THE DAILY Tenms:—Five DoLuars A YRAR. NEW SERIES. “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak ° — oe CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. TUESDA a Sg fe OE eee oO *, SEPTEMBER 30, 1890. free.” —Evriripzs. EXAMINER. VOL. 26.—NO. 105 NEW FALL GOODS! LARGE QUANTITIES NEW FALL GUUDS ———_—_A T-—__ —- J. B. MACDONALD’'S. Lots of Men's Fall Clothing, Hats, etc., cesses aio coecneninenici (x4, 5, Mauls, Shaws, Vales, Si a —{x)--—— —- Cheapest Prices. Charlottetown, Sept. 4, 1890--eod & wky << Ladies’ Jackets & Clo i) IDO selling at _— als, We are now showing the Largest Range of above Goods ever carried by us—the Newest and Most Fashionable in the Market. Children’s Cloaks! Children’s Cloaks! A Large Assortment of very pretty garments. (x) STANLEY BROTHERS, BROWN’S BLOCE. Charlottetown, September 23, 1890. % a 4 4 , " ~~. x ost t. lis ——— —_—_ _A FINE STOCK OF-— T RARE OPPORTUNITY. :XHIBITION | HAT desirable block of ground situate and being in the front and centre of ‘REVERE HOUSE” property, and com- prising nearly one acre of land, and a most | magnificent site for a Railway Passenger Station or first-class Hotel, is now offered for a sale by tender. Tenders will be received by the Lady Account Books of very (v0)——- Description Made to Order, BOOKBINDING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. ( \ Ee WORK DONE WHEN PROM x) ISED. Parties attending the Exhibition will do well to call on us while in Town. TAYLOR & GILLESPIE, Sign of the Big Book, J. D. McLeod's Corner, Queen Street. Charlottetown, Sept. 29, 1890. wo epee es oe renee ome rae. - we, oe H2s now added to his already large stock ( ~~ WATCHES of the best manufacture, a 209d sold are guaranteed. NORTH SIDE y 2aw wky li. WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, a very fine assortment of GOLD and SILVER nd the newest patterns in JEWELERY. All Store closes every evening (except Saturday) at 6 o'clock, MARKET SQUARE, CWTOWN. : Superioress of the City Hospital for the pur- ! chase of the whole block only up till the Sist ‘of December, 1890, reserving the right to accept or reject any tender. Farther information respecting buonds and conditions can be hid en application to Lady Superioress at the City Hospital, or to M. P. HOGAN, Agent, City of Charlottetown. aug7—dy tf wky her ‘PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION. ‘Yue following additional Prizes will be given in Class 29, ‘Plants and Flowers” : Ist. ind Sec. 29—Collection Stocks, 4 colors...... $0.75 25¢ “ 30— vi Salpiglossis, 4 colors. 0,75 25c * 3i— 7 0.75 25¢ “ 32— “ od ss— “oe ory $4— «ft d 7) 35— ; oe oT) (single) 7 ic ‘* 36—Dish Assorted Blooms, Double B ii a oa 0.75 ‘* 37—Bunch Sweet Peas, assorted Dianthus, 7 a Double Carnations, EER om 0.75 Verbenas, 3 colors... 0.75 Petunias (dble) 3 cols we colo et CORSO EEE HET EF ES EH EEE 0. 5 ** 38—Twelve varieties Pansy Blooms 9.75 “* $39—Hand Boquet Flowers......... . 1.00 “ 40-Bridal “ % Piecciies » 1.00 “ 41—Collection Show Poppies....... 0.75 ‘* 48—Floral Design for Table, base not exceeding two feet in GIDMORAM). © ican cio cinket -sp Pace 1.00 50¢ A. B, WARBURTON, sept9—eod & wky Secretary. Ji the City of Charlottetown, and known as the’ _SSSEe & SRR a“ LLL LOL Stop that CuRonic Gouch ory | so For if you do not it may become con- sumptive. For Consumption, Scrofula, General Debility and Wasting Diseases, there is nothing like { SCOTT'S EMULSION: Of Pure Cod Liver Oil and HYPOPHOSPHITES Of Liime and Soda. It is almost as palatable as milk. Far ( { better than other so-called Emulsions. ¢ A wonderful fiesh producer. SCOTT’S EMULSION is put up in a salmon color wrapper. Be sure and get the genuine, { Dealers at 50c. and $1,00, SCOTT & BOWNE, Pelleville. Sold by all NEW YORK Steamship Co. THE REGULAR LINE, THE IRON STEAMSHIP VALENCIA, 1600 TONS, CAPTAIN F. C. MILLAR, I.L leave Company’s Wharf, rear of Custom House, ST. JOHN, for NEW YORK, via Eastport, ine, Rockland, Maine, and Cottage City, Massachusetts, Every Friday, at 3 p. m, (Eastern Standard Time). Returning, Steamer will leave Pier 40. E. R. {foot of Pike Street), New York, every TUES- DAY, at 5p. m., for Cottage City, Mass., Rock- land, Me., Eastport, Me., and St. John, N, B. Freight taken on Through Bills of Lading to and from all points South and West of New York, and from New York to all points in the Maritime Provinces. Cheapest fares and lowest rates. Shippers and importers save TIME and MONEY ae ering goods to be forwarded by the New ork Steamship Company. Tickets sold at all stations on the Intercolonial Railway. For further information apply to FRANK ROWAN, ent, 228 Prince William Stree t, St. John, N. B., Or to N. L. NEWCOMB, General Manager, ‘al 68 Broadway, New York. wy CH'TOWN DRIVING PARK ——AND—— Provincial Exhibition Association. fq .