en ere 1 HE DAILY EXAMINER. Five DOLLARS A YRAR, ." \ . NEW SERLE _ 2 Ar em ee ee 7 Savttiiil ys oa ery (is é Ser AS V veull The bxamiser Fobkiishing (Co. From their oflice, of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, corner Ladies’ Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTICN— A J ntrata a OE. cn ch i ove l Gen ees Si $2.50 stracal QUKULS Thre m oths COCOCC COSCO SSE ES COE Ree 1,25 a py ee ne oni Co : Ones °° Holmanetts, Advertising at moderate rates, Men's Driving Collars, Fur Gloves. Contracts may he made for motthly, quar- teriy, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on application. Muiis, in Seal, ‘Beaver, Persian Lamb, ~ ALMANAC FOR JANUARY, 1898, MOON'S CHANGES, Last Quarter 5th day, 7h., 30.Im), a.m., SW New Moon 13th day, 4h, 20.2m., &. m.,N. E. a ans . low horizon.) A tp ] F {; i ; First Quarter ZIst jay, Oh., 36.8.,a, m., W. 5 Pata, és e ow horizon.) 5 . Q jes Full Moon 28th day, 7h., 6.4m., p. m., SP N ra laa 0 iq | f ce ; ae ie i HI lla, OU, tal HH Hf 0} Di 7 oe weer ee Moon! High! Day's Ps pal Moo"! wee risesisets | rises ien’h F M11 , (| - : — PUP ubliars, and y Gray and Blagk ih matte h m ‘ ¥ Lisi ) 7 51'419 7 8} noon\$ 29 ny ff & 2)M e P 0} 20° 8 18] 0 39! 30 ru Cu § 8] ; h R h ‘ 3/1 y 0; 21!) 9 20) 120; 31 bg ) BS, 4 say ov 22 10 48) 1 59 32 : 5 Thursda : 19 22\ll 631 2 55 33 Ladies Caps, } Frida 9} 24) morn} 3 58} 35 19 Satur a) BGS Fl aot Onatity SO Very Cheap. 8 Sun 48; 26) 2 20) 6 35) 39 R ( | ty ¥% ¥ 9 Mon 45 98; 3 331 7 59 40 Ine u la l y} + 10) Tuesday 47'. 30; 4 43; 8 46; 42° Y D : 11 Wednesday 473i 31| 5 511 9 37] 43 I iT 3 Vhured . . 16 33 6 51 10 931 45 Owes rrices, Is I ria uy i6 $4 a 4.3 il 5 47 14) Saturday 15} 35) 8 28jl1 44) 49 [5 Sunday 45; 36) 9 4imorn}; 51 ema amcamenens{) ahsasiotinane 16)M mnday 44 37; 9 35) O 20 3 . 17 luesday 15 oa °”.a© 57 06 | “7 MT Nur r : : i Weinediny | 3) dalle a tio oe STANLEY BROTHERS, 1$ Thursday 42} 40,10 52) 2 I? aries bl ae Bt as BROWN’S BLOCK. ais "2 - “ ik 4) 3 44 . Ch’towa, Nov. 20, 1887.--eod & wky E oy sHnuay ov 45 alt S| 4 45 > a ees ncaratagmeeeetties) icinines "iat % 23 Monday 33} 46) 0 38) 5 S4j J] r a v = rs rst a ee 34+) Duesda $i} 48) Lia; 7 4 I3; ‘ 2. e Ly 36; 45, 1 56) 8 3] 16) 4 XY r + : packet | Salsa BEST VALUE IN | 27 Friday 31] 6&2: 3 47; 9 40; 20; 28 Saturday 331 54! 4 51/10 23) 22 29 Sunday > 32; 53, G6 Bll 4 24 30 Monday 31) S57) 7 1 44) “26] , 31 Tuesda: 7 29)4 58) 8 29jaft 23)9 = > me | 7 ) LOAN on First Mortgage securities of Free- " = ice hold Farms, Low rates of interest. 7 Payable by instalments if required. SMALLWOOD, Solicitors. WARBURTON & ' Dec Ch wh, AT KIS 2 BO Fe 3-43- s-'-O- NI ARKAVGEwMERE ee ae z= ts 1 ae ae Pom ie cn fis rs m J yn, Nov. 30 bv INTER . i i [G0 PALACE STMaMBRS|** , INTERNATIONAL S.8. CO. Buy Your Supplies at land, every Monday, audi faurcsday wt 5.00 a. m pte iy i S. A oti BEER & GOFFS, wo Fare from Chariottete class ; 39.50, 1st class. s : for tickets a er ini rmation apply t« r » > , . pte ‘ i ar Heiis god otter invemavon sree =| «© Where you will get everything . BL Bi J-s P. uw. lL. Steam Nav o. | a 4 orto yous searent Dhiba Aes | Bresh, Good and Cheap Nov. 12, 1\87—eod wky =) Re: | a areeemtet Ges aps enor Sigg! <as) | & 87 have on hand a very Large Stock of Choice Groceries, all of which will be Sold at Y 5 > 4 ¢* i ‘ ” ° ° i. A Ri aad i & x @., ' 5 ¥ the very Lowest Cash Prices, to sait the times. Mil QSION WRRGHANTS | RAISINS-Over 8,000 pounds, Cooking, Seedless and Table Raisins. 00 | i) I i ty j i CURRANTS—Over 4900 ypounds choice, clean fruit. RECEIVERS O¥ CANDIED PEEIL—Citron, Lemon and Orange. i } FLAVORINGS—Lemon, ¥ anilla, Almand, Cloves, Cinnamon, &c., &c. cw YQ | : Mackerel, Butter. Uneese EGGS SYRUPS—Lemor, Raspberry and Lime Juice. Y pple, Corn, Tomatoes, Peas, Ox- ef, Salmon, Lobsters, &e.,° &e. ‘ 4 ‘ANNED GOODS Conadrpnsed Coffee, Peaches, Pinea Tongue, Sard Corned Beef and Dried Be af BISCUIT—Oswego, Sugar.and Giager Wafers, Coffee, Orange, Shrewsbery, Ovtmeal, {and a Large Assortment of Plain and Fancy Biscuits. CONFECTIONERY —A very fine assortment,of Mixtures Chocolates, Carame s, Creams jand Faney Goods, Aaa' Pouliry, Potatoes, Fruit & Vegetables. 