eeeciemdion ee en — ad ane THE DAILY EXAMINER. DOLLARS A YEAR “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxiripnzs. Sincix Corres Two Cents N\ . ‘Ty > r rawr wm . 7 ~ wwWyp ‘'r ’ ae a NEV Lids, UTA RLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. SATURDAY, MAY 3. 1890. VOL. 25.—NO. 124 8 . “m7 oe mone ne nenenencnencnononcnonwnrnononsewn | (Conf riluted by the W.C.7'.U. of Charlotletow : =. 7 : a ; rom ES. * ea . y . OWN. Tec or ¢ 5 vi Ak BS . meee | | LETTERS TO THE EDITO) Wy way * za ” A os . . “a4 ao saan ; 5 TEMPERANCE CORE aH. 7 ee ‘tag SY 6 Some thas 2 bac acudlien E > iia j | W.C TU. Work. The Want of a License Law. j 4 ie ; — me : Sik,—In a few months the electors of : a : oe Gara re | In regard to the great work now being | 4); ; creretindes 2 nw hs A ¥d8 she st’ | | d “ ¥ oe Ay W Shit ¢ GL amu Se REET, Chi LL2LOTTETOW N, P. i Bas * }carried on by the Womens’ Christian Tem- = ) at we called upon to again sustain | ——— — | perance Union, the following facts are given h reject the Scott Act. If the electors ‘. ‘ a re ee ; lin a circular recently issued by Frances ie. tps fo sustain it, what stature iT) noHiPiare AT | nite cn 46n Non t | ; Willard, President, and Caroline Buoll, Me lie re eure tne sale of liquor? It is Luu Luan Ud ik tipii Gail Voi man ry 00 5 Secretrry * foregone conclusion that it will be de- . : " ’ JAS PATON & CO. i The society represents over two hundred naga te Packie ae — we ASTY ¥ TATE DW % < nA a thous: 23t-he ‘ , arelr- BO SOR IRSt 0 re-enact the o! MILLINERY, SMALLWARES, &c. | pee carnest-hearted women who ®f€/License Law repealed by section 168 of 3 9 | DOES CURE evoted to works of philantrophy along] « The City of Charlot i ' 'TNVITE THE PEOPLE OF CHAR- lines that build up the temperance reform. | gop ~Y),4. a sctiaie ae ~ See se ‘ 8 ne - 'Rama shenrnawe _ and Waral . \ Ee iT Tp hn NY . di ‘ Di . That their view ot this reform is very heoed ACT, he : e-enacting o the old act Ais iis Lines of Ve: s, ixoceries and Warehouse ioods ft rae 7 nee es is is proved from the fact that they have forty would do for the present, and next year, if . . t ore f , ale i a i t - ~ a . ° Db wr ied va eee Sounleien oe CONSUMPTION disiinct departments of work, under the ee eoraee augue ewre - « - , é ct ‘ at i } @ pi . any ca: WHCGLESALE ONLY. ‘Newest Fashions for the Summer. Every SSM STIG IE RRS ij general heads of Preventive, Educational, | ict us have a license law. bag 7G Addition: to our Generai Stock are being daily re ved from the aiflerent sources of rroduction, and will be 5 ofiered Wholesale only at a sniall advance. on cost. \ riottet Whi, April 19. 1890 —« | | } Po-day we are opening a lot more Dress Goods, Parasols, Sunsh ides, etc. Our new stock is now pretty well opened, ud we are showing a good assortment of Seasonable Goods at very low prices. { E:tRRIS & STEWART. Ch bh. April Zi, 1899. ' | i i } i } my 0. S DAVIES & CO wierchant Tailors. | r f een nf Gann i j Yi; E HAVE A LARGE STOCK OF WOOLENS, in Suit-' \\ ings, Overcoatings and Trouserings, suitable for Spring and Summer wear, at the lowest possible prices for Cash. | MR. McDONALD, for the past six years (previous to com-, ing with us) of Boston, where he acquired a thorough know-_ ledge of his business, has charge of our Tailoring Department. | As a Cutter of correct styles of Garments, Mr. MeDonald has no} superior in the Lower Provinces. He has given our customers: the very best satisiaction. Men who care to dress well can’ make no mistake in giving us a call. | Three Cases CHRISTY’S BEST LONDON HATS just opened MEN’S FINE NECKWEAR, DRESS SHIRTS and UNDER- WEAR; Lot of BOYS’ SUITS low to clear. | B.S. DAVIES & CO, | CAMERON BLOCK. ch 25, 1890. * ; = : - cao JUST OLFENED—New Hats, in English and American makes, in Stiff and Soft, will be sold very luw for cash. ee a a ae eee a a ee ee Oe ~-«*-* sae 68 4. C864 4 4 08 OHS 8 OOOO OOS Se 5 qi ye! Yap ; im Be Bwvits o. s ta > We have TWEED and 'WORSTED SUITS, ‘made by us during the duli season, that will be found better value than any of tie Im- ported Clothing. | ae Ge 4 iT fe ‘ oT 7 “~ See our ALL-WOOL TWEED SUITS for $12 09. gar FINE NECKWEAR a Speciaity. | y lm ‘mous purchase of fine Underclothing— | Department full of Novelties and Bargains. | The Latest Novelties in Manties, Jackets, | Millinery, Black Silks. Dress Fabrics, Rib- | bons, Laces, Gloves, ctc.; also, Special ‘Bargains in Carpets, Curtains, Window | Blinds, Curtain Poles, ete. i j ' PRINT DEPARTMENT. —A_ grand | Prints. Zephyrs, Sateens, Musling, etc. | effect. a Special Passenger Train will leave Char- LADIES’ UNDERCLOTHING.