ia ey 4 1 ane OS UII CE Saas ilk st i et ik PE Sil in nat GN THE DAILY EXAMINER. Per Five DoLuarRs a YEAR. NEW SERIES. Che Dain Examiner is issued every evening by The Exainit er Publishing Oo From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— et ORES . essere ¢ ees eben len $2.50 Three monthe...... ep ee CedeveddeVoes 1,25 Pe SOONER .ccocceesocaes Seceeeisesceos aE Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on application. ALMANAC FOR NOVEMBER, 1887, MOON'S CHANGES. Last Quarter Sth day, 0h., 49.5m., p.m., W. New Moon 15th day, 4h, 55.9m., a.m., N.W. below horizon.) First Quarter 22ud day, 6h., 30.5m., a.m., be ow horizon.) Full Moon 30th day, Iih., 7.6m., a. m., South. te oe eee Sun ‘Sun /Moon! High! Day’s M,°“* OF "SS" rises|sets | rises |water| len’h 1 myh miattro;morn! h m 1! Tuesday G 47/4 41. 5 34/10 44 9 54 2 Wednesday | 45} 39} 6 Gi] 20 51 3 Thursday | 50) 38) 6 43/11 55) = 48 4| Friday | SI! 36) 7 27jaft 30) 45 5 Saturday |} 52) 35) 8 Ii) Lh, ot 3 Sunday | 54} 34) 9151151] 40 7,Monday | 56] 33/10 19) 2 41) 37 8| Luesday | 87] 31)11 27; 3°42! 34 9} Wednesday 60; 29 morn | 459) 31 10/Thursday (7 O| 28) 0 38} 6 23) 28 11| *riday i} 27] 153] 736) 268 12| Saturday 3} 26) 3 91834) 23 13| Sunday t 25| 4 27) 9 24 21 14; Monday | G| 24,5 45/10 9 is 15| Tuesday 7} 22) 7 211053) 15 16) Vednesday $} 21) 8 37/11 36) 13 17| Cnursday 10} 20) 9 25)morn | 10 18) Friday 11} 19/10 26) O 18) 3 19| Saturday 13} 19)11 17} 1 2) 6 20) Sunday 14) 18/11 55) 1 48 4 21| Monday 16] I7\aft 35) 242) 1 22| Tuesday | 17) 16) 1 6] 3 33] 8 59 23! \V ednesday . 38. 35) 1 33) a8 57 24| Thursday | 20! 1411 57| 545! 54 25) Friday | 21) 23] 2 22! 6 S2) 52 26) Satar jay 23; 13] 2 44| 7 45] — 50 27i Sunday , O34 12; 3 9 8 30) 48 28} Monday 25} 11! 3 36,9 10; 47 2+) Tuesday | 26) 1114 61947} 45 30 Wednesday \? 27/40 | 4 41/10 33) 8 43 L. ARTHUR & CO.,, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS Poultry, Potatoes, Fruit & Vegetables, 142, 144 Commercial Street, BOT ON, MASS. May 18, 1887. —_— — ES - BO ze B--8-T-O-N — FPA‘LT ARK t SGENENT. THE PALACE STEAMERS INT : a 34AL S.S. Co. Leave &.. John f land, every “ior 8.00 a m. ‘ia Eastport and Port- eduesday and Friday at Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd. Class ; 39.50, Ist class. For tickets and other information apply to G. A.SSHARP, F. W. HALES, P. EL R., P. EK. IL Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. Sept. 2. (7—end wky Uirtel BY THE Biston, Halifax and Prince Edward Island Steamship Line, The Only Direct Line Without Change. Charlottetown to Boston —_: "THE staunch and commodious steamships Car- roll and Worcester have been thoroughly refurnished and put into first-class condition wu every particular. During the season of 1887, one of these vessels + Wil ieave Pownal Street Wharf, Charlottetown, or Boston, at four o'clock, p.m., on THURSDAY Of each week, and {Boston for Charlottetown every SATURDAY, @U noon so silent Passenger Accommodation! Low 4°68 FALES :—Cabin, $6.50; Stateroom Berth. $8.50. Lowest tates for treight, which is al ways care- fully handled CARVELL BROTHERS, Agents, Chariuttetown. HARKISON LORING, Managing Owner, Lewis Wharf, Bostou. Juty Vi, 1380, | “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”— Ecxiripes. