eee THE DAILY EXAMINER. lerws :-—Frve DouLars A YEAR. NEW SERLES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Publie, may speak free.”—Evxiripzs. ISLAND. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1889. Srvete Corres Two Cents a VOL. 25.—NO. 95. Che Darlp Examiner ‘The naceteli Publishing Co., OFFICE, ed Every Evening by i FROM THEIR “LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQuAk | i Charlottetown, P. E. Island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : ie es ok og denne ee teseseccces $2 50 | Tie MEGA . 64 sis 46 40 00 L 25) One Month..... inet pital aaa SS sa Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar-| : terly, half-yearly o1 yearly advertisements o1 application. —~TO THE— Three Families in P. E. Island —~WHO SEND— WRAPPERS Representing the Greatest Value in Woodill’s German Baking Powder, * QNTIL SEPTEMBER 3st. JaMzEs A. MORRISON GEORGE MUBSGRAY! MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AND— Commission Werchants, HALIFAX tieragemmmete Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Kererzxces: Thomas lyse, Esq., Casuicr C, Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax ; D. ( Chalmers, Manager Sank of Nova Scots Charlottetown. a “Army and Navy Depot.” JAS. SCOTT & C0., HALIFAX. A Full Stock of Wines and Liquors JUST RECEIVED. 1 = (\ Cases ROYAL BLEND, : 75 cases ISLAY BLEND & GAELIC, 100 Cases OLD RYE, 50 *“ CHAMPAGNE, choice brands, 150 * CLARET, = HOCK and MOSELLE, 25 * LIQUEURS—Cherry Brandy, Noyau, Curaco, Maraschino, Bevedictine, 200 * FIN#® rok and SHERRY, 160 6 *©=©6 HOLLAND GIN and OLD TOM, 360 “ HENNESSY’S BRANDY, *, ** vr ana ¥,.0., 190 ~** BASS’S ALE, 26 “* BURKE’S STOUT, 100 «** APOLLINARIS WATER, wo * BELFAST GINGER ALP, %m “ FINE OLD RUM, KINAHAN’S L. L. WHISKEY, 5 Cf —And a Fuil Stock of— CHOICE GROCERIES ap2+ LR —==1889<>— BOSTON DIRECT. Boston, Halifax and P. E, Island Steamship Line. Only Direct Line. Without Change. CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON. The Staunch aud Commodious Steamships “Carroll” and “Worcester,” having been thoroughly refurnished and put into uae +488 COndition in every respect, wili, during the = . : with the of 189, run as follows, commeacing “ss CARROLL,” From Charleticiow', Vhursday, | Pih May. ai G p. m. _Oue of the °@ Vessels will leave Boston for Chaciotigiown 2VEKY Wu BSUAY, at Noon and Charlottetown tor Bawa EVEKY THURS- DAY. at mix uci wa, p.m at Passewser accommodatioa. ¥ARES—Piret-clnas Pacnage Berth in we'l-| fornished Cabin Staceroon "ies t aa a » $6.50. Staceroom erih, Lowest Rates for Freicht, carefully handled. CARVELL BROS.. Agents, Low ye Ge which is alweys Harriso Charlottetown. Kb o N LORING, Treasurer, sd Hoston, | | i | | | snacsipieipeeilt) Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks, New New New New | New New | | HAR! € Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks, , 6 ‘ Y <1 ™ ai . Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks. Men's Mien’s Rubber Coats, Mien’s | Ready-Viade | Ready-Viade ¢ Ready-Made Rubber ©oats, Rubber Ceaits. Carpets, Carpets, Carpets. Fiannels, Fiannels, Flannelts. —i—— (9) ——— iS & STEWAI augli5—eodéwkly. iF. Best of All: Cough medicines, Ayer’s Cherry Pec- toral is in greater demand than ever. | Mo preparation for Throat an] Lung coubles is so prompt in its effects, so rreeable to the taste, and so widely 1own, as this. Jt is the family medi- | ie in thousands of households, “*T have suffered for years from a hbfonchial trouble that, whenever i take epld or am exposed to inclement weath- er, shows itself by a very annoying tickling sensation in the throat and by diifeuity in breathing. I have tried a great many remedies, but none does so well as Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral which always gives prompt relief in returns of my old compiaint.” — Ernest A. Hepler, Inspector of Public Roads, Parish Ter- re Bonne, La. ° “‘T consider Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral a mmost important remedy For Home Use. i have tested its curative power,in my i family, many times daring the past thirty years, and have never known it to fail. It will relieve the most serious affections of the throat and lungs, whether in children or adults,’”? — Mrs. E. G. Edgerly, Council Blufis, Iowa. “Twenty years ago I was troubled with a disease of the lungs. Doctors afforded me no relief and considered my case hopeless. I then began to use Avyer’s Cherry Pectoral, and, before I had finished one bottle, found relief. [ continued to take this medicine until a cure was effected, I believe that Ayer’s Chetry Pectoral saved my lile.”