it does not carry off sufficiently rapid, the additional supplies received from sinks and wells and its level rises and falls according as the season is wet or dry, being regulated, gen- erally, by the amount of the ram fall, As soon, therefore, as this rising takes place | the poliuted waters are carried upwards | into the superincumbent strata, and with | it the ground air, which always follows the water movement, and this air, saturated with noxious gasses, finds its way into cel- lars, and from thence to the upper flats of dwellings—hence the great care that should be exercised to keep both the air and water of the soil free from pollution. Those who may not be disposed to credit these state- ments should ask themselves the question : If deep sinks and blind wells or surface drainage are safe conduits to carry off be- fouled water and other waste, why do cor- ' purations the world over, find it necessary to ‘expefid thousands and millions of dollars in ithe construction of various systems of sew- erage / The answer is obvivus. The pol- ‘lution, by the former methods of soil and | water is recognized as the principal cause of the excessive mortality wherever and iso long as it continues to exist. In your | well timed article already referred to, you called the attention of the health authori- ties tothe alarming prevalence of scarlet ‘fever in our midst. A few days agotwo : citizens happening to meet on the street, {one asked the other whose child had cen- pees the disease, to what cause so wide- ispread an epidemic could be attributed ¢ |The answer was at once as true as it was i laconic, viz: ** Filth.” | The Board of Health should take a note | of it and ask themselves whether they are {not largely responsible for this state of things, and whether their culpable neglect | has not brought sorrow and death to many ‘a household. Have they, as the guardians ,of the public health, enforced the city ‘urdinances in the removal of every cause ‘which gives rise to proventable diseases ? Have they suspended the bye-law regulat- ing the keeping of swine in the city? Let their Sanitary Officer answer whether pigs are not now kept reeking in pestilential ‘filth within a radius of a few hundred yards \of the principal business parts of the city. Such a state of things is simply disgrace- ful, and the whole body of the citizens shou'd rise in arms tu prevent its cortinu- ance. For the health of the whole city depends upon the conditions of all its parts. In looking over the Health Officer’s re- port I notive that the largest percentage of deaths is among children under five years, from diarrhoeal affections. These affections, ‘according to Dr. Ballard, who, for eight | years has been studying for the Govern- the city, on the St. Peter’s Road, and consist-| ment of Great Britain the causes of in- ing of Uwelling House, Farm Buildinzs and) 144 Acres of Land, nearly all clear, well! watered, and under a high state of cultivation. | testinal diseases, and in the British Medical Journal he declares: ** The essential cause of diarrhoea resides, ordinarily, in the superficial layers of the earth, etc.” And again, upon the results of this inquiry, he suygests that the chief aim in prophylaxis is: ** To prevent fouling of the soil with matters out of which the material of diarrhoea can be produced ; to secure do- mestic cleanliness, dryness and cleanliness of soil, lowering of ground water, preven- tion of rise of ground air, the free move- ment of air, protection of food from infee- tion, due regulation of sewers, etc.” The conclusions arrived at by so emin- ent an authority should incite our Board of Health to action and induce them to inves- tigate and correct (as you have already suggested) the many dangerous methods adupted by too many citizens in the dis- posal of sewage and other filth from their premises. Should such an investigation be proceed- ed with, and the proper remedies applied, they would have, I venture to say, in many instances, to introduce, as into savage life, the rudiments of sanitary civilization. Saxitas. ~ciitontinislspitaiamas titi Some one has made the discovery, or rather makes the assertion, that » dy al- ways walks upward. Put a fly on a win- The upper part laps over the lower, with an inch space between. Well, as soon as a fly lights on the screen, he proceeds to travel upward, and thus walks straight out t in, for vash ur approved paper. Ohya ts oie wag, 2, dw od doors. By this meaus a rom van be ately cleared of Plas. clo Testing the Elixir of Life. Dr. B. D. Harrison and Dr. William Richardsen, two’ leading physicians of Sault Ste. Marie, and Dr. J: er, leeturer on chemistry at the Kansas City medical school, have been conducting mee tomes | ing and ap- parently valuable experiments with Doctor Browne-Sequard’s elixir. ‘Great care was taken in the selection of Manrbs ‘from which the glands are taken, and bivood of sperm..t.c veins was also used, and the whole was macerated in filtrated water,after which pancroblin a digestive fluid,was added. The addition of pancroblia to the so-called elixir has never before been “and was