\HE PREMIUM LIST for the Exhibition to be held on the Grounds of the above Association, on the 30th September and Octo- ber Ist, 2nd and 3rd next, has been amended as follows :— Class 3 to be changed by inserting Sections if and 3}. Section 14 30 be: ‘‘ Stallion 3 years old and under 4 years old, imported, 1st prize, $12.00; 2nd, $8.00; 3rd, $5.00.” Section 34 to be: ‘ Stallion 3 years old and under 4 years old, Island bred, Ist prizes $10.00 ; 2nd, $8.00; 3rd, $5.00.” N. B.—Exhibitors please cut out. A. B. WARBURTON, Secretary. PUBLIC HALF HOLIDAY, [T compliance with a request received by me from the Directors of the Charlotte- town Driving Park and Provincial Exhibition Association, I do hereby invite my fellow- citizens to celebrate THURSDAY, the 2nd of October next, after Twelve o’clock, noon, as a General or Public Holiday, it being the third day of the first Provincial Exhibition held under the management and auspices of the said Associatiou. T. HEATH HAVILAND, Mayor of Charlottetown. Mayor’s Office, Sept. 25, 1890. Provincial Exhibition. | CURIOSITIES! —_ Directors are desirous of exhibiting } some cases of Curiosities, and would be obliged if persons who have any would lend them for exhibition. | A. B. WARBURTON, ' sept25 WANTED. Seeretary, N ACTIVE AGENT to represent a Manufacturing House in Prince Edward ‘Island, to ene the sale of a standard article kept by all Grocers and Druggists. Address _ ‘ Montreal,” office of Tuz ExaMINER. sept20 Address to Mr. H. C. Brownell. To H. C. Brownell, late Station Agent at Souris. Dear Srr,—It is with feelings of regret that we learn that you have resigned your position of trust in the Railway Depart- ment at Souris. We hope that in so doing you see your way clear :o better your con- dition in life. During your stay amongst us for a period of nearly thirteen years, you have become so closely allied with us in the social rela- tions of life that you have become, as it were, one of ourselves, and your departure will therefore be the more keenly felt. It affords us here great pleasure to attest to the many noble qualities of your heart and character. As a public official you have discharged your duties with courtesy, and to the satisfaction particularly of the business community. So closely have you kept to your post of duty that you fre- quently denied yourself a needed holiday. You have also identified yourself with every local movement for the public good or for the advancement and welfare of our village, and be assured that your sympathy in these matters has been duly appreciated. In parting with you we hereby tender Mrs. Brownell and yourself our best wishes for your future welfare and happiness, and trust that your friends in your future home may be as appreciative of your many good qualities as those you leave behind in Souris. James McDonald, Sheriff; John Me- Lean, M P P; R F McDonald, Uriah Matthew, P A McIntyre, M P; Thomas Kickham, ML C; Sterns Bros, Wallace McEwen, John Morris, D F McDonald, PP; JG Cameron, P M; E B Muttart, M D; M McCormack, J P; A R McDonald, Capt; J G Sterns, Archd Currie, J R Mc- Lean, M P P; Marshall Paquet, C C Carl- eton, jr; J D Lavie, Capt; Jas McQuaid, Norbert Pierce, McLean, Heartz & Co, J A White, Jas Hughes, E P Ford, M D; M J Foley; S P Campbell, Henry Morrow, A R McDonald, A McLean, M D; Fredk Mor- row, R Seaman, Jas Brennan, Captain Militia; Peter Stewart, G B McEachern, Dennis Murphy, Allan Boisner, J H Hooper, Jas McCormack, P W Me- Lauchian, L E Shaw, B D McEachern, Geo M Muttart, MD; A J McLaine. REPLY. GENTLEMEN,—I thank you most hearti- ly for the very flattering address which.you have just presented tome. The regret you so kindly express at my severing my con- nection with the railway department at Souris, is, in some respects, very kindly shared by myself; but the consciousness that