i a he tee am A Y EXAMINER | grant a reme ivy as asked for by the Catho “A GOOD OLD FRENCHMAN” SPEAKS, THE D IL, « | lic minority Phis question was auswered Sir,—Allow me a little space in your —_—-— i —_ = oe ee : . - >a . — THE DAILY EXAMINER " ne | in the same way The sixth question was paper to pass a few remarks. I do not Know that what I have to say will be interesting, but it may be amusing. If if they have an appeal from the two acts | perchance a ee wander s the } Vicinity of Ovster Bed Bridge, Rustico, | though benighted on your path, no anxiety « evening that they have lost a | by the Chief Justice and Justices Tasch | need attend your steps, for the creditable erean and Gwynne, and affirmed by Four- | *¥pervisor of our prodigal government lias, : : | in his desire to capture votes, caused the ! oe ,| occurrence of something unprecedented. Senile + our streets for well-high | ported to have spoken strongly in favor of | Just think of it! Two rows of bushes on half a century; who, during a great part | the province having a right to pass its own the ice to mark one track, and a traveller FEBRUARY 23, 1894 whether or not the minority have a right } ' } ’ ' } , or privilege in relation to education, and | THE REV. DOR. FITZGERALD. 4 many persons in Charlottetown | complained of, which was also negatived rie 1, And son ethis gy more than a friet 1. form has been | ner and King. The Chief Justice is re- ne period. baptited the children, | laws and against any imposition of any | fancies himself in the glades of an artificial £} = al i i Bl ls eal forest. Let us solve the enigma. Super- prepared e youths confirmation, | Sabin a ee visor Pino promised the bushing of the ice srried the young men and women, sym AN INSURGENT VICTORY. | to a Conservative whom we shall designate pathized with those who were sick and it No.1. Then he promised the job to a ba , was a | Da Gama’s Forces Capture a Strong Posi- | No. 2, if he would vote for the Liberal trouble, buried the dead ; one wh : trouble, br : , tion and Six Hundred Men candidates, which was agreed to, and as I i] vervant of the Master whom members ; : ; . » » The To. : it if ve ae knowledve,|, be London Times publishes the fol- | Understand, done. Then a No. 3, a grit if all Christiandenominationsacknow ledge, lowing despatch from Rio Janeiro, Febru- | YOU please, requested a share in this, and est, sterling man,—has passed | gry Léth, via Montevideo, Feb. 20th : The | Mr. Pino, in his liberality, allowed him to \ I acc id which w micied | returns of the fight at Amacao last week | ¢oter into partnership with No. 1. After wa he Boe tae ¥ ‘ . . ’ ack Bros . is . i tet fatally at halfpast | how that the losses of the Govern- Jack Frost had done his _work on the ew days ago resulted fatally at hi , ment were 55 killed and wounded and 60 | Tiver, on a beautiful and bright morning, o¢k this forenoor prisoners taken by the insurgents, On| the inhabitants of the city perceived that Dr. Fiteverald was rn at Tralee, | the insurgents’ side 146 were killed, miss. | @ profusion of bushes were being planted ‘ ty K il Ireland. on the third of | ing or wounded | on the ice by three men, and to their "aa ' 42 obtained Admiral de Gama is in no danger. The | astonishment, it resolved itself into two n : tlt mle insurgents are in good spirits and ready to | well laid off rows. Mr. Pino paid the B.A College, enter into another fight at any moment. | partners, but No, 2 is greatly disappointed Dublin. During the course of the same | Admiral de Gama +tates that he has suffi- and in dreadful exasperation; so much aba ee i stake not. he wa married to | cient provisions and ammunition for sev- | that he will sue to the amount of $4 for eral weeke, and that he will make every | breach of promise. ; . endeavor td maintain his present position |. The grits are deaf and dumb on polities owed to the grave ouly a few months | 110i) the arrival of southern troops. He | Since the elections. They are now convinced In 1846 he was ordained a Priest of | obtains many supplies and some men | that the measures of the Government in from the vicinity of Maje and Teresopolis, | amalgamating, disfranchising, Petermand- Miss Charity Purdon, whose remains he Charch of Eng po ee | ering, and expending the public money ' ¢ shied of June 1967. | ROR the head of the bay. gy x} g I , ’ - , ee ee - The guiners of the Nictheroy’s dynamite | 0" the roads eo extravagantly have secured Prince Edward Island. Here} o4) have deserted, and the remainder of | them too large a majority to show honesty, o . - . . ve * lei -- } , ame assistant to the Rev. | ¢he fleet is still at Bahia. The engines of | 4nd they are never willing to hear‘a politi- , »a) ialk porter . se 8 T) Tenkine who was at that time Reetor the Destrover have broken down and they | cal talk. It is re porte I that ee _ — , : Dr. Jenkins retired find mach difficulty in obtaining crews. | 1% 4 harlottetown that he could thank the se ee mi ‘mob aee Aquidaban leaves on Sunday to inter- } Frenchmen of Rustico for his election. | favor of the Rev. Charles Lioyd on the | cept the Nictheroy. , shall not deny that Mr. Wise got a little : f October, 1854; Mr. Lloyd resigned Advices from Desterro state that the | ™ore support pe gpa in ee ee ° iMr. Fitz serald was elected | government's strong position in the estate the reason is wel! nee n tea the erec- peddle cc ie on sarvatin peec In- | Of Parana was taken on Friday after severe tors. But these Pe eee > ” Avens n- . = 4 . ah, op ~w Ss < ector on the 24th of August, 1857 "| fighting, during which many were killed | never willing to tell why they support that would-be -wise man, who, on account | of his incompetency, ia a-disgrace to any constituency. Mr. Wise need not thank incted on the 26th of March, 1858, he | and wounded on both sides. The genera! ei at Easter, 1885, having been | commanding the government troops was Rector for nearly twenty-eight years. In | wounded and 600 prisoners were taken. : ° vith the Republica Soi ; Admiral Desterro j ‘ : : 1881 he too« the degrees of A. M.,: B.D. | and will peat cat hshortly, The | 2ture and devices,” which make French and D. D. at King’s College. He was for | government cruitem® Tidentes and Bahia | ™en, like others, for a favor, soietimes twenty vears a member of the Board of j are stili at Montevided.s The@atter ran | ready to barter their independence. Educat This is the brief life-record | aground while attemptirg to enter a dock A Goop Op FrexcuMay. ' ; ; on Wednesday einiiiitsilpioaertenimoe ; r 7cre } as Oe rar - . *- ; = ~ +. : a good man. Dr. Fitzgerald was po} qe government is raising more national | “A HARD-WORKING CLERGYMAN.” | | guards in the state of Sao Paulo, and will! moe Every one knew exactly where he stood as | endeavor to resist the threatened invasion Sir,—We notice in Tuk Examixer « Right or | of Gen. Saravia ; ey: | sent orders to the garrisons at Porto| heading. We believe there are hard- wrong. he was sincere and honest. His | Allegre, Pelotas and Rio Grande, com- | working clergymen on P. E. Island, but sessed of great strength of principl churchman and as a citizen moral courage never wavered Phe | prising 2,000 men, to march north. | cannot see ae ~ very well be applied | } in- | > Methodist clergyman at Souris. positions which he held, he would main- | o-e j & the Me hor ist clergyn OurIS His clerical duties cannot be very great BOSTON’3 UNEMPLOYED. A Delegation Literally Takes Possession of the State House. In this i respect, as in many others, his was an ait ‘6 5. life ! tain, if necessary, with his lift when his church membership does not ex- ceed twenty,and we do not think it reaches , that number, and they are all in the vil- example which might well be imitated n lage. True, he preached to the seamen -- Oe o O- THE BOSTON RIOT. A delegation of unemployed in Boston | called at the State House to see the gov- } ernor on Tuesday afternoon. Gov. Green- * | halge spoke to 2.500 people on the steps | on Beacon street, assuring them of his | at least some of the big cities of the States. | sympathy and expressing the opinion that Sr nenton‘snak: tha ether day | legislature would _respond to any Phe leader of a Boston mob the other -,| practicable petition. After the governor | proposed to “clean out every legislator” | retired, the crowd rushed into the build then in session in the State House if their! ing for the purpose of presenting demands for work and food were not sati-- | the petition, Morrison T Swift, tue lea ler, | asid that if the sugge-tions in the gover- ‘ | nor’s speech were not carried out every | men filled the hall of ‘the Legislature, | jan sitting on the floor would be cleaned shouting “ Down with capital,” Kill the | out The “governor was informed of the police,” “ Where are the cowardly law- | remark. He came into the corrilor and bers ?* ete Tt is probable that the | Confronted Swift who said he meant they | ee ee ee | would clean them out by the ballot. The | telegrasn referred to is somewhat eensa- | governor told him such talk would not be | tional, anid that the cries of tne mob were | tolerated there, whereupon Swift practica!