‘Ula Ate ith, for Teaue P10! Dontans A YRAR, s : ——— ail VEW SERLES. — Bowling Alley. We aubectiber hs fitted up a ROW LING ALLEY and SHOOTING GALLERY nig Warehouse, C pp ite Railway Freight oe 4. Water Street, which w ill be opened to 7 ‘ublic for the first time this evening, at gered & Cees. . ° JOUN JOY. RELL ORGAN, A gull ay a vis daiscuvtnt CHAS. IL. MORRISON, o'6 1.0 Queen Street. FOR SALE. PPVHE subscriber offers for sale Water Lote} | Numbers Four and Five, in GEORGE. | TOWN, with Dwelling House, Warehouse, | Bar? and f mye thereon, } This property is Lesu'ifully situated close to ‘he Railw “y Wherf and Ferry SI p. It is a very jlesiralle st.aation either for a Hotel | or Business Starcl, while for a private reaj.! deoce it has the advaatege of a southern | sspect facing the harbor, with a fine view on siisides. There is bold water on the shore , front, where a wharf can be extendcd at small} cust. i _ For further particulars apply to A. A. Mac: | Jouald & Bro., Georgetown, or at Charlotte- tewn to the owner, A. A. MACDONALD, oct27—Im dy Jaw wky PB ISLAND 81 Summer Arrangements.. HE well-known Steamers “ST. LA wl RENCE” and “PRINCKss OF cepted leaving Charlotietown at six o'clock in the! morning for Pictou, connecting there with! steamer “twerton” at 10 a. m. for New Glas- row, avd thea with Murning Train for Cape! jreton and Bastern Points. Also at Pictou} at ip. m. with i. C. R. for Halifax. Leaving Picton aneut noon, on arrival of Morn-/| ing train frum Halif-x, for Charlottetown, Leaving Summerside on arrival of Murning Train from Charlotre: own for Poiat du Chene and connect there with I. C. Rh. Trains for Monctoa and Ss. John, for Canada and} United States. Leaving Point du Chene on arrival of Morning | Train from St. John and Moncton for Sum-} merside, and cunnect there with train for) Charlottetown. By order, F W. HALES, Secy. Ch’town Steam Nav. Co. (Ltd). intyS— and im E er HOUNDANDAN Sr {OUP = 6h KCOUG! WroopinG CO OLDS. 384.0 YEARS IN USE. i PRICE2Z5°PERBOTTLEx Pei Sg hs! Ne Cle BOT eta made Tetis i lik ae a SOURIS LOYS FOR SALE. ao two beautifally situated Lots ad- joining the Court House, 100x100; alo ‘wo others, same size, on the hill opposite Dr. Melntyre's residence. These Lots command ‘beautiful view, and are desirable sites for Private residences. [rice low. Apply to JOHN COOMBS, Charlottetown, Orto CC. C. CARLTON, Souris. oct l4— eod Accent J. H. BELL, For Houses and ez) INCANDESCENT LIGHTS Shops. ‘ » , , y ow ~ ‘ . — P. E. ISLAND ELECTRIC CO. have imported and are now setting up the plant necessary to supply the Citizens of Charlottetown with the INCANDES. ‘OR 3 4 Bu fH aes ELECTRIC LIGHT. in. thei e | 4a sue ) LIGHT in th ar Ho 8, Shor i ieee @ | used will be the THOMPSON-HOUSTON, now in the United States. and Buildings. The system } a now in operation all over Canada and | ' ! Phe advantages of the Incandescent Light over other lights | Imost new, will be consist chiefly tn perfect immunity from smell, in the absence of canger from fire | jor otherwise, and in the steadiness and brilliancy of its light. | once been introduced it has been retained and given general satisfaction. The expert Engineer engaged in setting up the plant, and who is prepared to put in the lights in any buildings, will be glad to give all information necessary | as to prices, ete., to those who desire to introduce the light. the Office of the P. E. Island Electric Co. on and »fter this date. *® Lights will be available at al! hours of the night ™ JAS. WADDELL, Suprrintendent, Charlottetown, Oct. 29, 1890. Wherever it has | He can be found at! School Books ! STATIONERY OF ALL KINDS CHEAP. x) J VSL ———(*) Our New EUREKA MEMO. BOOK, with Ad- . LAW: will make DAILY PRL S as under, aindenttale. SOMETHING NiGE I sustable Cover just » jus School Books! (x)— fol ~~ —{x) ——_—— Our work in this line speaks for itself, RBC BET V ED we A LARGE STOCK OF BLANK BOOKS, ) ST BARBERS. Schoo! Exercises, nienii teas ket Memos, Cash Books, Time Books, Rapid Indexes, Day of the Week Books, etc. the thing for Business Men. OUR AIM will be to supply the BEST GOODS at the LOWEST PRICES. Orders for PRINTING and BOOKBINDING will receive careful and prompt attention, Canada. and is second to none in HASZARD & MOORE. Charlottetown, Oct. 21, 1890—dy tf a READY- MADE Men’s Overcoats, Men's Reefin MENS SUITS! —_—(x ) ———— LOTHING. Men's Overcoats, . Men b)-——— Boys Overcoats, s Overcoats. Boys’ Overcoats, Boys Overcoats. ———(s)- Jackets, Wien’s