pete ellie 6 Rie ltenie. 9iihatlay on ree . oo aman ae arma eer mecerae SL a ramen —s —— . Ne ee eT ese ee ee a ae ; Se ee — THE DAILY EXAMINER OK : : THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1893. ing this time, was touring in a Weet. Boeck: HAVE TO DIE TO ae i 7s dhelie ac = . — i ia ; THE DAILY EXAMINER, RACY LETTER FROM AN OLD ‘i DOMINION VOTERS’ LISTS ‘ 4 ack | I mio} 1) ' . I a { a ‘ P : cor : * 4 “ ‘ € ‘ ‘ a 4 4 } u t e . ‘ . ‘ : i , 1G o i Y \ ! : (dy f ar rh ara | y ° r nde f ‘ ‘ © t y } 4 i \ ive ‘ I i : 1 : Mle at | 2 ana t » t bv a P aa i : : +O+e ---- TRE GOVERNOR-GENERAL’S RESID ENCE i 42 A e n : (i ( si was i a res} t ana : irger i « e 4 Ride Ha We i uy y H ix e | a ra pted t « state , 5 wa ade. it firet pla Ottawa lia ! of ou le 1 (; iver 4 1 atu ' part of ’ | j la 4 v et red at all tl yg t W Ming eW iaugi ‘ LAN pie R i Ha years, have be t ey I t Rid H : ' ty ‘ (3 i and 4 a 2 ‘ er i tru ‘ 4 i | eT sa ‘ y | Ol sldom at Ottawa t | KS a i¢ Capital a t Avia | if e erection ! paiatiai t lings t! wihill the put | eeds of t y are overlooked. Thie | ight tot ke the Go It w be ba f the pe pie oe i Edward Islan for WW tance, | i | ed, pe er Fpecia : ; — ‘ ilated, Teak ng ire and if they sh yuld be cde la train t arry them to and from Cha ‘ ‘ und enable them to lo bus ' the same dav, while the path tastes the superior I als who permanently occupy the pub ] flices at Ottawa are bei gratified by . ’ es fa grat i gubernatorial: palace | eggs it at at the peo- | | rh Governor-General is } ! € y i trea und so are the | ind w ce} work for the first i pul Kf ‘ ast le ———— ++e+e —- Personal Mr. and Mrs. Unsworth returned from | the | pp Provinces last evening Mr. Geo. F. Owen, of Cardigan, was re- tered a he } : Davi« last evening M W Brehaut, of Summerside, | a by the boat this afternoon for Bos , where he will spend the winter srdinal Gibbons celebrated his silver ! jubilee at Baltimore on Wednesday The ebrat vas on a magnificent scale At the Queen Hotel this forenoon there were registered: Rev D B McLeod, Orwell; W Mutch. Eldon; James Ross, Mount Stewart; dJohr McQueen, Victoria Cross J ne La rd, New Glasg Ww We regret to hear that Mr. G.I. Fester | broke his leg a few days ago while prac- | ticing with the King’s College football : 7 ; team at Windsor Mr. Foster had cr iV the team about an the been elected captain of hour before, dent occurred Mrs. D. Taylor and Mrs. Wm of Charlottetown, are in the city at the residence of W. E. Sherard lavylor and Mrs. Perkins have just re- turned from a several weeks’ visit to the Workd’s Fa On their return they visit- ed Niagara Falls, Hamilton, Toronto, St John and other cities f interest Mone- t rr and in the first practice ac’ Perkins, visiting, Mrs aAnscr p' —_—- ee- Uhe Stock Exchange vesterday, ness of banks to make the unwilling snce ont- reserve , the hastening of Pacitic into the hands of a re f feeling of go nn- marked decline in values on fie 1a! , the adv d of sterling exchange toward the go fl yw, point the low ebb of the gold the national treasur the Unior ceiver, are sig distrust and heeded with na @ a returning slarm which cannot Satety Earl of Dalhouse, whe re- ently celebrated his fifteenth birthday, 1s the owner of an estate of 136,000 acres in Forfarshire, worth about $40,000 per an- un. His father, who was Secretary for Seotland ander Mr. Gladstone, 1s of the few examples of death from a broken heart. He and his countess were return- ing from a trip to America tn November rhe young one of 1887, and had reached Havre. The countess. who was auffering from *f : died there onS Nove mber 24. The eur:, quite prostrated with grief, took to his hed and was dead the next morning For eight weeks Miss Emisa Homeame has laid in bed with her head strapped to & pillow, says a late deapats h from Hun- tingdon, Pa I'wo months ago while pre- paring tor church, she felt a sharp and sudden snap like the breaking of a cord at the back of her neck Since then at every heert beat her head has made a Vic lent and responsive nod, first forward and ill. ee FRIEND. Some False Statements Refuted And Some Interesting Facts Set Forth. Dra Exawiver,—lIt is a long time e L have had anything to say through imns, though I. am glad to oir uy are not without correspond ()tlawa l yave thought sever times of address my your readers, a clei it rathet mn & gos#ipy ‘it Nor are m going to hear any politics from me, for heaven