142, 144 Commercial Street, BOSTON, MASS. biay 18, 18387. [of Oranges, Lemons, Applies, Figs, Dates, Pickles, B. powder Almonds, Filberis, Walnuts, &c., We. CHEAP CASH AT > Ee a ¢ * Le FL i & GORE ’S, Queen and King Squares’ Stores. ® HEAVING APPAR aMus A. MORRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS Connnission Merchants, HALIFAX. <r eee ry a4 | FOR | RY iy ES Dec. 13, 1887. a‘ 4 ae | | | | HUT WA BESO piv ik Consignments of [sland produce will receive prompt attention. Revgnences; Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; George és 4S NS SON Macleo Manager Bank of Nova Scotia - : rik A. & S town Charlett 4 KE now prepared to ente for p f {%¥. and most approved plans, the HOT WATER APPARATUS for Heating. The character of the work which the firm of A. HERMANS & SON has been in the habit of — 'performing, is a sufficizut guarantee that ‘the Heating Works set up by them will be % “ ’ ‘ ; MERCHAN E'S, thor Curar AND 9 & 14 Mincrne Lanz, Lo Repré sented wwe is, yoy WARREN & JONES, TRA vugh and efficient. Parties anxious to inspect the Heating Process, as built by A. Hermans & Son, can do so \ST » of the firm, on Bayfield Street. ‘ ie by calling any day at the private residene ; DON, ENGLAND. ‘anada by MukkISUN Coils, ete., mannfacturel on the premises as required. A. HERMANS & SON. ‘ Boilers on hand. in { & Muse@rave, Halifax Oct, 24, 1887 Charlottetown, November 30, 1887.— SLErHS, ATUS: r on contracts for putting up in Dwellings, etc., on the newest | * This is trae Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Ecxiipes. Sincie Copies Two Cents GREAT = “SARCAINS. nD shi || Gvercoats, Reefers, Wor- |; sted and = Tweed Suitings, 5 ee fan Hi Big Discounts for one month only |) A. J. MURPHY, CUSTOM TAILOR. Dec. 20, 1887—~6i Mortgage Sale TO be Sold by Public Auction, on THURSDAY the third day of November, A. D, 1887, et Twelve o'clock, noon, at the Court House, in Charlottetown, in Queen’s County, under a Power of Sale, contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, dated the third day of July, A. D., 1877, and made between ‘Thomas Henry Keating, of the one part,and Henry skeftington le, of the other part. -A LL that piece of land, in Charlottetown, in Queen’s County, in Prince Edward Islaad, being part of Town Lot number forty-two (42), in the first hundred of Town Lots, in Chariotte- ‘town, Gommencing on the westward side of Queen Street, at the southeast angle of the pro- perty of William R. Watson, thence by a line at | right angles to said street westwardly on or about j eighty-six feet, or until it meets the division line between Town Lot number forty-one and said 4 Town Lot forty-two in said hundred, thence slong said division line southwardly seventy-twe ; feet, or until it meets the northward edge of ; King Street, thence along King . Street east twenty-two feet, or until it m the west boundary of the property of the B of Prince | Fdward Island, thence following the course of the same. northwardly on a ltne Je] with Queen Street forty-four feet, or to the northward boundary of said Bank property, thence follow- itig.said ni ward boundary cogpuaciy for the distance of fixty-four feet, or un! the _ Westward edge of Quesn Street, thence following Queen Street northwardly for the- distance of twenty-eight feet, more er less, to the place of ‘ commencement, For further particulars apply to Edward J. Hodgson, Solicitor, Charlottetown. Dated this 3ist August, 1887, EDWARD J. HODGSON, Assignee of Mortgage. Sept. 1, 1887—eod tl sale The above sale is hereby postponed until WEDNESDAY, the Fourth day of January, next, A. D., 1888, then to take place atthe hour | and place above mentioned, ;t EDWARD J. HODGSON, |; Nov. 2, 1887. The above sale is hereby further postponed until WEDNESDAY, the lst day of February, A. D., 1334, then to take place at the hour and place above mentioned, ; EDWARD J. HODGSON. ab. ©. C. CARLTON, AUCTION HER, -AND— Commission Merchatn, SOURIS, P. E. I. 1887. SETS « EIGHS a = SS a a Oct, 3, a ; fms | 4 } : a SS | PARTIES wishing to purchase would con- sult their best interests by examining my stock of New and Second-hand Sleighs, which will be suld cheap to suit the times, Repairing of Carriageg oud Sletghs | promptly attended to and satisfaction guar anteed. N. B.