ee Cerms:—Five DoLtars a YEAR. This is true Liberty, when Free-Born Men, having to advise the Public , ntay speak free.--Ruririwes. Smxete Corres Two CENTS. NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE ED a Se ————— WARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1886. VOL, 18—NO. 67. Che Daily Examiner is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Oo. From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— ee , . . . os cocecconenmmabl $2.50 Se stad we se ohn onc 64 anke 1,25 SI. 5 coos stheneedn ecko bene 50 Advertising at moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, | on application. = ALMAN4‘C FOR FEBRUARY, 1886. MOON'S CHANGES, New Moon 3rd day, 11h, 25m, p. m. First Qaarter Lith day, 10h, 33 7m, p. m. Full Moon 18th day, 2h, 2 5m, p. m. Last Quarter 25th day, Oh, 58 Sm, p. m, Vais D Sun {Sun !Mooo! High rises water|len’h. I yWIEK!. M es OF WEEE rises sets th mith m/morfaft’n jh m' 1) Monday 7 2814 59} 5 36) 9 23| 9 31 2! Tucaday 2715 1; 611/10 4| 34 3) Wednesday | 26) 3) 6 50/10 5’ 37 4\Tharsday | 24) 4) 793/11 11| 40 5\ Friday , 23; 6 7 Ball 44) 43 €} Saturday 21 7} 8 2limorn; 46 7} Sanday 19) «8 8481015, 49 §| Monday 1s} 9 915) 04°) 51} 9| Tuesday 17; 1; 9 46) 123) 54) 10 Wednesday | 16) 13;10 121} 2 1) 57! 11 Thursday 14) 14/10 45) 2 46/10 1 12 Friday 12; 16) 11 22) 3 45) 4 13\ 4a turday 1l| 'Siaft 7} 5 3} 7 14 Sanday | 9 19) 0 59) 6 33; 10 L5| Monday 2s 7a 12 16| Tuesday oe oe 9° 850; 16 17| Wednesday | 2 . 3 j i 5| 24) 4 231 9 43) 19 © 5 6 18 Tharsday 3! 26} 5 40}10 30; 23 19| Friday | 2} 22] @S7jlir iz] @ 20) Satarday 6 59 28) S 12}11 46)@ 29 21' Sanday | 58) 30) 9 24/aft23) 32 22| Monday 56) 31)10 29) 113; 35 23) Tuesday 55; 33/11 41) 1 56; 38 24| Wednesday 52!' 34| morn; 2 42 42 23| Charsday 5l| 36, 0 44) 344, 45 26) Friday | 49 37) 1 43) 452) 48 27 | Jaturday | 47| 38| 237; 611) 61 23) Sunday 6 455 40) 3 26; 7 19:10 55 | | i ! ’ ! | ; ES! WARBURTON & SMALLWOOD, NOTICE OF CO-PARTNERSHIP. The undersigned have this day entered into artnership, under the style and firm of Varburton and Smallwood, Barristers, Attorveys-at-Law, Notaries Public, Ke. Office—Cameron Block, Queen Square. A. B. WARBURTON, B,A., B.C.L, | C, R. SMALLWOOD. a@ The firm are Agents for the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, which does the largest business of any Life Insurance Company in the world. Dec. 3—law wky 3 mo L. ARTHUR & CO, GHENHRAL Commission Merchants, 12) ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. —_— oe Egos and Produce a Specialty. Jaly 15—dly wkly CAUTION. BACH PLUG OF THE MYRTLE. NAVY ‘ & B. IN BRONZE LETTERS. None Other Genuine. FOR SALE. RIGHTON TANNERY, with its Steam Engine, Boiler, Splitting Machine, Stuf fing Machine and other Plant is offered for aale t private contract The above Tannery vas formerly operated by tle late Donald McKinnon, of the late tirm of McKinnon & Co., of this city. It is fitted up on the most modern principle, and has hitherto paid a large percentage on the capital invested. To capitalists no better in- vestment for their money, either by Bank or Manufactory, can be offered. Possession given immediately. MARY J. MACKINNON, | Executrix. Ch’town, Oct. 17, 1885. Qe BSCRIBE for THE WEEKLY FXAMI- NER. he latest local foreign news | ENGLISH CONFECTIONERY. The finest assortment of English 1. H. EK B i, S e wf KE 5 and Canadian Confectionery Christmas trade we have ever offered. BEER &A GOFF. | | MENCE MEAT, | Choice Brand, for Saie at BER & GOFF’S. pe Canned Salmon, ‘Sandwiches, Peaches, Pine Apples, Corns, Tomatoes, Peas, &e., choice | ‘brands. BEER & GOFF. COFFEE! COFFEE! Fresh roasted and ground—fine quality; also Essence Coffee and Condensed Coffee & Milk. BEER & GOFF. CRANBERRIES. 30, bris. ‘Cranberries and Fox- berries at BEER & GOFF’S. CANDIED PEEL, Keiller's Celebrated English Cit- ron, Orange and Lemon Peels at BEER & GOFES SPECIALTIES, Corned Beef, 20cts. per pound; Smoked Beet (shaved) 24cts. per pound ; Bologna Sausages, i4cts. per pound; Ox Tongues (English), Pea Soup, Xc., at BEER & GOFP’S. Pure Spices, Essences, & Pure Spices, Cream Tartar and Baking Powders at BEER & GOFF’S. ORANGES, LEMONS, GRAPES. 20 cases Oranges, 15 cases Lemons, —_———= Great Britain. BEER & GOFF. RAISINS. encias, Seedless. BEER & GOFF. APPLEHS. American Baldwins, N. 8. Tom- kins, Pippins, &¢., at BEER & GOFP’S. PASTRY FLOUR. 2,3,5,10 and 12 pound packages, very cheice quality, BEER & GOFF. Dec, 11, 1885. DANSON Di a4 oe PROMPT. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, haya been speedily cured by the use of ADAMSGN’a BALSaM after all other medicines haye failed. Sufferers from either yeceat or chronic coughs or bronchial affections, can resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining epeedy relief. Do not delay, get it at once. