~~ é a = THE DAILY EXAMINER. - - - - - FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24 1893 — ed ile ‘ promises as to recipgocity, and had dis- =o j age Vote. The Mortga 8 courteously refused to make the House ac- quainted with what had transpired at the Washington negotiations. Mr. Cockburn then took the floor and made a strong speech. He was heartily sick of the talk of napn like Charlton and PELEGRAPHIO NEWS, THE DAILY & FEBRUARY XAMINER, 24, 1890 One of the most obnoxious features of the Reserved Bill—with which we are again threatened—is that which provides that the the pro- PECIAL Despat To THE EXAMINER. DOMLUION PARLIAMENT HES 4 Social Danger ; mortgagee shall have a vote upon it is very plea runken- | perty of the mortgagor: The universal i ae who had only good wut oS ofl igi for the land of the stars an ness continues to decline, : at wae Sera with ae ae vied: li . .. | stripas and wWeo § depicted we ’ ttet n is peel née mumobder ! garde 19 Not surprising. Map) Nayvie co ' 0 > : en tine on tien Pee terrisige, 4 0avieS Delivers a Characteristic | farmers ase poor down-traddes cles. He ef our roughs and tough I ming smal! | most intelligent, the most enterprisiug, t’« § i depicte ir. Davies as the Rip Van in by degrees and beautifully less Che open {| most fully informed, the most honest mer peec 5 of the Maritime Provinces, who could see no On tl > + trade save that carried from port to port in bar has lost most of its attractions : the} in this Province have been constrained t —_ —-— ships, and who was unaware that the — other hand, the r he imsidio¥s | encumber their property. Premier Peters So: a rs ' _ | of sailivg shipping was a worid-wide malady. hah ' dining ; a ; , ‘ Some Pretty Wild Statements, | He read from the Montreal Witness a state- snatox.cant t yur drawing rooms - _— 5 | proposes Dy means of this COMAEST ODO « aaa that themida of « ships were at 1ooms is a portent of future wretchedness | curppletely nullify the influence of su i —_—-——— | present tied up in the docks in the different 5 . o tor some of those, and for many of the] men, and to place them in # position to b: ot arte of the world, including Free Trade Eng , ) vinnn i , Lock oara Takes the Figor, Feud, and drew forth a burst of cheers and in the swim Let if Sut r pointed at by their neighbors. pose the case of a farmer who has a larg¢ friends BOR, WHO GS BON laughter by asking Rip Van Winkle if the National Policy was respumsible for this sad state of things. Mr. Cockburn defended Mr. McNeil, of Bruce, whom Davies had attacked r trade relations with = —_-——-—— —-(t)}----- leeply dep! lly of our leaders of fashion We cannot re the thoughtlessness and f } } > ‘ 2 of whi gives evider , family of sons, one of whom gives evide Orrawa, Feb. 24, of great intellectual ability; the father and ther PLENDID ASSORTMENT in the following mrkes:—Velvets, Brussels, Tapestry Brus- in of society who vie with each pa In the House of Commons yesterday, | for sdvocating : a Seow ; . plying their guests with ¢ tly suppers, in-| m ther naturally desire to do the best they Mr. Davies resumed the Budget Debate. | Great Britain. ex ing that Mr. McNeill's sels and Tapestries. Also, a splendid assortment of N EW BLINDs, in Pi 11ns and f such conduct | ean for their boy; after he hes lsarned a king, be said, from a Maritime stand- | ence in the eye@ of the Opposition wae that, Fringed. fanmg wine. The mene instead of going to Washington to hold mid. night meetings, he had, when visitihg the land of hia birth, like a true Canadian, tried to draw closer the ties that bind us to the dear old mother land. But the best hit of Mr. Cockburn's speech was made when he quoted from a Hansard speech of Mr. 'Chariton’s, in which that gentleman in glowing words that section of the Dominion vas concerned, not one cf the Provinces e lized the expectations held out at the t+ it entered the Confederation. But if the people of the Provinces by the sea were uffering from the effects of the N. P., they had only themselves to blame, as for the } la, iti er for many 4 re-} mach as he can in our public scho: int, so lar as i happy household. | proposed to send him to McGill, or Har vard, to Edinburgh or Rome ; bar, for this, money is needed; the family put heads together, agree to deny themselves ia the psat have be : : ar Something new in VELVETS, with Borders to match. Also, a few VELVET and TAPESTRY SQUARES. HOUSEKEEPERS, and those who are thinking about comnenecing Housekeeping, will do weil to see our stock. Sp sctable, prosperous at iit cal Scarcely one of the leading families of the former generatio fluence of s has escay ed