— | Samuel Griggs, Waukegan, IIL. ' “ Six years ago I contracted a severe i cok, which settled on my lungs and | soon-developed all the alarming symp- toms of Consumption. I had a cough, j night sweats, bleeding of the lungs, | pains in chest and sides, and was so wostrated as to be confined to my bed most of the time. After trying various prescriptions, without benefit, my physician finally determined to give me Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. I took it, and the effect was magical. I seemed to rally from the first dose of this | medicine, and, after using only three | ottles, am as well and sound as ever.” — Rodney Johnson, Springfield, DL Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. fold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5. | | McLEOD & MchEN2ZIB, Star Hlave entered upon their Sem-Awaual Season of giving Reve Bargains. ee = ——— Merchant ‘'Failors, ee 9D ee jWE PURPOSE TO CLEAN OUT, IF POSSIBLE, THE BALANCE OF OUR SPRING AND SUNIMER WEAR, At prices we have not hitherto offered, in order to make room for our FALL IMPORTATIONS, Thie step was unavoidable, and as a consequence you may anticipate rare plums. | HOURS—FROM SEVEN TO SIX. McLE?D & McKENZIE. Charlottetown, July 31, 1889. Here and There. | Tue Philadelphia Hnquirer recently pub- lished the following highly improbable story aja special telegram from Saa Fran- cisco: | In atew weeks possibly the country may hear accounts of terrible privation and per- /haps death among a party of four hundred miners. Th are locked, up in the black | wilderness aska and believed to be with- ‘out food. Yesterday a woman received from her son a letter written nearly a year ago. It | was brief and ran: ‘I’malive, dear mother, | but am buried under snow and ice far up on the Yukon river.” The party originally left Jumeau with the purpose of going beyond that ‘post. The highest point of navigation is Ju- 'meau, which is a trading point at which re- gular San Francisco packets touch. After crossing ranges of mountains and many rapids ithe valley of the Yukon isreached. Within | this valley there is a village composed of 300 usefulness over the broad fields contem- plated by its founder. Joa Hopkins gave to this University almost $4,000,000 and an income amounting almo.t to hundreds of thousands. He had eared his money honestly, and he bestowed it nobly. Out of all there can be now found is a pile of school buildings, a breadth of farm land that is worth no more than when he died, aud a pile of worthless paver representing shares in « bankrupt railroed. The muni- ficent endowment and princely income have melted away under the ha: 1 of a railroad wrecker. The trustees fina ly raised $100,- 000 which wiil carry the ‘asiitution over the years 1890-91. The so e and only ho of continuing it is the rehabiltation of t Baltimore and Ohio stock. The Hon. 8. 8S. Cox, member of Congress for New York whose recent death at the age of sixty-seven was recorded in THE ;men who have already passed one winter iN-BX AMINER a few days ago, was one of the ithe terrivle solitude. They have sent. word |\that unless they could realize the hope of | rescue during the approaching month all ; would be lost, They have already spent one jwinter in the cheerless holes dug in the ‘ground. They were provisioned for a year. ‘Some ot the men may have started for Point Be rrow, others may have floated down the | Yukon and on the way become frozen, or th {may have taken the trip over the back row j by way of Juneau. All who have gone no ito the Arctic will surely be lost, while those ‘who float down the Yukon may be saved by ‘the steamer St. Paul, which has gone to their rescue,” The Ottawa correspondent of the Grit -papers must be spending his holidays in San Francisco. The story savors very much jof him. A writer on the temperance question propounds the novel theory that the ten- dency to strong drink is attributable to a lack of proper nutriment, and he proposes to overcome the evil, first, by repealing all laws that tend to enhance the market prices of food ; second by encouraging the adoption of improved processes and methods in agriculture ; third, by enacting an eight hour labor law; fourth, by insisting upon one day’s rest in seven ; fifth, by establish- ing cheap houSes so as to make living (Jess expensive. If the writer ever succeeds in bringing about the Utopian condition of society at which he aims he will in all probability affect a large reduction in the consumption of intoxicants. Poverty, NORWOOD FARM . BY AUCTION. to sell by Auction, omthe premises, On Thursday, Oct. 3rd, AT 10 O'CLOCK, A. M., The Farm Property of the late George Wright, | situated on the St. Petex’s Road, and within | 24 miles of the city. This Farm comprises 144 acres cf land, nearly ail clear, well watered, and ina high state of cultivation. The Dwelling House and Farm Buildings, whici are all in good condition, will be offered with 60 acres separately or with all the land, as may be desirable. GEO. M. HARRIS, sept7—tl sle Auctioneer. House & Lot AT GAYTOWNR. i — eo a> THE PREMISES, Wednesday, the ic iSth September, at 12.50 o'clock, land imimediateiy following the sale of Mr. | Robert W hite’s property at Spring Park, we 'wlll sell by AUCTION, by instructions from i | | | | | Of For Thirty GREAT SLAUGHT o 10 a EP ry ya Gi Boots and S.20es. me 1) re ne E will offer the balance of our Spring and Summer Stock &, y & of $100. i SALE \ A New ata BIG SACRIFICH gains in the City