se na ae : lea - Sone aaa. shea gE THE Dalry EXAMINER. Cs , DoLLARS A YRAR, NEW SERLES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, S\TURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1887. “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may spea k free.”— Kvureipes. SINGLE cae Two Canin VOL. 21.-NO. 129. ee Tye i Jaiu Examiner s issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Go From their othe», corner of Water and Great George streets, ‘h arlottetown, Prince EKdward Island, —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— is DOA, 20 00s dances obecceen etbece $2.50 ES eee eee eae 1,25 One BOOED .cce - ccvee coeetoobetbbaedecece 50 Advertising 4t¢ moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. bail-yeariy, or yearly aivertisements, OR aYpricetiou ALMANAC FOR OCTOBER, 1887, MOON'S CHANGES. Moon Ist day, Ilh., 34.8m., p. m., S. . fn eu Le t ' BSL WUArLO! iUth day, Uh., 44.9m., a.m., S.K. | New \ 1 1G6th day, Oh, 22.5m., p. m., West, V rizon First Quarter 23rd day, lh., 33.3m., p.m., Full Moon 3ist day, Sh., 18.tm., p. m., East. Di F Sun Sun |Moon High Day's DAY OF WEEK s M rises rises Water) lien b NEW FALL gaeBs NOW OF. EEN. a | J. B. MACDONALD. 0—_——_— — Every department full of the Newest Goods. Everything New in Ladies’ Dress Goods. Everything New in Ladies’ Jackets. Everything New in Ladies’ Hats and Trim- nines. Tremendous Stock of Ready-made Clothing. Every Inducement to Cash Buyers. Goods Bought Right. Our Prices will be found Low. —) J. B. MACDONALD, Ch'town, Sept. 26, 87—dy wy—pat A mh maftr'nymorn|h m 1 {Saturday 6 3/5 36 5 50/10 1211 33 2)Sunday 5d, ot 6 1011 42 2y 3) Monday 6} 32 6 Soil 14), 26 4 Lues Lay 5 320i 7 Bill 4 22 5) WV edne sday i 4 23 7 32iaft 15 19 3, Tharsday 0 26 8 5F'@ 50 1G! 7, Friday 12} 24, 8 44) 1 27 2 §| saturday 13} 22; 931; 2 @ v 9 yunday i i4 20:10 2a 3 6 10) Mouday | 16; 18/11 25) 410 2 1]! iveaday | 17) 16!morn}| 5 33/10 59 IZ) Veduexiay | 18) 14 0 33) 6 57) 56 13 Thursday 20 13: 1 46) 8 4! 53 14) eriday 21 ll} 3 118 &4 5O 15) Saturday | 231 9) 415) 945) 46] t's by a 7| 5 38/10 30 43) 17 Monday | 25) 5] 6 S7inl-a0) 40) (| Cuesda 27; 4) 8 Lajdd 37] | 37} iY) Ved 23 2; 9 30) morn 34 &| Laureday 29} U'i0 40) O 34 3i 2i\ Friday O}4 57)11 43) 1 19 27 22| Saturday 31 Svialt 34) 2 Q| 24 23| Sunday 2 a) 1 2213 4 2i 24) Monday 34; 52) 2d) 4 11 ls 23) Tuesday 39; SU) 2 34) 5 27 15! 26) Wednesday 3s 426°32.3516381: & 27/ Thursday 38; 47) 3 29) 7 40 9 28) Friday 39} 45; 3 53) S$ 27} 6 29 3 .turday 41; 44) 4 16) 9. 6) 3) 30 Sunday 45) 43) 4 40) 9 41) 0 31 Monday 6 45'4 42) 5 1/10 15) 9 57 | L. ARTHUR & €O., COMMISSION MERCHANTS,’ RECEIVERS [OF Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS Poultry, Potatoes, Frait & Vegetables. 142, 144 Commercial Street, BOSTON, MASS, Mays —_—— _ ee ES .) Ee - Eb-( 2-89-09. PIL. ARK LAGEMENT. THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE | ee Leave St. Join for Bostou, via Eastport and Port- and,every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 0 a. m. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd Class ; 39 dU, Ist class. For tickets and other information apply to G. A.SHARP, F. W. HALES, & ft. R.. P. E. L Steam Nav. Co, or to your nearest Ticket Agent, 24, jal wky LO Direel, —BY THE Boston, Halifax and Prines Edward: Island Steamship Line, The Only Direct Line Without Change. Sepr Charlottetown to Boston es Tt staunch and commodioas steamships Car- z roll and Worcester have been thorougbly furnishe tand put into first-class condition wm €very particular. we otriag the season of 1887, one of these vessels t Ul leave Pownal Street Wharf, Charlottetown Or Boston, at four o'clock, p.m., on fHURSDAY Of each week, and Boston for Charlottetown every SATURDAY, &@t noon Accommodation! Low Excellent tates | Li Cabin, $7.50; Stateroom Berth. $9 50. sow est 'ates for freight, which is always care- FPARE< fully Landled, CARVELL BROTHERS, Axents, Charlottetown, LORING, Managing Owner, Lewis W aart, Bostun. Jey Deen. Passenger Harriso \ J IR EF A to _D. REID, SUCCESSOR TO REID BROS,, —IS OFFERING— BARGAINS ee plea CLoruine, Furtsaines, Tryon Tweens. 