pees oe te ye ES \- se pmncadmensteg ae a - «al Bacall oth i & [eRMS ca “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having te advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxiripzs. SincLe Corres Two Cents NEW SERLES. JVHARLOTLTETOWN, P. EH. ISLAND, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1889. VOL. 25.—-NO. 151. Phe ijaiiv Examiner Is i Every Evening by hhe Examiner Publishing Coe.., FROM THEIR ti TONNAW it ig LONDON NUuUSsL, Charlottetown, P. E OFFICE, QUBEN SQUARE island. g a Ly i» R a wm 2 RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Nl WO og 0 hea bd wbe ob cceckess en OO Six I ree Une i WR dk bs since ci ee . 0 ef Advertising te? LL Fail > tack Now AN 64,3 ~ . at most moderate rates. ly be made tor monthiyv, quar- e cae Contracts may terly, half-yearly or yearly application. advertisements o1 («*)-———— ALMANAC FOR NOVEMBER, 1889, MOON 8S CHANGES, Full Moon, 7th day, Llh., 5?.7m., a. m., N. below horizon. Last Quarter, 15th below horizon. , Ba. k , wi ; New Moon, 22nd d ny, 9h., 31.1m., p.m., NW. M ant les, eOrna His, ist CRS, below horizon. ai - First (Jaarter, 29th day, jh., 16.2m.. p.m., I. ali the new materials and h irimmines to match. -_— oa Seeees, Whi day, 4h., 23.3m, p.m, NW iadies’ Felt liats, Feathers, Ribbons, Flowers. D cm » weEx|>22 Sun Moon: High! Day’s — oe s.sets |; rises | water} len’! 1 m'ih m after;morn h manne ammmel E aeme i Friday 6 47 441, 2 28) 4 54 9 54 2|Saturday 48; 39 2 56) 6 19 51 “a ~4 t 3 Sunday | © 301 3 21} 7 28 is 2 Ess | BY RS 4 Monday } Sl) 36) 3 43) 8 23 15 a 3 9 L e 5) Tuesday |} 53) 35) 4 6) 9 6) *.42 5} Wednesda | 54 34; 4 29) 9 44 40 : . ; sheila . a re : : eee 7' Thursday eae 33) 4 54/10 20) 37 A Splendid Assortment of MUFFS, BOAS, CAPES, ASTRAKAN JACKETS 8 Friday 57; 3l| 5 29110 54) 34 FUR-LINED CLOAKS. 7 auk cael me waked ¢ ao 9 Saturday L 58 | 29 3 of) i 28 31 10 Sunday iz 28' 6 S4ilft 4 23 enietaveaini i sevitinaaiin 11) Monday 12; Tuesday | 13 W edn s lay i 14) Thursday 15 Friday | 16 Saturday 271 7 20) 0 40) 26 96] $ 13} 118} 23 7» ein Ss .O ! 2410 12) 2 46 22\11 17] 3 44 21 morn | 4 49 & STEWART. | 17 | Sunday 20; 0 23) 6 3 18) Monday li} 191 130)7 9 19) Tuesday 13} 19) 2 39) 86) Wi\Wednesday | 14, 18 3 51) 8 52 21) Thursday } 46) 17) 5 7) 9 37) + =o ’ 22! Friday | 17} 16) 6 44/10 21, 859 BENS en? GOFF BROS FALL ROOTS 23\ Saturday | 18} 15) 7 43)11 45 SF gape C > Ri: MiSunday 20| 14, 8 59111 49) 64 = SS “wm 4. 8 \y 25| Monday | 21} 13/10 Simorn| 52 | ae oa x Sf , ‘ 26/Tuesday | 23/ 13/11 6] 035; 50 al fF Brits. 5 .w%»; Beat Them All! 27| Wednesday 24; 12/11 54) 1 24! is >i — ee = Se CS 2»; Thursday | 25, Ilaft3l) 297) 47 oSy! “Uxeeees a SPOS Se tie sniaibtelia 29; Friday | 26) 12 2314 45 Soe Se 30/Saturday FSBe WO) 1 Si) 4 7" 8 43 i ) NOTICE TO SHOEMAKERS.—We sare Headquarters for French Calf Tops, Sole Leather, Upper, Calf, Goat, Kid, ; Awls, Pegs, Pincers, Nails, Shoe Thread, Wax, Webb, Eyelets, Brass Hammers, Kc., ' ~ JOHN T. HELLISH, Barrister, Attorney, Notary Public, &., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. OFFICE—Leondon House Building, (Davies Corner). Queen St. All kinds of Legal Business promptly atiended to. Money to Loan at low internst ig & wky tf MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, FOrse BROKERS | Commission Merchants, THRESHERS AND SHAKERS HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Rerenences: Thomas Fyshe, Esy., Cashier GORPT BROS. re ee em em ne OR + eee Charlottetown, Oct. 21, 1889. re errr = ee ee er ene ss winincrseiseapll Ey niiialitige ——AND— Combined Threshers and Cleaners. Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; DV. C. Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia | . ANG ee Charlottetown. WARREN & JONES, | \ Vy K are manufacturing these Machines, and have some ready + r * . . EY a . a to ship. They combine the latest American improve- OU ne ee aan ane LONDON. ENGLAND ments, are fast Threshers, very light running, and easy on 7 ge . ” . LO! y , , 12 y > s 4 14 . ‘ y ‘ , ; ag 2 Represented in Canada by Morrison & horses, We believe them to be superior to any machines of the Meaears, Bite. kind ever sold on P. EK. Island, and we guarantee them t) give Oct, 24, 1887. Seto ; ‘ Beat. lm ‘satisfac ion in every respect. Terms liberal. For sale at mete tengo | en es a oon co me re ee re wr emer ee es es ee ae ee ey 4 3] CHARLOTTETOWN TQ ae A. BRUGE, MEGGHAN! TAILOR. The Staunch and Commodious Steamships 1 9 T 