—Enor- | Chemises, Night Dresses, Knickers, etc. i train will rin through to Tignish, and return on JAMES PATON & CO. | | | | DRESS DEPARTMENT.—London pur- | chases are now to hand, and a magnificent! lot they are. Immense purchases of double width Black All-Wool Nun’s Veiling, 42 inches wide, for 27 cents per yard; also, a’! big lot of single width All-Wool Beiges, | only 13 cents per yard. | ROBES! ROBES !—We cannot help’ feeling just a little conceited about our ¢ol-/ lection of Robes. Our buyer has spared no’ pains to procure everything stylish, and the! result is immensely gratifying. Borders, | Vigoreux Beiges, Embroidered, ete. i JAMES PATON & CO. } CARPETS.-—We are now showing the full range of new season's Carpets, in Wil- ,tovs, Velvets, Brussels, Tapestry, Scotch per cent. and Hemps. We have the largest variety, the best designs, and lowest prices. Before buying a Carpet, come and see our stock. | We don’t press anyone to buy. Come and compare with what you see in other stores. | MEN AND BOYS’ CLOTHING.—A_ big stock to select from. Prices as low as any in town, : PATON &CO’S. MOURNING GOODS. —This is one of our best Departments. Our buyer takes special care in selecting the most suitable goods for Mourning Dresses. We are offering good bargains in Black Silk Warp Henriettas. WATERPROOF CRAPE.—This Crape is made wholly of Silk, and may be exposed to rain, and after drying gradually does not spot. For all kinds of Dry Goods, --TRY— JAMES PATON & (0, Market Square. ps or ihe JAMES PATON & 60. | JNOTP IG ee. selection in the latest styles of English | ,merside on arrival of Steamer from Point dn to accommodate 13 horses. i OFFICE :—Market House (head of stairs). i | | | | tow Apt nena a 9 ky in its First Stages. Palatable as Milk. Be sure you get the genuine in: Salmon color wrapper; sold by all Druggisis, at 50c. and $1.0. SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville. FREER FEELERS CFP RF CLUS RACAL CM CLR CM CL RMA =. ~ + ee PE ISLAND RAILWAY. OMMENCING FRIDAY, 25th inst., and con‘ tinuing until Summer Time ‘Table takes lottetown at 500 a.m. daily (Sundays excepted) for Summerside, connecting there with Steamer for Point du Chene; returning, will leave Sum- inst., this Chene. Commencing Tuesday, 29th r Tuesdays and Fridays. J. UNSWORTH, Superintendent. Railway Office, Ch’town, April 24, 1890. ap2!—m w ftl May 20 wky prs 2i RARE CHANGE, “Terrace House” For Sale, BY AUCTION. AM instructed by Mrs. Catherine McKenra to sell by Auction, on the Premises, cor- ner of Powna! and King Streets, On Saturday, 3rd day of May, AT 12 O'CLOCK, NOON, That valuable property known as the ‘“‘ TER. RACE HOUSE,” comprising a lot of land fronting 40 feet on Pownal Street and 84 feet on King Street, with a large Three-story Brick Building, 32x40, and Kitchen, 20x30, finished tiroughout, with Parlor, Sitting Room, Dinin Rovm, Store, Kitchen, and 17 Bedrooms—al arg3, cheerful, airy rooms. A:so—A Three-story Warehouse and Stable, witt. frost-proof Cellar, 30x20 feet, Stted up TERMS—25 per cent. cash, to be paid at sale; balance payable in equal instalments in one, two and three years, with interest at 6 R. BEAIRSTO, ap26 Auctioneer, Plans and Specifications of Buildings PREPARED BY CHAPPELL & PHILLIPS, ARCHITECTS mch25—6w eod & wky—pd me cone | L py | | | | | Te ' ee ; | i | ' —— | “RUE at == oy i wi pitts hes " eelae a . ay 5 May SEED GaAIN, AC. HITE RUSSIAN, Red and White Fife Wheat, Two and Four-rowed Barley, Black and Norway Oats, Vetches, imothy and all sorts Clover Seeds. Also, Flour, Cornmeal, Crushed Cats and Barley, etc. F. L. MACNOUIZ, Evangelistic, Social, Legal, and the De- partment of Organization. Through their influence scientific temperance instruction has been secared by law in ali the territor- ies, in all schools supported in whole or in part from the United States Treasury, viz., West Point, Annapolis, the Indian schools, army post schools, ete, and in twenty- seven States, the same laws are now in operation. They have special lines of work for soldiers, sailors, miners, aud all classes who are in circumstances of special tempta- tion so far as pure and wholesome habits life are concerned. They have a network of juvenile societies extending from Tampa Bay to Puget Sound. They have a system- atic course for mothers, and mothers’ meetings are a feature of the local auxil- iaries. In these heredity and hygiene are subjects especially considered. They have a publishing house in Chicago, which sends out about sixty mulions of pages annually, and