teat ae eee ihietitien Oe ee ON i aie This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Evriripes. Suvere Copies Two Cenrs K.ineston, June 18.—In the General As- | “You must <9 te Berzuda. If) sembly Dr. Reid was erapowered to receive | } you do nub &@ will ast be respensts | ——— ee a ——— aw SERIES. Cty 2T OY . NY) Wn "tire, oo toy | eevee ene yaw SERIES. | ___ CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1891. VOL. 23.—NO. 27 [ | Ni THE - DASLY- EXAMINER, |Preserterten .Renensls Assomaty.| ‘res ao Rate) aN 5 AVERY EFFORT | i \ \x> 1, Gratefol Community Takes Advantage of Our Gireat Clothing Sale and are Thankfal ! > all gu 4 ifen’s, Boys’ and Children’s aS Specia uiles ~ . jis to the fullest extent during the past week. (lothing Sale + ; ‘ | Attraectio kept t ie the 5 ssa 8 agurii [o] mke Special Business ns n We realized : Our Great he buying pubtie all agog from morning past week; and so far from letting the ° fy ) rag. . ~ a . oxeitement dec une, We purpose that this week shall out-riva! yo fast, and make the people even more enthusiastic. AN 10h O PVED-OR TANT It has been d VERDICT! ecided by the best people that misrepresenta- . “— ’ ay ' { goods don’t pay, but that it pays well to always buy Yothing from the WONDER. 4 7UL CHEAP MEN, who always back up every advertisement H vith the goods as represented, The public are most respect lly asked to call and see their immeuse stock, even if they T don’t want to buy. i Prowse Eros., 4 Bt vias aniline bases the Wonderful Cheap Men. below horizon. Pull Moon 22ad day, Oh, 59.7m last Ynarter, Sth day, 7h., 3.6m, below heriz 0. NE, » Pp.™m., >. pm, NE, Curluttetown, June 8, 1891—eod & wky ~—— - _ : es A RT - ere (ALENDAR FOR JUNE, 1881, | MOON'S CHANGES, New Moon, 6th day, 0h., 13.3m. p. m., § fist Quarter, 14th day, Sh., 21 5m a. m., | 8 | ———+(x)—-— ) DAY OF WEEK) .un rises sets ‘Sun |Meon ’ ' . rises rat'r| leuh High! Days | ws DONT | YOU know we sell Men's and th mh m!morn/ after! h m $ Y . wy 77 38) Das | Boys Clothing ? ) Tuesday | 2.3 ¢@ 8:2 22 | ' (Nednesdsy | 16; 39'219' 918: 23 { Srareday Id} 40; 2 53.10 2 24 §] Sriday 15; 41) 3 21110 42 96 Y > #8 star lay 15} 42, 3.55'11 24! = 27 OU Buy till yOu Ste Ours » san lay 15} 42) 4 37|morn 27 Ss Nomday 14) 43,5291 0 7} 29: P iaesiay 14; 44) 6 30; O 45) 30} WV ednesd M4 441 7 33) 1 26! 930 i r I ee a 7 2 ee 5 BE surprised if you buy cheaper EY ridlay 13} 46) 9 45! 2 yo! 32 ; Saturday 13} 46l10 50! 3 42) 33 than you ever did. nd y 13; 47/11 53, 440; = 3% loony 13) 47/aft 57) 5 43] 34 10S new tay 13! 48° 2 O} 6 46) 34 ~ EN BN , r i Ui Welnesday in 46: 3: 6! 7 45| 35 AND SEE the Stock, look it wjeaure iay 3 48: 4 14 & 32 35 Wiidy =| 22 491 595/917] 35 Over B sarday 14} 4916 37110 1) 35 ; satay | 14) 49) 7 48/10 45) = 35 wenday = | 14) 49) 8 53/11 29) © 35 oonnnener{ X) ays @ ded lay | 14) 50) 9 45 aft 14) 35 Wednesday | 15) 50/10 30' 0 58] 35 B thursday 15; 5011 3) 1 46] 35 aay 16} 5011 39) 233) 35 A a earday 16; 50:11 52) 329) 34 Wsaaday 16) 50\morn| 4 28) 34 y rae? | 17| 50/0 8} 5 23] 33! mp teadlay 16;7 49' 0 34: 7 7/15 13 "| LONDON HOUSE Oh ® SOOTH: NC, D ibe Cure, Failure Impossitie, ALY Go-called diseases are Sunply sy any ty ms of c trrh, Meh a3 heacache, Losi 2 uf smell foul brent}; — = » C. ; Pa; , AN : HEALING, Aten a er; e f, "manent F Spitting, p ] vo a8, General feeling } @ debility ex. Wee ean binge with any of these or @ IDdre, } o- 6 *syMptoms, you have se MarTh, and shx Nag Preeuring a bottle ud | ee no WL Barw. “Be warned j : “a arhed in we Welected cold ia head } 8 in Cater); followed Sag mmaption and death © OY AN drngai or sent, RS Dad, on receipt’ of aica Ca romneal byaddressing J 20. Brockville, Ont, ' * " 7 ae : is Ys es np . . x . - S Sy Praio \ Sy 5 LL ee OEED c SUNDAE “RU Ech I WroomnefeoutS OUGHS ie \ =COLDS. a Bet EARS iN USE loys e@> "PER BOTTLE i. ONG & 00. ROPRLETORS John... N. B, | & . Charlottetown, May 11, 1891 —————{x) -—-— Best Value in Summer Overcoatings ! Best Value in Scotch Tweed Suitings ! Best Value in Trowserings ! ————{x1) HAVE A MAGNIFICENT STOCK OF THESE GOODS. Prices away down to suit the times. is directed to our $15.00 and $18.00 This is fully 20 per cent. lower than the same quality of goods. — 00 up. We defy competition. \ E Special attention WORSTED SUITS. we have ever before offered TWEED SUITS from $12. We cuarantee first-class fits. , JOHN McLEUD & CO., Merchant Tailors, Upper Queen St. Chariottetown, Jute 3, 1891. A CHEAP WATCH RE YOU WANTING [EAE RE YOU WANTING A GOLD OR SILVER , Wako TIN yo0D TH * yoU WANTING A GOOD a. aa WANTING A GOLD ENGRAVED RING RE YOU WANLING A DIAMOND or other Set RING . yOU WANTING ANYPHING IN JEWELRY ee : WATCH REPAIRED NG YOUR G YOUR JEWELRY REPAIRED ANYTHING ENGRAY ED RE you WANTI yRE YOU WAN TiN B:— YOU WANTING ve | Charlotterown, May 74, 2991. : ‘ John MeLeod & o JUNE 22, 1861. Notes and Comments. —-Montreal Gazette : Some Liberals com- plain that they know nothing about Mr. Abbott, the new Conservative Premier. This source of trouble, they may rest as- aured, will gradually wear away. —The Montreal Gixzette announces that the old Conservative firm wiil continue to do business at the old stand, and hopes by atrict attention to business to merit a con- tinuance of the public favor so generously accorded duriug the life of the late chief partner. —The Church of England Synod, now meeting in Montreal, has speken with a clear ring against the prevailing tendency to remove the sanctities which formerly hedged in the Lord’s Day. The wicked evurse of the Board of Trade, in defying the divine law by securing the running of trains on the Lord’s Day, and by demand- ing the opening of the canals on that day was sharply rebuked. The spending of part of the Lord’s Day in amusement re- ceived unqualified condemnation. —The Montreal Gazette remarks that for gume time the Globa has had a daily article on the prospect:ve injury to trade due to the lack of rain and on the trouble to come te the country from the weakness aud divi- sions in the Goverument at Octawa. The uight it was anneunced that the Congerva- tive Government was formed, with a unit- ed following at its back, espious showers fell in a laryve section of Oatariv. There i bas has not been such trouble as ex‘s's in |the Globe office in mundane effsirs since | the stars in their courses set theimsaelves to | tight against Sisera. | — Tae last letter written Ly Sir John 'Macionald is said to have b-en one to ‘Premier Robson, of Bestish Columbia as f slows :— ‘€ FARNSCLIFFE, \ j “Orrawa, May 19, 1°91. f ** My Dear Regpson,—it has occurred to me that the present would be an opportune season lor your Government to discuss with ‘ours the various questions still unsettled be- tween them. You, 1 presume, can get away from Victoria with little or no incenvenience, and you wil) find us here in Parliamentary session until the first of Julv, or Ister. We /will then scatter until October, and at that su-son you, I sappese will be wanted at home. Resides it will be a pleasant season for your journey ;—s0, give yourself leave of absence, , wad Dewdney, youard 1 can take up {* * and any other unsolved questions that may remain. Herein fail nat. ) ‘* Yours sincerely, ** JOHN A, MACDONALD.” i Dewduey and Mr. Joseph Pope both vouch that this was his last letter. The subject /en which it treats, that of the relations be- ween the Provinces and the Dominion, is one which must soon be dealt with in a - statesmanlike manner, } |} Aceording tothe Victoria Colonist, Mr. j "Some Orchard. Mr. John Dowling, of Stevensville, Mon- | tana, in writing toa friend in Charlotte- town, says .