dete ge. Tie hg ne® wake See Fatal Railway Accident A sap acctpsnt, attended with fatal re- suits, occurred at Kensington on Saturday evening fast about half-past seven o clock. At that hour, as the accommodation tram iu charge of Conductor O'Connor was leaving the station, a painter named John Ramsay, belonging to Bedeque, but who has been working on the Methodist church at Kensington for some time past, under- took to get on board. In the act of so do- ing he slipped and fell between the station platform and the cars, and, while trying to lift himself up his arm came in contact with the car wheels. The arm was broken in two places—one break being above and one below the elbow—and the fleshy part of it was lacerated. After the accident, Ramsay got up, and, with very little assistance, walked to the residence of Dr. McNeill. Dr. MeNeill telephoned to Summerside for Dr. McKay. They held a consultation, and decided not to amputate the arm. The bones were set and the arm dressed. At first the patient seem- ed to be doing well, but, after a time, he grew worse, suffering much pain. About midnight he died. : An inquest was held, and the coroner's jury, after hearing the evidence, returned a verdict that ** the deceased came to his death by injuries sustained in trying to board No. 5 evening train for Summerside while said train was in motion, and that no blame is attributed to the railway authori- ties for the accident.” ++ O+e The Maritime Exhibition. Tue Maritime Exhibition at Moncton closed on Friday afternoon. It was very successful throughout. The following Islanders took prizes in addition to those mentioned in Saturday's issue :— Apples, Duchess of Oldenburg — Ist, John Robertson, New Perth; Permain Blue, do., do.: Golden Russett, do. do., 2nd; R. L. Greening, Ist, do,, do. Standard-bred trotting stallion, four years old and upwards—-2nd, J. A. Gourlie, Sum- merside. Standard-bred trotting stallion, two years old—Ist, T. A. MeLean, Charlottetown. Standard-bred trotting suckling colt— Ist, Allan McPhee, North River. In the class for roadsters and carriage horses not standard, the following awards were made :— Stallion, four years old—Ist. J. A. Gour- lie, Summerside; 3d, Henry Lane, Mount Mellick, Lot 49. Stallion, one year old—ist, J. A. Gour- lie, Summerside. Brood mare with foal by her side—lLst, Allan McPhee, North River. Shropshire ram, any age—Ist, Hon. D. Ferguson, Charlottetown. ne i. o 0. F, SESSION OF THE SOVEREMIN GRAND LODGE. On Saturday last, Zlst inst., the sixty- fiith annual session of this influential organ- ization closed at Columbus, Ohio. The session was held in the House of represent- atives. Delegates from nearly all parts of the world were in attendance. The festiv- ities were carried on in a grand manner, perhaps the most imposing being that of the grand parade on the 18th, in which over sixty Cantons of Patriarchs Multant participated, while thousands of the mem- bers of subordinate lodges and encamp- ments, together with the military and civic authorities, made the display a most mag- nificent feature. We condense from the reports the standing of this noble order at the present time :— Total number of Oddfellows on the globe January Ist, 1889, 1,341,279, fully one- quarter of a million more than that report- ed by the next largest civilized secret society. During the year, the lodges in America alone paid vut for relief of members $2,253-, 020.06; increase over 1887, $133,562.91; relief extended by encampments, $226,- 444.21; increase $9,809.45; by Rebekah Lodges, $21,815.76; increase $4,171.85. Total paid out for relief, $2,501,820.23; an increase of $147,514.21. Brothers relieved by subordinate lodges, 6,352, expending $1,640,513.18, for weekly benefits; $423,280.80 paid for burial of 6,413 brothers; 6,545 widowed families re- weived $191,380.00; 9,557 patriarchs receiv- ed from