99, “Carroll” and “Worcester,” | : . | me bovis: been thoroughly refurnished and put into | first-class condition in every respect, will, during the as of 18x89, run as follows, commencing With the “ CARROLL,” From Charleticiown, Thursda h May, at 4 p. m. One of these vesse); i y for | Charlottetown EV ERY Wi : espa at en. ' and Charlot:etown for Bost VE TRS. DAY, at Six o'clock, v. _ on EVERY THUR sapncellont Passenger accommodation. Low | Boston, Halifax and P. £. Isiand g-g Steamship Line. f Only Direct Line Without Change, (0) HE PEOPLE’S FAVORITE PLACE OF TRADE, where the prices are so low that we will send you away rejoicing. We would specially invite you to see our , Meas’ lieefers, Mens’ Gvercoats, Hens’ Suitings, Men’s and Boys’ Furnishing Goods, 100 Fur and Cloth Caps, Fur Coats and Sleigh Robes. WEVE BARGAINS FOR EVERYBODY ! The fat, the lean, the rich, the poor, the wise, the simple, the young, the old, the millionaire, the beggar, the blind, the lame, CharlottetoumOct, 1889, FARES-—First-class Passa, : en furni ‘a taf oe, ab8age Berth in well- ane Cabin, $6.50. Stateroom Berth, $2.00 Lowest Rates for Freight ich i Carefully handled. ight, which is always | CARVELL BROS., Agents, © “nn LORING Treasurer, —_ Nails, sold cheaper aad promptly ‘ Beauty Is desired and admired by all. Among the things which may best be done to enhance personal beauty is the daily use of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. No matter what the color of the hair, this prepa- ration gives it a lus- tre and pliancy that adds greatly to its charm. Should the hair be thin, harsh, dry, or turning gray, Ayer’s Hair Vigor will restore the color, bring out a new growth, and render the old soft and shiny. For keeping the scalp clean, cool, and healthy, there is no better preparation in the market. ““T am free to confess that a trial of Ayer’s Hair Vigor has convinced me that it is a genuire article. Its use has not only caused the hair of my wife and daughter to be Abundant and Glossy, but it has given my rather stunted mus- tache a respectable length and appear- ance.’ — R. Britton, Oakland, Ohia, *“My hair was coming out ( without any assistance from my wife, either). I tried Ayer’s Hair Vigor, using only one bottle, and I now have as fine a head of hair as any one could wish for.” --R. T. Schmittou, Dickson, Tenn. ‘*T have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor in my family for a number of years, and re- gard it as the best hair preparation I know of. It keeps the scalp clean, the hair soft and lively, and preserves the original color. My wife has used it for a long time with most satisfactory re- sults.’ — Benjamin M. Johnson, M. D., Thomas Hill, Mo. ‘My hair was becoming harsh and dry, but after using half a bottle of Ayer’s Hair Vigor it grew black and glossy. I cannot express the joy and gratitude I — Mabel C. Hardy, Delavan, IIL ft 5 s J | Ayer’s Hair Vigor, | PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by Druggists and Perfumers. Horses, Carriages and Sleighs FOR SALE. \ R. E. J. HOUGSON having no further i use for his Horses, Carriages and Sleighs, will sell them, together with Furs, Harness, &c., by private sale. They may be seen at any time at his Stables. oct28—tf Celery | Celery ! f. _AY & SONS are taking orders for winter _B supply of Celery. Celery packed in boxes or barrels, and delivered on board car or steamer without extra charge. Orders taken at the Market, Charlottetown, or ad- dress J. J. Gay & Son, Pownal. Prices range from 25 to 40 cents per dozen, our best at $3 per hundred, Taking the medicinal proeper- ties of Celery into consideration, and the pre- valcuce of fevers in our midet, it is a wonder that even more of this truly medicinal plant is not used, My dear fellow dyspeptic sufferers, have you tried munching a stalk of Celery asa finishing off (so to speak) at each meal? If you have not, make a start; if you have, I need not tell you why. novi8S—2aw (mon thu) wky 2i MR. H. 8. HEARTY, Organist of Methodist Brick Church, Will take a Limited Number of Pupiis on the Pianoforte. For terms, ete., apply at the DUNCAN HOUSE, corner Water and Prince Streets, oct22 —3m ‘Mortgage Sale. To be sold by Public Auction, at the Cour House, Charlottetown, on FRIDAY, the Third day of January, A. D. 1890, at the hour of Twelve o’clock, noon, by viriue of a power of sale contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, bearing date the 14th November, A. D, 