— ** This spring I set out 1,100 more apple trees, and now the largest orchard in Mon- tana is owned by a Bluenose. This addi- tion makes 30 acres in my orchard, or about 4.500 trees—or otherwise an orchard a half ‘a mile long and 30 rods wide; or, if you should walk up and down each row of trees you would have walked 15 miles ‘* This orchard is situated in the famous Bitter Root Valley, between two ranges of ithe Rockies, and is the most fertile valley \in Montana, but, owing to the very slight rainfall, nothing wuld grow were it not | for irrigation. Water for this purpose is supplied by the melting of the perpetual snows Npon the mountain peaks. The manner in which the farmers in those west- ern valleys bridie the mountain streams and send off little rivulets coursing down between every drill of potatoes or row of corn, over meadows and through waving grain fields, is a novel sight to a P. E. Islander. So completely is this water under control that it can be turned on and off at pleasure. The farmers are therefore wholly independent of rain, and never fail to raise # goodcrop. Their productions are wheat, corn, potatoes and hay, basides apples, peaches. plums, cherries, currants, gooseberries, strawberries, raspberries, etc.” Mr. Dowling’s orchard is about tweaty miles up thia fertile valley from Missoula, the county capital, aud is easily reached, as a branch line of the great Northern Pacific Railway runs to Grantsdale, a distance of thirty miles further up. He is one of the successful men who have gone west. We understand that he is also interested in some mining operations, which, we trust, will prove successful. Mr. and Mrs. Dow- ling are both Nova Scotians, the former being a native of Gay's River, Halifax County, and went to the land of the setting sun—that land of mountain and prairie, sunshine and snow—in 1880, News Notes. vant girl for $14 a year. .' Methodist. In Sweden you can get a competent ser- Daring May French imports decreased 73,128,000 francs, and exports decreased $31,062,000 francs, as compared with the same month in 1890. In the Presbyterian General Assemb'y at Kingston a few days ago a motion to re- quire all church members to be total ab- stainers [aiied of consideration for lack ot aseconder. ‘his was bringing prohibition within tuo close range. It is more satis- factory to ask parliament to undertake the work of coercion. eS” Turstrs —The rush for turnip seeds is to Geo. Carter & Co's. The varieties most in demand are the Huszard’s Improved and Car- ter’s Prize Winner. dylw ‘ Bie for the conseqrenees.” ** But, )decter, { ena afford neither the time na ths money.” “Wot. if thai is impossibie, try SS PaTP eee es eo SCOOTERS Alarge bequest | Peterboro. The qrestion of a summer session was re- | ferrei ww the presbyteries of the church for | cons‘d r.tiou, which sball report to the gen-} eral assembly at its next meeting. The’ Presbyterian church has about 800,000 ad- eft by the late Mrs. Nichol, OOO Ret Cree Oe Oe ae nn : ee ate - + |S aeee Sd herents. Thescheme for the distribution ae tas : of probationers will be sent down tothe! ) -Sa i presbyteries for consideration. ei a st a ery ti Respecting the question of teaching! ; Sian =) theology inone of the colleges, it was car-! . rF PURE MNORWECIAN : ried