ee , y THA DATLY BSAMINER, FHBRUA RY 16, 1886. FEBRUARY 16, 1886. Editorial Notes. -_—- —Home Secretary Childers has ap- pointed a committee, of which he him self is the president, to enquire into the origin and character of the recent riots in London. — A despatch from Vienna says that Director Ham, of the London Bank, and King Leopold, of Belgium, have signed a contract at Brussels forthe first loan of $5,000,000 to an international syndicate to colouize Congo State. Eatries for the Colouial Exhibition : London, Eng Xa had *\ ’ f ecretaries for the various enirics. | ii t Mr. Joha Lowe, acting Deputy Minister of Agriéultare has announced that the total number for the Domiaion up to date is 809. ~~ The gross earnings of the Cana- continue to pour isto} {vive you plainand further proof of my sincerity Counterfeiters at Work. A PROMINENT MERCHANT in this city re- ceived the following letter yesterday fore- noon and handed it to Tue Examiner for publication :— eDaily Exanriner . New YORK. Dear Srr.—I received your name from a friend of mine who passed through your County lately, and thinking I could be of some service to you, I write vou, Now, if I have made a mistake in sending you this letter, f will ask you for God's sake not to expose me, I will be plain with you, lam dealing in Goods, 1's, 2’s and 6's, Dominion of Canada. The enclosed newspaper article will <plain all. Ican alsofurnish you with United States goods in sizes of 1's, 2's, 5s and 10's. Bear in mind these goods can be used in paying off debts. mortgages, buying land, etc., and will pass lfrom hand to hand just the same as the genuine. {No person who has used them has yet bad any i} trouble. but all have made money fast, safe and lsure. This is God Almighty’s truth. TU will say jnothing further until you return. this letter and }promise meon your word and honor, you will inever expose me. Jask nomoney in advance, not evenif you were willing tosend it, I want to preve to you that 1 mean business, fair and square, before you pay me one dollar, and, just as trae as there is a God in Heaven, you need have no fear of me. In my next letter I will | } in this matter: until then I remain a true friend toa friend. I am the only person in this country who cansupply you with the same articles the newspaper publication speaks of. Bear in mind, Ideai with very few people, and they must be men who know how to keep their own secrets, Please return this letter, as [ will yours. Please address in honor and confidence as follows,— PHILIP HANLEY, Box 6, dian Pacific Railway Company for the week ending Feb. Tth, amounted $101,000, against $92,600 for the cor-| responding week last vear, an increase | of $9.000. The number of miles in Operation is 3,527. — Gladstone is preparing a bill pro-|! viding for the appropriation of land in| Ireland by meaus of state funds. This bill will precede other Irish measures | which the government intends to present to parliamon Discussion of the Home| Rule question has been postponed until | on Next session. — The superintendent of the govern ment cartridge fa tory at 8 bec, iu his report just issued, gives the result of| his test with the Suider-Enfeld rifle at aj distance of 505 yards. The results ate | t d were highly satisfactory. Twenty} lots were cd from a Whiteworth rest, vhi re groupe 1 within acirele 80 ;in diameter. The cartridges used coutained 70 grains of powder and a}, 450-grain bullet. ~An Ottawa despatch says: The amon f seed grain to be distributed by | the Department of the Interior among the distressed half-breeds and settlers of | Prince Albert, Dack Lake, St. Laurent and Batoene will be apwards of sixteen | * thousaad bushels, $49,000. to the needy ones by the Agriculiural Society, the missionary | priests and the promiuent citizens of the aggregating is valve respective places. Grain must be ad- vancing in that section, as if these figures | are correct it costs $2.50 per bushel. —Belore the Riel uprising there were | barely 600 mounted police in the North-| west. The force has now been increas- | ed to 1,200 in addition to the 200) regulars, detachments from the artillery batteries, so that the force available for! preserving order and protecting the| people is row nearly three times as large ag it was at the beginning of 1885. This, fact alone should be sufficient to allay) rehensions that may exist as| reyards a further Indian uprising, and it is gratifying to teel that should any crisis unfortunately take place the everywhere are tolerably well protected, | any app settlers introduced into