wwe 04 am tonsa tar ee er tc RAO It sm ea apse ed a ee ee ee ME. nim ~~ - ‘ < caine - - Day EXAMINER, SEPTEMBER 14, 1875. — Short Catechisms. (, Wuo was the leading spirit in con- solidating British power in N orth America! A. Sir John McDonald. Q. Who broke down the hostile tariffs which hampered inter- Provincial trade ! A. Sir John A. MeDonald and _ his friends. Q. To whom are we indebted for markets all over the Dominion ! A. To Sir John McDonald. Q. Who obtained a free market in the United States for our fish ! A. Sir John McDonald. Q. To whom are we primarily indebted for the five and a half millions recently awarded by the Fishery Commission ! A. To Sir John McDonald. Q. Who gave us_ the Intercolonial Rail- free way? A. Sir John McDonald and his col. leagues. Q. Who reduced the tariff to 15 per cent / A. Sir John McDonald. Q. Who put ship material in the Free List / A. Sir John McDonald. Q. Who took the duties off tea and coffee ? A. Sir John McDonald. Q. Who always managed to have a sur- plus every year ? A. Sir John MeDonaid. Q. Under whom was the country pros- perous ? A. Under Sir John McDonald. Q. Who has enunciated a policy giving the young industries of the country all the aivantages which the tariff will give them without increasing the burden of taxation bourne by the people ! A. Sir John MeDonald, Q@. Under whom will the country again prosper ! A. Under Sir John McDonald. VOTE FOR SUPPORTERS OF SIR JOHN MACDONALD. Q. Who raised the tariff from 15 to 174 per cent? A. McKenzie. Q. Who took tea off the Free List and put five and six cents a pound upon it! A. McKenzie. Q. Who taxed shipbuilding material ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who levied a heavy excise duty upon malt made of barley raised by our farmers ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who spent 2,000,000 of dollars in s‘eel rails ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who sunk $30,000 in Goderich Har- bor ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who, though remonstrated with by his friends, left Souris Breakwater to the mercy of the waves and sunk $20,000 in Souris Harbor ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who paid $5,029 for a slab hotel ! A. McKenzie. Q. Who paid $500 and $600 per acre for wilderness lands on the banks of the Kaministiquia ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who has spent $14,500,000 without putting one mile of the Pacific Railway in operation ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who gives Brydges $12,000 a year ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who broke faith with British Co- lumbia / A. McKenzie. Q. Who failed to fulfil the terms of Union with P. E. Island ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who deprived P. E. Island of a seat in the Cabinet ! A. McKenzie. Q. Who tried to take away the franchise 0” our young men ! A. McKenzie. (. Who pardoned Riel and Lepine, but refused to grant an amnesty to O’Dono- whiue ! A. McKenzie. Q. Who cheated us with the Northern A. McKenzie. Q. Who allowed the sugar refining in- dustry to be destroyed ; and thereby al- lowed millions of invested capital to be sunk ; hundreds of vessels to go idle; the West India Trade in Fish, Agricultural Produce and Lumber to be destroyed ; the coal industries to suffer ; and thousands of men to go out of employment and out of the eountry ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who has invariably done the reverse of what he promised ? A. McKenzie. Q. Who, when in opposition, lifted his eyes in holy horror when he saw the public offices at Ottawa crowded with officials— and, when in power, spent millions of eo, mina pliner ane ~- " in erecting a bus that they c money might have more room! A. McKenzie. ©. Who went in to clevate the standard ; and, when in, allowed the author of ‘* The Big Push,” ‘‘ Come along John,” * Mis- sionary expenses,” ‘ Simpson’s Circular,” etc., etc., bo go unreproved ! A. McKenzie. ©. Who went in to put down bribery and now is cheek by jowl with Walker the Unseated ! A. McKenzie. ©). Who, when in Opposition, denounced Sir John MeDonald for extravagance; and who, during the five years he has been in oflice, has spent in governing the country, no less than $37,785,872 more than SirJohn did the previous five years he was in office ‘ A. MeKenzie. (). Who went in to reform nothing ? A. McKenzie. ©. Who is the most incapable Minister lof Public Works that ever lived ? A. MeKenzie. DOWN WITH INCAPACITY ; DOWN WITH CORRUPTION ; DOWN WITH EXTRAVAGANCE ; DOWN WITH HY- POCRISY ; DOWN WITH MAC- KENZIB¥B. and reformed ©. Who obtained for this Province $25,000 a year ‘‘ Better Terms” for all time to come / A. J.C. Pope and his associates. (. Who gave us the Railway ! A. J. C. Pope and his associates. (. Who made the silent speak in Parlia- ment / A. J. C. Pope. (). Who always stood up for our rights ? A. J. C. Pope. ©. Who suggested that the Dominion give $800,000 with which to buy out the Proprietory Estates and make the tenants all Freeholders ? A. J. C. Pope. ©. Who showed up the Northern Light swindle ? A. J.C. Pope. ©. Who looks to the interests of his country first, his friends next, and himself last ? A. J. C. Pope. ©. Who agitated in Parliament for the Victoria Breakwater ! A. J. C. Pope. QO. Who opposed taxed tea / A. J. C. Pope. (©. Who opposed the obnoxious tax on the malt made out of our farmers’ barley ? A. J. C. Pope. Who went in for higher taxes on the silks, satins, ribbons, brandies, high wines, etc., of the rich? A. J. C. Pope. «. Who is the strongest man to send to Parliament with the view of bringing about Reciprocity. A. J. C. Pope. (). Who sets forth a reasonable scheme to make it to the interest of the United States to grant us Reciprocity ! A. J. C. Pope. (. Who is the Free Trader in the broad and proper sense of the term ! A. J. C. Pope. VOTE FOR J. C. POPE AND HIS AS- SOCIATES. MekKenzie when he Q. Who steers his political bark South by North ? A. Peter Sinclair. @. Who went in to pull up and root out the railway—and when in, built the branches ? A. Peter Sinclair. «. Who feigned economy and wrote the dashaway letter ? A. Peter Sinclair. @. Who would have gone into Union with $25,000 a year less secured to the Island than Mr. Pope and his associate delegates obtained ! A. Peter Sinclair. (). Who bought the right of the Island.to a seat in the Cabinet, saw the Island robbed of the right and—never said a word ?/ A. Peter Sinclair. (. Who voted to impose an excise duty on malt—and actually did not know it was imposed ? A. Peter Sinclair. Q. Who did not know that McKenzie’s first Cabinet was composed of fourteen Ministers / A. Peter Sinclair. Q. Who sat silent when the Franchise rights of our young men were being legis- lated way ! A. Peter Sinclair. Q. Whovoted to raise the tariff tol7} per cent., and afterwards said he believed a larger amount of revenue could be raised under a 15 per cent. tariff. A. Peter Sinclair. Q. Who is new going about misrepre- senting the policy of his opponents and bolstering up the ‘‘ Organized Hypocrisy” with false statements ! A. Peter Sinclair. Our WITH PETER SINCLAIR. IF YOU WANT LOWER TAXES MORE ASSISTANCE TO INDUSTRY, AND MORE TRADE, VOTE FOR POPE AND BRECKEN. —— <> =e Who Moved the Flour Duty ? Tuer Grit organs are certainly bold in their falsehoods. They perpetually assert that the duty on flour last session was moved for by the Opposition. In fact it was moved by Mr. Brown, a Grit, and sec- onded by Mr. Lewis Ross, a Grit of such | valor that the Mail said he ‘would swallow | currently rumored to be an emissary from|the EASTERN POLLING DIVISION of the McKenzie Government to raise funds, | Charlottetown, Common a rattlesnake” for the Government. —— --- 32> oe << - — if YOU WANT THE BEST MEN IN, IVOTE FOR POPE AND BRECKEN. _ The Best Men. Can the Grits name thirty out of the Ministerial ranks as able as the following thirty gentlemen now opposing the Gov" ernment : McDonald, (Sir J.) Tilley, McPherson, Gibbs, Pope, (P. E. I.) Langevin, McCarthy, T. White, MeDonald, (Pictou) McDougall, Hon. W. Bowell, Piumb, Pupp v, Mitchell, WV wll bridge, Gault, King, (St. John). Masson, Colby, Costigan, DeCosmos, Domville, Coursol, Kirkpatrick, Carling. Morris, Schultz. On which side, let us ask Mr. McDonald, does he find the great labour empleyers, and the intelligent farmer and mechanic ! Where are the independent men whose only interest is to see the country prosper / The loyal wen who want to see Canada Palmer, Cameron, Brecken, hold her own against the States ! J snsdial aediactiicibneietenicetions A Solid Fact. Din Mr. McKenzie, when in Opposi- tion, promise to reduce the cost of Gov- it as he! has he reduced That is the question. ernment, and promised to do! Look at the record :— The total expenditure by Sir John Macdonald for his last five years was.......