- to give “pression | ly‘apologized. The mob had to be driven from the state house by the police. i Tae CANADA AND AUSTRALIA, only to preach to the people of the village Irparxe by the telegrams, the cris h M | i nent in and all the reat of the day was frée. wulcl acauiay toresaw 3 llaminet ; - brother minister on the Mount Stewart larger part of the former Souris circuit about 450 miles in length, and who has to fied. We are told that three thousa:i art to get to his preaching appoirtment, and ten miles farther to visit his parish- ioners, all to make the present Souris cir- cuiteasy for its “hard-working clergy- man.” In our eyes, such a paragraph re- garding the man on the smallest and easiest circuit on PE. [sland is ridieu!- for effect rather than Christians, or the paragraph regarding the hard work a great exaggeration. A Hoping the time will soon come when Telegraphle and Postal Communicatioa— | justice will be meted to all men I remain, Commercial Treaty Stipulations, | yours respectfully, to revolutiovary designs. Yet the fuet thet | they refused to disperse at the reque-t | of Governor Greenhalge, and that a strong force ot police had te. be olgained, proves that the men out ot work A recent cable despatch from London | Farreiar. and starving are at almost the last ex-| to the Montreal Witness says: To-day Ordinarily, the rank and file of | Robert Reid, n=nister of defence and eonatey? health of the colony of Victoria, Au-- : the people of the United States vield us | ™ alth of the colon: “7 mg % . ‘| The entertrinment given by the New h yp nit 5 ' a F a rriew w iv . : j to the law ny people | wake, heed na — oe : On. | Perth Hall Company, on. the evening of 4 ol nee t he y2 as an Ope | es ley stmaster-ceneral, con-i wo “ . ready obedience to the faw2 as & op’ | Arthur Morley, po =" ter oven eo! Feb. 20th, was, owing to unfavorable in the world, Their self-restraint in times | cerning a an eee ee, | weather, not so great a financial success as But. | cation “aes ee Reid ie " me me | ie vompany would have wished, | tralia. ater Mr. Reid addressed a mee'- i an ’ : : Governor Greenbaige, being the witness, | #'* vn her ’ f parliament interest- Cyrus Shaw, M. P. P., presided, and in ; hg of the members OF pe bs ee ca} | ® few well chosen remarks explained the ait * cok 2s ving a Ir 18 * . . | ed in the colonies, urg ng that posh yes, hangin object of the entertainment. nger orderly and law-abiding In a} subsidy be granted to the Australia-Cane- The programme, which consisted of ie R i | choice musical selections and recitation, ie lian line of steamships, also to the prowet or a direct all British cable between Aus- | humorous dialogues, dramas, ete., was ) tralia and Canada He also urged the rendered in a manner that would reflect necessity of Great Britain “naintaining her credit on professionals, and was received | naval supremacy, which would be aided by the audience with rounds of applause. by the Pacifle cable and steamship pro- | “pe company has decided to repeat the jects. He advocated al-o the removal of | entertainment—with slight alterations— risk todar. [ came from strange and | «ll commercial treaty stipulations with | on the evening of Wednesday, March 7th, I stand here to night | foreign countries, and all other restric- | chen & programme will be presented of orderly | tions preventing or standing in the way of | which cannot fail to satisfy all who enjoy muds in Maseechucetts (Cheers and imperial preferc ntial tra le, or > oo a rich literary treat. , he applan-e.) Massachusetts means bu .-| tial tarifl duties, in favor of trade oa ve mindncrecs widen: on It makes my blood boil to find | the colonies and dependencies and the Music--The Maple Leaf Forever............. : Massachusetts } mother country. s+Oce | ENTERTAINMENT AT NEW PERTH. tremity ° tT of great excitement is wonderful many of the poor men of Boston are no speech delivered by him on the evening of e day upon which the disturbance oc urred, the Governor sa d: I think I need all your good wishes in the presen I doubt if any lite | insnrance would con-ider me an ordinary t exigencies isorderiy scenes. to a-k the support of the men men who clain that . ee ie sa ss bees Dialogue—A Lis ely Afternoon, binge laws are unfriendly and unjust to any.