prints the Union Signal, which has sixty thousand subscribers, and is the chief paper ever edited and published by women. Their gospel work has permeated the nation, and was never more earnestly pur- sued than now. In the social realm they seek especially to enlist the influence of young women, and to hold up the standard of total abstinence for others’ sake. The Department of the White Cross and the White Shield, which is one of the largest, has called especial attention to the securing of laws for the psotection of women, and to the equalizing of the standard of an upright life, making it the same for men that it has always been for women. This society has about ten thousand local auxiliaries, and representatives from every State and Ter- ritory will be in attendance at the coming convention. Its mottv, No sectarianism in religion, no sectarianism in politics, no sex in citizenship, but each and all of us for God and Home and Native Laud. Temperance Education. —_— BY JULIA COLMAN. The time is past for supposing that the best work to be dune for the young is to save them as individuals from becoming drankards. In every department of tem- perance work, the cry is for workers ! more workers ! ! better workers!!! At the polls we want nen who shall vote for temperance intelligently and effectively. In legislative halls we want men who can frame laws that will held water, and not whiskey. As ex- ecutive officers, we want men who will carry vut such jaws honestly, and to good pur- pose. And it is better in every way to educate these men while boys, than it is after they have been elected to place and power by whiskey votes, We also want ministers whose temperance utterances shall have no uncertain sound; men who can understand and explain the difference be- tween fermented and unfermented wines, and who will refuse to place the latter upon the Lord’s table ; men who shall not only welcome temperance workers, but be tem- perance workers, and manage to enlist their congregations on the Lord’s side in this matter. We want doctors who, instead of giving a _ prestige to alcholic drinks by recommending them as medicines, shall make it their business to help the Temperance work by doing their best to discredit and discard alcoholic drinks in every shape, and espe-i- ally by exposing their decitfulne s ani warning the people of their disastrous af- fects. We want women everywhere for matrons of our homes who shall dispense with the social use of wine; girls who shall demand in their suitcrs the same high moral-standard to which they themselves subscribe; boys who care more for a clear head, a calm eye, a steady hand, a pure life, and aciean record than they do for wild oats, iow-bred sneers and driaking customs. We want men and women every. where, intelligent, brave and earnest, to work wisely in all sorts of ways for Tem- perance. And how can we have them un- less we educate them? When we see how weak and faithless and indifferent are many of the mer and women to whom we appeal for help, and from whom we expect- ed better things, our very hearts should be stirred within us to go to work, and out of the materia] that God has put into our hands, make men and women capable of better things ! Whom shall be teach / Everybody, but especially the very best and the most earnest minds you can ger. the multiiude, if the brightand the trif ing, the stupid and the lazy, fall away. Your thorough teaching may be a sifting process, If so. take good care of the wher. that remains. Remember, your great air is to educate workers, and if yon educate but few, see that you do it thorough !y. if the Saifere:s from Consumptien, Serofula and General Dability will try Seote's kmulsion of Coed Liver Oi}, with Hypophes phites, they will find immediate relief and permament benefit. Dr. H. V. Mott, Bren - wood, Cal., writes: “I have used Scott: Eimuision with great advantagé in cascs «t Pathisis, Scrofuia and Wasting Wisesses It ig very pslatable.” Sold by Druggists, ct 50 c. and $1.00. > i wait there 1 hour . *= : ' Do not be discouraged if you cannot holl | ' dyspepsia hh Everyone is delighted with the children’s clothing st J. B. Macdogald ~ Niglitex, Crrizen. The Title of ** Honorable.” Siz,—It is all very well to be deferential, but it must strike most people that in the matter of the pretext ‘* Hon.” the business is being quite uverdone at present. I notice that even you, Mr, Editor, apply the term indiscriminately to the ** good bodies” that compose the Legislative Council, some of whom, at least, could not be so properly addressed in any other connection. At the time of Confederation the question of title came up and was definitely decided by the following letter, based upon an Order-in- Council from the late Duke of Backingham and Chandos, then Secretary of State, ad- dressed to the Governor-General :— *‘In consequence of the Confederation of the British Provinces some revision of the former usage there about titles has become necessary, and I have the honor to inform you that Hes Majesty has been pleased to ap- prove of the adoption of the following regula- tions : 1. The Governor-General of Canada to be sty’ed ‘* His Excellency.” 