1879, made between Edward ‘Trainor, of Lot 22, in Queen’s County, in Prince Edward Island, of the one part, and the Right Reverend Hibbert Binney. Lord Bishop of Nova Scotia, of Halifax, Nova. Scotia, and Benjamin Gerrish Gray, of same place, Esquire, Trustees of King’s College, Windsor, of the other part, which said Inden- ture was, by said Benjamin Gerrish Gray, sur- viving Trustee, by an Indenture bearing date 13th September, A, D, 1888, assigned to Bawaed +. Hodgson of Charlottetown, in said County - A LL that tract, piece and parcel of land, situ ate and being on Lot or Township Number ‘Twenty-two, in the Parish of Granville, in Queen’s County, in said Island, bounded as fol- lows :—Commencing at a stake fixed in the west side of the Centre Settlement Road, on the north side of iand leased to John Trainor; thence west ta the West Setclement Road; thence north along the same nine chains and fifty links; thence east to said Centre Settlement Road: thence south along the same to the place of commence- ment, containing by estimation fifty acres of land, a little more or less. For further particulars apply at the office of Edward J. Hodgson, Charlottetown. Dated this 19.h day of November, A. D. 1889. ED ~ ee J. woneens. Assignee of Mor 2. novl9—eod & wky a —s §. 8. “WILLIAM.” “OR CHARTER. , y iif ABOVE STEAMER is now open for . charter. Will be due here from Mon- real on 14th inst. Apply to Sunol at Short Range. LOOKS AND ACTS. (New York Tribune, Nov. 18 ) The performance of Senator Lelan Stan- ford’s trotting wouder Sunol, and the sale of the filly to Robert Bonner for a price | horseman’s mouth, but the many padded | columns that have been devoted to the! Palo Alto phenomenon have been written | at long range. With a view to gathering editor of Wallace’s Monthly, who last winter at Palo Alto; and thereby be- came intimately acquainted with the mare | and her training, for particulars. ‘* from the middle of January to the Ist of | April, and, of course, had extraordinary op- portunity for observation. Sunol is a diffi- she is of a conformation and individuality | peculiarly her own. She is a beautiful bay , high at the withers, while measured at the | is very favorable to high speed—it is the) greyhound type, and necessarily gives great length to the rear quarters and legs, and ! hence great stride. Maud 8. is of that conformation, and so is Electioneer, the sire of Sunol, but among all the celebrities of the trotting turf none have it to the seeming exaggerated extent observed in Snnol’s outlines. She has an exquisitely handsome head, marred somewhat, how- ever, by a rather sour expression, and the neck is of good length and very beautifully lined. The shoulder is prominent, running obliquely to a rather low and smoothly turned withers. Her depth through the heart region and the formation of the chest gives the requisite lung capacity. There is just the slightest tendency to roach in her back, but the coupling is strong and the join broad. The lower line of her barrel runs harmoniously, if I may so express it, with her back, curving high at the flank, and this, though she is not very light-waist- ed, in counection with her great length from the hip to the hock, gives her the most greyhoundish appearance imaginable. She is not particularly handsome, as the popular idea of equine beauty goes, but her speedy and rakish look has a charm for the criticaleye. She has the sloping ramp that trotting-horsemen define as ‘the pacing conformation,’ and some critics see in these outlines a resemblance to that great campaigner, Goldsmith Maid.” ‘Tell me about her temper; has shea good disposition ?” ‘*She is one of the most nervous, high- strung and cranky animals that ever vexed the heart of a trainer, Not that she is par- ticularly vicious, but she is amazingly irri- table, and acts as though every individual hair was anexposed nerve. I have seen it Central Park. I do not think he will either drive or shoe her.” ** How was she trained ?” ‘*“Charles Marvin, Senator Stanford’s trainer, is a man of great resources in his profession, and indefatigable worker and a close student of the mental traits of the horse he trains. Heis far and away the most successful trotting-horse trainer of this age, anda man of even temper and superior intelligence. My visit to Palo Alto was for the purpose of preparing for publication a work on training, written by Mr. Marvin, and necessarily | had to study the Palo Alto