T i } F>oir Doll 4 ars per Vear. Serate Read, Room r DAILY “This is True Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free,”—Evripipes. EXAMINER ee ae Single Copies two cents. VOL 37 Pp. E. ISLAND; SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 25, 41897. NO 224 —~ — Bree Srey CHA oo 0.0 sh 0n4 05 40 bees aenss oka ee Just opened, a beautifil assortment of the very latest styles of Ladies Sacques. Be CATAD CIOGRh s 6.00 6 00d s 00 ic RéEIN < Vb pain heg sds hee ae eey Caely. ClO hee ncascoansevectsbasus Te 80469 2'8: 64.900 8 86.5.0 e*eees the values we offer in these goods, A Perfecit.... Wood Furnace U England, HIGHEST TESTIMONIALS FROM ALL DEALERS AND USERS. The McCla ry ivife. Co., vineria and VANCOUVER. If your local dealer cannot suvriy, writes our nearest house. —_— CA The undersigned represents the above first-class Companies. Ca.3os, Freights. carried at lowest rates. eee wee 6.0 se MAGHET” AMOUS MAGNET Made in 8 sizes, using 3, 4 and 5 feet wood. Will heat from 10,000 to 100,000 cubic feet. Heavy fire-box, with corrugations, increasing the beating surface. Extra large firing door and ash pit. Heavy steel flues with cast heads that will expand without cracking. Bolts on outside away from action of the fire. Instant direct or indirect dreft. Firing, regulating and cieaning all done from the front. Dampers can be operated from rooms above. Made for brick or galvanized casings. You Can keep your house warm from cellar to garret and 8 Do it Cheaply. a SSVvesseccoceeececocCcwzretee LONDON, MONTREAL, TORONTO, SOL &/: Marine Insurance. se The British and Foreign Marine Ins. Co., of Liverpool The Empress Marine, Ins., Co.,of London England. The General Marine Iusurance Co., of Dresden. Hulls. Sterling Certificates issued. FRED. Queen Street =e Total Assets, - Invested in Canada, - Total Surplus, nearly insurance in force, greates. company in the world. } in unrepresented districts, a in any otner company in the world. lt W. HYNDMAN AGENT Wal Lille iUsirauee OF NaYw YORE RICHARD A. McCURDY, . - . - Presiden (THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPANY). Has more insurance in force, a greater annual income and more assets is the oldest active American Co - $234,744,148.42 4,257,520.75 30,000,000,00 » 918,698,358.00 Income in 1896, $49,702,695:27, being TWELVE MILLONS . ° ° ? ’ . more than the total Revenue of the Dominion of Canada, Issues the most liberal policies and pays larger dividends, on all policies han any other company, and is beyond donbt,, the wealthiest and All policies payable in gold. Agents wanted JOHN MACEACHERN, Agent for P.E. Island or eee THE SAILORS THAT MANNED THE BLACKBALL CLIPPERS. ; BVUCSSOSIASIVSVOP Sse OUVTEcsece|esesqveve PACKET RATS OF OLD, ® Tough Crews Kept Ia Hand by Tougher the Robbed and Beaten—Punishment That Officers — How Lancsmen Were Was Sometimes Inflicted. “They were beautiful ships, the old Blackball packets; long, trim clippers, Shat tore through the western ocean under w cloud of canvas that was kept spread as long as it would stay to the yards. Many a one had never a dry deck or its crew a dry stitch of clothing in a dozen passages running. They were finely fitted up in the cabins and did a great part of the over- seas passenger carrying up to the end of the war, but they were tough crews and hard officers that sailed them—the tough- est and hardest, I reckon, in the world.’’ Old Barney Rockliffe, the shipkeeper at an East river wharf, was talking. He was a deep sea sailor for many years. “There was the regular packet sailor, who would ship on no other craft,’’ he went on to say, ‘‘packet rats, we called them. When one of them was fixed out in his regulation togs—a red Havre shirt, black trousers, a glazed cap and neat calf- skin boots—he was known as a ‘Bucko’ sailor, and put on great airs. They went in gangs tbat shipped together for the trip across the Atlantic. They fought the offi- cers where they dared and robbed and maltreated their fellow sailors. A green Dutchman on his first Blackball packet trip was their special mark, and he was lucky if, besides having his chest looted and the very boots stolen from his feet, he were not brutally beaten. The regular packet sailor carried no chest or bag, only the clothes on his back. He came aboard drunk, was driven, cursed and smashed through the passage by the officers and made a pier head leap from the ship before she was fairly moored at the wharf on the other side of the water. Pickpockets, bur- glars, criminals of eyery sort, whose in- dustries compelled them to make sundry changes of residence, shipped in the pack- ets so as to get from one side of the ocean to the other. Such a man, if a good sea- man, might get through the trip all right, but if not he fared hard at the hands of the officers. “It needed masterful, determined offi- cers to keep such men under, and the packet officers were of that kind. They were fighters always ready, and their or- ders were sharp and stern, with a curse, and perhaps a snatch block or belaying pin coming close behind them if the men were slow to move or to understand. A Black- ball ship often came into port with fewer men than she started with, and many an officer found it necessary regularly to leave the ship before she came to anchor and stay in hiding until she sailed again to avoid the warrants of arrest against him on account of his treatment of the crew. After a Blackball ship had cleared away it usually happened that a Whitehall boat put out from some pier and set on board two or three men who, clapping on round, straight visored officers’ hats, went to getting the crew into working order at short notice. “I was not the kind of packet sailor I have been telling you about, but I sailed a number of trips in the Blackball ships during tho civil war. Sailors were scarce, and the pay of $80 to $100 in gold for a trip