slats ICED —— AN cca Rte ORT, 68 THE DAILY EXAMINER. Five Doutars a Y RAR, - - - a — ~~ ere ee ene —_~ diiiesl SrxcLx Copiers Two Centr 4 EW SERIES. Is issued Every Evening by fhe Examiner Pablishing Co., FROM THEIR OFFICE, “LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, Charlottetown, P. E. Ish teviy, hait-y early vl yearly auvert application. and. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Oe Moe’.bs..«. «a. $2 5 ene eeoetns, J. So. .. . ck ches lL 25 eS ee ae . 0 50 g@ Advertising at most moderate tates. Contracts may be made. for monthly. qua) - iseinehis «yD MOON'S CHANGES. ALMANAC FOR SBPTEMBER, 180 New Moon 6th day, Ob: 43.6m. a m., N., (below horizon.) First Quarter i2.n day, 5h. 47.4m., p. mS Fal! Moon 20th day, 3.5 5e-eh.. Ow. B Last Quarter, 25tu day, 4h., 7.7m., a.m., SE. San oun sive tiigh Lay e M DAY OF WEEK! isos sets rises wacer| len’) “fis hm vwmorniattrn h m 1 Saturday , 235.6 3t' 0 155 7. 8138 2)Sand .y J ad 1 10; 8 i2 3) Muaday 23; 2 213;9 2 y §| Cuesday 2%| 23 3 19) 9 48 12 59 y Ved redehay aU 26 4 26.10 2) vb 3} Paarsday 32; 24 § 4t:11 7 o. Jierivday asi 22 ou Sil 44 4 SiSatrrday 34 20 8 l4imorn 4 PSan iny 3o hy! 9 Ziv 32 as ti Moucay 37 17110 4551 2 +i fi! Pues sy o3 loki 59) 1 47 O73 Ll Wedoesday 3J} lsat! OJ 2 33 24 j3) Pharsiay 4 12' 2 16) 3-45 i} * 14: friday 42; luEeallis 9g 28 la Saturday 40 8 3 53; 6 37 25 lbiSauday i4 ii 4 40; 7 62 22 Lj} Monday | 46 4' 5 14 8 49 1s ts| Tues tay [ 2| 5 44, 9 Si 15 wiWedneaiay {| 4% 0 6 10 16 isi ? H Toursday 50'S 33) & Zt i0 43] Ss 21 Fri sy 5! 56) 6 S7iii IG} 5 BjNatuiday 52) 64) 7 2011 47 2 2 Sania, | ie 52> 7 46 aft 19)1] 59 24) Mutclay 54 50; §$ 13) 05 | dO 2% Tuealay 55} 47) 8 45) | 28 52 #4 W eheslay 56} 45}9 22; 2 7} 49 's Thanday | 58 43110 525s 45 NiFridy — 6 ul 41/90 SS} 3 54} 41 ¥ Sasarlay 45 4011 54/5 7) 39] 9 Sunday 215 3a morn; 6 30}11 36 ; : ogee. aes... | }. A. WACKINNGN, P. Aiisey, solicitor, Notary Public, &e, * wer hS OPENED HIS— L.B,, Law Office in Georgetown, King’s County, wher: he will attend to professional work, sai joan money on Real Estate. nov2Ii—-wky QA MSSION Mackerel, Butter, Chees Vegetables. 142, 144 Commercial BOSTON, MASS. —- ww rt OF THE Leave St. Jon: iand fwerty uonday, Weinesi 7.25 . ali. for Mote sy ani L. ARTHUR & UO., MiXOHANTS, e EGGS Pouliry, Potatoes, Fruit & Sireet, iB. p- 3 '--N MATERMATIONAL 8.5. G6. via Eastport and Por.- i Fritay, a! aw from Charlottetewn to Boston, 36,50, 2nd 4s ”, ist Ci“aen, For tickets and other information apply to G. A.SHARP, F . ioe r &L RY: P. «. I ALES, Hteam Nav, Ce. Or to your nearest Ticket Agent. May 7, 128~and wes Se ae JaWxs A. Morrison. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKER —AND— S Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce pre mpt uttor tion. Rerexe 28: Thom . — ** M - & Nova Seotia, Hulifax ; aeeaT Sf 3) . . ; so Ee or OK of Charlot+. a es _ WARREN & JON PEA i East Cuitip ano 9 & J4 Mine ENGLAND. Representa in Canaia by M USGRAVE, Halifax. . &, 1 ’ LAIN DON, ~- will receive e Fyshe, Esq., Cashier - ‘ ’ Geurge Nova Scotia iS, MeRCHANTS, inc LAN#, ORRISON *%& ' | i ' ‘ } J ‘ who will deliver Goods to any partof the city ba without deliy. : j Svecial R-tes to management of Picnics, &c | | | SUMMER ARKANGEM ENT THE PALACS STEAMERS | > CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1888. __ VOL. 23.—-NO. 95. BS, CUSTO.: TAILORS, dealers in Mens’ Furnishing Goods. a ee eet sarge Stock and Vary 8 Large Lot of Summer Underwear, very cheap, a Straw Hats, . : « Heimets, os Coats for the Hot Weat*er, Dee ee ‘Ml the Novellies in Geats’ Neckwear and Furnishings, ALL AT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES FOR CASH. B.S. DAVIES & CO., CAMERON BLOCK, OPP. POST OFFICE. June 22, 1888. WALK RIGHT IN, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, eulibenkic: JOHNNEWSON'S FURVLIQURE ESTABLISHMENT, AND GET BARCAINS. —-—-—0)-——_—- — and Best Place in the City. ——-— — (0) —-— — — IN A DILEMMA! hance otal temas Largest, Oldest NEVER Can supply you all, and give you the best value. Sales daily: inereasine.