methods closely. The usual course was followed with Sunol. The colt at Palo Alto is weaned at about 5 months old, and is then haltered and taught to lead by the halter. After he has be- come thoroughly accustomed to this, he is given his first lesson in preparation for his turf career. This is on the miniature track, or, as I call it, the kindergarten, and, mark you, this innovation is one of the distine- tive features of the system of training which Senator Stanford and Mr. Marvin have perfected. This is a covered track, about one-fifteen:h of a mile in circum- ference, and, in fact, a counterpart in min- iature of the regulation mile track. The colt is lead around it until the novelty wears off, and is then turned loose, after being carefully booted with perfect-fitting shin and quarter boots. Of course the colt’s first impulse is to gallop around the track, but he soon settles into a trot, and is thereafter kept at it as much as possible, being controlled by the voices and the whips of the trainers, but he is never struck or treated with the s!ightest violence. “The youngsters learn surprisingly fast what%is wanted of them, and afer a few months take the exercise with scarcely a mistake. Prominent among the good fea- tures of this training equipmeut, it may be mentioned that it sifts the good from the bad, and enables the trainer to pick out those that are most promising. This is no small advantage at a place of the extent of Palo Alto, where there are about 300 brood mares in the stud, and from 70 to 100 horses and colts always in training.” * ** How long does this training on the miniature track continue ?” ‘** Until the colt isabout fourteen months old it isthe only training. After that he is worked, both in harness and on the, miniature track, until, say two years old, when he sees the last of the kindergarten. At about fourteen months of age the colt is broken to harness, and his work begins on the mile track. This work consists in short, sharp brushes to develop high speed, and this * brush system’ is also a Palo Alto inovation. This, with the miniature track, has been criticised by trainers of the old schoo], but their criticisisms do not have much weight against the fact that horses bred and trained at Palo Alto hold the fastest trotting record for yearlings, two- supposed to be over $50,000, puts the name |... of that precocious young performer in every | Alto plan, and she was driven no more in color, and stands fifteen hands two inches | x, ; quarters she is full sixteen hands high. | dranddam This conformation you will see ata glance | daughter of Gray Eagle, but this Mr. year-olds, three-year-olds and four-year- olds ; and Sunol’s three-year-old record is within one-half second of Jay-Eye-See’s tive-year-old record. R. McMILLAN. nov8—dy tf “To show how little Mr. Marvin prac cee ne en eae ge tices the old system of drilling horses many slow miles, instead of driving short dis- HOW THE MARVELLOUS TROTTING MACHINE tances at high speed, | may say that Sunol was never driven around a mile-track at speed until a day or two before her first race at Los Angeles, Cal., as a two-year- old. She was then worked a mile in 2.404. and another in 2.38. ‘lwo days before the race she worked a little faster, and won the race in 2.334—2.25. Then work resumed on the usual Palo miles until August 19, at Petulama, where she was worked in 2.38 and 2.33, and won a race on the 2st in 2.284 and 2,267. Then ' she was taken home, and not worked at a some rock-ribbed facts about the mare, the | mile until October, when she was given a writer asked Leslie E. Macleod, the junior Wile and repeat well within her limit. A spent ‘few days later she lowered the two-year-old record to 2.204, and she was not driven at speed again a full mile until she made her > re |marvellous two-year-old record of 2.18, and I was at Palo Alto,” said Mr. Macleod, | this year she has lowered the three-year- old trotting record 74 seconds—from 2.18 to 2.103. This performance at three years old isa much greater one than Mand §8.'s cult animal to describe, for the reason that 2.083 at maturity.” ** Is not her breeding in dispnte ?” ‘**The breeding of her granddam is. is. contended by Senator Stanford others that Waxy, her was by Lexington out of a and Wallace, the Editor ot the Trotting Regis- ter, disputes with evidence that will not down. Mr. Wallace does not contend that Waxy was not a racing-bred mare, but con- cedes that she