THE DAILY EXAMINER. eemvnlll peomant Terms :—Five Douttars a Year, “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxirpzs. ntinin mn Guitinis thtateaana NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1889. VOL.25.—NO. 107. Is issued Ever Evening by Vhe Examiner Peblishing Co.., FROM “LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. THEIR OFFICE, RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : ¥ i 1 <== thiemeienniiiteamtinraiat achat | ‘WE ARE OPENING TO-DAY ~ ff Cases Corsets, DOZHNS), | (iio ee i a cds ik cccaccecs y ee 2 One Month..... : cers ce iiusuceen Met 4M Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements op app at $10 $5 $3 LO THE Three Families in P. E. Island WHO SEND— O11. WRAPPERS Representing the Greatest Value in Woodill’s German Bakiag Powder UNTIL SEPTEMBER S3ist. ugl3 “Army and Navy Depot. JAS. SCOTT & CO., HALIFAX. A Fall Stock of Wines and Lignors JUST RECEIVED. m= (\ Cases ROYAL BLEND, 1 75 cases ISLAY BLEND &G-EZLIC, 100 Cases OLD RYE, 50 “ CHAMPAGNE, choice brands, 1560 * CLARET, 25 ** HOCK and MOSELLE, 5 * LIQUEURS—Cherry Brandy, Noyau, Curaco, Maraschino, Benedictine, ~ 200 “ FINE rORT and SHERRY, 1560 * HOLLANDGIN and OLD TOM, 300 *“* HENNESSY’S BRANDY, *, ** wor eee Fe GAs 100 ‘** BASS’S ALE, 206 * BURKE'S STOUT, 100 ** APOLLINARIS WATER, 100 *“* BELFAST GINGER ALE, 50 * FINE OLD RUM, 50 ** KINAHAN’S L. L. WHISKEY, —And a Full Steck of— CHOICE GROCERLES JAMES A. MORRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS --AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce wili receive prompt attention. Reverences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; D. C. Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scotiz Charlottetown. —<=1889->— ———— BOSTON DIRT. Boston, Halitax and P. £. island Steamship Line. CS Only Direct Line Without Change. —— CHARLOTTETOWN 0 BOSTON. The Staunch and Commodious Steamships “Carroll” and “Worcester,” having been thoroughly refurnished and put into St-class condition ia every respect, will, during t © saa a ~ y 3 with tho! of 139, run as follows, commencing “CARROLL,” Pron: Charlottetown, Thursday 9th May, at 6 p. m. One of these vessels will leave Boston for Chorietiovown EVERY WEDNESDAY, at Noon, : 1ariottetown for Boston EVERY THURS- a ef Six o'clock, p. na. ren cellent Passenger accommodation. Low —— FARLS— First-class Passage Berth in well- furnished C : extra, a ¢ Stateroom Berth, $2.00 Lowest Rates f ‘reig) carefully cane Freight, CARVELL BROS., Agents, . Ch ie Haxkisoy LoRing, Treasurer, DereseH abin, $6.50. which is always } ' | Bought at Manufacturers’ Prices and will be offered WHOLESALE AND RETAIL to compete with any ever shown on the Island. 1 ai Hina | BEER BROS. Charlottetown, Sept. 25, 1889—eod ————(x)——-—— ¥7E ARE NOW HEADQUARTERS for all kinds of Custom and Fiand-Made W Boots and Shoes. Having now on hand and to arrive a large and well-selected stock of Uppers, also the very best brands of Leather in the market for Custom work, and claiming to have the best staff of workmen in the Province, we feel confident that we can give pertect satisfaction both in fit, price and value to all who may favor us with their orders for Gents’, Ladies’ Boys’, Misses’ and Children’s Boots and Shoes of all kinds, which we make up at the most reasonable prices. A full line of Hand-Made Boots kept constantly on hand, Ordered Work a Specialty. Repairing of all kinds neatly and promptly done. Don’t forget the place, — 7 =. BELLE, Kanigl.t’s Old Stand, Upper Great George Street, Charlottetown, Sept. 21, 1889—tu fri sat tf “ 20th September. ——__-——(0 )_—___—- LARGE STOCK Nsw ——NOW PERERLINS & Char®ttetown, Sept. 20, 1889—dy wky OPENING AT—— NL auLvIN D A. Large Stock of \WATCHES Gn Hand, from $5 up—Tested and Warranted. —— x—--— Cheaper Kept in Stock but not Guaranteed Our Watches having received the highest awards for general excellence and time- keeping qualities, we can thoroughly recommend them. : Unsolicited testimonials regarding their merits received continually. every department. rT G HH. TAYLOR, NORTH SIDE MARKET SQUARE. New Goods in sept24 ———— or Thirty Days renee OD Sree emer GREAT SLAUGHTER SALE Of Boots and Shoes. 203 of our Spring and Summer Stock FOR CASH. The Biggest Bar- J. CO. SPRAGUE. ] E will offer the balance ata BIG SACRIFICH gaivs in the City guaranteed. “Stews? War ton, Chat lottetown, Aug. 19, 1859-—tu fri wey HEADQUARTERS. : 25% rae 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 Biood Diseases, you can make no mis- take in preferring Ayer’s Sarsapariila to any other. The fore-runner of mod- ern blood medicines, Ayer’s Sarsapariila 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 recommend it.’’