used to render assimilation of the elixir easier. Tests of fluid were made on Uncle Solomon Hay, aged 91, an inmate of the county-poor house, and on Thomas Moffatt, aged 76. Improvement in Moffatt’s lame- ness was marked. -He was stone blind, but after ky ic injection, claimed that he could distinguish light and darkness. Nei- ther of the men kuew anything of the elixir er why the injections were made. Uncle Solomon was entirely blind of one eye, and could distinguish only light and darkness with the other eye. He wad walked with crutches with extreme difficulty for years. Fifteen minutes after a hypodermic injec- tion of 30 drops of elixir, he declared t he could see, arose and walked to the win- dow without crutches, distinguished objects ut eoiaie Gietatel ae Pere? ugh his half - load of years isappeared. His pulse grew from 61 to 72, and grew much stronger. This was done one week ago. Both men are now as well as_ immediately after injection of the elixir, The insprove- ment on Uncle Solomon's condition is so marked that all who know him at first re- fused to credit the evidence of their eyes. The physicians who made the tests are well known in thecity and their standing . is above suspicion. Hundreds of inent residents of the Soo have investigated the case thoroughly, and are forced to admit that Dr. Brown-Sequard’s discovery has ap- parently wrought a miracle before their own eyes. Baptist Convention. Frepericron, Aug. 25.—The report of the committee on obituaries was read by Rev. F. H. Foshay, of Windsor, N.S. The committee on nominations recom- mended the following officers, whose aom- inations were confirmed by the conference : E. D, King, M. A., Halifax, president; J. W. Spurden, Fredericton, vice-president; J. A. Gordon, A. M., Charlottetown, 2d vice-president; Prof. E. M. Keiratead, Acadia, secretary; Rev. G. R. White, Yar- mouth, assistrnt secretary; W. G. Clarke, Fredericton, treasurer. Prof. H, C. Creed, the retiring presi- dent, then read his address, reviewing and criticising the work and duties of the Bap- tist church generally. Rev. Dr. Sawyer submitted a report of the board of ministerial education. It showed that twenty-three young men hold- ing licenses had received assistance, and that more money is needed. Adopted. [t was decided that Rev. F. D. Crawley preach the convention sermon next year, with Rev. J. A. Gordon alternate. Rev. Dr. Higgins read the report of the governors of Acadia College. It spoke of the splendid work done, bat urged the need of more funds and further provisions to keep pace with the demands of the age. The financial statement was submitted by the Rev. Dr. Day. It was laid on the table. In the evening an educational meeting was held in the church. The services on Sunday were largely at- tended. Baptist clergymen occupied most of the pulpits in the city and vicinity. ee ee ee ED: Careful Cullings. Great men of action have been often marked by their silent ways. ‘‘The super- ior man,” says Confucius, ‘‘blushes for fear lest his words should exceed his deeds.” The divinest tribute in the heart of man is love, and the mightiest, because the most human, principle in the heart of man is faith. Love is heaven; faith is that which appropriates heaven. How to live in the world, pressed with its duties, burdened with its responsibili- ties, in daily contact with its people, and swept by its tides of feeling, without im- bibing its spirit and taking on its character, is at once difficult and important. The solution of this problem solves nearly all others in the practical Christian life. It is no great matter to associate with the good and gentle; for this is naturally pleasing to all, aud everyoue willingly en- joys peace and loves those best who agree with him. But to be able to live peaceably with hard and perverse persons, or with the disorderly, or with sich as go contrary to us, is @ great grace and a most com- mendab'e and manly thing. _—-o°*o-— Faithful. —_— An English farmer had a dog that had been very useful to him. Butthe dog was ‘getting old, and his master had up his mind to drown hia. Se one day he took the dog with him, and getting inw a boat, rowed out to a large stream of water near his farm. He had a heavy stone tied toa cord. He fastened this round the dog’s neck, and then threw him intw the water. The poor dog k, but the cord broke, Then he rose to surface of the water, and tried to get into the boat again. ‘But his master pushed him off with the oar ‘a number of times. At last he stood up with the oar in his hand, intending to dow, and up he goes toward the top; he strike him a heavy blow, that would make can't be made to walk downward. So an him sink to the bottom. But in trying to inventor has made a screen divided in half. 'do this he lost his balance and fell into the water himself, He could not swim, and when the dog saw his master struggling im ‘the water, in spite of the unkind treatment just received from him, caught hold of his and t him safe to Show titis was in t : Age. a a ahs re jas Ares: so OO PEM ONE. alt ae aN Sind $i SI iis Aa ON. SORES ear “BE ite aa i] Frey A ala.