the fatal in- thei the p fidious destroyer intro- ocial circle in the guise of a duced into the « glass of wine at dinner or supper. It was hoped that the sad experience of the past | worth perhaps five or six thousand dollars ‘thers in the House. Their shipping had | public {which he loves far above all t 1e rest of ry? had taught greater wisdom to the leaders} thoy goto Mr. Peters, or to Mr. McLeod, a 8 “P per Jape ae had tare Se fe sage ee ee 4 J A I V/ I I i S PP A. ON AG ( ’ C) : , 7 yalue, pat Lor years their complaints . of society in the present. Wedeplore the} or to Mr. Warburton, or to some ration de dull oni . N ce bawenet. there | ¥#8 the fact that the aggregate of life insur- ? fact that this hope is not being realized. ther money lender, and get the money. | »; re prising all ance held to day by Canadians exceeded by re . : That thoes who ars accially the highest| civing as cocurity «mortgage. Pre-|the. N, FP. was “being “attacked| Sbove ® milion of dallars the ational debt Scotch Carpet House, Victoria Row. bat thos p ote t . : . ' ie Poem -: e expressed the confident bope that the Gov in the town think more about supp'yinmg}igently an election is sprung upon 3 i - Siie toad as ; He —— — ernment would apply the pruning knife to the t ste with “swell” spppers than | the cx : citing issue is ruised, | ~“2P° OFOOD USE sullcrea more from the) tariff with judicious care, and in this connec- heir ee "7 : ™ : 4 “¢ an a aoe country. An ee ni : a . {clifcets of protection than any other part of} tion printed out some of the chan that he} Charlottetown, February 22, 1893. with the ** feast of reason and the fo The farmer deems it of the utmost tm he Dominion. This statement was met thought were desirable in the interest cf the | = seen ~ wn en ea —— - _ soul” is not creditable to our town. Intel: portance that King’s Couaty should not} with |oui cries of **No,” “No,” from many | people at large. lectual people, refined and cultured peop’e, throw away a great deal dinners and re- do not, as a ru'e, deal of and suppers thought or time The Scottish literature upon bards ** cultivated in sot epecta and obtain a lvan of , ‘ f 7 Seer p st jfourteen years their representatives thousand dollars upon the farm, which is be gerrymandered, or that the Davies tax act should not be re-enacted, or that the Land Office should not be despoiled, or thet a big debenture debt should not be saddleo upon the Province,—and he votes accord- supported it with greater zeal than any Miri iuie members. Mr. Davies went on to argue that the country was going to the b d at a rate far surp»ssing the speed of its decline under the McKenzie regime. Cash was being withdrawn from the savings mnks faster than it was being deposited pictured the great benefits that followed the adoption of the a policy by the Re- ° THE RESERVED BILL. Dr. Bourinot’s Statement. viewers upon dur si d i ’ > ; : ( : ’ » little oatmeal, and really high-jingly. A few minutes later the train ur shipping was dwindling away, and we ; ' still owed for construction of the railways, nh 0 0 0 e€ omen class persons, in every generation, | arrives from Charlottetown, and up walks «| .},,4: the increased mileage and carriage of Orrawa, Feb. 24. have been distinguished for their! @ mortgagee, and a scene like this ensues :! which the Finance Minister had talked so| Dr. Bourinot authorizes the statemen plain living. To a person of nice percep- tions and exquisite taste, the endlesa variety of eatables and drinkables seen at our social suppers must be rather disgusting than | produce your papers.” Then the mortgagee} wars. Iu the Maritime Provinces,where the | There was the no’ion that a woman's life had broader outlook than the cm- pleasing to the sight or appetite. spreads out before the face of the assembled | natural increase during the last ten | the measure, notwithstanding the fact that broidery frame or the sentimental novel. It was hard to make thé world believe Does the conversation at our balle and} multitude the evidence that he realiy has} °*"s should have been 175,000 people, | his ministry may advise him to do so. that. there had been no gain whatever, but an' There was the higher education. That was hard to. cltiin. ‘There was the parties refer to subjects in literature or art, the latest discoveries in science yr the most interesting questions in religion or politics ; most part to the We and gueats are, in too or is it confine for the weather and the latest sensation ? fear that beth hos navy instances, wanting ta in solicitude for intercourse while ihe higher uses of social grosser tastes and lower they pander to th appetites