—George W. Whitman, Druggist, Albany, Ind. **T am safe in saying that my sales of Ayer’s ane far excel those .of any other, and it gives thorough satisfac- tion.”— L. H. Bush, Des Moines, Iowa. “ Ayer’s Sarsaparilla and Ayer’s Pills are the best selling medicines in my store. I can recommend them conscien- tiously.’—C. Bickhaus, Pharmacist, Roseland, Ill. “We have sold Ayer’s Sarsaparilla here for 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 good for the youth- ful blood’ as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.”— | R.U, Parker, Fox Lake, Wis. “ Ayer’s Sarsaparilla gives the best satisfaction of any medicine I have im | ptock. 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, Monmouth, Kansas. _ Ayer’s Sarsaparilia, Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. “GEO. A. ROMER, ‘Banker and Broker, | 40 & 42 BROADWAY AND 51 NEW ST., New York City. em | Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Provisions and Petro- leum Bought, Sold and Carried on Margin. P. S.—Send for explanatory pamphlet. sept20—dy & wky ly 1889. FE.HE Clipper Bark “ EREMA,” 300 tons register, P. Ledwell, Commander, will ‘Sail from Liverpool for Chariotietown about the ist October, ‘and will carry Freight at throug) rates to the ‘different railway points on the Island. | For Freight apply in London to Jonn Prr- ‘CAIRN & Sons, 7 Union Court, Old Broad St.; in Liverpool to Wir1t1aM BULLEN, 51 South John Street, or here to the owners, & 60 ‘ PcAKe Bards. Ch’town, 2nd Aug. 1889. eod tl d | | PRS ees SS | i Steamship Compay, Lti. STEAMER “ PRINCESS BEATRICE,” : CAPTAIN A. H. KELLY, Will sail from Charlottetown EVERY THURS- DAY at 2 o’clock for Halifax, calling at George- town and Souris, P. K. I., and Bayfield, Port Hastinzs, Malgrave and Hawkesbury, Arichat, anso, Sheet Harbor. ‘ ai ee will sail from Halifax EVERY TUESDAY MORNING, at 7 o’ciock, making me calls. “The above Steamer will make the round trip every week until close of navigation. This will enable Georgetown and Souris ship- pers to make direct ¢ mnections with Steamers at Halifax for any foreign market. _ Freight and Passengers solicited at lowest rates, and Through Bills of Lading granted to any port on the Continent or United Kingdom. ; Apply Ww. W. CLARKE, Agent, Chariottetown, : PickFoRD & BLack, Halifax. fynd—eod tt SPECULATION. ZSs9. A Republican Convention. THE state convention of the Republican party met in Boston on the 25th. The con- vention was one of the largest and most in- teresting held in that city in recent years. It adopted a platform favoring the extinguish- ment of national debt by purchase of bonds; a vigorous foreign policy; rigid civil ser- vice reform; sound currency; cessation of silver coinage; reduction of surplus; equit- able revison of tariff; maintenance of pro- tection, but its readjustment to meet chang- ed business conditions in New Eng'and and elsewhere; national law to protect voters and ballots; liberal pension policy; aid to steamship lines; building up of the navy; uational and state aid to education; perpet- ual hostility to saloon power; defence and support of public schools. The convention nominated Lt.-Gov. John G. A. Brackett, for Governor on the first ballot. The balance of the state ticket no- minated is: Lieutenant Governor, W. 4H. H. Haile, Springfield; secretary of state, | Henry B. P'erce, Abbington; treasurer, G. 1A. Warden, Lowell; auditer, Chas. R. |Ladd, Springfield; attoraey general, Audrew J. Waterman, Pittsfield. ” 2 Sunday on the Pacific.” Under the above caption, Rev. Benj. Chappelle writes the following interesting letter to the last Wesleyan :—‘*To-day is Tuesday. Jt was yesterday Diem Perdidi this time sure, or as the sailors say we ‘‘knocked out.” If, gentle reader, you do not understand me, | mean that about four ‘o'clock yesterday we crossed the 180th | parallel and sailed out of the occident into | the fancy-painted orient. Our ship is the Batavia, manned by a very courtoeus crew. There are on board 27 cabin passengers, 74 ‘living Chinamen, and the bones of over an ‘hundred dead ones. Among the passengers ‘is a General of the British army, a Lieuten- antof the R.N., a French Baron, a grandson son of Savage Landor, travelling artist for \the Graphic, a party of three Germans, one a judge and all doctors of laws, on their | way to