such a step has been advisedly taken by me with the prospect of improving my condition in life, will, no*doubt, be re- assuring to you, as it is encouraging to me. The years [ have spent in Souris have been ainong the pleasantest and happiest of my life ; and this, I may truly say, has been largely due to the uniform kindness and courtesy I have ever experienced in my social and business intercourse with this community. It is particularly gratifying te me that you are pleased to refer to my official re- lations with you as having been conducted with courtesy on my part, and with satis- faction to you. But I must assure you, that in being civil and impartial in the discharge of my official duties, I have only endeavored to do my plain duty as a public servant. Your kind allusion to any sympathy I may have shown from time tu time in the direction of local movements for the ad- vancement and welfare of the town of Souris, is, I fear, but poorly merited, for my attitude in this respect has only been an humble effort to discharge my obliga- tions as a citizen. In conclusion, I must again beg to thank you, on behalf of Mrs. Brownell and my- self, for your kind wishes in our regard, And, although presumably, we make new acquaintances and friends in our future home, still be assured, gentlemen, we shall ever cherish the fondest recollections of the many dear friends we now leave behind us in Souris. ; Yours, faithfully, H. ©. BRowNELL. Batmorat Cuork.—An exchange says: “The prima donna of the Balmoral Choir of Scotch singers is Madame A. 3B. Stew- aat, who is freely acknowledged to .be the most popular and artistic vocalist living in Scotland. She was trained at the Royal Academy of London, and has sung before Queen Victoria and the British Court, winning many assurances of the pleasure of her royal hearers in her rendering of the auld Scots’ sangs, so much beloved by Scotland’s Queen. Her magnificent con- tralto voice is enhanced by her distinct artieulation and exquisite expression.” At the Lyceum Friday, Oct. 3. Sap Dears or A Caps Breton Giri.—Jobn McDonald, of New Victoria, C. B., received a telegram on Monday from Boston that his daughter Mary, who left home a few days days previous, had been found in her room there on Saturday morning in an unconscious state, and had been removed to a hospital where she died. She had blown out the gas. The telegram was received only a few hours after a most cheerful letter from the girl her- self had been cpened and read. Her body was brought home for interment, ee Tue Inpiana Way.—The temperance peo- le of Greentown, Indiana, a place of 1,500 inhabitants, have finally driven the last saloon from their town. They have ~ up a continuous fight for two years. Three weeks ago the only saloon remaining in the town was destroyed by dynamite. The own- er soon resumed business, and was immedi- ately arrested on twelve affidavits, and court costs were piled up against him until Satur- day when he surrendered his premises to the sheriff, who closed the saloon. Oe Dyspepticure—!s not a palliative, but acure; it first relieves, then controls, and finally entirely subdues the irritation and in- flammation of the stomach that causes indiges tion and dyspepsia. News Notes. The shearers in New South Wales and Queensland have struck. The conference of Irish Nationalists will be held in Dublin Uctober 6, A death from cholera is reported to have occurred at Bristol, England. The Compte de Paris sailed from Liver- pocl for New York on Wednesday. Ice formed on the Adirondacks on the 25th inst., and snow covered the moun- tains. Gen. Leszcynski has been appointed Minister of War of Germany, to succecd Verdy du Verner. The damage by the floods in the depart- ment of Ardeche, France, alone amounts to 50,000,000 francs. Mr. Angus Graham, of Glencoe, Cat., high school, took the first scholarship at the recent matriculation examination in McGill University, Montreal. The lron City Bridge Company, of Pitts- burg, is reported to be in difficulty. The company is a large one. An attachment for $183,351 was served on them a few days ago. In a duel at Hartzburg, Germany, a few days ago, between Lieut. Blethstasser and Lieut. Garner, the former was killed. The duel was the result of a quarrel. Sir Hector Langevin has returned from the Northwest, and expressed