Five DoLiars A YEAR. a ae Pot i - ; ‘ * ‘ ' , . _ “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak Peres : ——— NEW SERIES. Che Daily Examiner is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Go. From their office, corner of Great George Streets, Water and harlottetown, Prioce Edward Isjand. a ee LAPIRATION OF LEASE. Threo months..... éecbbib thee ouieas 1.25 | eee a Sa } A OEE eee eR Aivertising at moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- | = ==EXTRAGRBINARY SALE ALMANAC FOR NOVEMBER, 1888, | ———— OF MOON'S CHANGES. First Quarter 3rd day, 0h, 52.7m., p, m., E. (below horizon. ) Full Moon Iith day, 3h., 54.0., p. m., N. E. ( te low hoi Zo. Last Quarter 18th -iay, 6h., 27.8im., p- m., ' ( (N. below horizon. ) ; New Moon 25th day, 3h, 6.0m., p. m., S. W. >! Sun ‘Sun |Moon! High Day’ Ot ww os WwEEK/5U2 Sun | Moon! High’ Day’s M rises/sets | rises (water! len hy {fi mh mmorn(morn h m 1 Monday 16 474 41/11 51) 1 35 9 54 : 2| Tuesday | 48) 39jaft 33} 221, 51 on 3)Wednesday | 50 38) 110)311) 48 “a Sebi: 4' Thursday | 51| 36} 143} 413) 45 Se 2s pee f aR 5| Friday 53; 35) 213, 5 22) 42 eee a Ri m 6)Saturday 54) 34! 35} 6 31) 40 wee ip ibe eve te! oe. Sn 7|Sunday | 56 3313 5/730) 37 8; Monday | 57}. 31/331) 8 19| 34 9, Tuesday | 53} 29,3589 OF; 31} wits tresses 26) 9 39 28 10\Wednesday 7 0) 28 581 15} 26 11 / Thursday . FF = HE Lease of our premises expires in a few months, and not betng able to renew the same on reasonable terms, or procure other SmI Ot im wm WW OD > iow! - 26 sao ms a premises in time for spring trade, we will dispose of our whole stock of NEW AND FASHIONABLE DRY GOODS at an Saturday ; 2 8 29 : 14) Sunday ; 6 24 7 aft Ss is eyeQ = ye ‘ fs nn on ‘ x »| e = leg co ‘ha > , Cr + sy ae ee | 15 Monday | 71 @ 3) 0 49) 5 L Nv MM teal ry tod hs —= cs ‘ag | : L { , Fa 16| Tuesday | 2 Sea Pee. B, a ~— Ee ce oe “3 17; Wednesday | 10) 20\10 14) 2 35) 10 18| fhursday } It) W911 24, 3 24 8 < 19) Friday | 13) 19}morn!] 440) 6 ad 29) Saturday | 14) 18) 0 33,6 3 4 Carpets, Oilcloths, Rugs and Mats at 33 per cent discouat ; Black and Colored Dress Goods at 33 per cent discount ; Mantle ae a +4 — 3 ” 9 - and other Cloths, Tweeds, &c., at 33 per cent discount ; Blankets, Counterpanes, Comforts and Lace Curtains at 33 per cent ~ na i « = ¢« : v . = : - a0 : . — he ei _ 23 acnhey 18! 15] 42419 8| 57 discount ; Silks, Satins and Velvets at 33 per cent discount ; Black and Colored Plushes at 33 per cent discount; Gloves and 24) Wednesday Hosiery at 33 per cent discount ; Linen Goods of all kinds at 25 per cent discount ; Prints and White Cottons at 25 per cent 25) Thursday 26 | | | 20) 141527} 953) 54 discount. 21; 13] 6 36/10 34, 52 ‘ Friday 23) 13 43/1) 13} 50 ae oa - : — 52! > A Lot of Goods at HALF PRICE, such as Millinery, Hats, Bonnets, Feathers, Flowers, Real Lace, Edgings, Collars and Sunday 5) 9 35'morn oe feed é s ; : 29 Mepdae 26) Cutis, Frillings, a large variety Wool Goods, &e. 11j10 28| 0 32 45 eb 911 ‘| 1 10) 8 43 JAMES Hl. REDDIN, | All of the Above New and in Good Order, and wili be Sacrificed in order to Ciear BARRISTER-AT-LAW, SOLICITOR QOut Quick. AND NOTARY PUBLIC, nae TO aula ea, Comes ies | , , cer ta MONEY TO LOAN. Ee SEE OUR CIRCULARS FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS. Sept. 27, 1886-1 mo eod & wy 3 mos 30) Tuesday Ch’town, Oct. 14, 1836. -BORnR- CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1886. free,.”—Evairipss. Mr. Spurgeon on Veotal Abstinence. Every friend of humanity will rejoice that Mr. Spurgeon may be counted on the side of the safest of all positions with refer- ence to intoxicants, total abstinence. Ata recent meeting of the Total Abstinence Society of the Metropolitan Tabernacle, he said there were two things that men needed —pardou of sin and to become holy. for them. God forbid that they should put any plan of theirs in competition with the Cross of Christ. But total abstinence had really to do with the matter of their becom- ing holy, it was decidedly helpful to per- sonal holiness. To be free from alcohol left the brain clear, that helped to the study of Scripture, andthe study of Scripture helped men to grow in grace ; so that there really was some connection hetween total abstinence and holiness; and there was also some connection between taking