eefing Jackets, Men’s Reefing Jackets. ——(s)--— ———__——_i)—- -——- BOYS SUITS! CHARLOTTETOWN, ¥: E. ISLAND, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER A, L890. Medical Advisers. Bermuda Bottled. in “You must go toe Bermuda, If The ft lowing extracts from the va'edic- an se nas i will not be res sae tory address to the graduating class of the vie for the consequences.” “ Bu a Pe martmen Wei ity | Sector, Ff cum afera neither the medical department of the University of : Pennsylvania, by J. William White, M_ D., time uor the money.” * that Is impossibie, try Prefessor of Clinical Surgery, are worthy of beiurg ead and studied by the people of Web. if SCOTS this Province :-— ‘ oh ce 2 ‘Examinations possess a still more useful ha BS own deficiencies, ‘To know that you know what you know aud that you do not know what you don’t know’ is, according to Confucious, the sum of all human (OF PURE NORWECIA COD LIVER. OIL. (sometimes enll it Bermuda Bote tied, and many casca of CONSUMPTION, Bronchitis, Cough knowledge. ‘No man,’ says Swift, * ever made a bad figure who understood his own talents, nor a good one who mistook them,’ while Josh Bilings says that * the wan who don’t know himself is a poor judge of the other phellow.’ or Severe Cold ‘ ‘** } ain sure each one of you could testify I have CURED with it; and the) that this effect of an anticipated examin- S advantage ts that the most sensi-) [ation is a real one, and that a positive ( I TR OI tive stemach can take it. Anether oncfit resul it in wh: : >» ca! iaimet Wala aiaanemde Sete te bencfit results from it in what may be cai)- stimulating properties of the Kiy=} et the kuowledge of one’s own ignorance pophesphiies. which 16 eontatims. which it imparts. I assume. therefore, that examinations are rather desirable than otherwise, so far as their effect upon the individeal is concerned, and that the inter- position of another between graduation and ent ance into active practice, however dis- } } You will find it fer sale at your ) Brogyist’s, tu Salmon wrapper, Be ) 8’ a you pet the genuine.” ¢ } ;COTT & BOWNE, Retlovire. § Ne RN OR ee a a een ee + ee eee _ this advantage, if it be a real one, is the 'merest trifle compared with the broader and jmoore important bevefits to the community which result from the establishment of state boards of examiners. There is nvth- ‘ing «bout which the general public, includ —-YOU WOULD SAVE— . Time 3 usa Abe khQs ing even persons of the highest culture and intelligence, are so unfitted to exercise in- Tro i ble, \dependent judgment as in the selection of their medical advisers. The reasons ~ j for this are obvious. The process of KE XPelse, |nature in the course of iliness and disease are often obscure and misleading ; the re- sults of treatment are frequently difficult to distinguish from the effects of this vis medicatory naturar; the necessary tech- nicalities of our profession are not easily understood, even by educated Jaymeu, and sre quite inexplicable to the masses ; the estabiishment of various medical sects out- itase ul it may be at first sight, would, ? nevertheless, be of positive benefit. But Ef Ef VW ocdill’s| |Baking German. PURE AND Wh'LESOME. profession, but each claiming to have found the whole truth in some exclusive dogma, has aided in confusing the popular mind ———— |jand in raising a cloud of dust, under the 3 Wen rts oD cover of which maranders of ali sorts and 4 e degrees of ignorance and incompetence in- LL PERSONS owing Mrs. R. Young, vade the domain of medica] science, : l ‘‘Under these circumstances the pos- who have not received legal wotice, will session of the legal right to practice medi- please call at $30. cree ei and have cine puts all so-called ‘ doctors’ regulars or er yy ok eer heft am Miss| itregulars, men of learning or charlatans, Wright will receive my niwatha’ ttteiadtcn, wise practitioners ready and competent to MRS. R. YOUNG. {US every rational means ¢ nd method in oct 18 the never ending combat with disease and ‘death, or Christian scientists, faith curcrs, hydropaths, electropaths and all other | bumbugging,* paths’ on the same level acts before the great mass of the people who as- ‘ an tas ; jsume that the authority to practice medi- TFHAT desirable block of ground situate! .7, implies the ability to practice. and being in the front aud centre off oer . City of the Charlottetown, and known as the | The number of avoidable deaths due “REVERE