that the assembly ask presbyterieswho| 1: COD LIVES OFT. } may «flirm the principle of a summer ses- ) Fsometimes @nil at Bermuda Bote } sion in theology to suggest «a practical) 5 {8 #'e Hramy Suave of = 3 _ ; Ae 2h ove eo scheme forthe working of a system. A; } CONSUMPTION, ; proposition frum the assembly of the United! | Bronchitis, Corel } States tu have the concensus of creed was! $} or Severe Cold } s i ; fa ADE tae sos ) referred to the delegates to the Preaby | }¥ have CURE with Jt: and tee ! ae Sane | yad rantage ts thnt the wast sen.i- ; i ‘ it : : et } tive steosmacts Gan take it, Anorker } j e. Reid pres nted the report on civil: ¢ thie ws a sameeenia ttre | and religic us rights. No active measures — } Stfsmeietines prenrcriies of the &f\-« . were taken during the year, because none) | Bupite-?* Nee Canter ce : en ; } ec: wi 34 & for oeke set your were necessa! y. : : ‘Ese vis’ 's, tt Selma trapper, ite} D-. Laing protested against the interfer- qe 2h Bet the peanine.” t ence with the rights of religion, complain. | we THD ANE, Mietiewst.e. | ing that while the Roman Catholics taught | anti-Protestant principles in their schouls, Protesiants could not teach Protestant; * principles in theirs. en = ik oS os 3 Me we Grwell Cove Notes. Fler tee ge TAs See gs —_— NOR SE ee _Most of our farmers have finished erop-| z si a Se, tg ae" a ping, although it was a very dry season, | or - but we hope after this that the heavenly STHAMSHITP rain may come to quench the ground. One of our most enterprising scholars has Q\y¥ ® left us to be Mr. Higgs’ apprentice (the ‘tate of ndiana. editor of the Guardian) to learn the print- §U : £ ing. All we wish for is that Mr. Higgs. and his staff will use him well. After he! gets through with his business he is going G Ee r | , to set up a printing press in his native LAR i; AS place. AND There is a good post citice ia this part of the country. All I have tu say about it is that it is well kept by Messrs. Stephens and McDonald. We wish the same to con- tinue. Brush Wharf is being repaired- that is, two blocks—one built by Mr. Panton, of Pinette, Mr. Levi Ings being foreman, and the other built by Mr. Thomas Mellish, of Montague Bridge, and Mr. Charles Gillis is foreman. There are five churches here, viz., one Lobsters by this Steamer should reach Bos- Roman Catholic, two Presbyterian and two ten on Monday morning, 29th inst., leaving The Roman Catholic Church twe clear days to enter at Customs before ig c mducted by Rev. Wilfred Dreelan, tha duty will be im posed. , Presbyterian by Rev. D. B, McLeod, and CASVELL BROS., the Methodist by Rev. John McKinley. | Agents. There are two shoemakers, three joiners, one tailor, one blacksmith, one carriage builder and two house haulers. | There are four government cttices, five’ cores, ands tanery, This, svotion is Halifax anf Pe Island. mostly Conservative. Here is a puzzle:—A fish was caught, | the tail of which weighed 204 lbs. Half his | body weighed a3 much as his tail and heal) Magnificently Equipped. Leaves Bosten, Saturday, 20th of June, at hoon. Leaves Charlettetown, Thursday, 25th of June, at 6 p. m. { . | Charlottetown, June 39, 1891—2i eod together. What did the fish weigh / Send! me ee your answers to Charles Gillis, Orwell Cove. | WG os site” He will give you a month, and then the es 5! meee oy Five | competitors’ names will be published. cents in silver or stamps must accompany each answer, otherwise it will ba no good. The annual school meeting was largely attended on Tuesday, l6éch inst. The sum of $63 was voted for school expenses and a. supplement. Neil A. Gillis, John Grant: and