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. Auotiet Arrival of New Goods bedi one (0) eee BY LAST STEAMER TO HALIFAX, Perkins & Ster Have added more NEW GOODS to their already large stock of this Season’s Importations. of New Cloths, of New Silks, of New Dress Goods. Lot Lot of New Trimmings. Additions to all Departments and Everything Marked VERY CHEAP. Lot Lot Another Another Another Another ee () Perkins & Sterns Oct. 14—dy & wky NEW FALL G88B5 IN OW “Jess. O-— - MACDONALD. carhis SipteRecipeennte oencrmencemnn lek J. BB. Every department full of the Newest Goods. Everything New in Ladies’ Dress Goods. Everything New in Ladies’ Jackets. Everything New in Ladies Hats and Trim- mines. ‘Tremendous Stock of Ready-made Clothing. Every Inducement to Cash Buyers. Goods Bought Right. Our Prices will be found Lew. —-( J. B. MACDONALD, Ch’'town, Sept. 26, 87—dy wy—pat Very Important. oe A Montreal House made a big dump of Clothing in our store the other day. They did it because they wanted Cash, | We are going to Sell it for Cash. And the man who has the Cash will get the Biggest Bargains in Overcoats ever heard tel! of. We Blow because we know our prices cannot be looked at by our competitors. A visit to our store wil! prove it. Come Right Along. rp PRO rROW Ss SIGN OF THE GREAT BIG HAT, & QULEN STREET. Uh'town, Uct, 2U, 1887--wod & wky ISLAND. MONDA“', NOVEMBER 7. 1887. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. Tt is as pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have been speedily eared by the use of ADAMSON’s BaLsaM after all other medicines have failed. Suiferers from either recent or chreme coughs or bronchial affections, ean resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining speedy relief. Lo not delay, set it at once. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druggists, 343 47a Ave, N, Y. CHANGE OF TIME. BOSTON STEAMERS. (ARROLL and WORCESTER will leave Char lottetown every THURSDAY AFTERNOON at 4 o’clock, commencing 6th October. Oct. 3, 1887. c. © CARLTON, AUCTION EER; —AND— Commission Merchatn, SOURIS, P E. L Oct. 3, 1887. wae ’ < c adel = a tsJ > | wi USTARD Ly ~ Ct ais Pea To) eee RE GOLD MANFG:CO™ -TORONTO: GLEN STEWART MARKET GARDEN James Burke, Proprietor. GOR CELERY, 25 cents per Aozeh, delivered at customers doors in Char'ottetown. If packed or put inte cellar, 10 cents per dozen extra will be charged. All other vegetables at market prices. Address all orders to Southport P, Office, P. E. Island. Oct. 8—twks Jaw Real Estate for Sale, HAT valuable roperty in Charlottetown, known as “Kensington,” containing about x0 acres. The best and most eligible sive for Exhi- bition Grounds, clo-e by the Raiiway Track. For particulars apply to GEORGE PEAKE, Agent for owner. Ch town, Oct, 12, 12387—3aw A CARD. To all who are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, lossof manhood, Kc., I will send a recipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE, This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self-addressed envelope to the REY. JOSEPH T. INMAN, Station D, New Fork City. TAMARAG Alderman RE. Elbeck, Kingston, Ont., says: ‘*Tamarac Elixir” is the best medicine on earth for Coughs and Colds. In my own case it produced rapid and gratifying results. I caught a severe cold which it seemed impos- sible to break up, buat continually became more thoroughly seated. Finally a hacking cough set in which troubled me day and night, causing soreness of the Lungs. Hearing your ‘‘Tamarae” highly recommended, I procured a bottle. The first dose eased the cough, and one bottle completely cured me. It is a splen- did preparation, pleasant to the taste, and should be kept in every house, Septs 24, IS8T—eod & why THE PIRATE. By Sir Walter Scott. f CHAPTER XV. ( Continued. ) A torch for me—let wantons, light of heart, Tickie the useless rushes with their heels ; For 1 am proverb’d with a grandsire phrase- I'll be a candie-holder, and look on. Romeo and Juliet. | The youth, says the moralist Johnson, cares not for the boy’s hobby-horse, nor the man for the youth’s mistress ; and therefore the dis- tress of Mordaunt Mertoun, when excluded from the merry dance, may seem trifling to |many of my readers, who would, nevertheless, think they did well to be angry if deposed from their usual place in an assembly of a idifferent kind. There lacked not amase- ment, however, for those