5 Sek \ EN’S WORSTED SUITS, 85.75; Tweed Suits, $6.50; Tweed Overcoats, $4.25; Boys A Overcoats, $3.00; Men's Heavy All-wool Pants, made to order, $2.25; Men's Heavy All-wool Tweed Suits, made to order (good fits guaranteed), $12.50; Children’s Tweed Suits, $2.00, worth $3 00, All-wool White Blankets, $2.60 per pair; Gray Flannel, 1&e¢ per yd., All-wool Tweed, 50c per yd.; Ladies’ Cashmere Jersey Gloves, 25c; Cashmere Hose, 32c. Hats, Caps, Neckwear and Gloves at astonishingly Low Prices. Allimported this Fall; bought right, and will be sold at a SMALLER PROFIT for. stories, high, with go d Cellar; and each floor his own present case) had no ponies of their Hopeful is not Cash than any other house in the City. TRYON WOOLEN MILLS DEPOT, Cameron Bloc Charlottetown, Oct, 15, 1887—eod & wky tf CLOTHING ror 1887~98 FALL AND WINTER Overcoatings, Overcoatings, Meltons, Naps, Vicunas, Worsteds, Beaver Pilots, Venetians, Worsteds. TWEED SUITINGS (In Endless Variety.) Worsted Suitings, Worsted Trowsering, Tweed Trowsering. 10: We are better prepared than ever before to turn out First-class Work at short notice, We guarantee FIRST-CLASS CLOTHES, and cheaper than any other house in the Trade. Ow ee JOHN MACLEOD & CO., Merchant Tailors and Gents Farnishing Store, (Roger's Building, Queen St., next door to J. DV, Macleod.) Ch'te wn, Sept. 29. 1RR7T—eod & wky DAMSON' P 2OIA Nie PROMPT. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson's Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey. Cougs, Coldg, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have been speedily cured by the use of ADAMSON’ BALSAM after all other medicines have failed Sutferc s from either recent or chronic coughs or brouchial affections, ean resort t this great remedy, confident of obtaining speedy relief, Do not delay, vet it at once. FOR SALE BY ALL PRUGGISTS, Bottled at St. Steven<) NB FPF. W. KINSMAN & CO . 343 4TH AYE., N.Y, ©. C CARLTON, AUCTION EER; —AND— Commission Merchatn, SOURIS, P E. L the proprieters, Prugyis«t Oct, 3, 1387. GLEN STEWART MARKET GARDER James Burke, Proprietor. The PIRATE. By Sir Waltar Soott. CHAPTER XI. ( Continued, ) When their extemporary repast was finish- ed, the factor became solicitous to take the road; and now Mordaunt discovered that the alacrity with which he had been received by Mistress Baby was not altogether disinterest- ed. Neither she nor the learned Triptolemus felt much disposed to commit themselves to the wilds of Zetland, without the assistance of a guide; and although they could have com- manred the assistance of one of their, own laboring folks, yet the cautious agriculturist observed that it would be losin: at least one day’s work; and his sister multiplied his ap- prehensions by echving back, “One da,’s work !—ye may weel say twenty—for set ane | of their noses within the smell of a kail-pot and their Ings within the sound of a fiddie, and whistle them back if ye can!” Now the fortunate arrival of Mordaunt, in the very nick of time, not tu mention the good cheer which he brvught with him, made him as welcome as any one could threshold, which, on all ordinary occasions, abhorred the passage of a guest; nor was Mr. Yellowley altogether insensible of the pleasure he promikel himsclf in detailing his. plans of improvement to his young companion, and enjoying, what his fate seldom assigned him —the company of a patient and admiring listener. As the factor and his sister were to prose- _eute their journey on horseback, it only re- | mained to mount their guide aud companion; a thing easily accomplished, where there are such numbers of shaggy, long-backed, short- ilegged ponies, running wild upon the exten-, |Sive moors, which are the common pasturage for the cattle of every township, where she!