¢.Noslop work. Furniture as represented. He does not adyrtise much, but gives his customers the benefit of this savine.«5— ye Pe, : Don’t forget the place OPPOSITE POST OFFICE. ast Valus for your Money, MR J. H. LOSAN WILL RESUME LESSONS ON } i 4 AVIES Vv GO, vesiss September 17. MHOULD asnfficiently large number of pupils desire it, Cases will be formedin PIANO avd OWGAN, of not more than four pupils in each, on the plewet the icading Conservatories The lenuth of the lessens will be one hour, and the reacs wii then be Five Doliars per term for each. ivrivate Lessons will sti?] be given Lo those who refer them, at the sare terms as previously—len jollars per Quarter, balf hour lessons, The Meth d oftastrveiion is conformed to that of the Leipsic onservatoriam, Appi cation sonic be ma ie a3 soon as possible after FAUR+DaY, Sept. :8ib, Rooms, 235 Hent Street. ’ aug25—Im W hy ‘Pay High —W HEN-- j : ’ As Good —RETAILS AT— Be... 10c and 20c. per Packet, and 32e. per Pound. angi? ow = esveepaneementarivin ebarniane oimelgimemeein AGEN . | __ Our “Home, Farm and i S! Business Cyclopedia” is a large work contaumng 900 pages profusely il- instrated, and also contains poriraits of ihe lead- ing statesmen of the Dominion. The thiee de- partments inte which the work is divided, treats fully every feeture in counection with Home and its happiness, -necessfal Farming and still move successful Business Life. Each department of the work has the acvantage of beng wiritven by Can n -pegialists. Tae work is purely Cana- dian. We want an Agent in every town and County, IH yeu want territory, terms and full paricujars, write to W, E, EARL, St. John, N. & i J-3 ROBERTSON & BROS., aikz2s—faw wks Publishers. Pax. JOHN NEWSON. EXHILARATING #0103, Charlottetown, July 7, 1888. PLAYING secured the AGENCY for this Pro- | vince from MR. JAMES A. ROUE, of Halifax, for his ' ; tt SUS. LO-DAX bOU Wille a wee ARE WE OPENING Wh ch were shipped to us ia error, will be sold at Cost and Charges to Clear, a<ceomantiinincsanmetiel, mata Choice Patteras Direct from Manufacturers. WHE ARE THOUSANDS OF HATS =—_— Far better yalue than is given by those that bluw so much. ‘You will be Convinced if you examin: our Stock and corpare Prices. » D. A. BRUCE, CUSTOM TAILOR Ch’town, June 14, 1888. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. 0 Hardware, Carriage Goods, -——-AND—— Paints, Oils, Varnishes, We. COe~— —_—<—-- ON HAND AND ARRIVING—A FULL STOCK OF THE FAMOUS GOODHUE LEATHC ens cee (enema NORTON & FENNELL. May 20, 1886-2aw d& why CHARLOTTETOWN. SRHLLING | 1 BELTING. AXATED WATERS, : I will be pleased to fill orders with despatch in the following lines, viz. :— Lemonade, ) © cam Soda, Or iaia oe \ In Large and Small Girager ‘le. ' Bottles. Champague Cider, | Nerve &voi, J In order to give my CITY CUSTOMERS every satisfaction, | have secured the services of an | Experienced Expressman, Hichest Price paid for ali kiads of KMPTIY | BOTTLES. ‘Tt eleptioue in connec'ion, JOHN JOY, Gid LBendon the use, WATER STREET. -——— 888. ‘1888-FALL TRIP-1 | | | 300 TONS REGISTER, P. LEDWELL, Commander, WILL SAIL FROM Liverpool for Charl sitetown About the 25th September, ' And willearry Freight at throngh rates to the 3 ' different Railway pvints »n the Island. 