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druggists, 343 dtm Avs., N. Y. Lovely New Style of Chromo Cards, with name and prize for 1c. 12 packs, 12 names, for $1. A sample pack and agent's outfit with illus. this al 8m always De foun therein. trated otaloge of Tricks aud Novelties, fo ac. stanip j A, W. KIN Y, Yarmouth, N. S,—mar for 25 bris. Grapes, just arrived from | 250 boxes received—Layers, Val-| o No Chaage in Business Contemplated ; buat a Bena Fide Change in Prices. 0 NTIL the end of JANUARY NEXT, | will give sach Bargains in DRY GOOLS AND J CLOTHING as will make everyone who will buy from me Happy, and in addition will give you some of my Choice TEA GRATIS. To every buyer of $2.00 worth of DRY GOODS Lb Good Tea. $4.00 ory “e se ®ib “e $6.00 “cc sé té 3\ib “ee $3.00 ss ¢ “ or Clothing, 41b Good Tea, $10.00 oe “ec sé 6 “ee 5lb “ ee Purchasers not requiring the Tea can have the equivalent value in other goods in the Store. The Quality of my Tea is well and favorably known, got Good Tea Free of Cast. J. B&B. MACDONALDS, Queen Street, This offers a rare opportunity to Ch town. Dec. 10, ’95, — — pi ———— BRITISH ~ WAREHOUSE, S3 QUEZN STREET. Se EE re FALL AND WINTER STOGK, | | | NOW COMPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT, UNSURPASSED FOR VALUE! A. L. BROWN. Ch’town, Nov. 19.—wkly. Better Value Than Ever | iTO THE WHOLESAILE TRADE. 70: i UR new samples of BOOTS and SHOES for spring will soon be “out, and we will have the pleasure of calling on our customers in a short time, We hope:to receive your liberal patronage as heretofore, DORSEY, GOFF & CO, | Ch’town, Jan. 26, 1885, EVERYONE CAN call and examine the largest stock of Household Furniture, &., &c., ever shown in Charlottetown, and also discover that they ot SAVE MONEY and get Good, Reliable Home-made Goods of andisputed value, fine finish and good honest workmanship BY BUYING Staple Furniture, Bedding, Mattresses, Fancy$Goods (for Xmas), Picture Frames and Moulding, Mantle-mirrorsfand Mirror-plates, Bagatelle Boards, Handsome Oil Paintings, Framed Chromos, and One Thousand and One other articles, FROM | THE P. E, ISLAND FURNITURE WAREROOMS, MARK WRIGHT & CO. Ch’town, Dec. 3, °85—eod wky —AND—- BLANK-BOOK MAKING, MONAGHAK’S BUILDING, = - = QUEEN SQUARE. s —— a, LL kinds of BOOK BINDING executed at Lowest Prices and with Quick Despateh® Ruliog, Numbering and Perforating for the Trade promptly attended to. BLANK BOOKS A SPECIALTY. aw A Share of Patronage Solicited. . JAMES D. TAYLOR & CO. QUEEN SQUARE. Ch town, Jan. 12, '86—6mos 2aw Imperial Federation, in Relation to the Future of Canada. —_—_—__ PAPER READ BEFORE THE LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC INSTITUTE, FEB. 4TH, 1886, BY S. M. BENT. (Coneluded.) . Says a late Charlottetown paper, (Herald, Jan. 20, 1836):— “Mr. Gladstene has declared that exports are the test of a nation’s prosperity. A correspondent of the London TYimes points out that Great Britain’s exports were at least £10,000,000 less last year than in 1875. Those of Germany have in- creased during the same pera’ by £40,000,000. those of Italy by £7,000,000, and those of the United States more largely still.” Rule to Ireland, and the infusion of young and vigorous Colonist blood inte the withered veins of old England. It will give us a new lease of life, renew our youth like the eagles,” &c. This, in the face of the fact that Home Rule is an almost ac- | complished certainty, and no thanks to the | Federation League, is mere political clap- | trap, and all such arguments will. be ex- |ploded long before Imperial Federation becomes anything more thana seductive ‘dream of one section of political economists. | Federation, as far as Canada is concerned, isadream. England’s past history is derk | with the stains of war, and she desires, by Colonial connection, to wipe away the |blood stains, and resume her position as queen of the nations. The dark panorama of Ireland's wrongs passes before the Celtic Let us apply the same test to Canada. | exiles who have found a home in Canada, ad 1882 “ ad 7a 1883 oe “ ae 1884 “ae “ An increase of over 70 per cent., while the imports increased, in same period, 58 per cent, _ The grand aggregate of trade, exports and imports, which I quote from the trade returns, was— he iii ed i (BARR h ele eens on $131,027,532 BAe WOR URC so eth b si ecepbeasebescepegee 207,803,539 or only 58 per cent of an increase. The aggregate trade by counties was:— In 1868 our exports amounted to,...... $ 57,567 1881 = ee bel se ae 98, Great Britain. United States. West Indies. 