vf sumptaous dinners by preparing and partaking and suppers, washed down with wine and a ‘‘ night-cap.” It is sincerely hoped that a little cool re- flection, resulting from a perusal of these amendment in this remarks, will jead to an *By whas right do you claim to vote at this poll.” ‘*{ vote on a mortgage held by me of the land of Mr. ‘Well, s mortgage upon the farm of this farmer, auc then he votes directly in the teeth of his mortgagee’s convictions, —and w slksaway leaving the farmer overwhelmed with shame aud indignation leaving all the neighbors to prate about the matter for weeks and months, to wonder how this apparently prosperous man ever became so far involved that he was com- pelled to mortgage his farm, to criticis» his wife’s methods of housekeeping or her passion for finery and pianofortes, and to to conclude that “all is not as it seems to be,” and ‘*there must be something wrong Is it wonderful that farmers and confusion, aomewhere. heerfully. He challenged the correctness of the census figures, and asserted that in en years, Canada had lost by the exodus more than Napoleon lost in all his bloody actual loss hy emigration of 165,000, of which 14 500 people were from the cities f St. John, Halifax and Charlottetown. This was treble the exodus from 1871 to 188i. He did not blame the young men tor leaving, as the wharves were decaying and there was no work for willing hands. Mr. Davies convulsed the House with laughter as, in dramatic tones, he loudly ssserted that he did not stand up te preach blue ruin, and that when he stated that the people were fleeing from New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, as if from a plague, he did so more in sorrow than with an object of making party cap- tal When he came to advocate the re- luction of the duties on’ many articles, he was met with loud cries of ‘Do you want that each branch of the Legislature having discharged its functions Jand been prorogued without the Reserved Bill having been assented to, that now the Lieutenant- Governor or Administrator cannot assent to Canada’s Interest in Hawaii. Orrawa, Feb. 24 Sir Hector Langevin gave notice yester- dey in the Houses of Commons that he will enquire on Monday whether the Govern- ment has called the attentiin of the Im- perial Government to the interest Canada has in Hawaii not being sbsoibed by the United States, aud requesting the Home authorities to safeguard that interest. Mitchell aud Corbett. Naw York, Feb, 24. The meeting last night between the pugiliet Mitchell and Corbett’s manager, Wm. A. Brady, resulted in the proposed trip to Can- of Canada. idea that a woman could vote as intelligently upon a school board es a maa, There was a bitter fight for the triumph of that idea, Woman has triumphed all along the line. AN APOLOCY IS DUE THE WOMEN OF CANADA. The proprietors of Meliss: commenced with the men. The men, throngh the trade, mads such constant demand for Melissa garmen‘s, to replace the archaie rubber coat, that manufacture and proofing was confined to them The ladies of Canada said-:;—'* Why can't we get Melissa wraps at the men ean get Melissa coats?’ That was decisive. The demand is answered, very vill-e-, town and city in Canada car row have its supply ef LADIES’, CHILDREN'S AND MISSES’ RAINFROOF WRAPS in the latest New York styles, without che New York expense. : It meanr an A 1 Now York @esgner and cutter, an imported staff of trained assistants, all mex, and ai) + ificient cloak mskers. But it means, too, exqdisite tailor made wraps, within a few steps of the home, wherever the home is, at less than the cost of imported goods. particular Not alone cur hosts and | everywhere throughout the Province are had pork a Mr. Davies declined ade being abandoced and the matoh is virtual- The latest designs ; the most perfect fit ; the atyle and smartness of rhe expen- hostesses but our young men and women|determmedly opposed to a provision i. ee vee en _ pronounced ly off. Mitchell will go to New Orleans if Cors sive New York wraps. There is beau'y in them. They are purely Canadian, houl ly fro lish sod| fraught with results such as these?