—Carriages wanting repairing, paint- ing or trimming, stored free for the winter. factory and Show Rooms Upper Prince Street, opposite Baptist Church. J. J. SEAMAN., | Dec. 13, 1837—eod & wy ti feb i IMPORTANT NOTICE. | @SINCE the petition to annul the Scott Act has been defeated, I take this means of in- } forming the trade and the public generally, | that I have beeu appointed agent for the Is- land for James Roue, of Halifax, manufacturer ‘of all kinds of temperate drinks, and that I | have in stock a large assortment of the above | goods which I will supply at factory prices. The goods manufactured by Mr. Roue are j ‘= 1 | factured in the Provinces. | (oods supplied immediately on receipt of | order. OYSTERS A SPECIALTY. Sold by the barrel, quart or half shell at the OLD LONDON HOUSE. JOHN JOY Proprietor, Water Street, 17th Dec., 1887, 2 aw 2w ‘Feed Gutters & Grain Crackers "OR SALE—Bel’s Feedcutters, bo son’s Fan-inill. Also, some cheap Hand-tracks, suitable for mills, granneries and warehouses, D. MACK ANZIE, . ent Street, a2 Chitown, Bec, 22, 1837-11 wkyai P. E. ISLAND, SATURDA V, JANUARY 14, 1888. ‘ment, in his speech at Detroit on the 2 EES GREAT MEETING At New Perth, King’s (o,, UNDER THY AUSPICES owe eee Of the Three Rivers Dairy- men’s Association. Commercial Union Discussed. Strong Speeches by Cyrus Shaw, Esq... M. P. FP., John Hamilton, Esq., John Scrimgeour, Esq., M. L. ¢., and Others. THE annual meeting of the Three Rivers Dairyman’s Association, held in New Perth Schoolhouse on Tuesday, LOth inst., was attended by over 200 of the farmers of New Perth, RKoseneath, Brudenell, Cardi- gan, Baldwia’s Road, Summerville and other settlements. _ The chair was filled by the president, George F. Owen, Esq.,; Cardigan, and after the yearly reports of the President and Secretary hal been read, the following officers were appointed for the ensuing year :— President--Fredk. G. Bovyer, Easq., Georgetown Royalty. Vice-PresiJent—Robert Dewar, Esq,, New Perth. Secretary--John Hamilton, Esq., New Perth. Treasurer-—Mr. ‘Villiam Kaneen, New Perth. Executive Committee —John, Ross, Union Road; John McLean, 18-Mile Brook; James McNeill, New Perth; Jas. D. Dewar, Brudenell; George F. Owen, Cardigan. On motion of F. G. Bovyer, seconded by James McNeill, it was Resolved, That the position taken by Jas. D. Dewar, Esq., Brudenell, in enforcing the Weights and Measures Act of the Dominion Parliament, deserves the warm support and thanks of the Three Rivers Dairyman’s As- sociation, and of farmers generally. A letter from Dr. Robertson, M. P., was read, regretting ~ the fact that owing to illness he could not atten’ the meeting. On motion of Jas. D. Dewar, Esq., the adjourned debate on the question of Com- mercial Union was resumed. Mr. Dewar said that the resolution submitted by him at the Montague meeting, as published in the newspapers, was deficient in the fol- lowing words which he wished to have added to it, viz: ‘*As may be agreed on by the Government of their respective coun- tries.” He had a little to add to what he had said at the former meeting with respect to this ques- tion. He considered that the remova] of alloustom'barriers between this country and the United States would be beneficial, as the United States was our only natural market. If it were not for the United States our potatves would have been a drug this fall ; and we, therefore, should press for any means that would remove the duty off this most jmportant farm crop. The adoption of Commercial Union would re- move all danger of international difficulties, such as nuw threatened on account of the fisheries question, and Mr. Dewar quoted Sir Lionel Playfair in support of his con- tention. He referred to the large export of eggs, and asked what would we do with them if the United States adopted the re- taliation bill passed last year. Cyrus Saw, Eso., M. P. P., considered we should carefully weigh the consequences that might follow the adoption of Com- mercial Union