} The emigrants ‘information of J M McLean, W R McLean, S Shaw, I want. and so do you, to give far} just published its annual report, which J A Dewar, O S MeNeil, RG Me- play to every citizen ‘of Massachusetts, | ‘how s that there were during the past — Laren, T Cameron, and when I nee Lisorderls persons throny- | an increased proportion of enqgeeses re- Seng —The Sailor Boy...... eee 2 nz the streets. is not-it @ question which | garting Canada, a decreased proportion RG MeLaren, J M Mclean, WR Massach setts miust anawer ? Yes, she | concerning Australia, and a marked in- + Mel man. ha« and will alwave answer and be true tu | crease as to South Africa. Reading - The Agricultural Editor.... her principles for equal rights. There- si a — Ug iitsstesssessees eecessssaeses ees eed A Dewar . I say, we have no reason for dis | PARIS HALF TERRORIZED. Violin Selection...... Miss Lillie Cameron 1% We sin ply want the business men | Anvther Romb asterten and Some Dam- Recitation— Old Ace.....-:..... 4M McLean Solo—Sweethearts and Wives. ......... oseesscs TSE <'% » 3+ oth RG McLaren Dialogue—Aunt Jerusha’s Mistake.... to atand by u Whenever the exigencie- | FS) (Amen SF all “ae ; oo. | Paris is again half terrorized at a bomb | ng as life ie lef, | shall eOiaavur toy explosion on Tuesday in an obscure hotel . gear | on the Rue St. Jacques. The bomb was Misses i, Cam ron and Katie K Dewar, | placed outside of one of the inner doors of | Messrs. R G McLaren, and J A Dewar. | the hotel, and when the door was opened it Music—Aunnie Dear and Called Away.. : J Kennedy, J M McLean, Misses L age is Done to a Hotel, rue to everv fiterest of the. comimneu- Ith of Mussachusetts m to be drawn by. onr propie _s. -! exploded with terrific force, inflicting want and misery which now pre explo i C : S| 4 _ : entenne : serious wounds upon M. Calabresi, pro- Cameron, and M Kennedy. 1, | prietor, his wife and M. Ismaet, a commis- Recitation-—The Polish Boy...J A Dewar ought to be contented with their -ot | sion agent. In addition to the above an Quartette—Come W here the Lilies Btn A farmer on his | ynele “of M. Calabresi was struck by a | Misses M Kennedy and Lillie Cameron, fragment of the bomb and severely hurt. Messrs. J Kennedy and J A McLean. It is thought that a former ldiiger, who Drama—Eh, What Is It........ ie. has been missing from the hotel for a few R G McLaren, OS MeNeil, J A Dewar, ' i irink, if ony he will w rk But day, wae the placer of the Lomb | Misses Mabe! Dewar, and Katie K in Boston, and New York, ant Philatel- According to one theoryythe bomb was j _ Dewar. 1.4 man or woman, however capable | p'aced where it wat found bya anarchist | Solo—The Pardon Came Too Late... whko had a personal grudge against M. and | ©. ctestoinhesnsseieen + +558 .Miss L Cameron Mine. Calabresi. The explosion caused | Recitation—The Rules of the Road.... mit of ethploymert at any moment and | much damage to the building, blowing out | Rete bepeseee. SOBph Shaw east upon the charity of the world tosuff' tT | the windows, crashing down the partitions | \ folin Solo be tbball beuscan aaa Miss L Cameron | and doing other damave. | Recitation....John Maynard and W Kaneen In the afternoon there was a renewal of | Drama—The Masterpiece......... .. the excitement cansed by the finding of | Miss M Shaw, Mesers O'S McNe‘], W another bomb. This time there wasno} R McLean, T Cameron. Six evestions wera. submitted to the | explosion. The second bomb was found Solo—Rosalie.... Peet colic wan de teg T Cameron : ‘ - | in the Hotel do “Esperanio on the Rue du National Anthem. Supreme Court in connection with this | Faubourg, St. Martin. Rumors soon be-| New Perth, Feb. 21, 1894. matter. The first question was whether | 04 me rife that other explosions in different —+ or not the appeal of the Roman Catholic parts of the c.ty had taken place, and Hood’s Sarsaparilla is absolutely’ un- lamong the places mentioned was the | equalled as a blood purifier and strength« n- | Foreign Affairs building on the Quai} ing medicine. It is the ideal spring | DOrsay. Afterwards these rumors were | medicine. Try it. effeet In answer to thie, the Chief Ju tice, | found to be wholly without foundation icine Justices Tascherean and Gwynne said | USE SKO.A’S DISCOVERY, the great Blood and Nerve Remedy. Ihe ies the great cities of the States is that £ thev a! wake the beet of it farm, may be practically independent Le of plenty to T may, at all events, be suce ' privec and willing to work, is Kable to be turned i and to starve . ee —-- MANITOBA SCHOOL DIFFICULTY. | minority is admissable according to the tatutes, and the second was to the same —-— Orme @ ee -- PERSONAL. no,” and Justices Fournier and King | The third question was 4 whether or not the’ deciéios’ of the Privy | ™r- Hugh MeNelll of the Temperance ‘ i a and Genera] Assurance Company of To thie, North