| pti t, preterential trade with Great| bett desires jto open negotiations there. If They are right at your coor. They are superior to anything of European manu- should promptly cease from foolish ap g ' Propagat Baitain to be totally outside the realm of he does not, Mitchell will return to England, facture. costly custom, which is—as the experience | There is no necessity for it, no principle eee ms es one at some length ad- They express the best in taste and imagination that New York can produce, of the past has proved—fraught with | upon which it can be justified. So loag as Unit . a ~ ane: 008 nae with the Disastrous Fire But the coat is # great desl less. danger and with misery the mortgagee receives hia interest, he has id calbaeatentipanbaenet Sook, honor aici : ~ wae wee Bee ee Bl Proofed with Melissa they are both ma i : d po ‘ f Ce i ‘ elegant and comfortable, for they are a double protection against cold and against € ‘ N NTID . . : : eee Lo real property in the farm which he holds} (.j. O’Brien, amid loud applause, re-| yeneeneamans Veh, $6 rain. Kither way they are now on the aie be Our Exports to Great Britain Tux farmers’ cheese, butter and bacon have taken a respectable position in the British market. Canadian butter has also taken a place in tha British market, and not an unenviable place either. The Gov- ernment has done what it could to stimu- late this trade. Butter has been put upon the market in uniform quality, stamped es Can- adian butter, bearing the impress of this country, making its own way. In one year, comparing 1892 with 189i, we find this atate of things, that whereas in 1891 only $440,060 worth of butter was exported to Great Britain, last year $577,455 worth cf as security. In any case, he ought not to be permitted to practically disfranchise the mortgagor. Notes and Comments. —The Patriot is dragging a red herring across the track. It won't do. The atten tion of the people can not be diverted from the Mortgagee Government. —-It is pleasing to note that the King’s County Liberal-Conservative Association is moving. We trust that the people of the whole Province will, ere, long, be organized against the infamous Gerrymanoder Bill of the Mortgage Government. “According to Robert Ingersoll, Tennyson was a piece of rare china, admired of man,tbat grew parrower as it grew older. Burns was a butter found a piace in the British market. homely piece of pottery that widened and e With regard to cheese, it increased in value | spread abroad, " oma of Reet, The : , an: 592 & : sentiment is intelligible, but the figure is pe from $9,481,373 to Ot 1,593 690. Bacon in- Salle: tocey thadenst, 5 ~ creased from $589 599 to $1,089.060. Hams| __1, it possible that the Mortgagee Gov- — ———_——— — ie went up from $37,393 to $53 938. Apples} ernment have been ee ually consulting i from $1,235,247 to $1,406,527. Fruits, | authorities for the purpose of asertaming . canned and preserved, showed an in- rat wut aa ee S oe {x} a -—> bee - ao« = r0V P o { ow e reqgiuirec uo asB- - 73 . » Ee 5% . crease. from $9,500 to $23,979, | NONCTIN EN oeerved Bill? It. does not \ 7 E hereby thank our friends and customers for their << . Barley increased from $75,225 in 1891 to} seem likely that Dr. Bourinot would volun patroaage during the past fourteen jears, and are ; $1,233,844 in 1892 Osis, increased from } teer the opinion which will be found among pleased to be able to say that the late fire will not compel : $5,954 to $1,975,485. There was a surplus | [B® EXAMINER 8 telegrams of to-cay. eileen bi : . i is ee ee. carpe cur retirement from business, although it dees compel our aql J Qualit Low rie) of oats in Canada, there Was & scarcity in raking aw ‘ Po . o ° Vy the eb bimntry, hence ode product fognd openlae new oe rs. We bave been fortunate in being » really MADE. “Pecs, eels tinea able to secure the commoedious building lately occupied by n . from $1,429,747 in 1891 to $2,332,337 in Messrs. Patton Bros. on Queen Street, two doors below » “ 1882. Split peas increased from $45,601 —-—BY——~— Messrs, Prowse Bros., and will there have all the facilities re y “os * to $89 681. Wheat from $969,134 to $5,- ; = ; » hae necessary to the I roper carrying out of our large and in- * «* Pas? 726,505. or an aad aL nn A. ANDERSON, ESQ ‘ L. L. D. creasing Grocery and Seed Business, We trust that under ] P rhe 912 010,369. Eggs, that ai ircumstance ; : : . Flour $861,912 to $1 exe, the LECTURE will be delivered in sv.}the circumstances all our friends and customers will make it}Qne Geod Turn LI NENS | ; ener page ~~ eermeber tec PAUL'S SCHOOLROOM, on a point to find our new place of busi d gi h ' ” ’ worth to $692,518 worth, an increase of Sa . re eee Pats patr Pp W oh dee hk O Ne aan e Deserves Another ! : ie ~~ cone 1 ie Clas Gael , : ; of their patronage. e shall open the New re Sest Irist and Scotch a ' ; 608 per ceat ! By the way, if our faroers | Tuesday Evening, the 28th inst.,) . : * cote English and Ceredisn = seston the tenle ueneste thee will Gel Git y 6: ‘jon Thursday, February 16th, with a new stock of goods. and generally wheu we have | cachet Winwine . Be ee ae ere " SHEETINGS, PILLOW BS theiprice of eggs exported to the British AT EIGHT O'CLOCK, minded Mr. Davies that there was a wide} {istinction becween the unrestricted discus-| sion of the question and Unrestricted Reci-| procity itself. Mr. Davies, therevpon,| launched forth into eulogy of the loyalty of the Liberal party. In thunder tones Mr. Davies went on to charge that the Govern- ment had deceived the people with false Removal Five hundred houses in Kadikey were burn- ed last evening, More than three thousand persona are homeless. The damage is eati- mated tive million francs. The English quar- ter was not touched by the fire, ie Trunks and Valisee.