with the United States. Histery told them that the Trojans, after one of the most protracted and successful resistances on record, broke down the walls of their city, in order to admit the wooden horse that had xroused their curiosity and awakened their cupidity, without examin- ing with the most rigid care the nature and contents thereof, and the result was that the city which had withstood the attacks of the Greeks for yeara, fell by the carelesness and coveteousness of its people. It is our duty as citizens of the Dominion to examine carefully the proposition that has been presented to the people, lest the result be the same with us as it was with Troy in the days of yore. By Commercial Union he understood the bresking down of ail the custom walls that divide us from the United States and the free admission of imports of either country into the other, with a uniform tariff against the rest of the world, and no _ doubt this tariff would be the same as that now in force in the United States. He believed he was justified in this conclusion, : ifor Mr. Wiman, the f: of this move- | admitted to be far superior toany other manu-; for Mr. Wiman, the father of = ‘ th of August last, is reported to have sai® as follows :— ‘* That as against all the rest of the world, the same rates of duty should be collected by Canada as are now levied by the United States while between these two countries of North America the customs line should be completely obliterated. In other words the | horse power, Fleury’s Grain Crackers, Dickie- 110% proposition is that around the whole continent of North America a customs line should exist precisely of uniform height.” The Chicago Times, a paper which ap- proved the idea, put the case very bluntly. It said :— **If the Porainion will take our, tariff laws sv ar ay ‘ ‘ ro 2 . ay 4 th hand ana “3 they are, and as Congress may choose to lify them, and as our Treasurry depart: ' ment and courts may congtrue them, well and good. This country may agree to such an ar- yaagement as that, but it will never agree to vecept the Dominion laws, or to put the whole busineys of tariff making out of Con- io VOL. 22.—NO. 43. gress or into the hands of some Joint High Commission. ; Unless, therefore, the Dominion is prepared to make a complete and unconditional surrender of all control over its own tariff, and accept whatever tariff our Congress may choose to enact from time to time, the scheme of Commercial Union, in the sense in which that phrase is used, is en- tirely out of the question.” That the Canadian advocates of the movement were ready to accept this defini- nition is shown in the speech of Mr. Joh» Charlton, M. -» made at Jarvis, Ont., on the 4th Nov. last. He said : “It was simply a custems union between two or more independeut states, where a com- mon tariff and excise laws were adopted, and the revenue collected, after deducting expen- ses of collection, was divided among the par- ticipants upon the basis of population, or any other basis that might be agreed upon, while all trade restrictions between them were re- moved. The application of the principle be- tween Canada and the United States would require that the two countries should have the same excise rates andthe same tariff upon imports from all other countries; tiat the re- venue thus collected in both countries should be divided upon conditions to be hereafter arranged; that the customs line between the two countries from ocean to ocean should be removed; and that trade between Canada and the States should be in every respect as free and untramelled as trade between the differ- ent States of the American Union was at the present moment.” We thus see that by Commercial Union we would be called upon te give up our main source of revenue, and that our tariff woula be regulated not by our own Parlia- ment, but by Congress at Washington, and that a tariff of uniform height would be maintained against the rest of the world. The first point that suggests itself is how would such an arrangement as this bear on our relations with Britain’ As we now stand, whilst Britain places us on the very same basis in regard to trade, as