America, is in town to-day. He is the Chief Justice and all the othera/ going east. except Fournier, who| Captain Robert Fraser, of the steam- | ship Coban, and Mrs. Fraser, arrived here | yesterday afternoon and will remain about a fortnight. The Coban is laid upat Leod. section ninety three of the British North | flalifax. We are always wide-awake for bargains. America Act applies to Manitoba. The Richard Hunt, E-q., of Summerside, is | Having secured a lot of five-frame Brussels registered at the Hotel Davies to~lay. Mr. | carpets at our own. price, we are going to i : ; Hunt was re-elected Chairman of the Sum- | give our customers the benefit. nly 95 “ aes ‘i. we @ ae Sense merside Town Council by acclamation a | cents per yard—James Paton & ay separa - ore basen lent ecnoo 8 by few days ago. feb?! - the Union, or is thereafter e-tabliched | ying McRae, Secretary of the District! Carpets—We have sold carpets in the by the Legi-lature of the Province, a” | W. M.S. of the Methodist Church, Char-| past, we are selling them at present, and appeal shall lie to the Governor General lottetown, wishes to inform Auxiliaries | we intend to sel! them in the future. And in Council from any act or decision of any | tat her address is now St. Avards, Char-| our friends will always find our prices the provincial authority affecting any right or Ssakteaern. lowest.—Prowse Bros. & Co. feb23 Sort » Ea ilege of the Protestant 7 neasee _—_—— To the anxious waiting one—s new Jatholie minority of the Queen’s subject Lideneniovedement tir tak Gameied in relation or Education.” ~-Halifax Herald: Mr. Fielding, in his | og \.o¢ married faces a. est. veer: Sona The Chief Justice and Justiees Tasch- |} manifesto, rejoices that. the oreo is ot fad Paton’s & Co. eee ereau and Gwynne answered “ No,” while ee ey a a ty on the : ee ws coal produced at the syndicate mines; Justices Fournier and Ring ‘answered but us dees not mention the fact that the “Yes.” The fifth question was whether people are paying from 20 cente to 50 or not the governor-geveral in council has | cents a ton more for their coal, according LOCAL NOTICES. aid “yes,” Council in the case was final for at the rate often cents per line. Just Opened—Another lot of those black and white and black and red flan- elettes as cheapas ever—Moore & Me- answered “ no,” answered “yes.” The fourth question was whether or not subsection three of sub-sectian reads : See the great bargains we are giving in hats and caps.—John McLeod & Oo. £.b20 3i USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the grea THE STODDARD PHOTOGRAPHS. Some YPartleulars About Them—How to Obtain the Sertes, Mr. John L. Stoddard needs no introduc tion to our readers. Bor thirteen vears he has: lectured in the large cities of America on his travels in foreign lands, illustrating each lecture with hundreds of beautiful yiews, made from actual photo graphs taken under his personal direction During his Jong and. brilliant career his lectures have been the delight and his views the wonder of countless thousands No other man is so capable or so well fitted for preparing a work of the kind. An indefatigahle traveller, a close ob server and a brilliant scholar, he knows,as his success before a critical public proves, what will best instrnct the mind and de- light the eye has enabled him to gaather from the “World’s Store-house” the choicest treas- ures, the rarest gems of nature and sof art He has surveyed the entire world and eclected for this great series scenes surrounded with the romance and history of past ages; the Frenchmen of Rustico, but “human | f The government has also | February 2nd, a paragraph with the above | | during the suummer months, but he had ! once a Sabbath, and that in the evening, | We think that “hard-working clergy- | man” would be* better applied to his | circuit, on whose shoulders is laid the | in addition to his own making his ciren't | drive twenty-six miles from Mount Stew- | ous in the extreme. The Methodists of | Souris must be a very unru'y class of castles whose towering battlements cen- | turies ago looked down on scenes of war, misery and barbaric splendor, cathedrals | built by ambitious monarchs, every stone | telling a story of ignorance and oppres- | sion; the homes of kings and queens, pre- tentious but unhappy rulers of the past } and present; mountain scenes rivalling in glory of the sun itself; the tropics teeming with vegetable and animal life; the Esqui- maux and the Landof the Midnight Sun. He takes us in Bonnie Scotland to Burns’ birthplace, and the home of Walter Scott; in