1873 $107,266,624 $89,808,204 $6,133,425 87,154,242 89,333,336 6,726,488 Showing a large decrease of trade with Great Britain, while with the United States it remained nearly stationary, and with the West Infies a considerable increase. There was also a large increase with France, Germany and other European gountries, A great argument used by®Federstion boomers is that British capitalists have £500,000,000 stg. invested in the Colonies. Well, they havo tha: money invested to make money ; but, mark you, enter a Free Trade Union with England, and most of it, if not all, will be withdrawn from the Colo. nies, and reinvested in English manufac- tures, and the Colonies will be the «losers. What is the great need of Canada at the present time? Three words express it— Treaty making power. We want Treaties with the United States, with Brazil, with the West Indies. Free Trade, or rather Reciprocal Free Trade with these countries is what we need more than a closer union with Great Britain. Why should we not also have a treaty with Spain and Portugal, and share in the fish trade with those powers, now monopolized by Nowfound- land ? The credit of Canada now stands higher ix, London than that of European powers, as shown by stock quotations. Stock. p. c. Selling Price. COE «.. ono cecdoccescdcone 4 107 PP cons 0n6eese ceetes > . 8&8 Oa ied veer’ s on 00 have 4% 1673 SIUM... s édeigs ec +000 0 ghens ae 4 608 TEEN... csudundercensbeue? eo 95 En nevksssccadevekoves 4 83 ET rer 4 1024 Portugal. ..........eeeeeess 5 89 These are the quotations for Sept. 12th, 1884. Then comes the question of defence. We live in peace now, but under Federa- tion would be sooner ov later drawn into war. We can defend ourselves. We have seen the alacrity with which our troops sprang to arms to crush the late rebellion. We heard of agood deal of skulking too, and why? Because we have so long looked to England for proteetion, and, until we outgrow that idea, and learn to depend upon ourselves, we cannot become a strong, healthy nation. We are able to protect our country. We have 40,000 trained volunteers, a number we can easily double if necessary. Let us in future be self-reliant, and set ourselves a high stan- dard of nationality. Alex. F. Pirie, whom I have already quoted, points to our un- protected sea-coast, and tells us that should England and Russia go to war, we would certainly be attacked, as we are a depend- ency of Britain ; while if we were inde- pendent, he assures us, Canadian sea-coast defences world be needless, as Canada would not become an object of attack in England’s brawls. Ithink this idea will commend itself to your favorable attention, remembering that we have now neither internal nor external dissensions calling for war. In concluding my remarks, which are necessarily condensed, and in which 1 have merely directed your attention to a few salient points, I trust that you will bear with me for a few moments longer, as f re- fer to the future of Canada, and her glorious possibilities. A political, social, commer- cial, naval, military, and academical union is the one advocated by the Federation League, or the Royal Colonial Institute,— for they seem to be synonomous terms,— who are evidently the motive power of a scheme which is sought to be forced upori the Colonies, uncalled for by the people. Canada knows her own wants better than England does, and should not waste her opportunities in more rhetoric. The British Islands are geographically situated for one parliamentary union, her East Indian possessions for a second, her Austra- lssian for a third, and her American for a fourth. If Canada’s ambition is to be something more than a mere dependency for a decaying power, let her also aim at being something more than a mere ‘‘snow fence,” as has been wittily expressed, for the United States. She will not be satis- fied with mere loyalty to the traditions of the part, but will develop faith in her own glorious destiny, her future independence, You smile at this, but ao independent nation she must be, under what form of Government you choose; whether a mon- archial or Republican the future alone can decide. Perhaps Oanada «nd Ausira'ia will take as kings sons of Vic- toria, when her death opens the way to| great and inevitable changes in the Empire. The Pall Mall Gazette, speaking of Im- 33g Quebec remembers the past, aud those two 8,290,823 | elements will sternly oppose any closer con- enseese 102,137,208 | nection with Britain. But they are both SIE) 912406, 496 | loyal to Canada. We have ties enough linking us to Eng- land. We are loyal to the person of the Queen, we are represented in the Privy Council, we have a heritage in the glorious literature of the nation acro s the Atlantic, and we cherish many childlike and brotherly feelings for the land of our