guaranteed. FOR CASH. The Biggest Bar- J. ©. SPRAGUE. Charlottetown, Aug. 19, 1889-—tu fri wky RR A COO EE LOS) NE EOE, EEE Furn ee ee cure. Charlottetown, WE ARE SHOWING New Solid Gak Bedroom Sets. [x] SOME VERY FINE ——{x}—_—— Blegant Parlor Tables and Wall Stands, DHSIGNS. LATESDL [x] CALI AND SHH US. MARK WRIGHT & CO. t 26, 1859, . i Mr. M. P. Hogan, his lot facing 50 feet on | Young Street, and running back 89 feet, with | anew double tenement house thereon. | Free from city taxes. Yielding annual rent- A good paying investment. i Terms at sale. | Bie it. NORTON & coO., i Aug. 28, eod Auctioneers. ON CONSIGNMENT, And For Sale at a Bargain. a0) FOR SALE BY E, H. NORTON & CO., In Lots to Suit Purchasers : BARRELS FLOUR, slightly damaged. For sale by E. H. NORTON & CO. 100 barrels Flour, warranted equal to the best ; price per barrel, $5.25. § octaves Vinegar, 1 cargo Roofing Gravel, 15 bars Copper, 14 in. square, 5 large Piate Glass Mirrors, owner is leaving the Is!and. 10 barreis Pure Cod Oil (no mixture). Some choice Building Lots in different parts of the city. Apples and other goods arriving daily. E, H. NORTON & CO., septé6—dy eod & why Auctioneers, TENDERS. | “EALED TENDERS will be received by he wadersigued until the 17th insi., at nocn, For the Building of a Warehouse on Kent Street, as per plan and specification to be seem at the oflice ot Chappell & Phillips. ; The lowest or any tender not necessarily ted. ees W. B, ROBEBLSON. septs—sod i | } | AM instructed by Geerge J. Wright, Esq., i hunger, overwork, mental worry and kin- dred things are all strong disposing causes to the indulgence in drink, and the re- moval of the causes must have a marked result in lessening the effect. It is to be feared, however, that the task is one of an impossible character. In. affirming that the countries where intemperance most flourishes are those where the people live in a state of semi-starvation ; that there is little intemperance near the tropics, and that it increases as one proceeds north, the writer would seem to be a little astray in his facts, Thistheory would require the Laplander to be a frightful example of drunkenness, as compared with the denizen of the south, whereas the fact is, perhaps, it is only due to a lack of opportunity that he is not. A very lively rate war is being waged be- tween two rival matrimonial agencies in Jeffersonville, Ind., and some slashing cuts have already been made in the line of fees. The matrimonial agent is a growth belong- ing exclusively to Jeffersonville. His ‘duties are to watch the ferryboats, and when he seos a couple who look like elopers in search of matrimony, he introduces him- self and agrees for a specified sum to fur- nish everything required for a wedding. |The business is peculiar, but it pays. The ‘oldest and best-known agency is under the jmanagement of a man named John Howse, ‘and another very active concern is operated ‘by one William Kratz, Until recently these men were good friends, and respected each other’s rights in the business; but it is not so now, and every day marriages get cheap- er. By a special arrangement with the magistrates, the figures have been cut down from $7.50 to $3 for a compiete matrimon- ial outfit, license, ceremony and all, includ ing the services ot a professional swearer to make oath to the lady’s age. About a week ago Kratz contracted to pilot a coun- try coup'e over and attend to their case for i$5. On the boat Howse offered to do the job for $4, and then the row began. The rival agents cut the rate $1 at a time, until Kratz offered to do the work for nothing. ae Quite a sensatin has been caused at younger brother uf the Duke of Durham, soon avowed his noble origin, stating that owing to family troubles he was making a tour of the world. lavishly. gentlemen to the Dalrymples and other> He speedily got into the A week ago he left for the west, announcing his de- However, he stopped: | wealthy families | best society and lived high. parture for Japan. lat Jamestown and on Friday night return- | ed. As he was about to board the west | {bound train the following morning he was jarrested for the forgery of 1,500 pounds. | His real name is Oswald Riddeil. Of the |money he had barely forty pounds. He is. 23 years oid, and it js said his father is in | ‘an Eng!ish prison for forgery. | Weare sorry to learn froma recent Bal- timore despatch that the John Hopkins University, the pride of the city and State, is in want and distress. From the proud position which a magnificent endowment anda princely income gave it, the Univer- sity bas fallen to a place where the salaries of its teachers must be cut and its trustees must pass the hat and beg for money, hop- ing against hope that no further cuts may necessary, hopeless of widening ita best known Democratic members in the Union. Mr. Cox has been a representative ever since 1859, and was noted for his brilliant wit and ready speech. He was minister to Turkey during the first part of Oleveland’s administraticn, but i the post to return to New York and suc- cessfully