alco- hol and unholiness. There was, further, a connection between total abstinence and holiness in the matter of self-conquest, the keeping of one’s self wel) in hand, which was a matter of great importance. Mr. Spurgeon went on to urge total abstinence for the sake of example, and for the sake of influence on families, and ia scathing lan- guagé denounced grocers’ licenses. Drunk- enness also stifled conscience ; and it was no use ministers and others trying to save the souls of men if they were first killed by strong drink. — i The Trans-Centinental Railway. In the handbook of Canada, compiled for the Colonial and Indian exhibition, under the direction of Mr. John Carling, mention is made of the fact that the idea of a trans- continental railway through British North America was first mooted by Major Car- michael-Sinyth in an open letter addressed to Mr. Haliburton (‘‘Sam Slick ”), and published in 1847. The writer said :— This great national railway from the Atlan- tic to the Pacific is the great link reqaired to unite in one powerful chain the whole English race—enabling vessels steaming from our magnificent colonies and settle- ments in the East to land their rich productions at the commencement of the West, to be forwarded and dis- tributed throughout our North American colonies and delivered within thirty days at the ports of Great Britain.” A map of the route proposed accompanied the letter, and, singularly enough,the Canadian Pacific railway takes the very route then suggested. The letter was followed by a pamphlet, pub- lished in February, 1848, in which the writer's views were elaborated. A corres- pondent of the Times, in an issue just at hand, states that Major Carmichael-Sinvth is still alive at the age af 87, in good health and with his mental activity unim oaired. VOL. 19.-NO. 141. But . 7 > j a - “° taking the pledge would not do everything;thus reserved, and placed elsewhere bya —_ eee ee ee ee Sincir Corres Two Crnts, nati A Railway Car Incident. A correspondent of the Hartford Times relates a little incident that-is both aniuez- ing and suggestive: it is generally under- stood that if a pe wates a sest for a few moments and :eaves some articles in it, that this will secure it till his return. In more than one instance we have seen an overcoat or satchel removed from a seat new comer. An amusing case of the kind recently occurred on a road not far from Hartford. A gentieman had occasion to leave his seat for a few moments at a sta- tion, and on returning found his overcvat and satchel removed and the seat takea possession of bya young man and ‘his best girl.” The gentleman said to the young inan: “‘i think I am entivod ty this seat, as [ left articles in it while 1 stepred to the platform for a moment.” Said the young man: **Possession is nine points of the Jaw, and J think we will keep the seat. “Then,” said the gentleman, “will you please rise that f may get my umbrella?” The young man could not refuse this rea- sonable request--and as he gose from the seat the gentleman slipped into it, much tg the amusement of the other passengers. The young man requested “this best girl ; to go with him to another seat. In_ reply she said, “‘[ can’t vet out.” ‘Will you rise?” said the young man to the gentle- man, ‘‘and allow this lady to come out?” **T think not,” said the latter; “‘if ‘possess. ion is nine points ef the law,’ I propose te avail myself of the same, aud if your friend, wishes to vacate the seat she can step over, causing more than a smile from those who witnessed the performance. <<< —- ™The Toronto correspondent of the Wits ness,commenting on the Liberal demon- stration in that city, on Tuesday evening, says: ‘““The most magnificent features of the proceedings were: first, Mr. Biake’s pointed appeal to the workingmen ; second, the entire ebsence of any reference to Riel.” W! bless the dear innocent jyouth, that is not to be marvelled at. The yood people of Toronto don’t take Riel in tlicir political egg-nog, and Mr. Blake and his lieutenants take mighty good care not to plant themselves on the Regina scaffold in Ontario. They know a trick worth twe of that. It is for Messrs. Laurier, Mercier and the allies in Quebee to rouse the peo- ple to avenge the death of their ‘dear brother,” while Mr. Blake and the Onta- rio