the rest of the world, we have also placed Britain on the same footing as any foreign country. We tax her articles as we do those of other uations, and there is no just cause of com- j plaint; but if we shut out the trade with the Mother Country by admitting the exports of a foreign nation duty free, we act inan unfriendly manner towards her. Would we be justi- fied in this course, or would it tend to our advantage? is a question that should be carefully considered. He was of opinion that such a course would be both ungrate- ful and detrimental to our best interests, Britam has assured us that her arm and navy are at our service in case of need, pand that the resources of the Empire would be used to defend us if occasion required. We enjoy equal rights and privileges with her in her treaties with fureizn courts, and vur interests are watehed by her ministers and consuls in foreign Jands. And for ail those advantages and privileges which we enjoy under the flag of one of the greatest nations the world has ever seen, we are not called upon to pay one cent. Is it for one moment to be supposed that we could ex- pect Great Britain to continue this respon- sibility if we discriminate against her in the matter of trade, and give such conces- sions to a foreign people / Again, we must remember that such a union would have the tendency of abrogating the treaties, made by Great Britain, under the fayored nations clause, with foreign countries, and, to use the words of Mr. Chamberlain, ** it would snap the tender cords that bind us to the Mother Country.” This would be followed by independente, resulting ulti. mately in annexation. By becoming inde- pendent, we woull have to support an army to protect us from foreign aggression, apd a navy to protect our mercan- tile marine. The expense of main- taining these forces would have to be defrayed out of the pockets of the people. We would also have to appoint ministers and consuls at the great foreign trading centres with which we would be interested, and that enormous cost which is now defrayed by the country under whose jurisdiction we live would have to be borne by ourselves. We would have a frontier of 4,000 miles to defend, on the other side of which is a nation who believe that the manifest destiny of all America is to be used by the United States. They ave greatly superior to us in population ; and nations, like individuals, who are bent on a quarrel, can soon find a pretext to engage in one ; and the fable of the wolf and the lamb would be amply illustrated in our case, and we would be swallowed up as easily as Texas was wrested from Mexico. Would we then be better off to have to submit to their laws and institutions, which I hold are far surpassed by those that we in the Dominion of Canada now enjoy? We would have to bear our burden of taxation toa degree with which in our experience we are in 4 blissful ignorance. We would have a high tariff, besides the high excise duties which in the United States are of the most serious character. We would have to drill and equip a certain number of militia-men each year and defray the expense out of what we call our local funds. We would not get one solitary doilar from the Treasury at Washington to carry on our local Government, but would lave to tax ourselves for that purpose. This Province now receives $193,557 from the Dominion Government as an annual subsidy, whereas under the United States we would have to tax ourselves for that amount, besides supporting various burdens now assumed by the Dominion. It, therefore, behooves us to ponder wel] these matters, lest we may wake up to realize our true position when it is too late. Our cattle trade with Great Britain would be destroyea if we enter into Commercial Union, We now enjoy great advantages over stock raisers in the United States in this trade. In the event of Commercial Union, our catilg would be co-mingled with American cattle, and a loss to this trade would accrue, amounting it is said to $650,000 year, which would come direetly out of the farmers pockets in Ontario, and to some extent from the farmers of this Island. (Ountinued on fourth page.) | !