Five DoLLARs A YEAR, NEW SERIES. KMS ~~ Tak is issued every evening, by from ieie otfice, corner of Water aud Streets, Charlottetown, Vriace Miward Island. ‘ ‘ ry KATES Of SUBSCRIPTION six Months, - - : $2 50 » Months, - - : l 26 tine Month, - ° ° Vv 50 mm Advertising at most moderate rates, Contracts iarcteriy, Nat yearly or yearly advertise im application. THe RAILWAY TIS TABLE, (Ch trlottet 01 Time ) i INK WEST. A. M. A. M s. Charlottetown 04] O12 €371 Hanter River. 3 Gs Meee 66 P. M. Kensington. awed Bae Isse 76 Reeiaa «ee pe ad a oSuUnimersidée, ‘ depart pee 9 27 » 32 io Port Hill Oicéenseae: Cw Alberton eS, 1205 6 57 DOS cect ea caveues 1242 7 47 FROM WEsT. me ee «606A Tignish pecccuce ee. 2 a cnc ing dxth wen 240 7 57 Ts ad 415 10%5 arrive O17 1207 Summerside ns iio ammerside, depart......642 122 6857 ES ne 607 20 7230 eee . CO iss ce 708 223 847 Chariottetowe .... 2.6 205 802 507 1007 GCING EAST, P.M. A. M. CRTOROIROOIIE, . «oo oe eek os es AT TS . RPCIWO .ccdicccct ae 832i Mount Stewart, |‘ =~ oF > | depart........527 902 St. Peter's «ieee enue 617 1002 P.M in shana wick ce beeen ds tae ie A. M. Prowas Beewaes. ....ccocsece 5322 907 aoa dens 629 1022 a a err er 647 1047 FROM EAST, A. M, -, oe i a wens 6a 27 ee a es heen ces 752 400 arrive 84 517 Senn Miement, § Oe °°" O° Do ae " » ) depart........ S4j 542 Cees, | 5. i okt cts ieee Te Georgetown. ‘oe Cardigan..... asses escapee a; ee meenin Gerwaee. .. . 54... . comecsed 842 §12 COMTIGNMENTS SOLICITED. R. O’DWYER, Commission and General Merchant POR SALE OF P, B. I, PRODUGE. 289 WATER SIREET, Si. Johns’ Newfoundland, Ie connection with the above is Captain English, who is well known in P. E, Island, who will take special charge of ali consign- ments, and will also attend to the charterimyg of vessels for the carrying trade of P. E. 1. The firm is one of theoldest and most reli- able in Newfoundland Keturns guaranteed to be prompt and satisfactory. Parties wish- ing to procure Labradore Herring should send their orders in time Sept. 6, 1854.—till 3ist dec, 84. L. ARTHUR & CO. GHENEHRAL Commission Merchants, (21 ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASSB.- Rggs aud Produce a Specialty. May 15,1884 wkly tf SULLIVAN & MACNEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Sevliciiors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown, Gao Money to Loan, W. W. Sosuivas, @. O. | Cansrsa B, Macneil, Jan. 16,83, er WOKS. \ Rk. CHARLES CAIRNS, in returning « thanks t. the public for the liberal Pstronaze extended to him, begs leave to in- form his old customers and the public gencral- ly, that he has taken into partversbip Mr. Malcolm Mclean, aud that hereafter the business will be carried on under the title of CAIRNS & CO. Marble & Stone Cutters. ——— CAIRNS’ MARBLE They have on hand a fine stock of Monu- Ments, Tablets and Headstones, in Italian and American Marble, They are of the latest de- Signs, and at prices to suit sll. Cc. CAIRNS. ; M. MCLEAN. — Ch’'town, June 30, 1894—prew m ¢ pat sj WP Darty KXAMINER tiximiner Publishing Co. i may be made for monthly, | ‘OMMISSIOD Merehants, |; i 2 oO} | 7 Anclionser and Comission Merchant, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, PPPLRS APPLES, APPLES. CHAGSLES DONALD & CO 79 Qucea St, London, FE. C, Will be glad to correspona with Apple Grow ers, Merchants aud Shippers, with a v.ew to Antuma and Sprivg . business They will also give the cnstomers requiring advances augl | WEST & RENDALL, | St, John’s, Newfoundlavd. made, | Jnly 25, 1884. 7 Consiyumeats solicited, Yaw 4m N. J. CAMPBELL, (Successor to Campbell & Rayden) ‘| LAD GNRSURARCH AGENT. | COR. GF QUEEN AND WATER STS., ‘Charlottetown, P. &. istand. | SHIP BROKER, — ' | Importer and Jobber of Choice Greeerices and Spices General Agent for P. E. Island of tae | British Empire Mutaal Life Assurance Com- | pany, of London, England Special attention given to Auction Sales of Lumber, Coal, Fish, Apples and other Fruit, Real Estate, Houschold Furoiture, Bankrapt and other Stocks, and all kinds of Merchan- lise. Correspondence and Cunsion™ Returns prompt! me4- a0. ' vo" , } onta enlioakeA McLeod, Moron & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS —AND— ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Oflice in Gld Baak, (UP STAIRS). } Ch’town, Feb. 21, 1984. & Soxs, CHARLOTTETOWN, ?, E. IsLanp) Commission Merchant, 269 BARRINGTON STREET, matte a... oe. ge Special attention given to the sale of P. E. Island produce. April 24, S854. }(Or WHearney rE HE Subscriber announces that he is com- pletivg a NEW & FIRST-CLASS HEARSE tor the streets; and having ordered a set of Ostrich Plumes from London will have a turnout Second to Nene in the City. REMEMBER THE PLACE; Opposite Dr. Taylor's, Grafton Street. ISAAC W. WADMAN. Ch’town, July 24—'aw wkly ~ LADIES, ATTENTION! UST Read This, and be convinced of the excellence of the Model Washer and Bleacher. It makes the washing light and easy, gi es the clothes that pure whiteness that no other mode of washing can produce. No rubbing required, no friction to injure the fabric. It is a Scieutific and Successful Ma- chine, which does its work superior to any other Washer that ever have been in use. You can do a heavy wash in a quarter of the time, without avy labour at ail. They are a durabl., time and money saving machine, and sold cheap. Price, 33,00 ; when sent to tiie country, $3.25. WM, WORTH, Spring Park Road, Agent for Queen's County, Ch’town, July 34, 'S4.