- ties, geese, swine, |Zetland cows, are turned out promiscuously, land often in numbers which can obtain but ‘precarious subsistence from the niggard vege- ‘tation. There is, indeed, aright ot individual ssibly be to a| goats, sheep, and little | he inflicted upon him, concerning the changes which his owa advent in these isles was about to occasion. Unskilled as he was in the modern arts by which an estate may be improved to such-a high degree that it shall altogether slip through the proprietor’s fingers, Triptolemus had at least the zeal, if not the knowledge, of a whole agricultural society in his own person; nor was he sur- passed by any one who has Jollowed him, in that noble spirit which scorns to balance profit against outlay, but holds the glory of effecting a great change on the face of the land, to be, like virtue, in a great degree its own reward. No part of the wild a mountainous region ove: which Mordaunt guided him, but what suggested to his active imagination some scheme of fmprovement and alteration. He would make aroad through yon scarce pass- able glen, where at present nothing but the sure footed creatures on which they were mounted could tread with any safety. He would substitute better houses for the skeoes, or sheds built of dry stones, in which the inhabitants cured or manufactured their tish— they should brew good ale instead of bland— they should plant forests where tree never grew. and find mines of treasure where a | Danish skilling was accounted a coin of a most | respectable denomination. All these mutations, ; With many others, did the worthy factor | resolve upon, speaking at the same time with jthe utmost continence of the countenance and assistance which he was to 1eceive from the higher classes, and especially from Maguus Troil. **[ will impart some of my ideas to the poor jman,” he said, ‘before we are both many | hours older ; and you will mark how grateful jhe will be to the instructos who brings him knowledge, which is better than wealth.” ; : (To be continued.) Hopefal in Prison. A sketch in the Philadelphia Times says : ‘* When fast race horses retire from the turf their life is usuaily one of pampered ‘luxury. Especialiy is this true if they go into the stud. But Hopeful—the great handsome Hopefui—the very gem cf trot- ‘ters as to temper, is spending his declining years in State’s Prison. He never did any- thing wrong, although he has figured as a ‘ringer,’ and won races under the aliases of ‘The Phenomenon,’ *The Little Wonder’ | e000 CELERY, 25 cents per dozen, delivered property in all these animals, which are brand-jand ‘Tom.’ Of these infringements of at custumers dovrs in Charotterown. If ed or tattoed by each owner with his own trotting-course law Hopeful is unaware; packed or put inte ceilar, 10 cenis per dozen extra will be charged. All other vegetables at market prices. Address all orders to Southport P, Office, P. E. and, Oct. 8—iwks 2aw Store Wanted or Land to Build Que on, ; BRICK STORE, on Queen Square, with Ware- ! house in ciose proximity. Store must be three , Must be equai to ar least fifieen hundred square | feet (or larger preferred), will be purchased or ‘leased fora term of five to twenty years; to be ready by eod«f July. Otters will be received at ExaMINER office for one month. Oct. i7, 1887—2aw 1 r cuaney 34 LE a 9 | a ‘BAKING POWDER. SAH NC) 8h (MD, Ub 8 ene) PEAT IW Ge ‘STOVE POLISH: A SPICES ' BORAX: CURRE POWDER: CELERY SALT MUSTARD ees | (Geer yeaeeg Veerel {| f perecane Smee LY hiaa hia, |e ea a ea A813) Sea PL Bene 7 = IWER MEDAL \ BRONZE MEDALS, — = NEW BOOT & SHOE STORE NORTH SIDE W.R. BOREHAM'S OLD STAND, ‘Chitown, PvE, I, Stock Entirely New and Personally Selected from the Best Fac- tories in the Dominion, and comprises a -Full Assort- ment, suitable for Fall and Winter Trade.) R. K. JOST. ! EFERRING to the above, I beg to thank my numerous customers for the patronave of the t and solicit a continuance of the same for my successor, and should be pleased to see and wait on all of my friends as formerly, Mr- Jost having engaged my services. W. R. BOREHAM. Ch'tows, isp? 27, 1887>-—od & why QUEEN SQUARE A CARD. To all who are suffering from the errors and fudiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, lossof manhood, &c., I will send.a recipe that will cure you, TREE OF CHANGE, This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self-addressed envelope to the REY. JOSEPH T. INMAN, Station D, New York City, H. W. VINNICOMBE, Instructor of the Violin, formerly of the Exeter Oratorio and Phi'harmonic Orches- tra, pupil of John Rendal, R. A., | England. Tuition given on the [nstrument individually— lnot in . class.’@anclas’ conservatory method jused. Age preferred--tweive to sixteen years. | ‘There is an Orchestral Ciass in connection for those that are sufficiently advanced, free of » charge. For particulars apply to H W. Vinnicombe, Fitzroy street, near St. James’ Church. Orders for pian» tuning lefi at _C. P. Fletcher’s, will be attended to promptly. N. B.