a — tn ett ett THE DAILY EXAMINER. CTerus:—Five DoLuarRs A YRAR. —- NEW SERIES. Che Daily Examiner is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Go. From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— ee WE, TUE Si vckc cot¥idocsccetes $2.50 IR ca coccasedviskietests cont 1,25 tL ee eeEY ee Advertising »t moderate rates. Contracts may be wade for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on application. ALMANAC FOR MARSH, 1888. MOON'S CHANGES. Last Quarter 4th day, I1h., 13.6m., p. m., W. (below horizon. ) New Moon 12th day, Oh, 86m., p. m., 8. First Quarter 20th day, 4h., 30.9., p. m., 5. E. FullMoon 27th day, 5h., 55.9m., p.m., E. D ~_/Sun ‘Sun |Mocn! High|Day’s D'DAY OF WEEK am |Sun |Mocn' High| Day's M rises/sets | rises , water} len’h 1 mh moaftrnjaftr'nh m * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”— Evxtripns. URDAY, MARCH 24,1888. ——_V CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. SAT ANOTHER LIST. {\UR LAST SPECIAL OFFERS brought hundreds of extra {J customers to our Store, and in order to still keep up the ‘supply of Bargains, we have prepared a new list, and ask you to read every item. As only a few DOLMANS, REDINGOTES and SACQUES remain, we will, in order to make a clean sweep, offer them at ridiculously low prices—so now is your chance. In FANCY ULSTERS and SACQUE CLOTHS, you can have your choice at large discounts, and in ‘T WEEDS our values are of the very best. Our DRESS GOODS trade has been very large this season, owing to the excellent value we have been giving; but our new reduced prices we expect to eause a genuine rush, Remember, our Stock is Fresh, and we are offering the most Fashionable Trimmings at Large Discounts, and you only need see them to find just what will suit you. We are to the front with a Choice Stock of HAMBURG EMBROIDERIES and INSERTIONS, CASH’S FRILLINGS tga gene ——_———— a SPENCER’S OPTHALMOSCOPIC TEST LENSES Will Detect All Visual Defects. EDGINGS of all kinds, and a.Stock of WHITE COTTONS— the best value we have ever offered. it Pays to buy your Dry Goods and Millinery at BEER BROS. Charlottetown, Feb, 10, 1888.—eod & w 1 ;Tharsday 6 4315 41) 9 58 0 4: 1058 2| Friday #2) 4211 14/1 26111 3 Saturday 40) 43)morn} 2 14 4 4 Sunday $8} 4 025/311 8 5 Monday 36; 47) 1 3¥i 440; 21 3) Tuesday | 34) 48) 2 37] 5°53! 34 7; Wednesday | 32] 50; 3 32) 715) 18 8'Thursday | 30) 51) 420) 817) 2) 9| Friday } 29) 53/5 1/9 7| 24 10 Saturday 27! 54; 5 36; 9 47} 27 11) Sunday | 253i 56; 6 G10 24). 3l 12) Monday | 22) 57) 6 32/10 56| 35 13 Tuesday | 21) 59:7 il 23} 38 14\ Wednesday (| 1916 0, 7 21/11 59) 41 13 /Thareday 17| 1) 7 44/morn! 44 16| Friday 15 2; 8 14) 0 30) 47! 17| Saturday | 3 3} 8 41; 1 2 50 IS)Sunday LB] 512 71130) 54 19 Monday | 9 6-9 43) 2 20) 57 20| Fuesday | 7} ° 7027) 3 9h20 21;\Wednesday | 5) S/11 14,413) 3 22) Thursday | 2] ef 20.5 838i °7 23) Friday 6 0} 10) 1 17) 6 53} 0 24/ Saturday 15 58| 12) 2 16) 8 ‘1).14 25)Sunday | 56) 13) 3 40} 8 54) 17 26| Monday | 5%} 14] 4 57/9 42) 20 27| Tuesday | 52} 15) 6 15/10 24) 23 2s|Wednesday | 50) 16) 7 30/11 4] 26 24' ThufSday 49) 18; 8 52/11 46; 29 30 Friday |} 43} 20:10 Qjaft 27} 33 31 Saturday 15 46! 22)11 22| 1 10/1236 “L. ARTAUR & €0., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, RECEIVERS OF Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS Pouliry, Potatoes, Fruit & Vegetables. 142, i144 Commercial Street, BOSTON, MASS. May 13, 1887. MEDICAL. Dr. Jenkins & Dr, 'S. R. Jenkins, OFFICE :- GREAT GEORGE STREET, (losses to the insured. Opposite St. Dunstan’s Cathedral. feb24—2m wky tf wky pat her j B-v0-s-T-O-N SPRING AR2 IAGEMENT. STEAMERS THE PALACE —_——— OF THE JNTERNATIGSAL S.S. CO. Leave St. Juin for Boston, via Eastport and Port land, every Tuesday and Thursday at 5.00 4 Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd class ; 30.50, lst class. For tickets and other information apply to G. A.SHARP, F. W. HALES, P. BL. y., P. &. L Steam Nay. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. Feb. 24, 1888 —s0od wk? AMES A. MORRISON. MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AND— GEORGE MUSGRAVE Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. RerereNces; Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax ; George Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown. WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS, 71 East Cugar ann 9 & 14 Minctne Lave, LONDON, ENGLAND. Represented in Canada by Morrison & UsGRAVE, Halifax et. 24, 1887— OVcROUA: 5, Heavy All-Wocl Pants, a Specialty. —_—O—_—_--- KNIT SHIRTS, ALL STYLES. Fiannel Shirts, Linders, &c. DOWN PRICKS. ALL AT AWAY GEO. E. FULL, Ch’town, Feb. 18, 1888. The Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Co, 20: Assets Ist January, 1887. . «| se .» e, anne 673,375.05 Assets in Canada, oe e -«. \Siit Sa “Sine? 70° This Company offers every advantage of the most undoubted security, liberal contracts, low rates, and prompt payment of (I> Policies issued for three years on Dwellings, Churches etc., at reduced rates. LEONARD MORRIS, Agent, Summerside. February 11, 1888—3m 2aw pd R. R. FITZGERALD, Agent, Charlottetown. ND HOME MANUFACTURES, VERSUS LM? O eb Bop: — UR New Factory is furnished with the most Modern Labor Saving Machines. We are now able to offer good, reliable home-made Furniture as cheap in price as any imperted and guarantee the buyer 25 Por Cent Better Value for his Money — 9 —-————— We invite careful comparison of Goo1s and Prices, and feel confident that our patrons ave money by trading with us. Large Stock! New Designs! Cut Prices ! A scientific and practical instrament for detect- - ing all optical defects of theeye, and deter- mining the lenses needed for their correction. As we use this instrument in adjusting Spec- tacles and Eye Glasses, wecan guarantee eatis- action to our customers in all cases of MYOPIA, or Near Sight, HYPEROPIA, or Far Sight, PRESBYOPIA, or Old Sight, and ASTIGMATISM, or Poor Sight, Caused by oval eyes, which causes some figures 7 aoe 4.4) at fifteen feet to look darker than 8 ‘ . h Si ; j S emarnyt which all oeulists agree isthe proper a Persons who have had difficulty in obtaining Spectacles to suit them are cordiall call and acquaint themselves with the merits of this instrument. This instrument measures each eye separately. invited to SPECTACLES and EYE GLASSES always in stock, of. the several grades, in frames of Steel Rubber, Nickel, Celluloid, Silver, Gold, and Spectacles and Eye Glasses other than r ar g00d8 mounted to order, Oculists * Prescriptions carefully filled, kK. W. TAYLOR, JEWELER AND OPTICIAN, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Feb, 28, 1888—2aw & wky ~ NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned sha this day entered into Co-partnership for pas par ose of carrying ona GENERAL COM- MISSION AND PRODUCE BUSINESS. The business will be carried on under the firm style of RITCHIE BROS, & CO. GEORGE W. RITCHIRK, J. ANDREW RITCHIE. 3i—mchl7 February 1, 1888. 1888. MARCH. 1888. GREAT CLEARANCE SALE BOOTS AND SHOES. I intend having the usual Clearance Sale fpr the month of March I will offer my entire stock of BOOTS AND SHOKS at 20 PER CENT. off my usual low prices. This is a genuine Clearance Sale, as all who have bought from me at the last sales know. My stock isthe largest and best assorted stock of Boots and Shoes on P. E. Island. Come right along and get first choice, as I ex- pect to have a big rush fur my goods, as I have always done in the past sales. J.C. SPRAGUE, feb29—4tw eod dy & wky Market Square. MORTGAGE SALE. To be sold by Public Auction, on FRIDAY, the Sixth day of April, A. D. 188% at 12 o'clock, noon, at the Court House in Charlottetown, in Queen’s County, under a Powerof Sale con- tained in an Indenture of Mortgage dated the Twenty-sixth day of August, 1879, and made between Angus McDonald, and Mary McDon- ald, his wife, of the one part. and Francis P. ‘Taylor, of the other part :-- ALL that tract, piece or parcel of Land situate, lying and being in Lot or Township Number Fifty-five, in King’s County, in Prince Edwar Isiand, bounded and described as follows: Com- mencing at a stake fixed in ihe shore of Boughton River; thence running south forty-five degrees west for the distance of ninety-nine chains ; thence running north forty-five degrees west for the distance of ten chains; thence running north forty-five degrees east to the shore of Boughton River, and following the course of the shore of said River tothe place of commencement, con- catoiew One Hundred Acres of Land, a little more or less, For further particulars apply to Edward J. Hodgson, Solicitor, Charlottetown. Dated this Sixth day of March, 1888, EDWARD