contest the niath New York district for the forty-ninth Vongress. The early part of his political career was spent in Ohio, his native state, whence he went to New York after the rebellion. He wrote many books, was a prolific writer to the newspapers, was a very able lawyer and became remarkable in Congress for his wonderful memory for figures and statistics. He frequently quoted pages of statistics offhand for the benefit of some opponent who doubied the accu of Mr. Cox's statements. While in Turkey he learned Arabic and gonvulsed and astonished the house on his return by prefacing his first epeech with a Turkish poem in that Janguage. They have a highly original if not very praiseworthy method of removing political enemies *‘ away down in Virginia.” A de- spatch says the investigations by the Grand Jury in Fayette County have brought to light a fiendish plot. About a month ago, a white man named West was waylaid and butchered by Bill Turner, a worthless negro. West was a prominent citizen and a committee of Regulators lynched Turner. Curiosity about the mvtive for West’s mur- der was aroused, and rumors of a statement Turner had made became so nuinerous that the Grand Jury took cognizance of them and began an investigation. One of the lynchers, John A. West, cousin of the mur- dered man, was summoned, and breaking down confessed that Chas. West was poli- tically obnoxious to a number of persons of Fayette County, who conspired together to get Turner to kill him, and then lynch- ed Turner to remove all evidence. The in- vestigation is still in progress, and those concerned in the plot are known and will be indicted. Some of them have fled. The quantity of beepand ale consumed in Europe in the course of aycar foots up to the very respectable total of 4,580,000,000 gallons. Germany alone consumes 1,128,- 000,000 galions and Austro-Hungary 3654,- 000,000 gallons. In Germany the beer- drinking accomplishments of the Bavarians distance easily those of any of the rest of the inhabitants of that bee: drinking coun- try. The consumption in that happy kingdom is 654 gallons per. anum for every man, woman and child in it. The Bavarian beer, as every one knows, is uncommonly good and uncommonly cheap. A litre of it, about a gGuart, costs only some four cents, anda Bavarian of very ordinary acquirements has no difficulty m disposing of four quarts at a sitting. Children berely able to toddie learn to drink beer, and tak- ing these facts into consider stion it is not surprising that the consump.ion shou!d be 80 large. To many of the »eople beer is both meat and drink. The New York Commercial Bulletin has discovered that Conada is cutting out the United States in the cheese manufacturing and exporting business, aui cautions Am- erican makers that they must bestir them- selves if they wish to preserve their market, The Canadian makers, according to the Bulletin, have studied the tastes of the market with greater intelligence than makers in the United States, and produce an article of superior quality. But not only this. They have invaded the chief cheese markets of the States, and have been able Fargo, North Dakota, by the recent arrest of a young man who for npwards of two weeks or more has been supposed to be a Qu his arrival there the young man re- gistered as Robert Morris, of London, but His income, he stated to ve $50,000 a year, and he spent money He first. appeared at Mayville 1 Emerson Piano, only in use six months and exhibited letters of introduction from and cost $350, will be sold at a bargain, as the, Cornelius Vanderbilt and other eastern! to give such advantages in the shape of lower rates of transport that large quanti- ties of cheese that were formerly shipped through New York now find their way to Europe via Montreal. The reigning families of the old world will eoon be so closely kin to one another ithat they will constitute one great family. |The marriage of Princess Sophie, sister of {Emperor William of Germany, to the | Crown Prince of Greece, will join by blood ‘the families of Russia, Denmark, Great ‘Britain, Germany and Greece, a regular chain passing from northeastern Euro westward and back again to the east. It- \aly, Austria, ard Spain are che only prin- cipal monarchies not yet in this blood alliance. the bar to union with these. But else- where it will soon be that royalty cannot fire a gun without shooting in the direction of a grandmother, a cousin or an uncle. The payment by an English syndicate of $5,000,000 for the privilege of manufactur- ing and seiiing a certain wel: known patent taedicine is one of the latest investments of English capital on this side cf the Atlantic. Many of the leading breweries have passed iato the haads of Englishmen; they now own large interests in the most important mines and railways,they are negotiating for the purchase of some of the leading dry goods houses, they own vast tracts of farm- ing country, and they are seemingly dis- proel ©: bay we vorreres ta) See Difference of religion constitutes . i ny 7 a . ’ em verre a) * ear acc