—I have twe fine old Violins fcr Sale. Anaznst 20, PRX7. Notice of Co-Partnership. WE have this day associated with us in Co- Partnership Mr. Henry ‘iordon, of Rose- neath. for the = of extending our business. Firm to be styled, McLEOD & STEWART. John McLeod, James O. Stewart, Henry Gordon. N. B.—Thanking our customers for their literal patronage in the past, we would solicit 4 continua»ce of the same; and as many as will favour us with their orders sal! have our prompt , attention, ‘ McLEOD & STEWARK Uct. Jom IS —ovtl 22 tew wky 2 peculiar mark; but when any passenger has occasional use for a pony, he never scruples to lay hold of the first which he can catch, puts on a halter, and, having rode him as far as he finds convenient, turns the animal loose to find -his way back again as he best can—a matter in which the ponies are sufficiently sagacious. Although this general exercise of property was one of the enormities which in due time but he has had wicked owners who carried him into remvte districts, and the honest . little hurse, docile always, did as he was told and won races _classes without distancing nags who couldn't ‘go within 2.30 tosave their lives. But Hopeful has trotted 150 races inside of 2.30, and has a record of 2.14}. He has inthe 2.35 and 2.40 - the factor intended to abolish, yet, like a wise Won in purses over $85,000, and the beauti- ‘man, he scrupled not, in the mean time to ful wife of Jobn 8. Hay hung a wreath of ‘avail himself of so general a practice, which, roses around the favorite gelding’s neck, he condescended to allow, was particularly the offering of the ladies of Cleveland when convenient foe those who (as chanced to be he beat Great Eastern in 1878. W.-H, in prison forany offence. He belongs to a prison officer, one known in his way almost as well as Hupefual in his, own on which their neighbors could retaliate. Three shelties, therefore, were procured from the hill—little shagged animals, more resem- *¢ >. ~ bling wild bears than anything of the horse ; Detective James Jackson. Neither a jtribe, yet ’ possessed of no small degree of opeful in his declining years. It woul ‘email and spirit, and able to endure as puzzle him to celebrate his twenty-first jmuch fatigue and indifferent usuage as any, birthday by trotting a mile in 2.20, but he creature in the world. ‘could do three of them inside of 2.30. : Two of these horses were already provided However, his halcyon days are over. His and ‘fully accoutred for the journey. One _ off fore-knee has weakened, and his chest of them, destined to bear the fair person of has been knocked out of shape.” Mistress Baby, was decorated with a huge| side-saddle of venerable autiquity—a mass, as} it were, of cushion and padding, from which depended, on all sides, a housing of ancient athens tapestry, which having been originally intend-; [ Petit Monitewr recently published in ,ed for a horse of ordinary ee eee “UP English an article showing that French ep A grat gl ea ae aa va society has become ‘* the prey of the Eng- } ad, i ar > . li ere ; \ shoulder to the fetlock, leaving nothing visible lish, the Y ankee, the Spaniard, ~ Italian, but its head, which looked fiercely out trom a it bemoans the fact in t : way :— these enfoldments, like the heraldic represen- ; A brutal shake-hand (') has replaced our ‘tation of a lion looking out of a bush. Mor-, former elegant way of kissing a lady’s rosy ;daunt gailantly lifted up the fair Mistress fingers. * The five o'clock tea has | Yellowly, and, at the expense of very slight! existed at all times, only formerly it was ‘exertion, placed her upon the summit of ber called le gouter, and pretty women used to -mountainous saddle. It is probable that, on ‘fly at it with fruits or light pastry. Now ! feeling herself thus squired and attended England has quickly put her heavy paw on -upon, and experiencing the long unwonted ‘the graceful custom, and at these orgies of consciousness that she was attired in her best English tea, ham, sandwiches, mutiias (!), ‘array, some thoughts dawned upon Mistress, | Baby’s mind, which checkered for an instant 'those habitual