J. HODGSON, Assignee of Mortgagee. mch7—6i law MORTGAGE SALE. Tobe sold by Public Auction, on TUESDAY, the 27th day of March, A. D. 1888, at the hour of Twelve o'clock, noon, in frontof the Court House in Charlottetown :— AU that tract, piece or parcel of Land situate, lying and being on Lot or Township Nomber Thirty-Two, in Queen’s County, Prince Edward Island, bounded and described as follows, that is to say :—All that tract, piece or parcel of Land situate, lying and being on Lot Number Thirty- Two aforesaid, bounded and described as follows: By a line commencing on the west side of the North River Road, at the south-east — of a Farm of Land in possession of Hugh McEwen, and running westerly along the southern boun- dary thereof to the south-west angle of said Hugh McEwen’s Farm; thence running south WiAi Manufacturers of House, Store, Office, Church and School Furniture. A UNDERTAKING. Ee Jan. 6, 1888. 1¢ five chains; thence east to the North River Road % | aforesaid. by a line parallel with said Hugh Mc- Ewen’s southern boundary; thence north along ' the western side of said road to the place of com- mencement, containing Thirty-Five Acres of . Land, a little more or less. e The above sale is made under and by virtue of !a powerof sale contained in an Indenture of | Mortgage bearing date the Seventeenth fag of February, A. D. 1883, and made between Penelope | McKenzie, of the one part, and Johanna Carroll, of the other part. | For further particulars apply at the Office of | McLeod, Morson & McQuarrie, Solicitors, Char- . lottetown. D. 1888. JOHANNA CARROLL, Dated this 2nd day of March, A. D. 1888. nmch2—4i law mon THE PIRATE. By Sir Walter Scott. CHAPTER XXXIX, (Continued.) His meditations were here interrupted by Jack Bunce, who, hailing him noble captain, said they were ready to sail when he pleased. ‘* When you please, Bunce; for I shall leave the command with you, and gv ashore at Stromness,” said Cleveland. ‘“‘ You shall do no such matter, by Heaven !” answered Bunce. ‘*The command with me, truly! and how the devil am I to get the crew to obey me? Why, even Dick Fletcher rides rusty on me now and then. You know well enough that, without you, we shall all be at each other’s throats in half an hour ; and, if.you desert us, what a rope’s end does it signify whether we are destroyed bythe king’s cruisers or by each other? Come, come, noble Captain, there are black-eyed girls enough in the world, but, where, will you find so tight a seaboat as the little Favor- ite here, manned as she is with a set of tear- ing lads, ’* Fit to disturb the peace of all the world, And rule it when ‘tis wildest ?” ‘‘You are a precious fool, Jack. Bunce; said Cleveland, haif angry, and, in despite of himself, half diverted by the false tones .and exaggerated gesture of the stage-struck pirate, ‘Jt may be so, noble Captain,” answered Bunce, ‘‘ and it may be that I have my com- rades in my folly. Here are you, now, going to be 4 All for Love, and the World well Lost and yet you cannot bear a harmless bounce in blank verse. Well, I can talk prose for the matter, for I have news enough to tell—and ‘strange news, too—ay, and stirring news to boot. ‘‘Well, prithee, deliver them (to speak thine own cant) like a man of this world,’ ‘*The Stromness fishers will accept nothing for their, provisions and trouble,” said Bunce —** there is a wonder for you!” *‘And for what reason, I pray? said Cleve- land; ‘‘it is the first time I have ever heard of cash being refused at a sea-port.” ‘*True—they commonly lay the charges on as thick as if they were caulking. But here is the matter. The owner of the brig yonder, the father of your fair Imoinda, stands pay- master, by way of thanks for the civility with which we treated his daughters, and that we may not meet our due, as he calls it, on these shores.” “Jt is like the frank-hearted old Udaller !” said Cleveland; “‘but is he then at Strom- ness’? I thought he was to have crossed the island for Kirk wall,”’ ‘“‘He did so purpose,” said Bunce; but more folks than King Duncan change the course of their voyage. He was no sooner ashore than he was met with by a meddling old witch of those parts, who has her finger in every, man’s pie, and by her counsel he changed his purpose of going to Kirkwall, and lies at anchor for the present in yonder white house, that you may