4am For Freight apply in London to John Pit- cairn & Sons, 7 Union Court, Old Broad Street ; in Liverpool to WiLam Bullen, 51 South John Street, or here to the Owners, P AKE BROS. & CO. | Ch’town, Aug 17, 1888—eod tt MISS WILSON (LATE OF HALIFAX,) ‘Will receive a limited number of Pupils for instruction in the ‘Gorman Methed” for the Piancforte. Classes will open the Second Week in September. : : ti a Address care of H. C. WILSON, Stanley Ber’. éw—ougil ' j { ' ; } Gleanings From My Common-place | numbering 3 kings, 12 dukes, 1 marquis, Boo ks. YOUNG GENTUS, Genius, when young, is divine. Why, che greatest captains of ancient and modern times both conquered Italy at twenty-five ! Youth, extreme youth, overthrew the ‘Persian empire. Don John of Austria won Lepanto at twenty-five—the greatest battle ‘of modera times; had it not been for the | jealousy of Philip, the next year he would have been Empercrof Mauritania. Gaston de Foix was ouly twenty-two when he stood a victor on the plain of Ravenna. . Every one remembers Conde and Rocroy at the same age. Gustavus Adolphus died at thirty-eight. Look at his captains—that wonderful Duke of Weimar, only thicty- six when he died. Bauer himself, after all his niiracles, died at forty five. COvortes was little more than thirty when he gazed upon the golden cupolas of Mexico. When Maurice of Saxony died at thirty-two all Europe acknowledged the loss of the great- est captain and the profoundest statesman of the age. Then there is Nelson, Clive; but these are warriors, and perhaps you may think there are greater things than war. I dv not. I worship the Lord of Hosts. But take the must Innocent LIL., ‘the greatest of the Popes, was the despot of Christendom at thirty- seven. John de Medici was a Cardinal at fifteen, and, Guicciardini tells us, baffled with his craft Ferdinand of Aragon himself, He was Pope as Leo X. at thirty-seven. Luther robbed even him of his richest pro- vince at thirty-five. Take Ignatius Loyola and John Wesley—they worked with young brains. Ignatius wa#orly thirty when he! made his pilgrimage and wrote the ‘Spiritual Exercises.” Pascal wrote a great work at sixteen (the greatest of Frenchwen), and died at thirty-seven. Ah, that fatal thirty-seven! which reminds me of Byron—yreater even asa man than awriter. Was it experience that guided ithe pencil of Raphael when he painted the palaces of Rome ¢ He died at thirty-seven. Richelieu was Secretary of State at thirty- one. Well, then, there are Boling- broke and Pitt, both ministers before other men jleave off cricket. Gro- tius was in practice at seventeen, ‘and attorney-general at twenty-four. And ' Acquavioa—Acquavioa was General of the Jesuits, ruled every cabinet in Europe, and colonised Americas, before he was thirty- seven. What a career! the secret sway of Europe! ‘That was indeed a position! But it is needless to multiply instances. history of heroes is the history of youth,— Disraeli’s Coningsby. SUCCESSION TO°THE THRONE OF FRANCE. ; illustrious achievements of civil pradence. | 17 earls, 1 viscount and 24 barons. WEARING OAK ON THE 29TH OF May. The origin of wearing this badge is com- monly believed to be to commemorate the preservation of Charles I], in the oak, on May 20h. Now, Charles fought the bat- tle of Worcester on Wednesday, the 3rd of September, 1651; he fled from the field, at- jtended by Lords Derby and Wilmot, and others, and arrived early next morning at Whiteladies, about three-quarters of a mile ‘from Boxobel House. * At this place Charles secreted himself ina wood, and in |a tree, (from the King’s own account a 'hollowed ouk), since termed * the royal oak;” and at night Boxobel House was his place of refuge. At Whiteladses he ex- changed his habilaments for those of the fsithtel Penderell. Subsequenily he er-- barked at Shoreham on the i.5th of October, and landed next day at Fexamp in Nor- mandy. On his return to England, Charles entered London on his birthday, the 29th of May, when the Royalists displayed the branch of oxk, from that tree having been instrumental in the King’s restoration; hence the custom of wear’ng oak on this day, and not from Charles