-% £9.770,.789 The total expenditure by Mr. Mackenzie for his five per year, for every year of Mr. Mac- kenzie’s term than the cost of Government under Sir John Macdonald. That is a solid fact. The extravagant Sir John ran the machine of Government for five years for eighty inillions ; the Econo- inical Retrencher, Mr. McKenzie spent over the same work one hundred and eighteen inillions ! Here is a problem. If extravagance costs eighty millions, and economy costs one hundred and eighteen millions, how much would it cost to run the same game by Mr. Mackenzie for another five years / li two and two make four, then another five years of the Mackenzie style of Gov- ernment will take another $37,785,872 out of the taxpayers’ pockets in excess of what Sir John Macdonald’s style cost, so in ten years (which Heaven forbid) the people will have paid $75,571,744 for the mere fun of keeping a man in power who talks of economy while squandering like a drunken prodigal ! — —————— MEN OF QUEEN'S, IF YOU WANT RECIPROCITY — VOTE FOR POPE AND BRECKEN. — --- save Meeting at Long Creek. Tue schoolhouse at Long Creek was well filled last evening; and Mr. Brecken re- ceived an attentive hearing. Mr. H. Law- son replied to Mr. Brecken; and then Mr. D. Farquharson took the _ floor. There were cries of ‘* turn about,” ‘fair play,” ete. Mr. James Cur- rie protested against two — speeches in succession on the same side. His pro- test was bourne out by the Chairman, and afterwards by the meeting. but Mr. Farquharson refused to give way; and there was—sucha scene! Tomake peace Mr. McKay, M. P. P. for the district, offered to waive his right to speak in favor of Mr. Farquharson. Mr. Far- quharson then spoke. He was very abusive towards Mr. Brecken, and was impatiently heard. Mr. McKay followed. His speech was calm, practical and convincing. He had good points to make, and he made them so well that he almost demolished the baseless fabric of an argument erected by Mr. Lawson. It was evident that a large proportion of those present were in favor of Pope and Brecken. --—- 4p Meeting at Cape Traverse. HWOWATT AND HACKETT VICTORIOUS. Av the meeting held on Friday evening there were over two hundred electors pres- ent. Messrs. Howatt, Yeo and Perry ad- dressed the meeting. Pope spoke two hours anda half. After Mr. Pope, Hon. Alexander Laird tried to speak, but the ;people would not hear him. In the opinion of good judges the party stood in the pro- portion of 175 for Hackett and Howatt, and 25 for Yeo and Perry. At the close, three cheers were given for Howatt, Hackett and Pope. - nolan dlitaes An Emissary of Corruption! A FOUL SHAME FOR CANADA, Toronto, Sept. 12.—An edition of the Mail this evening has a special from Wash- ington, saying that a person named For- syth, said to be an employee of the Post Office at Ottawa, has been in Washington, years has been........... SEES 556.601! Showing for five years of a Government which pro- mised to retrench, an in- i oc ces ccc tans % 37,785,872 which is at the rate of $7,557,174 more | Old Scotland Yet! tish hills Were trod by her sons, loyal and truc; Wh — L_Amoansl aX oe . | ar : When a thdtsand elaymeres from thei scab bards would flash, | Ata vlance from the beld Rhoderic! Dhu, | One brave Scottish King held his life in his hand, ‘ On the faith of the bold Clansman’s word, When valley and ford and grim mountain corge Were held by the Clansman’s gdod sword; In pride we can list to the tales of the past, ‘I'o the fame that her sons still achieves, And spurn we the foul-mouthed caitiff that dared ‘Vo brand us descendants of thieves, — When the last of her prinees, with chivalrous pride, Aspired to his forefathers’ throne, And wandered a fugitive over the hills {fis sires had once claimed as their own; lier sons may be poor; yet her Clansmen were proud, The wanderer to shield from the cold, Not thousands could tempt one true Scottish heart Our Charlie to barter for gold, Yet Cartwright the slanderer dared to give vent ‘Vo words basely false and untiuc; His cold-hearted instincts betray him at once A sport from some Gipsey or Jew. Sept. 14, 1875. SCOTSMAN. E ae Te The Man Who Votes! THe man who votes for Sinclair and McGill votes for a system of organized hypocrisy. The ian wiio votes for Sinclair and McGill endorses the gross corruption con- nected with the purchase of the Neebing Hotel. The man who votes for Sinclair and 'MeGill is willing that this Island shall {have no representation in the Dominion Cabinet; that Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia and Quebec shall have a voice in the Government of the country, but that this Province shall have none ; that our mem- bers are to be mere units, useful only on a division when the Government is in danger, bus utterly helpless when the interests of the Island are at stake ! ! The man who votes for Sinclair and Me- Gill endorses the infamous Steel Rails Scandal. <A great part of these rails pur- chased in a falling market at a time when the price of rails was rapidly declining —at a time when they were not needed, and would not be needed for