—Qaw wily, 1 Island Pobiery PB. Island §robery, ———— STOVE-PIPE STONES, CHIMNEY TOPs, DRAIN PIPES, wae STRAWBERRY VINE PROTECTOR: And other articles made to order at the P E. ISLAND POTTERY. BEER & GOFF AGENTS Oh'sowu, May 27, 1984. usual faeilitics fk Liberal advances | eé ; . i This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Pubiic, may speak free.’’—Evnriripgs, { , IN O'T ITC #53. MORE ROOM. Bost LOWER » :(0e— -—-— PRICHS ! —9— — A imcressed, thus enabling me to show a very much better / Goods than usual, ps Kvery Department is well filled with Choice NEW GOODS, impwrted divect from the English Markets. And, as { am bound to sustain my past assortment of 1884, What Lord Rosebery Really Said. A STRONG PLEA FOR THE COLONIBS—CANADA OR THE UNITED STATES /~A QUESTION FOR | BRITAIN. ! encanta ! } The statement that Lord Rosebery, one tion between Great Britain and her colon’ ‘ics, had been advising his countrymen to emigrate to the United States instead of to ‘Canada, was a thunder blow to his friends ‘on this side, The statement now turns out 'to be a telegraphic lie. By the full reports ing the Trades’ Union Congress in Aber- deen. He said he was much atrock with the ‘‘federalism’”’ of that congress, embrac- ing loe:l or detached self-management for THE WORWKINGMEN OF GREAT AND GREATER | —- _ — ha . aoameunans SINGLE Copres Two CENTS, VOL, 15.--NO, 112. | hefore them, and then they might regret {not having taken time by the forelock. | When laxity of connection became a habit | its tendency was to become looser and not itighter, until there ceased to be any connection at all. He knew jthat a great many working men, both here land in the colonies, took an even stronger view of tbat question than he had indicated, M ) (| , * | ee st adr : ¢ | Lhu J b> @ ,0f the strongest scvocates © el-ser Connec-/They hoped not so much for a bond of the British Empire as for | A LEAGUE OF ENGLISH-SPEAKING PEOPLE jall over the world. (Applause). He quite admitted the sublimity of the conception ; |but we Were practical men. We had to S my Store has been greatly enlarged, my importations have been greatly of his speech in the English newspapers |@eal with what was nearest at hand and ' pow before us, we see that he was address. | likely to be achieved. He did not believe | that the league of English-speaking people | was likely to be realized in our time. But | What he wanted to point out was, whether jit Came in our time or not, that he did not ilreputation for selling Cheg e 103! rhe ‘onize » will fi pias - fs . . eat { g Cheap Goods, those who patronize me will find my the differevt unions, with a common bond | Suppose Great Britain, when she entered | Prices Ls Ww, Quality Good. OALE SiijH Us, , L. E, PROWSE, Sign of the Big Hat, 74 Queen Strect. hh’ toven, Sept. 95, 18K4.—e0d whly DORSEY, GOFF & CO’S. cence Ene anmpancimee Uelebrated Hake ot Boots a arin the lead all over the sland. _—_— ---—-_— 0—_—— People say our Boots are Water-tight, Good Fit, Very Cheap. and wear as well as Custom Boots. AND —_——_— — /O- BE SURE AND GET OUR MAKE. DORSEY, GOFF & CO Ch'town, Sept. 18, 1884.—e0d wkly THA. TEA. Extra, Prime, Cheap, Strong, Nice, Al, Splendid 0 Beer & Goff’s for Extra Tea, WHOLESALE. BEER & GOFFS FOR PRIME TEA, RETAIL. BEER & GOFF’sS FOR CHEAP TEA, WARRANTED. BEER & GOFFS FOR o> POUND TINs. BEER & GOFFS FOR Al TEA BEER & GOFF'S FOR SPLENDID TEA, ANY QUANTILY. WHOLDHMSALE & RETAIL. Ch’town, July 9, 1884—2aw 0 NICE THA, Attention Ye Who Are In Doubt. Lot Experience be Judge,—Comparison and Vurse the Jury. MARK WRIGHT & C@., Because of the excellent facilities they posriess, have been able to reduce the price of all goods manufactured by them, and by buying their raw material in the best narkets, for cash, are 'prepared to give the purchasing public THE BEST VALUE IN THE PIOVINGE. They arc vviling from thirty to fifty per cent. below prices asked soime time ago in the same establishment. ! . a Faetory, Office and Showreom—King Square, Ment street | | : | Chegottsbews, "sy 7 "Aan Soar why .enl centre of united