whom the dance did not suit, or who were not happy enough | to find partners to their liking. Halcro, now \completely in his element, had assembled round him an audience, to whom he was de- ‘claiming his poetry with all the enthusiasm of glorious John himself, and receiving in return the usual degree of applause allowed to minstrels who recite their own rhymes—so long at least as the author is within hearing of the criticism. Halcro’s poetry might in- deed have interested the antiquary as weil as the admirer of the Muses, for several of his pieces were translations of imitations from the Scaldic sagas, which continued to be sung by the fishermen of these islands even until a very late period ; insomuch, that when Gray’s poems first found their way to Orkney, the old people recognized at once, in the ode of the “‘ Fatal Sisters,” the Runic rhymes which had amused or terrified their infancy under the title of the ‘* Magicians,” and which the fishers of North Ronaldshaw, and other re- mote isles, used still to sing when asked for a Norse ditty. Half-listening, half-lost in his own reflec- tions, Mordaunt Mertoun stood near the door of the apartment, and in the outer ring of the little circle formed around old Halcro, while the bard chanted in a low, wild, monotonous give interest and emphasis to péafticular passages, the following imitation of a North- ern war-song : THE SONG OF HAROLD HARFAGER. The sun is rising dimly red, The wind 1s wailing low and dread, From hs cliff the eagle sallies, Leaves the wolf bis darksome valleys ; In the mist the ravens hover, Peeps the wild dog from the cover, Screaming, croaking, baying, yelling, Each in his w.ld accents telling, “Soon we feast on dead and dying, Fair-hair’d Harold's flag is flying.” Many a crest in air is streaming, Many a helmet darkly gleaming, Many an arm the axe uprears, Doom'd to hew the wood of spears. All along the crowded ranks, Horses neigh and armor clanks ; Chiefs are shouting, Clarions ringing Louder still the bard is singing, **Gather, footmen-—gather, horsemen To the field, ye valiant Norsemen ! ‘Halt ve not for food or slumber, View: ot ‘antage, count not number ; Jolly eap cs forward still ; Grow h. crop on vale or hill, Thick or scatter’d, stiff or tythe, It shall down before the scythe. Forward with your sickles bright, Reap the ha vest of the fight— Onwarn, footmen,—onward, horsemen, To the charge, ye gallant Norsemen! ‘** Fatal Choosers «f the Slaughter, O’er you hovers Odin’< daughter ; Hear the choice she spreads before ye,-- Victory, and wealth and 7 ‘ Or old Vaihalla’s roaring hail, Her ever circhng mead and ale, Where for eternity unite The joys of wassa] and of fight, Heudlong forward, fuot and horsemen, Charye and fight, and die like Norsemen!” ‘*The poor unhappy blinded heathens!” said Triptolemus, with a sigh deep enough for a groan; ‘‘ they speak of their eternal cups of ale, and I question if they kend how to man- age a croft land of grain,” ‘The cleverer fellows they, neighbor Yel- lowley,” answered the poet, ‘if they made ale without barley.” ** Barley !—alack-a-day !” replied the more accurate agriculturist, ‘‘who ever heard of barley in these parts? Bear, my dearest friend, bear is all they have, and wonderment is it tome that they ever see an awn of it. Ye scart the land with a bit thing yeca’a pleugh—ye might as well give it a ritt with the teeth of a reeding-kame. Oh, to see the sock, and the heel, and the sole-clout of a real steady Scottish pleugh, with a chield like a Sampson between the stilts, laying a weight on them would keep down a mountain; twa stately owsen, and as many broad-breasted horse in the traces, going through soil and till, and leaving a fur in the ground ‘would carry off water like a cau- seyed syver. That they have seen a sight like that, have been something to erack