their encampments $180,080.08 for 63,559 weeks’ sickness, and 1,167 were buried at an expense of $36,091.04. Since 1830 there have been 1,575,637 persons initiated; 1,393,946 members and 176,608 widowed families relieved and 136, - 334 members have died. The total relief extended during this time was $48,601,- 862.09. Surely this is a splendid showing. PrOre New Drug Store, Mr. A. 8. JoHNson, late of the Apothecar- ves Hall, has fitted up a new drug store on the corner ot Kent and Prince Streets. The fittings inside are of solid ash with antique oak tilling. It is heated by het water and lighted by electricity. Altogether the ar- rangements throughout are very complete. rhe stock is new and ot the best quality. Mr. Johnson is a graduate of the Philadel- phia College of Pharmaey, and was in the employ of the Apothecaries Hall company for about four years. He is well known koth in town and country, and we predict for him a successful career. A ea Selegraphic Odds and Ends. A BUDGET OF GENERAL NEWS FROM PARYS OF THE WORLD. Vienna, Sept. 20.—There wes a heavy fall of snow throughout Austria Syesterday. Hundreds of peasants’ cottages were com- pletely snowed under. Much damage has been done to crops. Sr. Pererssvre, Sept. 20.— Newspapers in this city have been ordered to cease championing Boulanger and adopt a moder- ate tone concerning Bulgaria. This is sup- posed to indicate a desire on the part of the government for a peaceful policy. Panis, Sept. 20.—Thirty-two of the 259 Boulangist candidates nominated have withdrawn, and it is now too late to sub- ‘titute other candidates. New York, Sept. 20.—The business -silures in Canada the last seven days re- Maced -° and Russells agencies are “i,and in the cor i rede. responding week last Hatirax,Sept.20.—An eight year old son of John H. Barnstead, leather dealer. fell into the Northwest Arm this afternoon and was drowned in five feet of water in the ALL presence of his 16-year dld_ sister, THE D MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 1889. AIL ERAMINER, - - - — Just before the Imperial Parliament was prorogued, a most important announce- ment was made by Mr. Balfour regarding the future policy of the Government in the matter of Lrish education. ‘* Something,” he said, ** ought to be done to give a higher university education to Roman Catholics in Ireland.” He regretted that the Roman Catholic clergy had discouraged attendance at the Queen’s Colleges or at Trinity, which is now open to all denominations. ‘* But regrets are vain things and we must take facts as we find them ;” and the fact 1s, that in this matter the legitimate wants of the Roman Catholic population are net satistied. It has therefore beeome necessary to devise some scheme ‘‘ other than those which had at present been attempted” to do this. What renders this declaration all the more important, is that Mr. Chamber- lain states that it has been made with the assent of the entire Liberal Unionist party. lf Ireland is to be governed in any respect ou Irish ideas, there is certainly none which has a stronger claim than denomina- tional education. But there is no idea to which English Radicals are more vehement- ly opposed and it will be remembered that it was upon this rock that Mr. Gladstone's administration was wrecked in 1874. That this opposition has hot abated is shown by several speeches of the Radical members to their constituents, especially in those of Mr. Wallace and M. E. Robertson, who call attention from the real merits of the case by suggesting that it is merely a ministerial device for thrusting in a wedge between the Parnellites and their allies in Great Britain. ** A Romana Catholic prelate recently oa his way from Rome, was interviewed by the Paris correspondent of the London Daily News, to whom he stated that the report that the Pepe was preparing to leave the Eternal City