teach German law in Japan; nine i**gtobe trotters;’ one Japanese who is returning from buying $300,000 worth of goods in foreign markets; another who , has heen purchasing machinery |by which the cotton mill which he ' represents will increase its operatives from 800 to 1500; and among others a band of | half a dozen from the Methodist Church of Canada carrying to Japan the priceless trea- {sure of the gospel of Christ. Three are ‘young ladies, three young men; four are ‘from the Maritime Provinces, two from On- | tario; three of the six are children of Mount | Allison. If parents do not wish that their boys and girls ‘* seek first the kingdom of God,” they had better not send them to Sackville, for its atmosphere is calculated ito produce just that type of character. | Yesterday the ocean was calm asa lake. At 10.15 the ship’s bell began to toll, at 10.30 service was held. As I happened to | be the only minister on board, they had Hobson’s choice. The rich liturgy of the | Episcopal church was used. The readiog | desk was cushions covered by the Union i Jack. Text: ‘* Almost thou persuadest ;me to be a christian,” After Tiftin, visited Chinamen in their steerage and enjoyed very much talking iwith them. Nearly all understanding some English, a number have attended 'some Mission school in the cities from | which they came, several were well dispos- | ed towards Christianity, andl one was a pro- 'fessed Christian. After dinn:r, had a ser- vice of song, directed largely by General | Tripe. who is as devoted a servant of our King as of our Queen. We have learned /to love him very much asa humble, noble | christian gentleman, and have been favor- (ed with his ripe views of scripture truth in | our daily Bible readings. And when darkness had settled down we | wandered off to the ship’s stern, and watch- ‘ed the sparkle of phospherescent light, and \looked out along the track of shining i light toward home and loved ones and so | closed my first Sunday evening (Monday evening wasn’t it) in the Orient.” ~~ + oe > ee News Notes. | The New York Daily Graphic has sus- | pended, The Chinese Emperor and his Council | are said to be debating the piacing, of re- | strictions on American merchants and mis- : sionaries, | Five cotton mills, at Blackburn, Eng- ‘Jand, running 120,000 spindles, have re- | sumed work. | A Chicago despatch says the C. P. R. is | preparing Lo open a new lake and raii route {to the seaboard from Chicago, via Owen | Sound. ' The Chicago Farmer's Review estimates {the corn crop of 1889 inthe Cnited States | at 2,268, 292,083 bushels, against 1,987,790, - 000 in 1888. At Eldorado, Kansas, a few days ago a child mysteriously disappeared, and Al- onzo Edwards and his wife were supposed to have made away with it. A mob strung them up with a rope until they were al- most dead, in an effort to extort a con- fession. The child was afterwards found alive and well. Superstitions proverbially die hard, and especially among sailors. Perpetually in the presence of mighty natural forces, the tars are specially liable to cling to traditions based on their experience of the uncon- trollable powers amidst which they dwell. The United States Government have a case in point to dispose of. The sailors of the Pacific coast do not like the name of the new cruiser San Francisco. They say it is an unlucky name, and that if the cruiser goes to sea it will never come back. It ap- pears that a number of vessels bearing that name have been lost within the past fow ors in this case is notva'together unreason- able. A California Senator has written to the Navy Deportment asking that the name be chaaged, and the autho-vities are now weighing the matter in the balances. years, so the peculiar prejudice of the sail-| Who Was He? AN UNKNOWN MAN KILLED BY A HAMILTON, ONT., POLICEMAN, Hamitton, Ont., Sept. 26.—A man about 30 years of age, engaged board at the house of Mrs. Spense, Young Street. He displayed a large roll of bilis, but was very uncomnitnicative and did not disclose his name or anything concerning himself. He remained closeted in his room and did not eat his meals with the other inmates of the house, but we: t out and brought what food he required, and ate it in his room. Mrs. Spencer became alarmed at the man’s peculiar behavior, and when she saw & re- volver in his room her alarm increased. She notified the police. Three policemen went to the house yesterday afternoon, but the mysterious stranger refused to admit them or communicate with them. Two of the police were instructed to watch the room last night, and some time this morning the door was forced and constables Hawkins and Campaign entered the room. The man shot twice, but did no injury. One of the ‘policemen returned the fire and instantly kitled the man. Who the latter is or what is the mystery regarding him has not yet transpired. Constables Hawkius and Cam- paign are held pending turther investiga- tion. oo : Startling Charges Made. MANY MORE QUEREC VICTIMS MIGHT HAVE BEEN SAVED FROM DEATH Quesec, Sept. 24.