contingent prate about the iniquities of the tariff, the beauties of free trade, and their consuming love for the workingmen. Still it has happened that the politican, as the circus, contortionist, sometimes spreads himself tuo freely, and in the endeavor te cover too iuch ground, comes to grief. —— TS ie ee — He ssived for many years in Nova Scotia and Canada in the 23rd High'anders. He has lived to see the project which he first originated fully compijeted, and his mame should not be forgotten in connection with it. Se LS inte St. Joha Business. The information furnished by the St. John Sun, respecting various lines of busi- ness is of an interesting nature. In the wooden ware business, the Messrs. Flew- welling have, year by year increasec their business, which has assumed large pre por- tions. The Christie Company report a gain Varaa ix « fortified seaport towa of Bul- , Goria, situated on the southwest. shure of ithe Black Sea, at the mouth of he Prax di, land about fifty iniles from Shumia. It is surrounded by a stone wall ten feet bigh, loopholed and defended by batteries and outworks on the system of Vauban, The population of the towu is about tweouty thousund. A railway, chiefly owned in England, connects Varna with Rustechuk on the Danube, about hundied and forty miles distant. The t@wn is ditty and poorly constructed, but strategically it is one of the most important of the Bu! ‘garian fortified places. During the Ruseo- | Turkisi: war the seaport was defended by nro or in front,’””—which she did without delay, , BOSTON. of their business over last year, while they |three larye bitteries, and there were thon have been obliged to add to the capacity of ;#bout two huadre!d guns on the works, of their works. Scott, Lawton & Love ave |large calivre wodern — construction, working night and day to fill orders and are! The garrison necessary for the defence * doing a jarger business than any time since { V@1na agains! vueasive operations is esti- WINTER ARE ANGEMENT —— | THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE IgTERWATIONAL S.S. CD. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- land, every Monday, and Toursday at 8.00 a. m. Fare from Chariottetowa to Boston, 36,50, 2nd class ; $9.50, Ist class. ; For tickets and other information apply to . A.SHARP, F. W. HALES, P. it. > eee P. E. L Steam Nav, Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent, Novy. 15, 1885—eod wky ee L. BE, PROWSE does not offer a discount of 383 Commission Merchants, per cent; to do so, &® per cent profit would need to be (2) ATLANTIC AVENUE, ‘added. Such profit would rain a farmer or any other BOSTON. MASS. Man---83 per cent discount means a profit of 50 per reer biis 3 cent. But the facts are: He buys for cash only, there- eee +A fore buy from 15 to 28 per cent less than many houses ~ in the trade, and can afford to sell even less than those who pretend to give those Fabulous Discounts. Ten Phousand Dollars (510.0939) worth of Cloth- ing at wonderfal low prices, Overcoats from $2.7, ‘Suits from $4.58. up. Job Lot Clothing at about hal: BARCLAY & U0, price. Large stock of Dress Groods, Sacques, Ulsters GENERAL Sacque Cloth, Ladies’ Hats, &c, very cheap. Shirts Comission & Srippiag HMercAzS, and Wnderclothing below competition. eee cA ‘Byery sensible man and woman should see his steck Enver ti urntandoateh ES and not be led away by sensational advertisements. Over tifty thousand bashels P. E. LI. Ln de. 2 OW SS. A CARD. Toall wh re suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c., I will send a recipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHARC remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America, Send a self-addressed cnvelopo W the * REV. JOSEPH T. IxMax, Slation D, New York City, ™. This great potatoes received by ua iast fall. Ovr prtrons all satisfied. Vessols chartered for potate fraights at short notice, Write for merket reports a@ 4oroialties —Potatoss, Mackerel, Can- the year oi the fire. Foster's nail works are supplying an immense and increasing: constituency. Fowler, the edge tool maker, has increased his business 50 per cent., in a few years. It has been learned,througli the instrumentality of Andrew Myles, that we need not be dependent on the Old Country, for the best fruit syrup, and the