2. The Lieutenant-Governor of the Pro- Vinves to be styled ** His Honor.” 3. The Privy Councillors of Canada to be styled ** Honorable,” and for life. 4. Senators of Canada are to be styled ** Honorable,” buat only during office, and the title not tou be continued afterwards, 5. Executive Councillors of the Provinces to be styled ** Honorable,” but only when in office, and the title not to be continued after- wards 6. Legislative Councillors in the Provinces not in future to have that title, but gentlemen who were Legislative Councillors at the time of the Union (ist July, i867) to retain their title of ‘* Honorable” for life. 7. The President of the Legislative Council in the Provinces to be styled ** Honorable ” during office. 8. Lhe Speaker of the House of Assembly iu the Provinces to be styled ** Honorable” during office. There are no members of the Legislative Council, as such, entitled to the title of ‘* Honorable,” except Mr. Thomas Dodd, (President), and such other members as were elected before we entered Confedera- tion (ist July, 1873) and therefore it is a manifest abuse of the term to be applyiug it to Messrs. Scrimgeour, Murphy, McNutt, Kickham, Rogers, or any other members of the Chamber that I know of. Dunpas, The Shortest Route. Sin,—In your issue of May Ist, I notice a letter from Mr. Alex. Strang, Cape Tray- erse, in which he says that *‘under present arrangements, passengers could leave Char- lottetown, via the Capes route, connect at Painsec Junction with the C. P. R. train from Halifax, and arrive in Montreal twenty-four hours shead of passengers go- ing by Summerside, and that is easily proven;” aad further states: **I would ask ‘Responder.t’ where the passenger going by Summedside would be when the C. P. Rt. train passea Painsec Junction?’ The pas- senger by the Summerside route would be riding on the C. P. R. train, on his way to Montreal, several! hours ahead of the pas- senger via the Capes. The exact distance from Charlottetown to Painsec Junction is 95 miles, made up as follows : Charlottetown to Summerside ....... 49 miles “ummerside to Point du Chene . oo miles Point du Chene to Pansec Junction. .11 miles or 26 miles less than via the Capes. Under the existing arrangements, passen- gers by the Summerside ruute reach Paio- sec Junction at 1'.30 a. m., ani have to and 35 minuves for the U. P. R. train, which is not due at Paingec until 1.05. As Mr. Strang puts it, it is easily seen which is the quickest route. ALL Buaton. Dyspeptics Will Rejoice. (L’rom Weekly Telegraph The attention of onr readers is called to the advertisement of *‘Dyspepticure,” which ap- pears for the first time ic this p»per to-day. Dyspepticure has been a houshold remedy in St. John for a number of years, and without any sort of alvertising has become familiarly known throughout the maritime provinces; that itis so well known is due to its wouder- ful success iu curiay indigestion ana chroric Mr Short has given close attention to every detail of arrangeme it in placing ‘*Dyspepticure, the specific for 4. pepsia,” properly before the pablic. It cen aow be obtained by and general lealers from the who'esale deny boases of Ss, Joho, Halifax and Montreal ihe thorou: h manner in which itis being advertised has alread; (in three weeks time) resalted in a large demand from ali sectious of the Mayvi- time Provinces The pamphiet on Dyspepti- sure contains in its 12 pages the resulis in the fewest possible words of taany yeara’ carej:l investigation and the: zrouie dyspeptic ca.- not do batter than send for one of these littie books, which explains this positively new rational and « treatment of the wont imiserabie of modern diseases, Druggises and general dealersin P. KE. Js- land can now obtain Dyspepticure from T. 1h. Barker & Sous and 8. McDiarmid, St. Joha, and Brown & Webb and Simson Bros. & Co,, druggists welco: i it sail i tae 2 Boe & niet ee I ee a en a ae ee ee ee an ee 5S SME Se SE en eer ag sais tek