the provides that nobody! —A liquor law Ohio Assembly shail se!l, give or furnish intoxicaats to! be use 1 4s “4 heveruge to ADY person who is 05t @ legal habitual drinker, and does not have with him a certii » showing that he ts such a drinker, Any sesi- deut of Olio more than twenty-one years of age may become a legal habitual | driuker by making affidavit before the | Probate Judge of his county, registering | his came, age, residence and occupation aud paying fifty cents for registry and | the certificate, which the Judge will thereupon issue. Selling to a non-regis- | tered drinker is a misdemeanor punish-} able with fine and imprisonment. —A *“P. E. Islander,” writing to the! Halifax Herald, sets that paper and one) of its correspondents right on the ques- tion of the P. E. 1. Railway, by showing that the Dominion of Canada did not build our railway, but that, with the ex- ception of the Caps Traverse Branch—| some 12 miles —it was built by the Local | Government. The idea ia general out- side of this [sland that the Dominion had c e . * . i! ha ‘he distribution will be made |;,,°; Lorne | fr (ijustas ready as the genuine, and to sum the ferend guest. At last 82 Tompkins Market, 6th Street, New York. Vollowing is the clipping referred to : MONTREAL, Feb. 5.—It has long been suspected, but for private reasons kept qviet, that there has been some mismanagement in the printing and lengraving department of the Dominion of Can- lada ones andtwos. Why this secret has been s0 jong kept from the public has now leaked out. rhere has been in New York for the last 5 months two of the smartest, quickest and most intelligent of the Canadian detectives, but their efforts met with no success, for these New York scoundrels carry on their business in such a clever, quiet manner that the best informed people would take them for gentiemen of high standing in society, for they certainly are as polished a set of villians as ever lived. One Montreal detec- tive of the British American Bank Note Com- pany used his best endeavors to ferret out this rious work, bat his efforts met with but little i suecess. It seems very strange, but it is true,that tt base scoundrels have in some mysterious, accountable manner obtained exact imitations of the Dominion of Canada plates, from which it is supposed they have printed from $800,000 to $900,000 in ones and twos, and perhaps more, as it 'is known or at ieast suspected that there is in circulation in the different provinces at least $400,000, but so extraordinary fine and perfect is the work done itis impossible to distinguish it ; from the genuine, or detect those using U, as it is uspected that our smartest bank clerks and nk tellers have taken in thousands of dollars in this spurious money and paid it out again without etecting it, for everything on the notes are as ar the genuine as itis possible for skill to yet it: engraving, printing numbers, coloring figures aud skrnatures all seem wonderfully and mar- vellousiy complete, Now the question is how id these scoundrels get into the confidence of 1e trusted ones in the British American Bank Note Company. The question has puzzled the tectives. One thing is certain, the secret is well and faithfully kept, but it is hinted at and surmised the thing was done with the liberal use of American goid, The question comes again, t is to be done to unearth this bold and suc- wsfni fraud? The detectives have given it up, 1 a ti | for they cannot distinguish the genuine from the it issue, and the officials seem powerless natter, and those that are using it are safe : nble, for the notes pass from hand to hand maiter up in a few words, they thatarein the scheme are making money safe and sure, and are wetting rich fast, for these bold nefarious rogues seem Well supplied with Dominion ones and twos, and but little possibility of ever bringing them to justice,so secretly do they cover their tracks and carry on their base work. LEPTERS VO THE EDITOR, ‘The Marriage Ring.” Srr,--To the expressed sentiments of others | would desire to add my own in thanking you for the ‘‘sermons” published, for several weeks past, in each Saturday’s issue of Tuk Examiner. The sermons of Talmage, rich iu the glowing imagéry of the poet, staunch in the teachings of an earnest practical Christian- ity, and admirabie in their presentation of trne religion in the beautiful and cheerful garb which she is so well entitled to wear, ‘ought to benefit all, and will certainly harm none; and are specially prized by those | who, like myselfware debarred, by reason of