about in another soit, than those unhappy auld-warld stories of war and slaughter, of which the land has seen even but to mickle, for a’ your sing- ing and soughing awa in praise of such blood- thirsty doings, Master Claud Halcro. ‘*It isa heresy,” said the animated little poet, bridling and drawing himself up, at if the whcle dense of the Orcadian Archipelago rested on his single arm—‘“‘It is a heresy so much as to name one’s native country, if a man is not prepared when snd how to defend himself—ay, and to annoy another. The time has been, that if we made not good ale and aquavite, we knew well enough where to find that which was ready made t» our hand ; but now the descendants of Sea-kings, and Cham- pions, and Berserkars, are become as incapable of using their swords, as if they were so many women. Ye may praise them for a strong pull on an oar; ora sure foot on a skerry; but what else could glorious John himself say of ye, my good Hialtlanders, that any man would listen to?” (To be contin wed.) Apvice To Moturks.— Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natura! quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain; and the little cherub awakes as ‘“‘bright asa button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, regulates the bowels, and is the best known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for Mrs, Winsloe's Suothing Syrup, and take no other ktod warl? eol & wky air, varied only by the efforts of the singer to! Since Copies Two CEents. VOL. 21 NO. 142. The Vacant See. ' ARCHDEACON GILPIN’S CIRCULAR TO TRE NOVA SCOTIA SYNOD. _ Archdeacon Gilpin has issued the follow- ing circular to members of the Nova Scotia Synod : Hauirax, N. 8., Oct. 29, 1887. My Dear Breraren.—When reminding you of the adjourned meeting of our synod to the 9th day of November next, (when we are to meet in St Luke's Cathedral church at | half-past nine o'clock for business), it is right 'I should give you some information relative to our present position. Immediately upon ob- taining by telegram (Uct. 4th) a detinite refusal from the Bishop of Iowa to accept this bishop- ric, I wrote to the Archbishop of Canterbury (Oct. 4th) informing him of Dr. Perry's re- fusal, aud communicating the resolution of the synod and the two archbishops, together with the Bishop of London, should be requested to recommend a person to be clected bishop of this see. The otier members of the com mittee appointed for this purpose were not then in the city Upon their return I sent (dated Oct. 19th) certified copies of the synod’s action to the Archi bishops of Canterbury and York, and to the Bishop of Lond-n. T have not heard from the Archbishop ot Cante:bury im an- swer, and am not now ina position to lay be- fcre the Synod any facts relative io the action of those to whom the recommendation was referred. Ihave deferred this communica- tion as long as possible in hopes that I might have somewhat to bring before you. It is, however, of great importance that a quorum should be present, and therefore it is hoped that all will make an effort to attend. —_— in Brief, And to the Point. | Dyspepsia is dreadful. is misery. ture, | The human digestive apparatus is one of , the most complicated and wonderful things in existence. It is easily put out of order. Greasy food, tough food, sloppy food, bad cookery, mental worry, late hours, irregulai habits, and many other things which ought uot to be, have made the American people a nation of dyspeptics. But Green’s August Flower has done a wonderful work in reforming this sed business ,and making the American people so healthy that they can enjoy their meals and be happy. Remember: No happiness without health, But Green's August Flower brings health and happiness to the dyspeptic. Ask your drug- gist for a bottle. Seventy-five cents. Disordered liver Indigestion is a foe to good na- jdahlin Stn BruraL TreatmeNt.