England to Stratford-on-Avon, where dwelt the great-Shakespeare and his fair Ann Hathaway; Stoke Pogis Church, the scene of Gray’s Elégy, and to the Old Curiosity Shop” inmort&lized by Charles Dickens;. in-France «to Paris and Ver- sailles, where the mighty Napoleon plan- | ned the conquest of ‘uation, and to little where Bismarck, the Iron Chancellor, mourns for the return of past powers; inRome te the Colosseum where gladiators and wild beasts fought for life to please Nero and his. savage followers, to. the Orient where Cleopatra lured kings to death, and in Jerusalem to Bethlehem, the birthplace of the Saviour. He leads the way through the great galleries of Ver- sailles, Luxembourg, Dresden, Florence and ancient Rome, showing the world’s masterpiece in painting and statuary. In the New World he takes us step by step from Greenland ‘and Alaska in the North to Patagonia in the South. In our | own country he shows us all the large | cities, the houses cf Wash ngton and Longfellow, the splendor of the Sierras, and the home of the Cliff Dwellers; in Mexico we visit the homes of the Montc- zumas and the scenes made famous by the luckless Maximilian; we-ereas the Andes through the highest pass in the world; | scale Mount Chimborazo, 21,420 feet high, and see as they are today Brazil, Argen- | tine Republic, and Ittle bat tempestuous Chili. Who would not enjoy a tour of the | world with such an accomplished com- panion and guide? Millions of dollars are annnally spent by tonrists vainly endeav- oring to see the treesures shown in this book. Many they never see, and those | they do but few appreciate, because they | do not understand the history connected | with them. In this work we not only see the scenes true to life from every land, but }are given, in few words, their entire description and history Great care has heen exercised hy Mr. Stoddard in selecting the photographs for this great work. Every phase of life from that fouud in the castles of the Old World to the straw cottages of Mexico is represented. He shows us remote corners of the earth where the foot of white man seldom treals. The plotographins of so many scenes in distant lands has cost Thousands of Dollars, ut the result justi- fies the enormous expense and labor invo!- ved. No such collection has ever been published, and it rerpresents what the wealth of the wold cannot buy. petted op . ” a } “WORTH A GUINEA A BOX."* - PILLS > (Tasteless— Effectual.) ; For Sick- Headache, Impaired Digestion, Liver Disorders and Female Ailments. | Renowned afl over the World. 3 . Covered with a Tasteless & Soluble Coating. | Ask for Beecham’s and take no others. $ | Made at St. Helens, England. Wholesale Agts. Evans & Sons, Ld, Montreal, | For sale by a.) druggists, j ow 2 a 327 = e “ = « Reliable Brugs, Cal i of . as Honest Dealing, = | | « > = Low Prices, —_ = “= &)/ HAVE WON THE TRADE. | > 5! oe | sg B | Wy ~ FE REDOIN BROS i | © 2| | , — <= | The Popular Druggists, j feb23 —dy j | | | Steam Navigation Co, Ltd. Annual Meeting. The Annual Meeting of the above Com- pany will be held at their office, corner of Great Geuge and Lower Water Streets, of Eleven o'clock, a. m. By order, F. W. HALES, Secretary. feh23—dy © Advertisements under this heading cnarged any jnriediction in the premises, or to! to quality and amount purchased ! Blood and NerveRemedy. 479 DNTA i wrviisvN It is the perfection of the well matured plant properly eured by expert growers. Mild flavored, bright and of match- | less quality; Mastiff Plug Cut pleases the most fastidious, J. B. Pace Tobacco Co., Richmond ‘General Kixtensive travel and study | Trianon, the home of hapless Marie An- | toinette; in Berlin to the the very house | mo = Liability Policies covering all lia- bility for damage to person and property are issued by the Canada Accident Assurance Company. AGENT FOR P. E. ISLAND, E. R. BROW stock.» CH’TOWN. BLOCK, TELEGRAPHIC. SpeciaL Despatcnes to THe Examiner CORRUPTION IN NEWFOUNDLAND. Contempt of And = High Court. Sr. Jony’s, Nfid., Feb. 23. Surveyor General Wood is nowgon trial for obtaining his election to the legislature by corrupt practices. Colonial-Secretary Bond has refused to submit to the official documents for the inspection of the court. Justice Winter characterized his conduct as outrageous in contempt of court, and nam produced. nn ig A Runaway Clergyman. Lonvoy, Feb. 23. A sensation has been caused in church circles by the sudden disappearance of the Rey. Peter Williams, of the Congregational Church, Hackney. Williams is a forcible and eloquent p eacher. His disappearance is supposed to be due to financial troubles. a Murder and Suicide. Canton, Pa., Feb. 2° » . wounded Hazel Craig, a colored girl, and self in the head. oo An Anarchist Arrested. . Paris, Feb. 23. The police have arrested an anarchist named Revolu, who is presumed to be one of the leaders of the bomb throwers now operating in Paris, ——. Liberal-Conservative Candidates. 