knows the Is und is cursed with them already! > And auch politics, toc I take up the last Fa rand I find the official report, ex tending ver half acolumn, of a par bic meeting, with a the paraphrenalia of sirmat t secretary, and mover and = itions, held to consider he road leading from sea ‘ shore, ar i to devise the . ‘ of improving it And after rteen gentlemen had expressed the pinions pro and con, it was resolved it the d was more or less impaseable, and that was the int f the Govern- nmediately repair it The idea ifteen men (including the chair- a and secretary, who are not is having taken part in tt acuesion) wasting their time in a manner Wiat on earth is the pe f their re presentatives in both Houses f the Legislature? They are not. yet finct: officus. What a huge. farce isthe system of local government as pursued on the Island! I wrust not be understood as recommending @ surr nder of self-govern- ment. Still, there is no necessity for a Cor- ss engine to run e ferryboat. Whata iseless lot of machinery, and--whrat ex- ravagant expend ture it involves. It is well that one chamber has been got rid of, though whether the new constitution is yng to bea success remains to be seen The next move should be in favor of biennial sessions. I think I am right in saving that of all the States of the neigh- boring Republic, only four have anuual session? But did I not promise to talk no politics ? Ihe next thing, naturally, is the weather pit hit to” THe Ex- And here I wish t P t giving us, daily, four or AMINER fc rT bb es of news about the weather. ip here, we are anxious to know er it is hot or cold, rain or snow, ith, “at home,” and Islanders or dr! vervwhere take at least that much in- terest in their native Provinee. I allow when any “heavy weather” occurs 1 make a note of it; but what I have reference to are the ordinary changes from lay to day We are having three days of high wind and oecasional rain, which has battered fences, blown down trees and himneys, and nearly left the trees bare. It is noticeable how much sooner the eaves begin to fall here than they do at € They commenced so long ago as the | tirst week in September, and now some of the streets are covered inches deep with them. We had some glorious weather ust week, but I fear we have seen the end af | Che chief top c of ¢ onversation just now 1 the Hooper case, and I observe the Island papers are devoting some space to it. Itis an extraordinary affair, and a good deal of sensational matter has found | its way into the press, which may have i Liaszardd, | which he attributed | Northwest Rebellion, but some say he was } estimation, and helped to turn public feeling against him. Every man is presumed innocent until he has been proven guilty, and no one know- ng Hooper would ever pick him out for a He is 34 vears of age and is a third ¢ clerk in the Post Office Department, at a salary of $700 a year. { knew him slightly, having met him two vife murderer. lass | years ago at the residence of a friend who had rented Hooper’s house furnished, and with whom Hooper boarded all winter It was just before this that he had placed his wife in the Kingston Insane Asylum, while he gave out that she was travelling lown south for her health, but we knew pretty well what was the matter, and where she was Hooper was a noted port we stamp sector, and not long ago, lisposed of a valuable collection for over :3,000; at least, he said so himself. H $5,000; at ieast, he sa oO hinselt t is not at al! like any of the pictures which have been published of him He is very dark, with heavy dark mustache, alway well-dressed and, though not ®oO tall, he | reminds me very much of Mr. W. H. furmerly of Charlottetown Hooper suffered severely from rheumatism, to exposure in the My impression of him hero in his own stories should be taken at a liberal discount. According to he had military only in the Northwest, but in He had a mania for always rheumatic was that he was a { that rret great his his own account. Feen service, not Afri aas well porning benefit societies, and he is said to belong to no less than nineteen of them. These he turned to good account, for as he was constantly disabled from rheumatism, he re ‘enormous “sick benefits,” althongh he was all the time in receipt of his Government salary. Last spring he leave eived completed a ten months of absence from his office, and the amount of benefits he received from his lodges during that period was up in He aimed at prominence Recently he branch of the the thousands. and has acquired notoriety. was hot to establish a . P. P. A.