influence in their con- gress. I[t would surely be well, he sail, if , this prineiple of federalism were far more widely applicd to the colonial eoncerns of ization combined strength fer mutual cb- | Jecis with separate management for separ- ,ate objects, and this would be exactly trve of the British Empire. His main |View in coming there that day was jto call the aitention of the Con- gress to this matter, because it was a vital matter, not merely to the Empire, but especially to the working classes. (Hear, hear, and applause.) The British Empire seemed to waver between the two dangers which he had irdicated, whenin the last century it attempted to act like one vast trades’ union, and lost the great empire known as the United States. After that catastrophe, exactly a century ayo, it re- bounded to the opposite extreme, and was now, hethought, in danger of having no cohesion atall. At preseut almost the only function of the central Government with regard to its colonies seemed to consist of sending governors out like bread upon the waters—(a Jangh)—and not always with so much consideration for the adaptability of the individual fur this office as for the con- venience of sending the individual to a co‘ony. (Hear, hear, and jaughter.) That was a function of extreme delicacy, great importance, and considerable danger, be- cause the colonies might ask themselves, uncer such circumstances, what was the exact advantage of the connection which bound them to the Mother Country, as they might as weil THEMSELVES APPOINT THE GOVERNORS whose salaries they were compelled to pay. (Hear, hear.) None were in a better posi- tion than the working classes to appreciate the present inadequacy of the relationship between the colonies and the Mother Covntry. If we wished to retain our united empire, we should do more than appoint governors and veto bills passed by the Local Parliament, otherwise, how long would either party care to preserve so color- Jess and feeble a connection. (Hear, hear.) Whilst France and Germany and other nations were seeking to found colonial empires—were we, whose colonial empire formed their medel and stimulated their ambition, to allow that empire to drift away from us! This was not a question for mere doctrinaires and theorists, but should interest all thoughtful politicians, and especially the working classes, who mainly peopled our colonial possessions, There was nobody who had so much to gain as the working classes from a closer connection with the colonies, for THE WORKING CLASSES IN CANADA and Australia had already got much more power and made much greater advance in many respects than the working classes of this country had yet been able to do. On the important question of emigration, much information of great mutual value might be exchanged by means of a closer connec- tion between the Mother Country and the colonies, for they could thus learn where there was most room for emigration, and for what class of industral emigration there was the most room. He thought there was too much emigration to the colonics carried on by Government without any real regard for the wants of the employers or ‘the employed, or the interest of the emigrant. (Cheers.) They went out too often in order merely to swell the popu- \lation and to increase the constituencies, and provide a proud boast for the Secretary for the Colonies, but in some cases they had come when they were not really re- quired, and had been the cause of suffering both to themselves and others, (Cheers.) Well, now, what was this emigration? In the year 1884, up to this time 175,925 persons of British birth had left within the jast eight months for other shores, of which 111,739 went to the United States—(hear, hear)—and 56,867 to Canada. What he had, therefure, to ask them was this—‘*Do you wish that these kinsfolk and friends of yours shall remain permanently associated with your fortunes and the fortunes of this country, or i SHALL THEY WANDER AWAY TO NATIONS, | not under the dominion of the British Gov- lernment?® (Applause). If they went to India they were in Great Britain. If they went to Canada they were in Great Britain. If they went to Australia they were in Great Britain. If they went to the United States they went to institutions highly to be com- mended, in many respects far in advance of ours, to be associated with a people to whom | we were akin and whom we loved, but who} were not our people and who had not our institutions. (Applause) What we want- ed to know was this:—‘* Will you be severed ‘from these emigrants whom you send ont, 'that federation or leagne, would be less considered if she came as the head of a great empire, than if she came with only the two \islands to which the Nihilising sect of poli- Assortment