9° Havirax, Feb. 23. The Liberal-Conservatives nominate! W.A. Black, James Morrow and Dr. Thomas Walsh as their candidates fur Halifax County in the local elections. suastiapdiitiinanetsinae GENERAL TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. Loxpon, Feb. 20.—Military reports from Sierre Leone are to the effect that the new magazine rifle used in the expedition against the Sofas surpasses the Martini in effici- ency. Kxoxvitie, Tenn., Feb. 20.—At a meet- ing of the southern coal operators called here today to memorialize the senate against the free coal clause of the Wilson bill, the first speech made was in favor of free coal. It was delivered by C.M. Woodbury, receiver of the Mingo mines of Middlesborough, Ky. The sentiment of the meeting, however, is against free coal. ; Cuicaco, Feb. 20.—The First Presby- terian church of this city is much exercised over the teaching of the Chinese in Sun- day schoo! by the voung women of the parish. A determined effort was made by the anti-Chinese elament in the society to put a stop to the practice. Danger of matrimonial alliances between teachers and pupils is the cause of the trouble, Maprip. eb. 20.—The Minister of For- eign Affairs has received a cable message from the Spanish Minister at Washington saying that the United States Government has admitted the principle of the Spanish claim for damages to Spanish subjects who suffered during the Florida war. The amount of the claims is said to be about $1000,000. Wasninerox, Feb. 20.—The Spanish claims referred to are identified with the early existence of the Government. The claims arose through an invasion of Florida by the American army about the beyinning of this century, wher Florida was a Spanish province. Thx troops seized or destroyed some personal prop- erty of Spanish subjects, who after the | cession of Ficrida took up their residence | in Cuba, declining to give allegiance to | the new flag. In the treaty of 1818, en- | acted between Spain and the United States, | articles were concluded providing fur the settlement of these damages. wii i +> + <te——- —___.. WHEY NoT | | subscribe for one or more of the following | MAGAZINES or PAPERS ? Atlantic Monthly, Cosmopolitan, Cas- | sell’s, Harper’s Monthly, Harper’s Week- | ly, Review of Reviews, Scribner’s, Mun- sey’s, Century, St. Nicholas, North Ameri- }can Review, Outing, Sunday at Home, | Pall Mall Budget, Illustrated London | News, Graphic, Black and White, Illus- trated » American, English Magazine, | Harpers Young People, Harper’s | Bazaar, Penny PI ustrated, The | Young Woman. The Young Man, Frank Leslie’s Budget. Pleasant Hours, Woman jat Home, Boys’ Own Paper, Sketch, Youths’ Companion, Judge, Puck, Texas Charlottetown, on WEDNESDAY, the | Siftings, Grip, Life, Myra’s Journal, De- | patch of F Seyenth daywt.Mareh, 1894, 4trthe hour | lineator, Art Amateur, ete, | j We take orders for any of the above or many others not here mentioned. If you do not wish to subscribe for any of these for a year youcan getin single numbers at our News Counter.’ In ordering by the year we can get back numbers, so as to begin with the January number. We have the best equipped News Stand in the + rovince, and shall endeavor to keep it up tothe times with the latest Magazines, Periodicals and Newspapers, both Home and Foreign. Any information cheerfully given and your kind orders solicited. GEO. CARTFR & CO., febl9 Booksellers, ete. For Lobster Traps. Maniila Marline (fine spun), Cotton Twine, Manilla Rope, all sizes. Full stock, lowest prices. CARVELL BROS. feb21—2w 2aw Information Wanted of the relatives of JAMES WALLACP, a carpenter and seaman, who came to Bos ton about 20 years ago. Address GEO. WALLACE, South Abington Station, Mass, Virginia; and Montreal, Canada.. jan29—dy & wy threatened incarceration if documents are During a fit of jealousy Bert Peterson, a young colored barber, shot and fatally then committed suicide by shooting him- P FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 238, 1894. ee ely Announcement. LADIES, DON'T READ THIS ! | if you don’t want a CARPET this spring. | anyone to feel bad when we advertise Read James Paton & Co's. Daily We don't Wan 1,000 Yards 5-Frame