being then con- cealed in the oak. It may te added that the oak could scarcely have een in sufii- cient leaf in May to have concealed the King. CROMWELL’S ** FORTUNATE DAY.” The 3rd of September was always regard- ed by Cromwell as his ‘*fortumate day.” On the two successive anniversaries of that day he gained his famous victories 1f Dun- bar and Worcester ; yet subsequently, on that very day, agreeably with a strange prophesy of Colonel Lindsey, the Protector breathed his last. The Monday before, August 30th, was the most wiudy day that had happened for twenty years ; and the following Friday, on which Oliver died, there was also a high wind, which produc- ed these very opposite lines: Waller says Oliver died ** In storms as loud as liis immortal fame,” and Godolphin, ‘* Tn sturms as loud as was his crying sin.” T. H. H. 8th Sept., 1888. Wheat in the States. The London Times says editorially:— * Judging from our special reports from The | the wheat producing States published this morning, the United States wiil not be in & position to furnish very much of the 70,- (00,009 or 80,000,000 bushels of wheat which will be required to meet ihe defi- ciency caused by the poor crops in the Old Not a little remarkable is it to observe ‘World. ‘The weather has been unfaverable that from the accession of Louis X1V. to here as Ti Warope to largesharvests of the ithe present time not a single king ur gov-. principal food cereals, bu‘, so far as can be ernor of France,~—though none of them, ‘learned, we shall have ample wheat for with the exception of Louis X VILL, have} home consumption with probably some, if | been childless,— has been succeeded at his’ not a great deal, to spare, to supply a por- demise by his son. Louis XIV. suivived tion of the demand across the vcean. In- his son, his grandson, and several of ' diana and Wisconsin appear to be the only his great-grandchildren, and was succeeded States in which the yield is above the aver- at last by one of the younger children of age, and can be considered really a great 18 grandson, the Duke of Burgundy.|one. In Ohio the crop is reported to be Louis XV. survived his sen, and was suc- not over sixty per cent, of the average and ‘eveded by his grandson. Louis XVI. left la son behind hun ; but that son perished in the tithy dungeon tu which the cruelties of the terrorists had confined him. The King lof Rome, te whom Napoleon fondly hoped Ito bequeath the boundless empire be had iwon, died a colone: in the Austrian service. | Louis X VIL. was, as we have said, child- less. ‘Cue Duke de Berri fell by the hand lof an assassin in the lifetime of Charles X.; jand his sun, the Duke de Bordeaux, is in exile from the lind which his ancestors ‘regarded as their own estate. The eldest son of Louis Philippe perished by an un- timely accident; and his grandson and heir, the Comte de Paris, does not sit upon the throne of his grandfather. hus, then, it appears that for upwards of two hundred years in no one of the dynasties to which France has been subjected has the son succeeded to the throne of the father.— The Loudoun Times, 1856. NO NEW ENGLISH SOVEREIGN IN MAY. It is remarkable that among the thirty- three sovereigns who have sat on the Eng- lish throne since William the Conqueror, although each of the eleven months has witnessed the accession of one or mere, the month of May has not been so fortunate, none haying ascended the throne within its limits. THE RED AND WHITE ROSES. The precise perivud at which the Red and White Ruses, now adopted as hos- tile emblems in the divided house of Plant- agenet has never been satisfactorily ascer- tained, but a contemperaneous MSS. in the Bodeleian Library at Oxford proves that the White Rose was au hereditary cognizance of the hvuse of York, and borne as such by the Duke when he inherited the