ill-health, from attending the services of } the sanctuary. ‘The admiration expressed by the great preacher for Scotland's favorite poet, and | his quotations from the same may recall to 'some of your readers another occasion upon which these lines were usec. It was the jubilee of Dr. John Anderson, the celebrat- ed Divine; and a special celebration there- of was held in the great City Hail of Glas- gow, whero an immense concourse of people had gathered to do honor to the aged pastor. COlergymen of all denomin- ations thronged the platform, and one after the other came forward to address the icrowd end to pass panegyrics upon the rev- stepped forth William Anderson, then in the full zenith of hia popular- ity. A breathless silence overspread the hall, as its thousands of occupants bent forward to catch every tone of the voice which was wont to sway the multitude. Quietly advanced the distinguished scholar, and gently placing his hand upon the sil- ver hair, recited : bis 80n, Dr. ** John Anderson, my jo, John, When we were first acquent Your locks were like the raven, Your bonnie brow was brent. to build our road, and in concluding his letter “P. E. Islander” remarks: “It is therefore to be hoped that we have heard the last of the Dominion having had to build our railway.” With regard to the non-fulfillment of the Terms of Union, he remarks that we have been heavy losers and concludes with tho rather siguificant threat that “before long we Shall know who will indemnify us.” ~-A letter was read before the His- torical Society of Halifex, written by Judge Isaac Duchamps, who resided in Windsor previous to 1755. <A copy of this letter fell isto the hands of the late Judge Williams, from whom it was obtained by Dr. Akins, an inde fatigable collector of historical re- cords, The Iatter describes the agricultural methods of the Acadi- anus, who, it appears, raised in one year enough wheat in the township of Horton aud vicinity to feed themselves and leave & surplus of 6,000 bushels for export. They did their ploughing late in the fall and sometimes as early in the spring as February, frequently sowed their wheat in the slush which covered the ground 1» winter, but never later than the first of April. The dyked marshes yielded 16 to 18 bushels per acre and the land was worth £10 to £12 per acre. | But now we're wearin’ auld, John, Your locks are like the snow ; ' Yet biessings on your frosty brow John Anderson, my jo!” j and before he had finished with Now ye maun totter down, John, ' Yet hand in hand we'll go; And sleep together at the foot,} | John Anderson, my jo.” the beautiful sight of filial love, as the | talented son of the pious father, in homage | to his sire, flang his own grandeur of intel- | lect aside by preferring Burns’ simple lay, | had appealed to the hearts of all ; and tears | welled up and rolled over the countenances | of many, even of those whom the profound- jest logic and most* powerful oratory had often failed to affect. Yours truly, Susan MacLegov. i | February 13, 1886. A Apvick to Moruers, — Mrs. Winslow’s | Soothing Syrup should always be used when | children are cutting teeth. It relieves the | little sufferer at once; it produces natural, _quiet sleep by relivving the child from pain, and the little cherub awakes as “‘ bright as a } ’ Ié is very pleasant to taste. It ) button.’ soothes the child, softens the gnims, allays all pain, regulates the bowels, and is the best ‘known remedy for diarrbwa, whether arising |from teething or other causes, Twenty-five j cents a bottle, Be sure and -ask for ‘* Mrs, | Winslow’s Sovthing Syrup,” and take no other kind. [feb 4 vod wkly THE NEWS OF THE DAY. Carefully Collated by “The Ex- aminers” Reporters. Osman Digma has occupied Tamai. Mr. Beaugrand, Mayor of Montreal, is again seriously ill, Minnesota is a wonderful State. She boasts 111 breweries. Additional cases of landlord oppression in Ireland are reported. Rome is now said to be a clean city, and the foot-pad is unknown. There are abont 15,000 miles of electric wires in the city of Chicago. M. Rochefort has tendered his resigna- tion in the Chamber of Deputies. Lord Reay has resigned the Governor- ship of Bombay owing to illness. Sir William Vernon Harcourt has been re-elected to Parliament from Derby. Sir Charles Warren, the new commander of the British troops at Suakim has arrived there. A strong attack was made by rebels upon the British patrols 2,000 yards from Suakim. Socialists in Paris and Berlin are jubi- lant over the doings of their brethren in London. Yseult Dudley who