ideas about thrift, that formed | ~~--— ee -— - French Society. pudding, gengember pie (!), etc., are swal- lowed down, and our bordeaux has given Grtete Tne mele nies ‘the daily and all-engrossing occupation ef her soul. She glanced her eye upon her faded ' Joseph,and on the long housings of her saddle, ‘as she observed, with a smile, to .Mordaunt, i that ‘‘ travelling was a pleasant thing in fine , weather and agreeable company, if,” slie ad- if ded, glancing a look at a place where the em- | Ee; , broidery was somewhat frayed and tattered, i** it was not sae wasteful to ane’s horse-furni- , ture.” |} Meanwhile, her brother stepped stout- ‘ly to his steed; and as he chose, notwithstnding the serenity of the iweather, to throw a long red cloak ‘over his other garments, his pony was even ‘more completely enveloped in drapery than that of his sister. It happened, moreover, to be an animal of a high and contumacious spirit, bouncing and curvatting eccasionally ‘under the weight of Triptolemus, with a vi- 'vacity which, notwithstanding his Yorkshire descent, rather deranged him in the saddle ; gambols which, as the palfrey itself was not visible, except upon the strictest inspection, ad, at a little distance, an effect ws if they were the voluntary movements of the cloaked cavalier, without the assistance of any other legs than those with which nature had provided him; and, to any who had viewed Triptolemus under such a persuasion, the gravity, and even distress, announced in his countenance, must have made a ridiculous contrast to the vivacious caprioles with which he piaffed along the moor. Mordaunt kept up with his worthy couple, mounted, according to the simplicity of the time and country, on the first and readiest ‘pony which they had been able to press into the service, with no other accoutrement of any kind than the halter which served to guide him ; while Mr. Yellowley, seeing with pleasure his guide thus readily provided with way to chemical compositions known as cok (!) tail and sherry gobler(!). We have no longer cafes; they have become taverns, bars and musik (!) halls.”’ ee Give Them a Chance! That is to say, your lungs. Also all your breathing machinery. Very wonderful machinery it is. Not only the larger air passages, but the thousands of little tubes and cavities leading from them. When these are clogged and choked with matter which ought not to be vhere, your lungs cannot half do their work. And what they do they cannot do well. Call it cold, eough, croup, catarrh, cansumption or any of the family of threat and nose and head and lung obstruc- tions, all are bad. All ought to be got rid of. There is just one sure way to get rid of them, That is to take Boschee’s German Syrup, which any droggist will sell at 75 cents a bottle. Even if everything else has failed you, you may depend upon this for certain. pneumonia, ——— The Chinese have a thoughtful proverb : ‘* The prison is shut night and day, yet it is always full; the temples are always open, jand yet you find no one in them.” — “ My husband had a cold on his langs, and after using Adamson’s Balsam he was relieved ‘and finally cured, No one should be without ‘it, for its curative properties are certainly | wonderful.” Mrs. H. C. Somers, Hotel Effing- |ham, 1435 Broadway Street, New York. Trial ' hotties 10 cents. dy wy ‘‘ LaDIEs, ATrentiow !—A special meeting of 1) <>: Gao a steed, privately resolved, that this rude, the Bazaar Commi tee of the PE. Island Hospt- custom of helping travellers to horses, without leave of the proprietor, should not be abated in Zetland, antil he came to possess a herd of penies belonging in property to himself, and exposed to suffer in the way of retalia- tion. But to other uses or abuses of the country, Triptolemus Yellowley showed himsclf less tolerant. discourses he eld with Mordaunt,or (to speak mutly \nbite torwetay) the huremgues which Long and wearisome were the , tal is to be held in St. Panul’s Schoolroom on | Monday, 24th inst., at 3p. m., forthe pur- ' pose of choosing a suitable time for the annual basen 2i—oct21 rare -——— -— Recetvep to-day, one case American Hat jand Bonnet Shapes.-—NSTANLEY Bros. } oct20—2i a Lapies’ and gente’ walking boots, lateet style at Gorr Bros oot, UT «a TS Ee. SR