coughing public abroad are cured by a St. John balsam. The article on the fruit tirade is instructive as showing a growing demand for the most wholesome of all Juxuries, and as furnishing one of many indications that Western Nova Scotia has close trade re- lations with St. John. eg Widow Stewart's Wealth Cornelia Mitchell Stewart, whose death was announced some days ago, was the daughter of James Clinch, an old New York merchant. She was born on Oct. 20, 1813. Her brother was Charies P. Clinch, for many years deputy collector for the port of New York. When she married Alexander T. Stewart she was but twenty-two years old, and he was then only a promising young man, without fortune or backing. When he died, in April, 1876, he was at the head, in wealth and in the magnitude of his business, of the retail dry goods trade of the world. Mrs. Stewart was simple in her habits, lively and vivacious, and the | mated at fifteen thousand men, -_—_— - suinoceanaiiniaitee ‘here are no less than 36 different mis. sionary societies represented in India, writes the editor of the Star of India to thie Independent, besides 10 or more prive'y rnissions, The English Baptists were the first to enter this great field (passing by the early Danish missionary society, which seut the first Protestant missionaries to India in 1705). and the Disciples of Christ, whose mission dates from 1%83, the luet. All branches of the Church are represented. Europe and America—Great Britain, the continent, the United States, and Canada~— all are here, laboring band in hand for the uplifting of India. According to the statis- tical summayy for 1885 there were 157,504 communicants: representing the fruits of these missions, ——— en, Se <B> oe - The United Sates Prohibitionists put their firet candidaty: for the Presidency in the field in 1872. Be polled 5,608 votes. In 1876 the Prohibition vote was 9.757. In 1880 it was 11,64). In 1884 it was 151,070. In the contest of 1884 the loosen- ing of party ties, owing to the unsatisfac- tory record of the Republican candidate, did much to increase St. John’s vote. Many Republicans who could mot vole for Blaine and would not vote for Cleveland voted with the Prohkibitionists. Under norma! circumstances the straight Prehibi- fact that up to the last forty-eight hours of her life she was able to walk up and down three long flights of stairs to and from jx room will furnish sonse idea of her activity. | Her charities were many but unostenta- tious. The property has increased in value | since she inherited it. The house in which | she lived cost five million dollars. Mrs. ! Stewart made a will which is understwod to | dispose of her wealth for the most part; ! is estimated at from twenty million to thirty million dollars, : Caan oe ' Apvice To Morsers.— Mrs. Winslow’s' Soothing Syrup should always be used when! ned Lobsters, Eggs. Jane 17, 86 —3mo eod Ch’tewn, Out, 21, 1686. . n Winslve’s Sovthing Syrup, and take no other | ind - , feb4 eutl vk ‘tien vote would among her numerous relatives. Her fortunc | 3820 lbs pork... hardly high a figure. Ss Summcrside Exports. Sum™ersipe, Nov. 12. Shipped by str. Princess of Wales,Cameron, master,-for Point du Chene :- Dee OO oo a Fire be we tebe vines 3 707 00 alt ape in ROE Oe Teer 416 00 5 cia db ie a ig] 00 re Cee 3 00 GENO - GUUEES. bs 5 os nd ds 5s ot eve 909 09 o J isy same str. on the iith: children “are cutting teeth. I+ relieves the} 22 cases egys......... iu’: HS little sufferer at once; it produces natural} isd bags potatoes......... 64 00 quite sleep by relieving the child from pain;| 350 ree OTE, on ckdb wis oe cess 6 WwW and the little shrub awakes as “‘bright as a} eee Ne ic. ooo cn 2 4 09 button.” It is very pieasant to taste. It! 16 horses............. 1419 0% soothes the child, softens the gums, allays ali} 175 sueep...... Saas ecu 350 4) pain, regulates the bowels, and is the best! 1168 bush oats. . ei di.wcwad 3 350 00 known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising 60000 tbs starch. ...... even iese 1800 00 irom teething or other causes. Twenty-five! 450 Ibe pork.................... 23 00 cents a bottle. Be sure andask for Mrs.; Jwagon.. ............ sadam iad 49 00 S771 00 have reached so ° oe na ea Ets.) a g , wore i 8 Ai aL oenpaneeityy scene dies bm» Bitinsin ae