shot O’Donovan Rossa, is still at the Middletown, N. Y., insane asylum, Lord Lansdowne has purchased Mr. L. R. O'Brien's painting, entitled ‘‘September on the Saguenay.” Sir Farrer Herschell, the Lord High Chancellor, has been raised to the Peerage, with the title of Baron Herschel. It is understood tHat the ten thonsand liquor ealoonaof New York take in $220,-, OUO per day, or $74,000,000 annually. The premature discharge of a cannon in Moneton on Tuesday evening injered two of the young men who were engaged in loading it. It is proposed to have a wrestling tourna- ment in Cincinnati shortly, to settle the question of who is the champion catch-as- catch-can wrestler in the United States. The Socialist leaders, Barns, Champicn, Hyndman, and Williams, had an_ inrter- view with Mr, Joseph Chamberlain recent- ly, and went away thoroughly dissatisfied. A enrious feature about the forgery case at St. John’s, Nfld., was that the names of some of the parties{forged to the notes were directors of the bank which discounted them, Henry Thielan, a farmer of East St. Louis, sat down on a box enclosing a buzz saw in a planing mill, when the saw sud- denly started and Thielau was instantly cut in two. The Duke of Seville, imprisoned for dis- respect tothe (ucen of Spain, made an attempt lately to escape from prison but failed. The Dake has offered his services to Zorilla. John A. Breathitt threw a snowball at Wilbur Wilson, at Hopkinsyille, Ky., and the latter fatally shot Breathitt in the abdomen with a target gun. The young men were good friends. An Epgtizh paper says that the Hindoos are complaining about the poor quality of idols furnished them by the Birmingham manufacturers. The idols are too ugly for even the most devout Hindoo. The Francais publishes a letter stating that the Italian consular agent at Monaco, who had kept the suicide of Italians secret, and who was guilty of other doubtful actions, is now in prison awaiting trial. A heavy-weight pugilist of New Zealand, named Richard Matthews, has arrived at San Francisco, and says he is willing to fight John L. Sullivan, or any man in the world, for $1,000 a side, with or without gloves. He has never been defeated. A military court which has been investi- gating the history of the disaster to the French army at Lang Son, during the Tonquin campaign, has acquitied Col. Herbinger, who bad charge of the French troops at the time, from all blame for the disaster. A young man of Washington, Ga., who had arranged to elope with his sweetheart, knocked at the wrong window and awoke the old man. In his haste to get away his revolver went off and shot him in the foot, and the old man opened on him with a shotgun. Harry Worman, a bright boy in Fostoria, Ohio, showed so much interest in electrical experiments that he became a privileged character at the electric light works, no other ontsider being permitted near the dynamos. The other day he wanted to receive a ‘‘good shock,’ and so got a pail of water and, touching a positive pole of a dynamo with a rod in one hand, put the other hand in the water and fell back dead. Aman in Guadalajara, Mexico, went to & priest to confess, and while the priest leaned over to listen to the recital of the seeming penitent the latter plunged a dagger into his heart. The murdered priest was well known and popular, and no cause can be assigned for the tragedy, especially as the assassin is dumb to all enquiry and cannot be induced or forced to speak about the matter. The man is now in jail pending an investigation by the authorities. A meeting of Englishmen and Scotch- men, in favor of Home Rule, was held in London afew daysago. Lord Ashburnham presided. Messrs. Joseph Cowan and Jus- tin McCarthy, members of parliament, made addresses. The meeting adopted a resolution to form an association for the purpose of advocating the granting of a par- liament to Ireland. Subscriptions to the association’s fands were received to the amount of £400. In the Paris Chamber of Deputies a few days ago, M. Basily, a new Workingman Deputy, defended the striking iron miners at Decazeville for breaking into the resis dence of the Superintendent M. Watrain and trampling him to death, He apoke with great violence. He delivered a social- istic harangue, dwelling on the hardships which miners were compelled to endure and declared that under all circumstances of the case the killing of M. Watrain was a “popular act of justive.” Herring. Herring. 200 Bris. No. 1 FAT HERRING. 