L wsOL mén AIP. the British Empire. Their present organ- | ticians would wish to redace us. (Lear, -hear ) The bond which united the various component parts of this empire together must either become stronger or weaker, ‘and could not continue to exist in its pre- sent omewhat indefinite position. It was most desirable that the bond should be- come stronger, and that the working classes, who mainly peopled our colonial empire, should place this important subject in their programme for EARLY AND SERIOUS CONSIDERATION, By embracing this vast and elevating ques- tion they might prove themselves not only Britons, keenly watching and canvassing every question that arose in our own islands, not merely representatives discuss- ing sectional subjects, but also proud parti- cipators in an empire which, either at home or in India or our own colonies, effered such a variety of opportunity to working men of all classes 28 could be efiered in no other country in the world. (Hear, hear, and cheers. ) op CURRENT NOTES. a Another Irish informer says he concocted his evidence. Four thousand five hundred French sol- diers are sick at Tonquin. Another Cuban filibustering expedition is being organized at Key West. Queen’s College and Kingston Women’s Medical College open this week. It is proposed in Toronto to fiush the streets instead of watering ihem. A London hotel bell boy has just com- mitted suicide after his first over indu!gence in liquor. Madagascar advices state that the French have occupied the Bay of Passandore and erected a fort And now a London newspaper corres- pondent has eloped with the wife of an English nobleman. The falling off in Quebec’s shipping trade this year is estimated at 100,000 tons in sailing vessels alone. “Darling has your love grown cold?” ask- ed the bride of her young husband. ‘‘Not as cold as the coffee is,” was his unfeeling response. Grip to Dutferin—Accept the congratula- tions of Canada, my lord, on your advanec- ment—may you be as great a success in the East as you were in the West It is reported that Sarah Scheuer, daugh- ter of Abraham Scheuer, a New York mil- lionaire, has eloped with, and married, Henry Friedman, a young stock broker. “If you would be traly happy, my dear,’ said one young lady to another, ‘‘you will have neither eyes nor ears when your hus- band comes home late from the club.” “Yes, I know,” answered the other, whe abominates tobacco, wearily,-—‘‘But what am | to do with my nose ?”’ Austria has something novel, by calling together all those persons whose distinguish- ing feature is a nose superior to ordinary olfactory organs in size, form and color. Of the eighty competing noses, the prize was awarded to one belonging td a Vien- nois—a gigantic, violet hued trunk soft elephantine proportions, the pride of its possessor. A fellow who has a mania for collecting literary curiositics in the shape of queer titles of books, found the following in the catalogue of a London publishing house. The firat, somewhat appetizing, is, “How to Cook Onicns ina Hundred Different Ways,’ and the second, rather demoralizing to prison systems, runs, ‘*How to Get Out of Newgate, by Une Who Has Done It and Can Do It Agam!” Prove Burrer.—‘‘l see you are shipping a yvod deal of prime butter to the city,” said a gentleman to a farmer living in the vicinity of New York. ‘*Yes,” he replied. ‘“‘I am doing very weli this year.” *‘How many cows do you keep?” ‘Cows !” said the farmer ;"I don't keep any cows.” ‘*How do yon make butter without cows / was the astonished query. ‘“‘I guess you don’t know much about the dairy business,’ replied the farmer, somewhat amazed ; of I am the proprietor ci the bone-boiling establishment over there. The Montrea) harbor commissioners have leased 60,000 feet of land contiguous to the wharf opposite the Canadian Pacific depot, at the nominal rent of Sl per annum tor 99 | or detain them by a bond of nationalty for lall time to come?’ This question was lmore important even then the franchise | gi estion which was now agitating the coun- try. He wouldteli them why. ithe franchise could whercas the question of colonia was not so well able to do that. hear). What was to be feared this question mig (Hear, Because | costing a fourth of that amount. take care of itself, é ial federation |store grain init, as well as the Canadian lime wntil all of a sudden it might loum up and years, for a site fur two elevators that will hold 1,000,000 bushels of grain, and which | will cost $400,000 to erect, the foundation All rail- ways entering the port are to be allowed to ‘Pacific. This enterprise, it is claimed, will was, that) make Montreal the supreme shipping port ht be put off from time to | for the grain produced in the Northwest eat. £ ee a a TE A AS OO eae a HI