probably had running blood. He does not contend, however, and suc- cessfully I think, that she was not by Lex- ington out of the Gray Eagle mare. Waxy started only once ina race, and she per- formed so wretchedly that her owner gave her away immediately after. But she was the dam of the good race-mare Alpha, the best of the get of imported Hercules, and this 1s presumptive evidence that she was racing-bred. Electioneer, the sire of Sunol, was bred at Stony-ford, New York, and General Benton, the sire of her dam, Wax- ana, was also bred in New York. Whatever her granddam was Sunol must be conceded to be the most marvellous trotting-machine that has yet appeared, and the greatest triumph of Senator Stanford, her breeder, and Marvin, her trainer. Andas I have shown, New York favors the glory with California.” > re Turning Water iato Wealth. THE GREAT WATER POWER AT THE KAKA- BIKKA FALLS TO BB UYILIRED. A business transaction has just been con- summated which involves ascheme to utilize the water power of the great Kakabikka Falls, a few miles from Pot Arther, Ont. Deeds have been recorded by which Thomas Marks, of Port Arthur, conveys to Dr. A. M. Eastman, of St. Paul, and B. J. Ander- son, of Minneapolis, representatives of a wealthy St. Paul, Minneapolis and Phila- delphia syndicate, the property known as Kakabikka Falls, containing 480 acres and stated that Mr. Bonner will drive her in ithe water rights to the Kaministiquia River at that point. The river there is 350 feet wide, with a perpendicular fall of 100 feet, and can be developed to furnish 200,000 horse power. The new proprietors propose to build at that point a Canadian lidaspeiite With this end in view a large tract of adjoining property has been secured, which will give ample space foracity. A large amount of capital is behind the scheme, and it is pro- posed to build there large flouring mills equal to those of Minneapolis for grinding Manitoba wheat ; pulp and paper mills for utilizing the poplar forest adjoining, reduc- tion works for turning the siiver ores of the neighboring mines into bullion, blast fur- naces, saw mills, and factories of all descrip- tions for the output of which a market can be found. Eventually it is intended to use a portion of the power for generating electricity, to be used not only for local purposes, ‘big alsc to operate the silver mines. The Port Arthur, Duluth and Western Railway is extending its lines two miles to the falls. A branch of three miles will connect the Canadian Pacific with the new city. Engi- neers are now on the ground to make a complete topographical survey, in order that the plans may be made as complete as possible. ‘Napoleon the Great. J saw Napoleon crossing the bridge of Lodi with the tri-color in his hand—1 saw him in Egypt in the shadows of the pyra- mids—I saw him conguer the Alps and mingle the eagles of France with the eagles of the crags. i saw him at Marengo—at Uim and Austerlitz [saw him in Russia, where the infantry of tbe snow and the cavalry of the wild blast scattered his le- gions like winter's withered leaves. I saw him at Leipsic, in defeat and disaster— driven by a million bayonets back upon Paris— clutched like a wild beast—banished to Elba. I saw him escape and retake an empire by the furce of his genius. I saw him upon the frightiul field of Waterloo, where fate and chance combined to wreck the fortunes of their former king. I saw him at St. Helena, with his hands crossed behind him, gazing out upon the sad and solemn sea. I thought of the orphans and widows he had made—of the tears that had been shed ‘for his glory, and of the only woman who ever loved him, pushed from his heart by the cold hand of ambition. And I said [ would have rather have been a French peasant, and worn wooden shoes. I would rather have lived in a hut with a vine grow- ing over the door, and the grapes growing purple in the autumn sun. I would rather have been that poor peasant with my loving wife by my side, knitting as the day died out of the sky —with my chil- dren upon my knees and their arms about me. I would rather have been that man, and gone down to the tongueless silence of the dreamless dust, than to have a pee Ha 3 im nation of force and murder known as Napoleon the Great, Robert G. Iugergalt, - ) acciagenamaaariats muon ero Ey en OE > sectaseinasaseanin. siting diamant inawaaan ita cmatinsiis wipeaialbn | tn - Fi pu F eect apenas ae ne a cre te me a mn Ps sas ma tesfn ie r a yh