200 Half-barrels do 50 Quarters do do 60 Quintal CODFISH, cheap for cash or trade. . DAVID SMALL, COTTON DUCK—COTTON DUCK Notice to Shipowners & Builders. (HXHE Subscriber now offers to the trade, Yarmouth. Cotton Duck, at manufac- turer’s prices. Has on hand a supply of light and heavy ducks, DAVID SMALL, Agent, Hyndman’s Buildings, Corner Water and Queen Street. Ch'town, Feb, 16~—2i wky 2 mos Fiour, Fisk, Apples, &c. Y Auction, WEDNESDAY, February 17th, at 11 o'clock, at my Auction Room :— 35 barrels Flour, some of which is slightly damaged; 50 barrels American Baldwin Apples, in choice order ; boxes Lemons, bags Peanuts, &c. Also—5,000 lbs. Dried Codtish, 200 barrels No. 1 Herring, &c. A. McNEILL, febl5 2i Auctioneer, FOR SALE. OWN LOT No. 75, 5th hundred, belong- ing to the Sneeston estate, situate on Euston Street, opposite the residence of F. L. Haszard, Esq., near St. Peter’s Road. For particulars apply at the oflice of R. R FITZGERALD. Ch’town, Feb, 13, '86—4i ASTOUNDING! — A Remarkable Story of Fraud in Utah. $20 Suits, in fine Saxony tweed, just imported Ex. Northern Light for early spring trade, now selling at $14, worth $20, to keep our employes in bread during the dull season, at REID BROS, a Nearly all the Public Lands Stelen. 330 Best Black Worsted Suits, in new spring designs, reduced to $20, at REID BROS. eel Evidence to Fill All the Jaile. $l4 Tryon Tweed Suits, reduced to $12, at REID BROS. Senators aud Congressmen Iniplicated a $6 Scotch Tweed Pants reduced to $4, at REID BROS, Summerside “ Parnell Club” Fully Aroused to Its Responsibility. Beautiful Black Worsted Suits for Men, only $6.50, at REID BROS, Summerside Champion Cutters Make a Grand Strike for the Freedom of Ireland. 50 Pieces Scotch Tweed, in newspring patterns now selling at the ridiculously low price of 85cts, worth $1.40, at REID BROS, ee ee General Logan .Imazed at the Disclosures. REID BROS. CAMERON BLOCK, Ch’town, Feb. 11, 1886, North Atlantic Steamship Co, SPRING SAILINGS, 1886. From London and Liverpeol S.S. ‘CLIFTON’ WILL LEAVE London for Charlottetown, ABOUT 15th APRIL. S.S. “Nellie Wise,” WILL LEAVE Liverpoo! for Charlottetown, ABOU® 15th APRIL, The above Steamers, after discharging at Charlottetown, will proceed to Batlurst or Miramichi. Carrying Goods at Through Rates to the principal points in P. EB. Islend, New Bruns- wick and Nova Scotia. For Freight, Passage, or other informetion apply in London to Stewart Brothers, 3 Fen- church Street, Fen Court ; in St. John, Chat- ham and Bathurst, N. B., to R. A. & J. Stewart ; in Liverpool to I. C. Jones & Co, FENTON T. NEWBERY, Agent, Ch’town, Jan, 30, 1886, To Lobster Packers, FOR SALE. 400 boxes of TIN PLATES, suitable for Lob- ster Cans, 22 pigs of LEAD. 22 ingots, TIN. 1 bar of COPPER. Apply to PEAKE BROS. & CO. PILLEW CSTTSENS —— AND.—— SHEETINGS, TOWELS AND TOWELLING. 10% EXTRA GOOD VALUE ‘sina rn ee STANLEY BROS, Brown’s Block, Opposite Harket House. Ch’town, Feb, 16, 1886.—dy wky GASH SALE! GHEAP SALE! 1G SALE OF DRY GOODS AND CLOTHING, HATS, &c., i) at L. E. PROWSE’S. Now is the time to buy! Big dis- counts on Dress Goods, Cashmere, Merino, Flannels. Feathers, Laces, Embroidery, Gloves, &c. HATS, HATS, Largest Stock in the City; Lowest Figures in the Do- minion. Come and see the Cheap Goods. L. FE PROWOSE, Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen Street. Ch’town, Feb. 16, °86-—-eod wky Yy LEA During Stoch=Taking. : o——~- - J B. MACDONALD is now having his Annual Clearing-Out e Sale of Remnants and Short Ends of Goods, Remnants and Short Ends of Dress Goods and Clothes. Flannels, Winceys, Sheeting, Cottons, T weeds. And all Remnants and Short Ends will be cleared out st the very Smallest Prices. The balance of Ladies’ Fur Caps, Fur Muffs, Fur-Lined Cireulars, Ladiss’ Astracan Jackets, at prjces to clear. ob 2 B. MACDONALD, QUEEN STREET.’ Ch’town, Feb. 10, 1886 - dy wy a ——— ee ANNUAL SS — JAMES PATON & CO, SUCCESSORS W. A. WEEKS & Co. PRICES ALWAYS LOW! ‘ Market House | | New Post Office MARKET SQUARE. “SUvoaes Isastuyvrt Stamper’s Sto Corner. Here : St. Patrick’s ' Hall mee) ee ee Buy your Dry Goods from JAMES PATON & CO., tire above Plan will show you where to find them, Ch’town, Jan. 19, 1886. ee = = Better Value Than Ever! TO THE W,HOLESAILE TRADE. . OR new samples of BOOTS and SHOES for spriag will soon be font, and we will have the pleasure of caliing on our customers in a short time, We hope to receive your liberal patronage as heretofore, DORSEY, GOFF & CO, Ch’town, Feb. 10~—tf 3aw Ch’town, Jan, 26, 1838. | 4 > : sa . * % te ee ao i aS % Ph m Shoe WS ited al le Al shies, SA PO ES PF oR PARE Tate ee ee es