most certainly was not true. The Pope has more faith than to think that the Church can perish, and to run away woald be to doubt God’s pro- mises. ‘*It would, moreover,” continued the Bishop, ‘* be impolitic. Princes who flee from fear of revglution seldom come back, and when they do it is with faded glory. The Pope is not only Captain of St. Peter's barque, but custodian of the in- finite artistic wealth contained in «his palace, and of traditional forms, the preser- vation of which enables Catholics to under- stand the history of their church and its action on civilization.” *_* The ‘‘New Review” is what its name declares it to be, it is literally a New Mag- azine, and claims favor among the many other magazines which save so many people the trouble of thinking for themselves, now- adays. The second number, which recently appeared, contained a very interesting paper (anonymous) on **Talk and Talkers of To- day.” The following, whether correct or not, is at least a forcible description of Mr. Gladstone’s method: ‘‘No image, except that of a torrent, can convey the notion of Mr. Gladstone’s conversation—its rapidity, its yolume, its splash and dash, its frequent beauty, its striking effects, the amount of varied matter which it brings with it, the hopelessness of trying to resist it, the un- expectedness of its on-rush, the subdued but fertilized condition of the subjected area which it leaves behind. The bare mention of a topic in which Mr. Glad- stone is interested opens the flood-gates and submerges a province. But the tor- rent does not wait for invitation. If not invited it comes of itseif, headlong, over- whelming, sweeping all before it in a seeth- ing flood of reasoned and impassioned elo- quence, and gathering fresh thought and fury from every obstacle which it encoun- ters in its course.” * & * The study of men’s names is as curious as it is interesting. Arbitrary as they seem to-day, they all had their source evidently in some fitting fact. Many English sur- names express the county, estate, or resi- dence of their original bearers; as Bur- goyne, from Burgundy; Cornell or Corn- wallis, from Cornwall; Fleming from Flan- ders; Gaskin, and Gascoyne, from Gascony; Hanway, from Hainault; Polack, from Po- and; Welsh, Walsh and Wallis, from Wales; Coombs, Compton, Clayton, Sutton, Preston, Washington, from towns in the county of Sussex. Camden says every vil- lage in Normandy has surnamed some Eng- lish family, Dale, Forest, Hill, Wood, and the like, are derived from the character or situation of those who first bore the name. The prefix ‘‘ atte” or ‘‘ at” softened to ‘‘a” or ‘*an,” has helped to form a number of names. Thus, if a man lived on a moor, he would call himself Attemoor or Atmoor; if near a gate, Attegate or Agate. John atte the Oaks was in due time shortened to John Noaks; Peter at the Seven Oaks, into Peter Snooks. Byfield, Ryford, Un- derhill, and Underwood, indicated resid- ence originally, In old English, Apple- garth meant orchard, whence Applegate and Appleton. Chase, a forest; Clive, a cliff ; Clough, a ravine; Cobb, a harbor ; whence these names. The root of the ubiquitous Smith is the Anglo-Saxon ‘*smitan,” or smite. It was applied prim- arily to blacksmiths, wheelrights, carpen- ters, masons and smiters and strikers in general. Baker, Taylor, Butler, Coleman (coulman), Draper, Cowper (cooper), Cutler Miller, and the rest, plainly denoted occu- pations. Latimer is from latiner, a writer of Latin. Lorimer is a maker of spurs and bridle-bits; Arkwright, a maker of chests ; Lander, contracted from lavandier, a wash- woman; Banister, the keeper of a bath: Kidder, a huckster; Wait a minstrel: Crocker a _ potter. Such names as Baxter and Bagster are the feminine of Baker; Webster of webber or weaver; which shows that these trades were first followed by women, and that when men began to take