—A new lot just opened and seiling very cheap at the Dominion Boot and Shoe Store. feb24 4i dw —OF-—— The Melissx proofed wrans cost but a trifle more than the ordinary cloth wrap. BUT BE SURE YOU GET MELISSA, Dw’t take what some unscrupulous salesmen or traders wil] te!l you is the same as Melissa, or as good as Melissa. They are really cn'y worthless imitations. You can always tell a genuine Melissa garment by the Trade Mark Label. Jast look under the collar inside. D-signs, Patterns, and every «ther Special! attention given to letter order. THE MELISSA MANUFACTURING €8., MONTREAL informaticn furnished on epplication. J. W. MACKEDIE & €O, Montreal. Sole Agents for tie Dominiun. feb24 -4' (24. 28, mir 3, 7.) The balance of goods saved from the late fire will be kept| got a good bargain we return at COTTONS, SHIRTINGE, mafket is one cent. and a fraction above/ender the auspices of the Y. P.S, by|separate and sold at prices to suit. for another. That is the rea-|**: ‘pseia! prices dur : the average price of those sent to the Amer Dr. Anderson, : ; Subject“ Characteristics of the son our Store is so crowded. j|[ivg February. House- | TICKINGS. etc, Alege oa ican market. The export of horses, for Present Age.’ which it was said no market could be found Admission, 10 cents OVERDUE CCOUNTS. Come and see what Wwe can|keepers will save many cad a tele aan hs | as valued at $156,254 in 1891 yeaa 4 0 . 2 in 1888, wns valued a $166,254 in S. GREY, offer you in BOOTS ardlarn vy Si serie, 3 and $214 7#5 in 1802. It is well that these feb24 Secretary. . oe I y ying ow NEW SPRING PRINTS : figures should be laid befure the public in | ———————————— We beg to intimate to those who have not yet squared SHOES. We have marked hak Qenleslaniei a ie y ‘ ‘ s . ieee ai ae " @ * ; ‘ 8 : : ' ‘ ; i order that they may eee the actual expan-| CHALLENGE ACCEPTED! |their Fail accounts, that we expect them to call at once and|down our Stock that has been mattractive Dress pattie sion of our trace as the peepee . the — ae Lie ie settle ata = eash or approved notes. We do not wish to damaged by smoke, and must . ithe f ae : market in Great Britain for those products . Ali! CURRAN. i fognert ti) arsh measu d h bi > ® . . - 68 Bs challer b tae E : : ars sures, an ope this r ' which our farmers raise = waud “nian. as to wi0 eam write the bes: safficient ’ P eminder will be get clear of them. arene . _ ae ~ atory. i ail your conditions, whe- . A ; ST Ee = —The Halifax Herald says: it has ther of minor imoortance o etherwise, with the Thousands of pairs atill left. nr ee ra . certain! come to a retty pass when , ee ‘ , . 5 See have Sgn to Boston to oe for writing story to be limited to one Don t mss the chance, as the ] ace Curta ins ; d E b id . : seek employment in their own country. Before | gnd—Both to deposit $10 with Captain Johnson, sale is genuine. This sal mbroideries. a Nova Scotian cin mine or sell Nove Scotia | to show that we mean business. 2 5 is sale of Ours means more than «a few goods hastily bought aud cheap 4 coal in Nova Scotia, be has now, so it appears, | 3td— Winner to take all, including proceeds of 5 marked to attract trade. It means coustant search -- buying—makinz ready 2 to go to Boston and dance atte ndance on a board of Yankee specelators. The position is » humiliating ove, and reveals one of the pur- poses the secessionis(-.nncxalionist gang who sale of accepted story. in book form 4th—Loeer to pay costs of publishing said story 5th—Rejected stories to be consigned to waste ol PATRICK CANTWELL. compose our | cal government had in view in selling eut eur mines, Souris, February M4, 1993~—1i Grocers and Seedsmen, 136 Queen Street. Charlottetown, February 16, 1893. Ji M. McLEOD & Co., QUEEN SPREET, Charlottetown, Feb. 22, 1893. means every centre, foreign and dame: power of cash can do. and qualities were tic, has been explored. It means that only goods of standard Ic mesas what the and reliable bought and will be sold at the lowest possible pric -. BEER BROS.