see with your glass up the lake yonder. I am_ told the old woman clubbed also to pay for the sloop’s stores. Why she should shell out the boards [ cannot conceive an idea, except that she is said to be a witch, and may befriend us asso many devils.” ‘*But who told yon allthis?” said Cleve- land, without using his spy-glass, or seeming so much interested in the news as his comrade had expected, ‘“ Why,” replied Bunce, ‘‘I made a trip ashore this morning to the village, and had a can with an old acquaintance, who had been sent by Master Troil to look after matters, and I fished it all out of him, and more, too, than I am desirous of telling you, noble Cap- tain.” ‘“And who is your intelligencer?”’ said Cleveland ; ‘* has he got no name?” ‘‘Why, he is an old, fiddling, foppish ac- quaintance of mine called Halero, if you must know,” said Bunce. ‘‘Halero!” echoed Cleveland, his eyes sparkling with surprise—‘‘Claud Halcro ?— why he went ashore at Inganess with Minna and her sister. Whore are they? ‘Why, that is just what I did not want to tell you,” replied the contidant—*‘* yet hang me if I can help it, for I cannot balk a fine situation. That start had a fine effect. Oh, ay, and the spy-glass is turned on the House of Stennis now! Well, yonder they are, it must be confessed —indifferently well guarded, too. Some of the old witch’s people are come over. from that mountain d| ofan island—Hoy, as they call it; and the old entleman had got some fellows under arms himself, But what of all that, noble Captain ? —give you but the word and we snap up the wenches to-night—clap them under hatches— man the eapstern by daybreak—up top-sails —and sail with the morning tide.” “You sicken me with your villainy,” said Cleveland, turning away from him. ‘‘ Umph!—villainy, and sicken you,” said Bunce. ‘‘ Now, pray, what have I said but what has been done a thousand times by gen- tlemen of fortune like ourselves?” } <* Mention it not again,” said Cleveland; then took a tren along the deck, in deep medi- tation, and, coming back to “Bunce, took him by the hand, and said, ‘‘ Jack, I will see her once more.” ‘‘ With all-my heart,” said Bunce, sullenly. ‘Once more will I see her, and it may be to abjure at her feet this cursed trade, and expiate my offences——” 4 ‘At the gallows,” said Bunce, completing the sentence. ‘With all my heart!—confess and be hanged is a most reverned proverb, ‘“‘ Nay—but, dear Jack!” said Cleveland. “ Dear Jack!” answered Bunce, in the same sullentone—‘t A dear sight you have been to dear Jack. But hold your own course—I have done with caring for you for ever—I should but sicken you with my villainous counsels.” “ Now must | smoothe this silly fellow as if he were a spoiled child,” said Cleveland, speaking at Bunce, but not to him; “and yet he has sense enough, and bravery enough too; and one could think, kindness enough to know that men don’t pick their words during a gale of wind.” “Why, that’s true, Clement,” said Bunce, “and there is my hand upon it—And, now I think upon it, you shall have your last interview, for it’s out of my lime to prevent a parting scene ; and what signifies a tide—we can sail by to-morrow’s ebb as well as by this.” (To be continued.) s _—— ee reeemeengeesiontigle SINGLE Copizs Two Cents Se — VOL. 22.—NO, 102, THE NEW POLICY. WHAT IT INVOLVES. Speech of Hon. George Foster, (Hansard Report.) [ CONTINUED. | So it is not a sufficient remedy that we should adopt this heroic remedy because the pat expression is given vent to that we have no natural market, and that we need the United States for a natural market. Again, the loss of population was an argu- ment advanced by the hon. gentleman. We must revolutionize the condition of this country, we must step out on an un- known plank, we must leave the ground upon which. we have stood for years, we must burn the bridges and cut the connec- tions which are dear to us, because there has been a movement of population in this country. I do not deny that there has been a movement of population. 