them up they for some time kept the feminine names. Stew- ard, Stewart, Abbott, Knight, Lord, Bishop, Prior, Chamberlain, Falconer, Le- gette (legate), either signified what the per- sons were, or they were given them in jest or derision, like the names King, Prince and Pope. The termination ‘* ward” indicates a keeper, as Durward, door- keeper; Hayward, keeper of the town cattle; Woodward, forest keeper: Read, Reed, or Reid, is an old form of spelling red, and was bestowed, as White, Brown, and Black were, to denote the color worn or the complexion had. Hog- arth, from the Dutch, means generous, high-natured; Rush is subtle; Bowne, ready ; Bonner. kind, gracious ; Eldridge, wild, ghastly. Many Welsh names,natural- ized in English, are from traits, as More, Ge | Dal, Mek | Veuginn, tle j Lane slender ; Mole, bald ; Gough, red. Sur-/ names. now apparently meaningless are from old English and provincial dialects. Boock, for instance, signifies badger ; Talbot, mastiff ; Todd, fox ; Culver, pigeon; Henshaw, young heron ; Coke, cook. —_— -_ Baseball The match game of baseball announced to take place between teanis from the Lawn Tennis Club and the Park Cricket Club came | off on Saturday last. Following is the score : CRICKET CLUB. AB. B. RUNS OUTS J Rundle, c...... 6 2 4 l N Rundle, p...... 6 3 5 1 W Murray, a 6 4 5 0 E Mellish, cf, .... 6 2 3 1 D H Robinson, 3b. 5 2 3 2 A H MeNeéeill, 2b,. 5 l 2 3 E Trainor, ss..... 5 ] 2 3 TG Thccssaes <n 0 0 4 B Marie, Hf... ...0- 5 a 2 3 Totals 49 15 25 18 TENNIS CLUB, E Ings, c........ 3 W A Weeks, jr, p 3 ® McDonald, rf. . B Newbery, Ib... W Stewart, cf.... J J Johnston, 3b.. W A O Morson, 2b H C McDonald, If E Cameron, s83.... BS | wet wwe o| —-ooer wenn oe) ocooceern= Ge | RO COR tom ae to Totals by Innings. cs 46434 Cricket Club 1 2 4 6 5 7—25. Tennis Club 112 042) O—65. Umpire—A. Thorne. Time--1 hr. 45 min. | AZINV LS LYCEUM. The Schoff Concert Company, Composed of Popular Artists, will present a CHOICE ENTERTAINMENT AT THE ABOVE HALL, On Friday Evening, Sept. 27th, A well-selected Programme, including Solos, Duets, Quartettes, and the sparkling Operetta, “DIAMOND CU DIAMOND.” Admission, 25 cents; Reserved Seats, 50 cents. Doors open at 7.30; begin at 8 o'clock. Reserved Seat Tickets and plan of dall at Reddin Bros’. Drug Store. For particulars see house programmes, sept23—-tidte pat APPLES. S we have had another Carload, we will \ weli at Auction again TO-MORROW, TUESDAY, Sept. 24, at 10.30 a, m. :— 70 Barrels GRAVENSTEINS and a few other varieties. E. H. NORTON & CO., Auctioneers, sept23 AUCTION SALE anaes IP Byannns House and Lot on Sidney Street, in Charlottetown. 1 undersigned is instructed by the Executors of the Estate of the late Cones Brace, deceased, to sell by Auction, on the premises, in Charlottetown, On Saturday, Sth October next, AT 12 O'CLOCK, NOON, All that Dwelling House and piece of Land on Sidney Street, Charlottetown, formerly owned and occupied as a residence by the late George Brace, having a front of 53 feet on Sidney Street, and extending back 80 feet, and is part of Town Lot Number Seven, in the Second Hundred of Town Lota. The House is in good condition, and the property is a valuable one. For particulars as to title, etc., apply at the office of Stewart & MacNeill, Solicitors, Char- lottetown. ROBERT BEAIRSTO, Auctioneer, sept23—dy eod AUCTION. * §XHE subscriber will submit to sale by Auc- tion, on FRIDAY, 4th October, at. noon, on the premises, West Street, Char- | lottetown, a Freehold House and Ground, | ** Westbourne,” with frontage to the harbor, giving a beautiful position and view, contain- | ing dining room, double drawing room, library, | 10 bed and@ressing rooms, linen room, tank > room, 2 bath rooms, with every convenience ; | secondary staircase and bedroom, kitchen | scullery, housemaid’s pantry, etc.; large cel- | lar and