himself as delighted with his trip. Sir Hector ridi- cules the idea of dissolution, and says par- liament will not meet before Febraary. The Duke of Sutherland, who is some- thing of a musical enthusiast, has erected a large organ in the gallery of the grand hall at Stafford House, London. The instru- ment, which is the largest and most com- plete of any in private residences in Eng- land, is blown by a hydraulic engine, and cost $30,000, Rev. A. M. Deford, of Hortonville, Wis., was arrested at Milwaukee on Saturday, while on his way to attend the Wisconsin conference at Whitewater, on a charge of “raising” bank bills. On his person were found a number of mutilated $10 and $20 bills, with a bottle of mucilage and a pstr of scissors. He is 28 years old, and has a wife and four children. The Devonshire **cottage” of the Duke of Bedford, at Endsleigh, where he is enter- taining a large party of friends, is a cottage only in name, for it cost $300,000 to build, and as much more was expended on the gardens and grounds, which contain sixty miles of gravel walks and grass rides. Endsleigh is. one of the most beautiful places in Great Britain, but its owners live there for only about a month in the year. The London correspondent of the Toronto Globe says: ‘I hear that some of the younger members of the Imperial Feder- ation League hope to form a distinct branch of the League for the United Kingdom, They propose to try to arrange that Mr. Parkin shall continue his visit here and help this movement. The idea is to give full representation from an English point of view as opposed to the colonial point in the discussion of the problem.” Wm. H. Schrieber, a ing book- keeper of the First National Bank of Columbus, Ohio, who robbed the bank of $100,000 in 1888 and fled to Canada with a female companion, who it is supposed as- sisted him in the robbery, was arrested in Detroit a few days ago. His companion died in Windsor, Canada, about two months ago. Schrieber wasenticed to Detroit by &@ young woman engaged by a detective agency for that purpose. The London Standard says the McKinley tariff is much less alarming than it looks. It may diminish our trade with America, but it will aid us immensely to spread it in other quarters. A number of English merchants and manufacturers have looked forward with dread to the time when America would enter the markets of the world to compete with us on a free trade basis. Their alarm will now disappear. To our own colonies, the new fields | in Africa and to all countries desirous of developing their foreign trade, a continu: ance of high tariff in America will be an. excellent bit of good fortune. a Big Fire at Chicago. A PACKING HOUSE OWNED BY AN ENGLISH COMPANY DESTROYED. Fowler Bros.’ packing house, at the stock yards, Chicago, was damaged by fire on Sunday morning. The water had little effect on the grease-soaked floor, and the fire soon reached the tank room where thirty-two tanks of lard were located, These }exploded, one after another, and the boil- ing lard fed the flames more fiercely. The heat was so intense that the firemen had to work at a distance. In the cooling room where 6,689 hogs were freezing they burn- ed like oi]. About 1,200 men and 100 girls were employed by the company. ‘The loss is entirely coved by insurance, most- ly in foreign companies. The loss is divid- ed about as follows: $125,000 on ma- chinery; $75,000 on dressed hogs; $500,000 on sides, hams, shoulders, packed in cellars. While part of the building is totally des- troyed, the loss is small because the build- ings were cheaply constructed. The esti- mated loss varies from $250,000 to $800,- 000; the exact amount will de nd upon the amount of meats stored in the buildings and destroyed. The company conducting this business is composed of Englishmen. Fata Accipent.—A Halifax despatch re- rts that a fatal accident occurred at Cam- ridge Station on the W & A railway on Priday afternoon, Nathan Condon, ng- ing to Cambridge, was walking on the top of some apple barrels on the edge of the platform as the west-bound freight train from Halifax came along. He tripped and fell beneath the car wheels, Both of his legs were cut off, and he died in a few minutes. K. D. ©. Cures Dyspepsia. iil WA I A: ae. % Ate i i RE Be BI on : tts namemillieteaa weed nists ai = Rei TO