was too tempting to miss. Being a good sailor and temperate, I got on well with the officers, and I managed to pull through without trouble with the men, but I saw some rough sights ana doings. The thing that impressed me most was what I saw one Christmas day, with the ship lying out at anchor ready to sail at turn of tide. It was bitterly cold. The crew had come aboard in all stages of drunkenness, from fighting to dead drunk, and the uproar about the forecastle was like what I have heard told of sheol. ‘‘Among the crew was a very decent lookinzg old man, warmly clad, and wear- ing, I remember, a red comforter round his neck. I don’t know whether he had been drinking or not or whether he accidentally fell or was pushed down the hatchway, but he fell some 10 or 12 feet down into the forebold. A gang of the packet rats fellow'd him down to where he lay, beat ' got him notice. |. Ail kinds at $4.40, $5, $5.25, $6.25, $7.00, $7.50 and $10.00 No old goods Prices marked away dow». and KickeG Dit anim ne-was ‘msensinie apd robbed him of everything they fancied about him. ‘*When the ship was got under way and the crew were mustered amidships to be chosen off into watches, the old man stood among the rest, looking in mighty bad shape after the treatment he had under- gone. Asarule little notice would have beon taken of the matter and no inquiries made, but it chanced that the captain and he were both Freemasons, and the old man gaye the captain a Masonic sign, and that The captain’s eyes blazed as he heard the old man’s story, and he teld him to point out the men who had beaten and robbed him. He identified six or seven—one of them was wearing his red comforter—~and they were ordered to stand (%s apart from the rest of the crew. ‘*They were compelled to deliver up to the old man everything that he said was his, then the mate and second mate, the boatswain and carpenter put on steel knuckles and walked into them. The fel- lows were knocked down and hammered and then pulled up to be knocked down again, tho steel knuckles, wherever they landed, cutting like knives, until the deck looked like a slaughter pen. It was a cruel punishment, but none can say that it wasn’t deserved. ‘“‘Now and then a packet officer would be killed by the crew. What these officers bsted worst was to find a landlubber ship- ped as an able seaman, and they used to mmake the trip a miserable one to him. Some of their punishments were queer ones, such as setting a man to dip water from one bucket to another with a tea- spoon or fitting canvas wings to him and making him pass the watch aloft ona yardarm, crowing like a cock at every two bells.’’—New York Sun. Not the Belshazzar Legend. The story is told of a Sunday school which once had a teacher named Amina- dab Wilk, a milkman. One day the sub- ject of the lesson was the feast of Belshaz- zar, but the class was most inattentive. Wishing to arrest immediate attention, he called out to one of the boys in a sharp voice: ‘‘Jim, who placed the writing on the wall?’’ The boy falteringly answered, ‘‘ Please, sir, it was Harry Barker.”’ The teacher was amazed, but he at once said: ‘Read out what he wrote.”’ Jim immediately turned round and read from the wall: i Our teacher’s nameis Aminadab Wilk, He sits on a bucket his cows to milk; He waters his milk three times a day, Then comes to school to sing and pray. —Soottish Nights. ———- The Great English Remedy. - : Siz Packages Guaranteed to promptly. and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotencyand ali effects of Abuse or Excesses, ~ Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opiumor Stimu- r. lants, which soon lead to In- firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of eases; is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine known, Ask druggistfor Wood’s Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, $1; six, $5. One will please, siz will cure. Pamphlets frea to any addresa, The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Geo. E Sold ix Charlottetown by Hughes, Druggist. Oysters and Apples. The best cellar and warehouse accom- modation® in the city. We expect to handle nearly all the apples on the market. Country dealers and town customers can place their order with us and be sure of getting the best stock at market prices. OYSTE BS--We expect to handle 2000 barrels thi® season ,every barrel repacked by hand inour cellar. Customere will know exactly whatthey may expect as marked on each barrel. E. H. NORTON, €cn micsicr Merchant and Auctionere 5 5D 3 OS G2 UO bo te bo every garment brand new and direct from the Oid Country A glance over the stock will give youan idea of ed ia Nee2222 22220 S When Visiting The — Ze PROVINCIAL Cs | EXEIBITION BE SURE SAT. AND SEE OUR Dental Exhibition AT THE BERLIN PARLORS We will be pleased to receive callers and 4 explain to then how our work is done. » We do everything that is done by the lead- ey) ing Dentists of America and have perfected our- *\* selves in the latest and greatest successes of e “3607 ..”° 3 In addition to the Famous METHOD, we will introduce painless DENTISTRY | BY ELECTRICIY Y We want you to call and see it. We will show you how we make BERLIN f re) O a Crown and Bridge Work. Artificial Teeth of All Kinds and in fact every branch of our business is open tofinspection, and we are proud of our work. BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS, ver Store of Prowse Bros. The above shows the Myopia, or near-sighted eye, with and without correcting lens. The eye-ball is too long, and this condition greatly interferes g g; g y with distant vision, and if neglected, may produce serious results. When at- tending the exhibition, raake it a point to have your eyes examined FREK by —& F HUTCHERSON, Optician & Jeweler ueen St., opp. J. D. McLeod’s. i ic lp i a Stance i - om in al ahh tebe tnedly a 2g cae =. ne Se ee ~