years to come. They are lying in heaps—going to rust— and will be utterly worthless when re- quired to be used. They were purchased by Mr. McKenzie from a firm of which his own brother was a partner, and for no other reason than to put money in his brother’s pocket. Mr. McKenzie ‘says that he is only guilty of an error of judgment. What an excuse for a statesman to make! In order to escape the charge of corruption, he is compelled to acknowledge his own utter 2¢@ incapacity |!!! -_> —— —— WHERE TO VOTE. IMPORTANT INFORMATION FOR CIry ELECTORS, Ix Charlottetown there are six polling divisions, at which the votes will be taken, as follows, viz :— The Poll for the first Polling District shall be taken or held at or near James Curtis’, Sydney Street, and all regis- tered voters on the revised list for the (WESTERN POLLING DIVISION cf Charlottetown, Common and _ Royalty, whose surnames begin with any of the let- ters of the alphabet from the letter A to the letter G, both inclusive, shall yote at such Polling District, and not else- where. The Poll for the second Polling District shall be taken or held at or near the New Engine House, on King Street, near the Bank of Prince Edward Island, and all registered voters in the revised list for the EASTERN POLLING DIVISION of Charlottetown, Common and Royalty whose surnames begin with any of the letters of the alphabet from the letter A to the letter G, both inclusive, shall vote at such Polling District and not elsewhere. The Poll for the third Polling District shall be taken or held at or all registered voters on the revised list for the WESTERN POLLING DIVISION of Charlottetown, Common and Royalty, whose surnames begin with any of the let- ters of the alphabet from the letter H to the letter M, both inclusive, also in- cluding Macs, shall vote at such Polling District, and not elsewhere. The Poll for the Fourth Polling Division shall be taken or held near the Fire En- gine House at or near King Square, and all registered voters on the revised list for the EASTERN POLLING DIVISION of Charlottetown, Common and Royalty, whose surnames begin with any of the let ters of the alphabet from the letter EH to the letter M, both inclusive, also in- cluding Macs., shall vote at such Polling Division, and not elsewhere. r The Poll for the Fifth Polling Division shat be taken or held at or near Freder- ick Curtis’, head of Queen Street and all registered voters on the revised list \for the WESTERN POLLING DIVISION }of Charlottetown, Common and Royalty | whose surnames begin with any of the let- | ters of the alphabet from the letter N to ‘the letter Z, both inclusive, shall ivote at such Polling Division, and not elsewhere. The Poll for the Sixth Polling Division shall be taken or held at or near David R. Hooper's, north of Euston Street, and all registered voters on the Revised List for me.) Loyalty, : me : Pr ae \through Free Trade Association, to assist | whose surnames begin with any of the let- (in carrying the elections. , ters of the alphabet from the letter N to Forsyth is said to be a confidential agent |the letter Z, both inclusive, shall vote at of Huntington. such Poliing Division, and not elsewhere. | i In the days that are gone, when our gre) \ 7 ‘THE WONDERFUL CHILD near the | Market House, Queen Square, and || mm “a tS Se ae ee ca ae ta ADVERTISEMENTS, EW See PAND RALLY A GRAND RALLY OF THE— Liberal Gonservative Party WILL BE HELD IN THE MARKET HALL, —on— SONDAY EVENING, The icth inst... at 7.30. J. 8. CARVELL, CHAIRMAN COMMITTEE, ; | Chitown, Sept. 14 Currants. 0) BBLS.—-NEW AND NICE AND CHEAP, ai?) CARVELL BROS, Sept. 14—3i FE, ey Qe Rice. yf} BAGS LANDIXG TO-DAY. e) CARVELL BROS, Sept. 14 ~—3i Sugar. If 4 BBLS. YELLOW C., }) 50 this. White GRANULATED, 10.“ CUT LOAF. CARVELL BROS, Sept. 14—3i Kerosene. or BBLS. HOURLY EXPECTED, Five & eV Ten bbl. lots from wharf at moder- ate figures. CARVELL BROS, Sept. 14~ 3i MARKED LIKE A BEAR! The Greatest Curiosity of the Age! Wi be on Exhibition at Mr. Me. } Isaac’s Hotel, Queen Street, oppo- _ ee Drug Store, this Even- ng, and during the day on Mon the 1Gth inst. ve Admission, 10 cents. Ch’town, Sept. 14, 1878— CROMPTOW’S ; ADJUSTABLE CORSETS NOW ARRIVING AT THE LONDON HOUSE, September 13, 1878, -_- —AT THE NOW ARRIVING LONDON HOUSE NEW FRILLINGS - -—-AT THE-— LONDON HOUSE. September 13, 1878— a Debentures ! — ‘ coe Ee OREN ie O 0, , payable in 20 years, an bearing terest at 6 per cent. a annum. Interest guaranteed by the Provincial Govern payable half-yearly at the office of the Board. ISAAC OXENHAM . Sec’y of Board. By order, Ch’town, Sept, 12, 1878—pat lw HE City School Board offer for sale -_~ i