HOUSE” property, and com-|*°, the ignorance of legally qualified prac- prising nearly one acre of Jand, and a most) renee of medicing is enormous, — magnificent site for a Railway Passenger} “An address upon a correlated suject was Station or first-class Hotel, is now offered for, delivered by one of my colleagues last year, sale hy tender. soon after the great flood in this state. At Tenders will be received by the Lady /| its close, he said : ‘*In the presence of the Superioress of the City Hospital for the pur-! dead in Conemaugh, the nation bows in chase of the whcle block only up till the 3ISt' sorrow; but, before God, I tell you that it of December, 1890, reserving the right) js my belief, founded on the largest exper- to accept or reject any tender. | ‘ieuce, that if the dead who, in the last fifty Further information respecting buonds and | years, have been sacrificed in these United conditions can be had on application to Lady Stat - a ats f Sterne years Superioress at the City Hospital, or to States upon the a “as — eee eee a ance, could this day rise before us, the M. P. HOGAN, Agent, thousands of Conemaugh would be lest in the City of Charlottetown. | multitude; silently, heralded by no roar of flood, mourned by no outburst of national ep e'y remorse or sorrow, one by one they have ner passed over, a never-ending holocaust to * | governmental imbecility. Is it not possible to awaken the peopie of the United States to the fact that the medical profession holds LONG BROS. the lives of men, women and children in 9 ithe hollow of its hands? And, as is r ia done in every other civilized country, 80 Tanners and Cur rier Ss also in this should the law require that the man at least should be technically educated before such power is committed ~ to his keeping.” The eloquent words of Pro- Hides, Calfskins, Sheepskins, Horse | fosgor Weed segimauide to-day the unex- Hides, Tail-Bair, ete. aggerated fecling and belief of the best men sijiomiiinaiin in our profession, based upen a common Market Rates paid for Hides, ete. knowledge and an unvarying experience. Lay “You may ask, and very natucaliy, is not MALPEQUE ROAD, the possession of the diploma of a legally Opposite Ch’'town Wooien Mills. {constituted medical school sutiicient evi- oct6—3m eod idence of the fitness of the graduate to as- aug? _dy ef wky her ——DEALERS IN—— ry ‘. st f einer ee ‘sume the responsibilities of his rofession Ogee eo ine ste pitces: © THE FISH MARKET ire diplomas, I am proud to say, do afford evi- dence of such fitness, and would be so re- garded everywhere in the world, You have the good fortune to be graduates of the old- AUSAGES, 12 cents per lb., made from’ est and probably the best known of the the very best materials every morning. | medical schools of this content; a school Grafton Street. ——_— (x }——_———- The Leading Custom Boot and shoe HAR Ris & eT EWART, ye BEEF and PORK always in 6] founded by men whose names are insepar- LONDON HOUSE. Maker of the Province, r NOW READY with a good selection of . LEATHERS and TOPS for the Fall and inter trade, and wonll respectfutly invite all who require a first-class Hoot or Shoe to tuspect eur stock and prices before placing their orders, All our goods are guranteed not to squeak, also to fit well and comfortable. Orders always filled up totime. A full line of ourown make kept constantly on’ hand. Waality the highest, prices the lowest. 4 oe AIRING of all kinds promptly attend- J. H. BELL, Cy Upper Great George Street. A'town, Sept. 6, 1890 3m 2aw (thu sat) TE nett LO LT. HOUSE situate on Sidney Street, oppo- wW* . site the Methodist Brick Church. ent Moderate, Also— ePposite Judge Reddin’s. os Jag John Keily, Keq.. Water Commissioner, the owner at Southport, EDWARD KELLY. Sept26—2aw Charlottetown, Oct. 23, 1890—5i ——$ += —— CAN GIVE YOU A WATCH for $2.75, . } Beg eA ches | , | : . up; and although w all worth oe a. veniily Wanches that we can oer pws ogre A — and exercise as country, some supervision was kept over from pain; and the little cherub awakes 50 15.00 and $20.00, and Brooehes and Pins by t! iM . NEW BRACELETS and LADIES ‘are not first-class im every respeet. A Hou-e tiiuate on King Street, recommend at $7.00, $10.00, thousand. le above Houses are in good repair. Ap-| CHAINS just received. * eS eS a a Sa —_A RH COMBINED— iil \x) Price according to quality. In Most of the Goods We Sell. or a Brooch or Ring from 10 cts E. W. TAYLOR, Ch’town, Oct, 18, 1890 -Zaw & why CAMERON