Brussels Carpet at the remurkable low price of | _ 95 CENTS PER YARD! | | | | We secured the above lot at less than any other _ Wholesale House in the Dominion could buy them for _to-day. Why? Because we were nearly sold out, and we were uble to buy the lot at 25 to 30 per cent. below regular selling prices. JAS. THE SOGIETY OF ARTS It’s Pretty Early of Canada (Limited), in the season to advertise WALL PAPER, but it’s a MONTREAL. pretty good thing to get paper worth 50c. a roll for CAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000. L5e. You can do it, though, now at the BAZAAR : ’ STORE. These are our last year’s patterns, and WILL BE SOLD regardless of cost. Perhaps some may pear gtr doubt this statement, but we only want a chance to Incorporated by Letters Patent of the prove it. Our Lée. papers are reduced to from 6c. to Seeeeneees of NGNEN, Seven nanny 10c. If you require Parlor Papers we have them, but if you want THE VERY LATEST SPRING STYLES, GALLERY OF PAINTINGS wait about two weeks and we will show you a few eye- Nos. 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame St., openers. For Dining Room, Sitting Room or Bedroom Montreal. Papers Now is the time to buy. You get our last sea- . ; son’s Embossed Gilt Papers for from 15c. to 25c. a roll. One of the hichest Galleries of We notice there are some wide-awake people among Paintings in Canada, the Guardian readers, from the number who took ad- —_—— tantage of our Reduction Sale of Window Blinds. [f : —aiea from 10 o'clock, you have not noticed it in the Guardian look it up, or " All the Paintings are originals, mostly better still, read it here:—*QOur whole stock of from the French school, the jeading mod- Dadoed Blinds at 50c. « mplete. ern schooi. Eminent Artists, such as Francais Rochegrosse, Aublet, Baran, Pesant, Petit- BAZAAR COMPANY. A Society established with a view to disseminate the taste for arts, to encourage jean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a = many others, are members of this Charlottetown, Feb. 23, 1894—m w f iety. —_—_— ———— — — Sale of Paintings at easy terms. Next distribution of Paintings between the Shovels, Forks, Axes, Handles, Society and Scripholders on 28th February. Price of Scriptum, $1.00. Ask for Catalogue and Circular. H. A. A. BRAULT, janl7—mwf tf Director. On the Square! PROWSE BROS. keep a Retail Store Quite near the Market Square ; All those who want Gents’ Furnishings Are sure to find them there. They’re giving bargains every day, So go and get your share ; Don’t buy elsewhere until you’ve called At PROWSE’S, on the Square. In Overcoats, and Reefers, too, They’re offering bargains rare ; While Underclothing is quite-cheap At PROWSE’S, on the Square. A doctor’s bill you’ll have to pay If that Hat or Cap you wear; You’d better buy a nice Felt Hat At PROWSE’S, on the Square. No need to stay at home from church Because you’ve naught to wear; When you can buy a Suit quite cheap At PROWSE’S, on the Square. feb9—eod Horse Hoes, Horse Nails, Bar Iron, Sleigh Shoe Steel, Disstan’s Cross Cut Saws, Disstan’s Files Truck Spokes, LARGE STOCK. and Rasps, Cart and Wagon Stock, Hubs, Rims, Axles, Well Buckets. Galvanized Tron ‘SGO00D aooD / FENNELL & CHANDLER. Charlottetown, January 31, 1894—tn fri = ——s FIVE LARGE CASES OF — te D 8B. STEWART, General Agent for P. E. Island. oN Steel Enamelled Ware, NOT A JIG FULL ordered direct from the manufacturer in should have arrived in October last, only arrived this Germany, that But just Three Teas; oons-full of WOODILL’s GERMAN BAKING In order to reduce the stock we will sell for a few days at a Discount of TWENTY PER CENT. week, These gooes are of the best quality, bought low and marked Jow, but we must clear out a lot of it. Now is the time to buy. Discount for Cash only. R. B. NORTON & CO. Charlottetown, February 2, 1894—tn fri POWDER, with a quart of Flour, will give as nice a lakey Rolls as one could desire, TRY IT} feb2 wre “We Have a Few Hundred Pairs of BOOTS, SHOES AND SLIPPERS, ODD LINES, LEFT FROM THE SEASON’S TRADE, and in order to make a quick disposal of the same we have decided to offer them at a Discount of 25 to 59 per cent. This is positively the best chance to get first-class Footwear ever offered in the city Sale commences TO-DAY. J. M. McLEOD & CO. Clearance Sale of Boots. We are placing on our Bargain Counter a large lot of Mens, Ladies’, Misses’ int Children’s Boots, which we intend to clear out regardless of cost, Call and you will get bargains. GOFF BROTHERS. Charlottetown, January 20, 1894—dy wd Charlottetown, January 24, 1894—m w f