Neil M. Gillis were appointed Trustees, and Neil A. Gillis, Secretary. John Gillis was appointed teacher. We are sorry to hear that Mr. McPhail, Superintendent of the Hospital for the Insane, is about to tose his position, and also Mr. Nichvlson. Policemen are badly needed around here. | We wiil have to hire Sergt. Bradley for a few nighis, and also Marshal Cameron. The Orwell Cuva people have chartered | the steamer Haather Belle for an excursion | —_-_—____- on the 29-b. A gala day is expecred. | Hurrah for Capt. McLean and his staff ! ) ; j -———"""_ Propo Cuurcu Damacep.—During the thunder- * storm on Tuesday evening the steeple of | the Methodist Church, Jolicure, was torn | off and thrown across tlie road. Inside the church the chanitelers were torn dowa | and considerable other damage dons. - Tae Cutcaco Way.—If it be true that a} Chicago physician, Dr. L. W. Whitney, having demanded $3 for sewing up @ wound | in a patient’s head, ripped ap the wouad with | his operating knife b-cause the pstient had | 5, Ss. FASTN T, A. HW. KELLY, COMMANDER, ILL sail from Halifax every Monday, at 10 p. m., for Charlottetown, csll- ing at Canso, Arichat, Hawkesbury, Port Hastings and Souris. Returning, will leave Charlottetown every Thursday afternoon, calling at same intermediate ports with the exception of Souris, For Freight, etc., apply to W. W, CLARKE, Agent. Charlottetown, June 20, 1891—dy sed Nailings OF THE STEAMERS OF THE LINE. : =< fa “Ts WA 1’. S but $1.89, aulsiil: ‘‘Giet out of my cffice AE aha ae irty b liteych you not to come = Seen ae ee ees s you dirty old bam, I y¢ . ; { Ver tg Pea a ett ci WO around here anl beat m: out of my tee,” it is} a thousand pities that Chicago is a civilized | center. This alleged doctor would be a good subject for a fiest-cliss endeavor oa the part oo ig of Judge Lynch. | BON A\ ISTA. ROM Montreal for Charlottetown, Syd- ney and St. John’s, Newfouudland ;-~— a Oe ee June 26:h + Kade ike coded July 16th "eh August 6th Exaisiriox.—The arrangements forholdiagi — | “8 ** presse $ ve tae Canada’s [aternational Exhibition and Mam-| From Montreal for Charlottetown and Syd- moth Horse Fair at St. John, have been pro-; ney only :— ceeding quietly but eff ctually during the last COBAN .........- 05-02 seer ere ees J —_>— te nly 2rd few months. But a new impetus has just 5 gas sete cee ne 15th been given tothe Kxhibitioa Association, by ig aa IT hE enn ‘* 28th a liberal guarantee faad which has been sub- PEAKE BROS. & CO, scribed by piivate citizens and the City junel7 Agents. Council of £t. John. The most gratifying | : 4 feature of th> work his been the manner ip | which both bayer and sellers are ente:ing B ReaD WI RE into the ides of the horse fair. A letter just. my e received from Agen* General Feilows, London, | Eng., informs the Association that in order} a to secure buyers ef horses for the British! Army, it will be necessary that the author. | ities be advised as early as possible of the number and classes of horses which are likely to be offered for sale. Kqually gratif,inz | results are noted in the Industrial section of the exhibition, as already applications f r) Geppemqpe, spggonige | space have been receivedfrom a larger number’ Se ee of manufacturers than exhibited last yer. } Arrangements for special attractions sr) being made both in England and the United States, and there carnot be any doubt but some of the best diawing enterteinments will be offered to the public. QF HUNDRED COILS. CARVELL EROS. Ch’town, June 19, 1891—3w 2aw IN. “MAR ONTARIO BRAN landing to-day, dbo acid low. ee An abe may 15—eod LO\vs, NORTH SIDE OF MARKET SQUARE.