~—the Protestant Protective Association—~in Ottawa; not that his Protestant principles were so strong, but it was a new society and he wanted to be at the head of it. Indeed, when I made his acquaintance, he was a member of the | surpliced choir of St. Alban’s Church and | was very enthusiastic on the subject. I think it was Heber Haslam whom he in- duced to accom pany him one night to St. Alban’s, where the cantata of the “ Passion” was being sung during Lent, at which he assisted most devoutly. Aitogether, the case is a most mysterious one, and it will be hard for Hooper to explain the pur- chase of the poisons and the falsehoods he told to procure them:—the notices of his wife’s death, yublished twice before she died, and representing the occurrence to have taken place in two different vears jand at two different places; as well as i other very suspicious circumstances. If the analyst discovers poison in his wife’s | body, it will go hard with Hooper. then backward, with the regularity and precision of a clock pendulum. In either movement her head passes from the per pendicular about one foot. The local phy sicians are nonplussed over the affiction. The Samoans, aceording to their latest vieitor, have been cele brating Mr R. L. Stevenson’s forty-sixth birthday The | Lee ls Mer ury points o it that there must be 4 mistake three. He is «till one of the younger nov- elists, Of the others Mr. Meredith and Mrs. Oliphant are each sixty-five, Mr. Besant is tifty-five, Mr. Hardy and Mies . “te sroughton are each fifty-three, Mr. Buch- | annan is hitly-two, forty-five, Mr seven, M; Mr. Grant Allen is tider Haggard is thirty- Doyle and Mr. Barrie are each Mr. Stevenson is only forty- | | | | Lady Thempson and her daughter hav- ing returned from England, Sir John and they may be expected io settle down again to domestic life. I was much amused at reading a very silly paragraph, copied into the Patriot, about “strained relations” be- tween Sir John Thompson and Sir Charles Tupper. It went on to say that “the Ministers were not invited to the High Commissioner’s house in London, and when Sir Charles was in Ottawa it is al- leged that he went near none of the Minis- ters, but kept himself to himself and his friends at the Rus-ell House.” The Min- isters who were in London last summer were Sir John Thompson, Sir Adolphe Caron and Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper. No one hints at any estrangement between father and son. Ido net know whether Sir Adolphe was at the High Commis- sioner’s or not, but the I do know that Sir John Thompson was not in London, during the whole time he was away, for more than two hours. He sailed direct from New York to Havre, and went thence to Paris. On his way home he arrived in London about 9 p. m., and was in Liver- pocl next morning, ard while Sir John was in London Sir Charles and Lady Tup- per were in Liverpool, and their London house closed. After his arrival in Can- aia, when Sir Charles went West to Winnipeg, he never left the car at Ot- tawa, and on his return he stayed a couple of days with the young Sir Charles, and thirty-three, Mr. Kipling is twenty-nine | did not put up at the Russell, as stated in and Mr. Auilier Conch is twenty-eight. the paragraph. Sir John Thompson, dur- But if the story reproduced in the Patriot were true, is it probable that Sir Charles | would have taken paSsage across the At- lantic in the steamer with Sir Jehn Thompson ? Whenever you read . of | squabbles in the Ministry, you may make up your mind that thingspolitical are |. very quiet at the Capital, as it isa dearth of facts that compels a certain class ‘of | correspondents to resort fo fiction of the nature I have exposed. Another “job” which some papers have | been making a lot of fass over, isthe sup- erannuation of Mr. Lawrence VanKough net, Deputy Superintendent-General Indian Affairs, and in this they are aided by Mr. VanKoughnet. himself, who assert iat he is healthy a3 4 trout, and as fi r work as he « If anyone Ss -to lame for Mr. VanKoughnet’s > supéranua- n, it is himself, and his delusion = tha: » is -till tit for work, is but a symptom if the disease which is said to at- acked him over a year ago. At any rate, ibout that tims, he waa suldunly taken ll in his