title. Camden states that the Lincans- trians derived the badge of the Red Rose from their ancestor, Edmund, first Earl of Lancaster, ‘** On whose person,” says San- ford, ‘‘ was originally founded the great contention betwixt the two royal houses of Lancaster and York.” Again, Cam- den, in his Remains, asserts that ‘* Edmund Crouch-backe, second son of Henry the Third, used a red rose, wherewith his tomb at Westminster is adorned.” A'so that ** Iehn of Gaunt, fi th Duke of Lancaster, to: k a red rose to his device, as it were, by rivbt of his tirst wife, the heiress of Lan- caster, grandchild to the above-named Edmund Crouch-backe ;” and that ‘ Ed- mond of Langley, Duke of York, his younger brother, adopted as his emb'em the white rese.”— Note to Hulsted’s Rich- ard EL. Among the Harleian MSS. is an origina! document containing the names of the slain in the desperate battles between the Houses uf Yuwk wad Laaouster me years, of inferior quality. Iu Lbinois the quality is not high, though the quantity harvested is satisfactory, and in Kansas a loss of fully one-third has been sustained by the negligence of the farmers in protecting what promised tu be a fine wheat crop. With the suffering expected in Engiand and the rise in price of bread, already made there on account of the failure of the wheat crop, and in anticipation of the certain scarcity of that cereal ia the immediate future, the United States is to be congra- tulated upon the amount of wheat already harvested in this country. If we cannot feed the world it is pleasant to know that we can feed ourselves.” nh ot Hard work, whether as sovereign, author or soldier, evidently does not shorten men’s days, if other circumstances, inclucling first of alla good coustitation, be favorable. Ger- raany has furnished the spectacle of three men, occupying respectively the three posi- tions just mentioned, two of “hom where ;honogenarians, Ranke, the historian, and Emperor William; while the third, Marshal ‘Von Moltke, is still in harness at the age of 88. The Marshal had held the position of chief of the general staff, to his resignation, of : which reference ‘as been made in our des- | patches, for thirty years. On assuming it he | was in the prime of his life as a soldier, but not yet in the prime of his farhe as a general. The two great campaigns which gave him re- putation were still in the future. No warrior of renown has cherished more exalted ideas of ‘the military office and career, or of the import- ance of war among the factors of human pro gress than those to which Von Molike has given expression. It is, perhaps, to that fact no less than to his services to the empire that we must attribute the extraordinary warmth and pathos of the Emperor's letter to him. Satnppsiadaatallincnctearatinn The Republicans have scored a success in the first skirmish preliminary to the zen- eral contest of November 6th. The Ver- mont election on Tuesday resulted in the opponents of Mr. Cleveland carrying the State by 27,000 majority. Vermont is always Republican, but this year that party has gone ahead of its record in 1884, the last presidental year, vy 5,000 vores. Some of this is known to be due to Demoratic dissatisfaction with the campaign manage- ment, but this elem-at in the situation hardly accounts for the whole result. In speaking before a Belgian audience scrae time ago, Cardinal Lavigerie reminded his hearers that Godefroy de Bouillon, whose statute be had lately had an oppor- tunity of saluting, had led 89,000 men to Pp slestine to rescue the holy . places from the infidels. Such a past imposed obliga- tiuas. He appealed to Belgium to furnish not 80,00) bu: 100 vuolu:t ers t» rescue from the hands of cruel slave dealers the unhappy men, women and children, who were the victims of their ruthless inhuman- ities. ‘ OMB sys;