—The testimony at the inquest to-day into the cause of the deaths of the victims of Thursday's disaster developed the fact that the city was, ac- cording to the testimony of most of the witnesses, almost criminally negligent in not supplying tools by means of which the entombed people could be rescued in time to save their lives. This delay, in many cases, it seems, proved fatal, and the testi- mony of Dr. Kemp and of Ferdinand Beau- champ, one of the most heroic of the men who rushed to the rescue of the unfortu- nates, working 72 hours without a rest, goes to show that had the proper appliances such as almost any ordinary well-equipped fire department ought to have, been at hand, or even obtainable from the corpor- ation, the list of dead would have been much smaller than it is. -_-- A Little Breeze in Fiorida. HORSE, WAGON AND BOY LIFTED INTO THE AIR AND BLOWN 200 FEET. A ‘Tornado passed over Pablo Beach, some sixteen miles from Jacksonville, Fla., at six o'clock on the evening of the 23rd. It did great damage to Murray Hail, a large beach hotel. The tin roof was torn off, the windows and Goors burst in, and the build- ing left in a generally shattered condition. he servants quarters and carpenter shop near the hotel were completely demolished. Prince O'Neil, a boy 13 years old, was standing by the horse and buggy of Lawrence Haynes, near the dining pavil- lion awaiting the arrival of the evening train. The horse, vehicle and boy were lifted into the air and blown 200 feet to the beach. The boy was killed outright. A freight car on a side track was lifted in the air, turned over twice and landed on the north side of the main track sixty feet dis- tant. A passenger train due at 6 o’clock was half an hour laie owing to obstructions on the track. Had it arrived on time a hundred cottagers returning from the city would have been killed or seriously in- jured. a Felegraphic Odds and Ends. A BUDGET OF GENERAL NEWS FROM ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD. Lonvon, Sept. 26.—Six tourists and their guides in the Bavarian-Austrian Alps, yesterday, met with an accident by which the whole party were severely injured, It is feared the injuries will result fatally. ATHENS. Sept. 26.—The Greek govern- ment has sent a gunboat to protect the leaders of the Cratan insurgent commitiee committee who have taken refuge in Melos. Reports from Crete say that Turkish soldiers on the island dishonor the women and imprison and torture Christians’ with impunity. Paris, Sept. 26.—The municipal com- mission hes declared youl the votes for Boulanger in Montmartae and for Roche- fort in Belleville. The commission has confirmed the election of Count Dillon (Boulaugist) for the department of Morbi- han. St. Psrrexssvru, Sept. 26.— Acting under orders irom the Czar, DeGiers, prime minster, left St Petersburg to-day for the country, to be gone two weeks. His de- parture confirms the report that he would juot accompany the Czar to Berlin. : | Vienna, Sept. 26.—The Emperor Fran- cis Joseph has ordered the stoppage ef the |proseeution against 322 striking miners, ‘charged with participation in ricts in | Styria. | Mapriv, Sept. 26.— The Sultan of 'Moroceo bas given assurances that unless ‘the Spanish vessel seized off the Morocco ‘coast is proved a smuggler, the roffiians who capturec her will be duly punished and damages for the cutrage paid by the Spanish authorities. ! } | Consumption Can Be Cured By proper, heal thfal exercise, and the judi- cious use of Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosyhites, which contains the heal- ing and health-giving virtues of these two valuable specifics in their fullest form. Dr. D. D. McDonald, Petitcodiac, N. B., says :— “T have been prescribing Scott's Emulsion with good results. It is especially usefal in persons of consumptive tendeucies.” Sold by Denggists, 50. and $1.00 7 _ SEE ppt yp, els re i a a U ne naa ner we be ; iari a rata pa EEE NTE ES ERR NET EL, LE EOE OT ET NE, ET a nga = Sabi Seis ae 9 sa ae a