office, ut was said woth tion of tiie brain. So nalady and so indispensible a change of sir for his recovery, that he left Ottawa before he obtained leave of absence, which months,’ till he Was the continent of back hie first months fur- medical ver wae. have an att serious wa- h-» he overstaid seme cabled for to return from Europe. When he came act was to apply for eight ther leave, backed up by, strong certificates, that it was absolutely neces sary to the restoration of his health Naturally enough, . the Government thought, if after four months Jeave, Mr. Vankoughnet’s health requires eight months more to fix him up, he must be pretty well played out, and the best thing is to superanruate him, As soon as Mr. Vankoughnet heard what was tn the wind he became miraculously restored to healtty it knocked Pink Pills and Ddodd’s Liver Restorer higher than a_burnt boot. “By his superannuation and Mr. Hayter Reed's succession, & very large annual saving will The Indian office at Regina will be closed up, and the work now done there transferredto Ottawa. Mr. Reed hasbeen a long time agent at Regina, drawing a salary of $3,200, the same as Mr. Vankoughnet. The latter deserves no sympathy, although he is going about whining and snivelling, he has for over 30 years fed at the public crib, he has neither chick nor child, he lives most frugally, be effected. “gecording to the straightest sect of his religion;” and will enjoy $2,000 a@ year for the reat of his days. “That mercy | to others show, that mercy show to me,” has been exemplified in Mr. Vankough- net’s case; it affords a striking illustration of “chickens coming home to roost.” He was a back number of an ancient series, and, under Mr. Reed, it is safe to say the Department of Indian Affairs will “be “ad- ministered with greater efficiency and less pharisaismn. I noticed a paragraph in the Islaud press, a few 2 ago, copied from the Mainland papers, to the effect that Mr Joseph Pope had completed arrangements with English publishers, for the produc- tion of -his life of Sir John Macdonald There is no truth in the report. Mr. Pope’s book is not yet finished, and while he may have consulted English publishers, it is almost certain that it will be brought out in Canada. Itis to be regretted that Mr Pope’s labours on the great chief’s mem- oirs should have been: interrupted by his employment on the Behring Sea Commis- sion. Still we should be gratified that his talents are in demand, and what are more valuable than talents, hia in- dustry and perseverance’; for brains ere mighty little good without application will'be glad to learn that Mr. Pepe’s work in Paris was highly apprectated -by the Britixh side of the case. Independent of the Colonial Secretary’s letter, already published, and Sir Charles Hibbert Tup- per’s opinion, Sir Richard Webster wa» pleased to express his warm commenda- tion of Mr. Pope’s services, and only yes- terday_ he received a note from Sir -Char- les Kuseell praising his work in the strougest possible terms. I have several times wondered that Tue Exayiver névér contained “any extended allusion to my old friend, Mr. C.: Birch Bagster, a notice’ of whose’ death E read with much regret » few morths ago. Here, perhaps, 1 may be allowed to relate an incident connected ‘with him, which goes to show how small our world really is. Soon after coming to Ottawa 1 form- ed the acqueintance of Major ‘Hollins worth, a son of a brave officer in Her Majesty's service, Capt. Hollinsworth, who was one of the great Napoleon’s guard at St. Helena, and who was afterwards one of the “Military Knights of Windsor,”? One evening my friend Hollinsworth took from his desk a couple’of photographs, Laaked whose ‘they were. He replied: “My irather and his wife”’ His brother’: photograph waa that of an extremely fine- looking man, while that: of ‘his wife, a handsome woman, did not look so well, a+ it was.taken in a white dress: Casually ny friend remarked that she had been a Miss Bagster -I said the name was familiar. He added, that her family was that of an exfénsive. publishing: house in London. I said that I had a friend, in Charlottetown,. who was connected with that house—Cornelius Birch Bagster To make a long story short, Mra; Vievor Hollinsworth was Birch Bagster’s daugh- ter, her mother having’ been a “Misé Aitken (whom I remember well); a ‘sistet* of the late W. B. Aitken, of Georgetowti. It took fully tWo hours for .HoHinswerth and me to talk the matter over that ‘hight. Birch Bagster’s mother lived at Windsor, where Captain Hollinsworth was in“ at- tendance on the Queen :--there Mrs. C. B. Bagster and her family lived after they left the I land. The young people were well acquainted, and Victor Hullinsworth (called after Hér Majesty) married one of the girls, I forget which. Victor Hollins- worth was a tea-planter .in . China, but is now, I think, living in England. My friend reminded me of an incident T-had-heard Birch Bagster re- late, that his mother lived to be over 100 year of age, and that on “her Siundreth birthday the Queen sent her a choice bou- quet of flowers. Two years ago, when Rubert McGréevy was busy swearing away honest men’s characters and betraying his companions in rascality, he was hailed by the Opposi- tion press a3 a hefo, a martyr and” sundty other titles expressive of ali the virtues, For the past month he has lain in Ottawa goal, detained as a witness for the Crown, because no two persons could be found to 20 security for his appearance at the trial next month. Where are al) his friends and panegyrists of two yeara ago with their-professions of friendship and _ affec- tion ? They vowed the highest confidence in him then; what has lie done since to destroy it? I regret to observe that the Examiner has been misled by the rumour that Lord Aber- deen has demanded the enlargement of Rideau Hall. This is another of the can ards manufactured by press correspondents of lively imagination. The new Governor General’sentowrage is larger than that ofany of his predecessors,but it will cost the coun- try nothing more, They are only so many more mouths to feed and bodies to clothe. The Governor General’s salary is not cal- culated according to the size of his family ; it would be the same whether he was a bachelor or had 600 in his retinue. Lord Aberdeen isa man of wealth, which he and his wife spend generously and to good purpose, in works of wide charity. Their character La: preceded them ; and, apart from their high: position, they deserve good treatment at our hands. Enouzh for this time. W. C.D. Otta wa, 15, October, 1893. BIRTH. At Summit, Washingten, on the 7th inst., the wife of James CU. Ferguson, for- merly of this city, of a daughter. gg a DIED. In this city, on Thursday, 19th Oc‘o' er, inst., Capt. Michael Walsh, aged 85 years. [Funeral notice later.] yover 55 years of age for Bly, His fellow-Islandere | A FEW GOOD FEA URES OF THE Covenant Mutual Benefit Association OF GALESBURG, ILLINOIS, Lite Insurance at | i You get one-half of your Policy in cash ,~WHUIKE LIVING, in case of permanent total duvabclity from any cause. You will receive cash dividends annually after turee years, thus reducing the cost of your insurance. You ean get back part of what you have p sid in after five years in extended or paid-ap nsarance. You can surrender your Policy Actual Cost, after ten years and receive your entire contribution to th: Emergency Fund (N cAsH,. or In evedt of 4 Your prior dgaih itewilt- be ad ted “to the ‘face vi nu of your Policy. You can surrenderyour Pol¢y on ‘artivabat life oxDctaticy and receive your total co i- bution to the smerzeney Pound, together-ath al! profits and tions thereto, IN CASH,or you can keep your Poticy in forceand tet your you. Has paid in dea LION DOLLARS It has 3) members and now working its seventeen h year. Boe Has assets ie xcess of ONE MILLION Hote LARS, dndits Ems gency Fund and surplu over liabilit. esexceeds bho eT WU NDRED-AND FIFTY THOUS SND DOLLARS. 3 ; It has $33,000 deposited: with ‘the -Tnsubance Departinéfit of Canada. ; It has no.due undunpuid death chima, ¥) }- Ithas dir ct State supervision, protection | aml! guarantee, i aé It has $112,000,000 of business in foree. helaims Over SEVEN MIL-4 FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS to the Widows and Orphans.and Repeftefiries of its @véeased- members in Canada, . - It ‘has already written, dimwing the thestieight months of 1898, TWENTY-EIGHT MILLIONS @f new business. : ’ tele It has no membership fees, no annual ¢ UCS, _ or other side issues to incre se the rates.. ? You can elect to pay annually, semi-annu- ally or bi-monthly. Policies incontestable and after three years. No chance of loss to the inaured. Will insure persons not over 5) years of age for $20,000 wrsees Will ingure perso ot HO \ insure persons not over th ypars_ ; $5,000 or less =~ me. ‘ Further information sapplied b¥ duly authorized agents, or upon appl THEO. I. CUHAPPELLE, non-forfeitable m iad 394 Our Heavy Fall Tweets are now in, and we have =F [ i thousands of patterns a select. from. All-Wool, 30c¢. and up. All prices are low. READYMADE CLOTHING This department A line of Clothing for Winter wear is com- plete. the finest ever placed on this market. No Clothing House can under- sell We smallest boy and the largest us, can fit the mm. Come and see. McKay Woolen Co. Charlottetown, Oct. 19, 1893. CELERY |. CEBERY ! ans Bin A ia 15,000 Choice Celery Bthe Lest quality, hard and firm, wnequalled_in flavdr.4 The following low price’ speaks ‘for’ itse!f :— 166, $2.00; per 1,000, $18.00. Celery shipped. to all the Maritime Pro- vinces, No extra chargé for boxes. Address x J:J3.-GAY-& SON; Pownal,-P. EB, i. It has. already paid ONE MUNDRED ANS} Per dozen, 30 cents;. pexy 50, $1155 per | TELEGR km? geacy und aceumulations carry jt for 4 Tweeds! € & AP * Hotel in Trouble. Sr. Joux, N. B., Oct. 19. F. A. Jones, of the Dufferin House, has assigned with C. Stocktun, as trustee. The liabilities are said to be $15,000, which is probably an under estimate. It is reported that George Murray and. C. M. Bostwick, who own the building; and tAx Ob Skinner, carpet dealer, Mr. Kennedy, grocer, and some butchers are among the largest creditors. Wonderful Trotting NasHVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 19. Directum lowered his record by 1} seconds yesterday and made the fastest time ever trotted in a race. Direetum ifeft his field'a sixteenth of a mile. Time by quarterr, 32, 1.035, 1.34, 2.05}. ——_- - —— Wreck of a Schooner. Parsporo, Oct. 19. “The threemasted schooner Nettie Shaw, ashere at the mouth of Apple River cn Stmday morning. She is a total wreck. Death of a Prominent Woman. Posroy, Det. 19. Lucey Stone Blackwell, the wel]-known wet euflragist, is dead. > Site Blake's Departore, Orrawa, Oct. 19. Agent for P. E. Island & astern Nova Scots [> -Mr' "Blake leaves for England on Nov- Ch’ tow ng Oeicit; 18088 cotowy ot 1o-teni BEF to resume his Parliamentary duties. af « a ~ Sir John Abbott's Condition. Montreat, Oct. 19. SirJohn Abbot passed a very uneasy night. THE NEWS IN SHORT METRE. Corbett laughs at Fitzsimmons’ chal- Jen - tm There were sixteen cases of smallpox reported in New York last week., It is said that Russia is considering the question of the exclusion of America flour from Finland. One-half of the charters filed- with the secretary of state in Kansas for the last two months were for churches and cemeteries. The Mahomedans have a great universi'y at Fez, which is attended by 700 students. The Koran furnishes the chief course of study there. Nine states of the union. have no town or city containing as many as 20,900 in- habitants. Nine other states have only one city each of 20,000 inhabitants. A Berlin despatch says that the exuber- ances of the reception of the Russian fleet at Toulan are regarded with contemptuous indifferance in German official circles. Breech-loading rifles were invented in 1811, but did not come into general use for many years. It is estimated that over 12,000,000 are now in actual service in the European armies, while 3,000,006 are re- served in the arsenals for emergencies. It is announced that more than 20,000 patents were granted on inventions involy- ing the industrial application of electricity between January 1, 1876,and December 31, 1892, and the number of new ones is in- creasing #t the rate of more than 200 per “anhum. 7 A Rahway, N. J., widow, wh had stowed away $500 in small bills in an old bureau drawer, discovered a few days ago that her hoard had been converted into fractional currency by mice. The moral is that hoarding at home in nooks and corners is a raw way of banking. The Congo is the most wonderful water- way in the world. It is twenty-five miles “across in parts, so that vessele may pase one another and yet be Out of sight. - It has twice the extent of the «navigable waters of the Mississippi and its tribut- aries and three times its population. It has been compnted that in a single cubic foot of the ether which fills all space there are locked up 10,000 foot tons of energy which has hitherto escaped notice. To unlock this boundless store and subdue it to the service of man is a task that awaits the electrician of the fut- ure. —Says the New York Post of Saturday : “ The gold reserve tock a fresh plunge yesterday of nearly $1,000,000, the bal- ance being less than $86,000,000. The Situation becomes more critical every day.” And the New York Herald of the same date declares : oct] 9—mon th & wy LND OPIS 5 7/7 w7lisvM/ Atisthe perictionefthewel = “2 : matured plnt properly cured by expert powers. Mild less quality; Mastiff Plug Cut pl vases the most fastidious. J. B. Pace Tobacco Co. Virginia; and Montreal, Canada. Halifax Markets. P. M. JENKINS & CO. yeneral Commission Merchants. We give « ial aattengion tothe kahdiing ,ot Cargoes of Produce and the clrartériny and -insuring of vessels) Weniso have vrand faci- etc. Consignments solicited. Good Bank references. We forward all kinds of goods to any point. Box 240, Halifax, N. s. septs—l yr “DR. SMITH, VS, V.D, Graduate Ontario Veterinary College and 4 Se Dental Schogl, . * : Office, Montague Bridge, King’s Ge. Calls by telephone attendedto as speedily as possible. A full line of Veterinary Medicines always on hand. Condition and Sonic Pow- ders of the best quality. wy—octé HOUSE TO LET. TO LET, a comfortable Dwelling House situated on corner of Kent and Pownal Streets» Enquire of THOMAS W. DODD, At Medica! Hall. +e sept23 lities for selling Eggs, Butter, Oysters, Pork, | flavored, brigcut and of match. | Richmon 1, | TEACHERS and SCHILOLARS WILL FIND Carter's Bookstore a full supply of Schoe! Books, School and AT College Pens, Gage’s Copy Books, all numbers from 1 to 11, Carter’s and Staf- ford’s Ink, Penholders, Inkstands, Lead and Slate Pencils, Slates, Rulers, Exercise Books, Scribbling Books, new supply just received, octl8 Prices right. A call invited. Hand-lade Goods are the most reliable. When & man wants a new: suit of clothes he does not want one that has the ap; earance of having been cut in a sausage machine and put together in a “sail-loft.” Leave your order with us and get a stylish, well- made suit. If youcorder a suit elsewhere you will make a mis- take, and the cutter will likely make one too. Watch the best dressed men: they are our patrons. D. A. BRUCE. ,,..... from: Liverpool, N.S8., for Hillsboro, went | Sexctat, Desparoues tO THe Examiner. | | } | | i — (5) — — +--+) --- & CO. Readymade Reefers and Overcoats, WO BETTER YALUE IN THE CIty. eget EG ——AND SEE Great Stoc —-—-() fF —-- CLOTHING |! OUR—— % 4 ; % Pa —— -—-- MEN'S _ OVERCOATS. SEE OU2 Boys’ Suits, Reefers and Overcoats. x Still Going On at Jas. Paton & Co’s., 168 MARKET SQUARE, GREAT SALE UF CARPETS. (x) Important to Ladies ! | } } Try James Paton & 60's, DRESS COODS | Mourning Goods. ! i | This isa very large Department with jus. Our Stock is very complete and 4 prices very low. Millinery! Millinery! | JAMES PATON & CO’S. Stock of HATS, BONNETS, WINGS, RIBBONS, ete., etc., is very large. Hats and Bonnets trimmed in the very latest styles by ex- perieneed hands. | Furs! Furs! | ! FUR CAPES, BOAS, MUFFS, CAPS, etc., 4c. 1 GOAT ROBES very cheap. The Very Best Value in ASTRAKAN JACKETS. ' iD JAMES PATON MARKET SQUARE. Charlottetown, October 16, 1892—eod Are Dangerous | Then to be Safe, always Insure with 6. We. Brow CHARLOTTETOWN | WHEN NEXT buying Soap, ask your Grocer for Ammonia Soap, For gen- eral household work it has no equal. Ask your grecer for it. October 2, 1893 ee = = RINGS! in 10 carat, 14 carat and 18 carat, heavy and light | weight; Engraved Band Rings, Diamond Set Rings. Ruby and Garnet Rings, Solid Gold and Real Stones. A LARGE STOCK AT G. H. TAYLOR’s, Sept. 8, 1893-—tu fri NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE | steady eniployment aud good pay by aj- Delays pea OVER Shawls, CHEAP JAMES PATON & CO’S. ‘ Shawls, Al Wi Great tock of DOLMANS, JACKETS and ULSTERS. 4 LADIES’ JACKETS from One Dollar up at JAMES PATON & £O'S UNDERCLOTHING very cheap t SHIRTS DRAWERS Scoteh atid Canadian. and in English, CARPETS. 5 The LARGEST -_ BEST ASSCRT MENT on the Island CURTAIN POLES, Blinds with Spring sae Rollers. & 69, Bargains in Curtain. ‘ Watitindiae 6 et 30 Years Manufactured Ml eae And Quality Unexcelled. octld ——_—_— - Thirty Hearses Wanted. The Brigantine Gertrude, 292 Tons, tegistered and Classed, ie « xpected to sail for Trinidad, W. L, about the 28th of October, and will carry Horses on fre Apply at once to ©. H. SCHURMAN octl6—tf Coat Makers Wanted. Four first-class Coat Makers can find ply ng to FRED. L. HAM, Merchant Tailor, St. Stephen, New Brunswick. octi—ly lw wy li