1 do not deny that there is always a movement of population from older countries to new countries, and from the older parts of new ‘countries to the newer parts, Thatisa world-wide fact, especially as far as the movement of population from Europe to America is concerned, and more especially in regard to the Anglo-Saxon race. My, hon, friend was mathematically precise in his proofs. He brought it down to an exact statement that one out of four of the Canadian people is, as he unfortunately said, exiled to a foreign country, and that three out of four of the foreign people who come to this country land themselves in the country which lies to the south and west of us. Will youthink of what followed that statement which was.so precise, so mathematically certain, so definite in its proportioas of one to four and three to four, in the way of argument to prove that that ‘was so! It needs simply for me to say, and the hon. gentlemen that heard the speech, or, if they did not hear it, who will read the speech, will bear me out, that the ARGUMENT WAS TOTALLY INADEQUATE to the assertion, and that the assertiou re- mains unproved. But the member for South Oxford (Sir Richard Cartwright) has more than that to do. He has to prove not only that there has been this move- ment of population, but that the heroic remedy which he proposes will stop that movement. The larger portion of the argument of last night and of to-day was totally irrelevant, and J shall not attempt to deal with it. Let ihose hon. gentlemen beat upon it until the anvil is beaten out by the hammer. It has nothing to do with the question unless you. establish, in ad- dition to that, that, if we adopt this pro- posal, that movement of population will cease. Will hon. gentlemen think fora moment of why the movement of popula- tion takes place from older countries to newer? Will my hon. friend from Prince Edward Island (Mr. Davies) think a little more on that question, a little hard think- ing would not hurt him, will he ask himself why people leave Prince Ed- ward Island for the west? He says it is not on account of the scil—granted 3 that it is not on account of the climate— ranted ; that it is not on account of the fits under which he live and the flag under which we live—granted. Why, then, do they leave? They leave mainly jfor two reasons : one, becausethey seek industrial employment which shall bring them in a larger amount for their earnings, and the other, to get on lands broader and freer so that they may be able to try their agricul- tural capacities on these larger lands. Those are the principal reasons why they leave the older portions of the country. Un- fortunately there was a long period when Canada had no Northwest, when she had no broad prairie country to which her children could go, but the United States of America had a broad prairie country which was opened vp by lines of railways and into which the surplus population and the adventurous population of the older states of America, looking for broader and freer privileges in regards to land, went and gradually settled. The people of Western New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Ilhnois went further west as the lines of communi- cation were opened up, and many of our own people went there, impelled by the same considerations and settled in the Western States, and the seed always brings the accumulation, and the nucleus which was planted there drew upon those who remain. And, sir, if Canada ever wished to keep her independent and prosperous course, it was of the first importance that she should have and open out for herself acountry of broad lands, a country of prairie freedom, 4 country of those new conditions, sir, it was eminently wise that the Northwest should be added, and wiser still that it should be opened up, and all the wiser because of the keen competition which that country and Canada had to face in comparison with the United States of America. Now, sir, we are in the position that when our people from the older Pro- vinces wish broader and freer lands, they can go out into, OUR OWN NORTHWEST, where the great body of the people who go from our older sections to-day are turning their steps, and where they will make their homes under the same fiag and_ will still remain citizens of Canada. My honorable and philosophical friend shakes his head as though it were not so. Is it not more than it was twenty years ago! Is it mot more than it was five years ago? Is it not more and more so each year? Let time have its sway, let the country open up, let the prosperous years repeat themselves, let the nucleus of population go im there trom (Continuea_on fourth page.)