furnace, gas fittings, electric bells, | hot and cold water all over the house ; stable, | coach house, etc., ete. May be treated for by private contract be- | fore the sale, and inspected on application to the owner, W. M. RAYDEN. sept23—lw pd “OLD LONDON HOUSE," UST RECEIVED direct from Great Bri- tain, a large lot of Shanks’ Belfast Ginger Ale, Apollinaris Water, Soda do. Orders for any quantity promptly filled. JOHN JOY, sept23 Proprietor. Prime Labrador Herring. CONSIGNMENT of 50 Barrels of the} above, ae by the ‘ Princess Bea- trice” from Halifax on Thursday next, will be sold low ex steamer in lots to suit pur- chasers, HORACE HASZARD, spit LVYv YNDNINATO MON *Spoor) MOSSP[X) pue Jsjseysueyy ‘wopuo'y “00TH S.:NMOUE _ | Enormous Sale & Proviucial Exhibition BOOTS AND SLLOBS. M*s. AND BOYS’ WELLINGTON BOOTS of superior quality and bottom prices 3 Mens’ and Boys’ Laced Boots, for quality and cheapness unsurpassed ; Mens ca. Boots aiid Hand-Made Wellington Boots in stock ; French Kid, Oi! Goat, Calf, Kip, Buff, Pebble and Split Boots, at rock bottom prices; a snitable variety of Slippers always on hand ; Misses’ and Childrens’ Boots too numerous to mention, including Spring Heel Roots and Shoes. RUBBER BOOTS AND SHOES,—Mens’, Ladies’, Boys’, Misses’, Youths’ and Chil- dren’s American and Canadian Rubber Boots and Shoes in stuck; also, a case of Child’s Spring Heel Rubbers. . B.—The demand for our manufacture of Boots has so increased that we found it necessary this autumn to add seven new hands to our Factory. Call and see us. You will be welcomed, GOFF BROS. er ee eee eee es ee 20th September, {o}——-——— Charlottetown, Sept. 23, 1889. isin NN icin ——NOW OPENING AT—— PEREINS & STERNS. Charlottetown, Sept. 20, 1889—dy wky ———— ane — = = : = —_ ree eee —_ USE AMival ol Autum Goods ‘ism WE ARE OPENING BLACK CRAPES. BLACK CASHMERES, HOSIERY, BLACK PLUSH, COLORED PLUSH, PRINTED POUGEE SILK, Ke, Wc.. rO-DA ¥ Charlottetown, Aug. 26, 1889—eod eee Estate of McDonald, Me- Donald & Co., Sours. -artnership Notice. — % ‘ have this da utered into Partner- pre rces' GALE v¥ p ss B ul Attorneys, under —— Office in Nex c, opposite the Post ; ?RYENDERS will b ive nder- | ' sa a ae bis dae ; aig narlottetow! tii WED [LLLAM S. STEWART Ls signed t Unariotret > : — ® ; NESDAY, the 25th inst., at nooi } per bERL H. MacNELLL ' sons disposed to ler f i cOnow vag x M nve etown, Sept. 9, 1889, ing to the Estate o! McDonaid, MevVonalid A Septis—-ady lw wy im 4 Co., of Souris, P. KE. L.:— LOT !.—Dry Goods, Hardware, Boots and Shoes, Groceries, Miscellaneous Goode, | Wagons, Harness, Sleighs, Horse, Sate and Shop Furniture, contained on the premises at APPLES. Souris. oe we Debts, Notes of Hand, RB* AUCTION, on MONDAY, Sept. 23rd, 8 . 7 at 10.30 o’clock, a. m. :-— LOT 3.—Interest in Shop Premises at Souris, and all other real estate mentioned in the assignment. Inventories and Stock Lists may be seen on application to Mr. Reginald H. McDonald at Souris, or office of Carvell Bros., Chariotte- town, The undersigned wil not be bound to accept the highest or any Tender. Terms Cash, 100 Barrels APPLES, Gravensteins and other choice varieties. Sale positive. E. H. NORTON & CO., sept2l Auctioneers. Ww. KF. Mil. §. ; SVHE ANNUAL MERTING of the Women’s Foreign Missionary Society (R. D.) will be held in Zion Church ob THURSDAY and FRIDAY, the 20h and 7th inst., at 10 o'clock, a. m., «nd 2 o’clock, p. m. : i A Pubiic Meeting will be held on TIIURS- DAY EVENING, at 7.30, when addresser , will be delivered by Rev. Mr. Morton and & Mrs. Morton, returned Missionaries from f Trinidad, and others. & A collection will be taken, =~ A. A. MACDONALD, W. H. AITKEN, Trustces. Ch’town, Sept. 17, 1889—tl 25th Men Wanted. Ww want a Wood Turner, a Man to at- tend a Circular Saw, six to eight Benchmen, and four smart, strong Boys, MARK WRIGHT & CO. augl4—dy tf sept20