BLOCK. Store. lably assoviated with medical science in Fresh and Salt Pork, Smoked Hams and! 4 merica, and whose influence and example Bacon. ie ‘ ‘oe. Fi have been transmitted through a long list “ae , oe Codfish, Herring, Finnan} of successors, who, however inferior in ex- namet, OS tional and individual instance, have as a }ROCERIES all kinds; CANNED) [°P " Sr aed GROCERIES of all kinds; CA‘ body been representative of the best 5, ete. 5 at Racer required in the way of Provi-| thought and spirit and purpose of the pro- sions can be had at our Store, Grafton Street, fessivn, and have kept the university where very cheap. it now stands in the forefront of medical : J. H. MYRICK & CO. | Progress. Her diploma has always repre- Aye sented, and never more truly than at the t28—2w eod i oct238— 2w e present day, the best system of medical ment.” * * * * * For the Winter. commendation would not apply to many, J ful attention. Horses handled for) foul colleges. For further particulars apply to a, %. WHERE from _legis!ative + . v > ro : 46 Great George Street, Charlottetown. eee sdodigioesly' Je Stablee in rear on King Street, Telephone/ while with equal octl7—dy 2m eod | ‘ | function in recalling to the individual his) i *” + ‘ Po Ww der, side of and unrecognized by the aon teaching to be found in the United States, HORSES BOARD and the record of her graduates in all fair competitive examinations for years past i the truth of this state- amply establishes the truth o is s ~ Soothing Syrup has been used by mothers ‘Unfortunately, however, these words of for LEAN, warm, ventilated Stables. Ca- 2- perars not to the majority of American In tbe early days of the these institutions, but a little later, when growth and development went on with such enormous rapidity, they escaped control, and = in- numbers a rapidity they de- teething or other causes. generated us to all useful qualities. In every oants a bottle, ~~ =bonanginom oareponeunpotip-ipnieesanva as dentonsetnaanananrsescainsnmntemntetainaengunasnnqensssneasa=apsnatiaoastiianitentaaasiaateiagtotthsaipetianieadaaetemaaeabaaaanate * This is trne Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Eonrermes. Sinaie Cortzs Two Cents ro Wa r VOL. 26.—NO. 135 | : | state little bands of swindlers or speculators, | co-operating with quacks or with unworthy ‘bangers on of the profission established alleged *‘schools” or “colleges,” which were realiy shameless diploma miils, and which ‘pened wide the doors of an honorable pro- fession to thousands of unmitigated ignor- jamnaes and charlatans, American medical | diplouras svoa lust all value in foreign count- jries, and indeed at the present time, with | ; comparatively few exceptions, are dizcredited abroad, By gord fortune, the competition among {the rascals themselves was so keen that by unde:selling each other on the ope hand and overstockiug the mrdical market on the viher, they destroyed their own means of subsistence and of the 224 colleges once ex- isting vere 105 are extinct. But we still have Jeft 120, about 100 ia excess of the actual requbements of the country, and nearly three fourths of which are schools merely in name as they require only two years of study, cr sather, to be strictiy ec- curate, attendance during two terms of a few months each.” It is these 80 or 90 chartered medical shams that flood the country with half educated doctors ot medicine, nearly 5000 annually, the medical population increasing at the rate of 54 per cent., while the annual increase of the general population is less than two per cent. As tothe learning and intelligence of the average graduate f om these schovls, the most conciusive evidence is afforded by the results of examinations before the Sta‘e Boards already established.” “The lust published report of the answers of some of the rejected candidates contain the following gems, which | know you will apre- ciate, even if the non-medical portion of my audience cannot gresp their siupendous absurdity: One embiyo neurelogist defined the curpus callosum 9s ‘that part of the dura mater which separates the cerebrum from the cerebellum.’ Another (who evidently did not know of Dr. Lerdy’s existence) said ‘The aortic makes its exit between the first and second ribs.’ ‘The Pesitoneum is a serious membrane extending into the chest and coverlog the heart and lungs.’ A third was of the opinion that ‘the boiling point of lah- renheit is about 300 deg., and that when phosphorous burns it makes nitrogen gas.’ (imagine the effect of those answers on Prof, Waormley !) Others said that the normal tem- perature of the human body is from 112 deg. to 140 deg., and the normal respiration 70 per minute’; that ‘there are 16 ounces to the pound in apothecarys weight,’ that ‘coxalgia is an inflammation of the cocey, ‘Ranula a disease of the eye,’ ‘Scarlatiua an eruption of the head,’ that ‘acupressure was made with the finger or any other instrument,’ that ‘the technical name of rhubard was Columbo,’ and that ‘“‘Dengue or break bone fever was a fever that comes on soon after the bones are broken.’ The list might be extended indeti- nitely, but 1 have given you enough examples. What I desire to impress upon you is the tact that each of these grossly and densely ignor- ant appiicants held a Diploma from a legally- constituted medical college, and that although they wete, of course, ali rejected in the State in which they made their application, they can come and do come, here, and by comply- ing with a slipshod, inefficient and easily- evaded registration law, can take charge of the health and the lives of the people of the great State of Pennsylvania, ‘Is any fuller evidence needed {as to the ad- vantage to the community which would result from the establishment of a State Board of Examiners ? “The right of the State to take such a step is practically unquestioned. An unbroken line of authorities have held that the legis- lative bodies of any country may exercise such police powers as are co-exteusive with the natural right of self-protection. It is more than a right, it is the duty of the State to take such action. ’ “The argument is a brief and simple one. It is the duty of the State to demand, in the case of the death of each of its citizens, suffi- cient evidence that the death really occurred, aud that it was due to natural causes. This evidence is required not only to guard the lives of citizens, but to protect the rights of property in its transmission by inheritance, and to prevent fraud or crime. In the great majority of cases, such evi- dence must be a physician’s, certificate, and the State should, therefore, ia its turn, possess satisfactory prof that the siguer of such a certificate is competent to judge in the matters conceruing which his evidence is to be taken We have seen, incontrovertibly, that the possession of a degree of M. D. is not such proof, **Therefure, the State should, in its own in- terests, require each man who proposes to en- ter a profession so closely connected with the lives, health and happiness of its citizens, to be examined by a State Board. Such exam- ination should include the fnndamental ele- ments of nedicine which are not only accepted by the regular profession, but cannot be denied by any schools or sects—as chemistry, anatomy, physiology, pathology, hygiene, diagnosis, practical midwifery and operative surgery. “If there is any flaw in the chain of reason- ing which, based on the existing evidence of dangerous ignorance ia a large portion of the graduates of our colleges, leads us to the ad- vocacy of such examining boards, I am unable to detect it. The University of rennsylvania is on record, through the action of the pro- vost and many of the faculty, as earnestly demanding not only such a bill, but, in ads dition, the compulsory establishment of a fourth year in every medical college in the State,” etc., etc. It is to be hoped that the people of Prince Edward Island will read the foregoing ex- tracts carefully, and see the necessity of hav- ing a good law in this Province. Quacks of the wost barefaced quality come here and fleece the people and guli the Province of thousands of dollars. The people and the Legislature must support the hands of the Prince Kdward Island Medical Council in their efforts to regulate the education and the conduct of the members of what should be an honorable profession. +9 Apvice to Morsers.—Mrs. Winslow's children teething for over fifty years with perfect success It re- lieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural quiet sleep by relieving the child bright as a button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regu- lates the bowels and is the best known remedy for diarrhoea, whether arising fram Twenty-five apll8'Mlyoodwkyly s ae i ee : Fen ee eee aa rt rae rae ae a velo os hoes _ nce oo he eee v — a _ a ee aa F c i | . 4 Sin ot, 8 Se & tm a = a ae ral’ Ss rg A. ea +4 bart #\e 3 mS Be eae 4 t a