forefathers, and we need no closer union. We havea noble mission. We must do- velop and nationalizs Canada, not hamper /her progress by helping to build up other nations, ‘‘Self preservation is the first law of nature.” We have irebled in wealth and doubled in population since 1867, year by year we are growing, and with the growth of the nation national institutions are expanding. We enjoy rights and privileges which it would be madness to surrender, to sink in the bewitching glamor that fascinates some men, and causes them to look kindly on a scheme whose very principles are ,wrong, to us at least. We must preserve untouched our glorious liberty, our immunity from landlordism, which is the life blood of Eagland’s decay- ing Empire. We want no Botany Bay and Star Chamber history on the free soil of this fair young Dominion. We want no standing army, no muzzling of speech in Parliament, no new class distinctions, such as would follow in the wake of Imperial Federation. Oil and water will not mix. Our imter- ests, sympathies and traditions are very different from those of England’s African or Indian dependencies, but we are more in harmony with those of Australia, and Australia, like Canada, will not federate. We can preserve peace and harmony with other nations, we can regulate our trade and commerce, foster our manufactures, and protect all our rights, without looking to England for assistance, and by thus relying on ourselves we shall become stronger, more prosperous and independent, and more respected as a nation—and a nation we are bound to be in the near future. Our people are able to govern and protect themselves—why should they seek more! Nay, why should they accept more, when offered under the delusive guise of Federation? We are the equals of any nation in intelligence and self-governing power, and let us not sink our virtual in- dependence. Let us not cripple our future by taking up a share of England’s enor- mous burdens. Let us not resign our young nationality, to become « small con- stituent part of a prospective Empire of doubtful stability. We can support in the Northwest, opened up by a great railway, a population of 260,000,000, and there lies the future greatness of Canada. ‘‘ West- ward the Star of Empire takes its way.” I have already shown that Canada, above all colonies, could not enter an Imperial Federation, because she would lose the French province of Quebec, as well as the Maritime Provinces, which are mainly people by exiles from the bills and vaies, the mountains and riversides of Scotland and Ireland. Itistrue that England has sown in North America the seeds ofa second empire,over which she shail exercise no stern, controlling hand. When the tree, which long since sprang up from those seeds, bears ripened fruit, Canada will be a free and independent nation, owning al- legiance only to the will of her own people, and no further fiefship to any European monarchy than the golden clasps and silken cords of kinship and tradition. She will still respect and love the motherland, as a child that has long since become a strong man loves his white haired mother, but still, in all financial, commercial, social and intellectual relations of life, standing erect and alons. and conscious of her own strength and power,—swayed perhaps by kindly counsell, but not tied to the Im- perial apron strings. We must complete the unification of the people of Canada; sink all race prejudices, and petty differences and unsightly creed quarrels, all sectional and provincial jealousy, and become one in national senti- ment, in language, in literature, in the development of our exhaustless resources; one in a true Canadian nationality, a people respected the world over;one against foreign intrusion or interior revolution. Let us have faith in our future, and live up to that faith. NOTES, Not the promissory, but facts about Wericome Soap, an article that does not con- tain one particle of the adulterstions used to reduce the cost of “* Pure Goods,” but does esa the value of legitimate Washing Qualities, the demand for which proves the advantage gained by the use of the genuine over Soaps of doubtful character. None should be deceived even by Red and Yellow Wrappers, or any of the imitations of the Weitcome, as a pair of clasped hands is stamped on every bar. Made by Overis, Davia & Co, ~“_> - A Carp.—To all who are suffering from errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &e. I will send a recipe that will cure you, FREN OF CHARGE. This great remedy was dis covered by a missionary in South Amorican send self-addressed envelope to Rev. Joseph perial Federation, says :—‘‘It involves, among other things, the concession of Home T. Inman, Station D. New Vork.