—The Albert N. B., Maple Lecf learns that Mrs. Elias Walton, an aged and insane woman who lives at Alma with a married son, has been starved several times, locked up in her room while her children went ito a frolic, abused and beaten in a most in- human manner. The rumor goes further and says that the son has beaten the father for try- ing to take care of his wife, and one sister has also been kicked and mavled for interfering | with her mother who has tried to commit | saicide by drowning in a lake near the dwel- ling. Dr. H. H. Coleman, on the order of the poor overseers of Alma, went to Mrs. Walton’s a few days ago, so as to be able to make out a recommendation to send her to the asylum. but he found her fastened in a room with the small children, and was unable to et in the house. She will be taken care of by the authorities. ih ece-ocilipeillliaeadiek lta He Wantep to Die.—Last Thursday morning Constable Craig found a man named George Mills in a stable noar his house, at Peterboro, Ont., hanging by the neck, dead, George evidently was determined to dic. He first, it is said, took rat poison, but that not working fast enough, he shot himself, not fatally, and then a rope put an end to his life. , The support of the 1ope was so low that his 'feet had been drawn up to allow the body to |be suspended. He made an attempt on his life sume twenty years ago by nealy cutting his throat, when he kept a blacksmith shop. Mills was about sixty years old, anda d 8:i- pated character. tc = A Prooressive Town.— The Moncton Times says :—‘* Less than 25 years ago, one hun- dred acres of the land on which the town of Westville, N. S., now stands, was offered for acow. Now it is worth from $15,000 to $20, 000. Thetown has a population of alout 3,400. The telephone and electric light are among the improvements contemplate d. ice most progressive commuuities, Westville is a conservative stronghold.” 1S ae eet tes Bap Inptans.—-A Victoria, B. C., despatch of the 3rd says; ‘‘ Metlakpatia Indians, who emigrated to Alaska under Duncan, returned a short time ago totheir old village and wrecked a large and handso ne church, almost totally destroying it. The lining was stripped from the walis. They cut the lower post, cut away the corners of the main building, and destroyed all the seats. The perpetrators got away. A ReturRNins Home.--The steamer Cumber- land yesterday andthe State of Maine on Tuesday, bruoght fifty men in ali, who have been working at various pursuits in the United States during the rummer. The men princi. polly belonged to Nova Scotia and P. E. island, and are going home to spend the win- ter.—St. John Sun, ——-—_ <i> A Nakrow Escare.—While the Latercolo- nial Railway authorities were having neces sary repairs made to the iron railway bridgs bat Rimouski on Saturday last, one of the men at work, named Despres, a resident of Levis, fell from a height of 47 feet into the river and fortunately escaped uninjared. —Moncton Times. »se—- -- Womas SurrRace.—At the annual meeting of the American Woman Sudrage Association, held in Washington, D. C., resolutions were adupted affirming the dete rmination of mem.- bers to press their claims for suffrage by etitioning the various State Legislatares for ithe right to vote in all Municipal elections. | —— i A A Parcn Work Quitt.—Miss Annie Brit ltain, of Midland, King’s County, N. B., is the possessor of a patch work quilt, which con tains 5,944 pieces of cloth. In each of the white square blocks, to which the smuler pieces are sewed,is neatly worked with neodde wad Tar tad & best bortey OF Vow aaproytets i ce NE. On ete my _sapemwetnatanen i 0 AS SR REE Te ET RATS eer SN hous slits Sia Bananas f k meets LR PE « U = i i A IP A BH EY Ul 7 a, senate, tie veracity ia A se Ns tli a ae