a cae Ce ive DottaRs A YBAR, WEW SERIES The Daily Examiner is issued every evening, by The Examiner Publishing Co. corner of Water and reots, Charlottetown, Edward Island. ae From their ollice, idreat George St Prince RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, $2 50 Three Months, 1 25 une Month, 0 50 aa Advertising at most moderate rates, Gontracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half-yeariy or yearly advertise ments, on application. ———— ANAC FOR OCTOBER, 1884. MOON'S CHANGES, igst Quarter Ist day, 7b. l7m., a, m, New Moon 7th day, 3h, 19m., a. m, vist ‘Quarter, 15th day, 9h. 8m., p. m, Fall Mova, 23rd day, 5h. i19m., p. m. Last Quarter, 30th day, lh, 45m. p. m. atv Pe nett — (Sun Sun |Moon|High | Days/ > OF WERK : a ; “ DAY OF WEEK i 2es sets | rises | water |len h | SS aftn hm | hm h maft'n Thursday (6 35 36/10 57| 3 45 11 33 gi Friday a $4|mora | 510} 29 SSeturiay | 6 321 0 251 6 37| 96} 4 Sunday 8 30 1 27) 7 52! 22 | §, Monday Y 23; 249) & 27 19 §\Tuesday | 10 26/4 1) 933) 16} q;\Wednesday | 12| 24) 5 12:10 14) = 12) giThursday | 13 22! 6 22)10 52) 9) 9 Friday 14) 20 7 29)11 28 6! 10) Saturday 16, 18 8 34'morn | 2) [1 Sunday | 17) 16 9 36, 0 “$e 59 | 12' Monday |} 1's} 14:10 34) O 4) 56 13 Tuesday | 20 13/11 26) 1 20) 53 | 14, Wednesday 21; lljafti4' 2 @O 50 | iThorsday | 23, 9 057| 243 46) 16 Friday 241 7| 135) 345 43] 17 Saturday 25, 8 2 al 450) 40) 1§, Sunday 27 41240'6 6 37) 19| Monday 1 2 23 971i; 4] Tuesday | 29 O 337'8 6 31 91, Wednesday 30:4 58 4 5) 8 50) 27 22/Thursday 31; 66 4 35) 9 31 24 | 93) Friday | $2; 55,5 7/1010 21} 94 Saturday 34 53 5 47,10 47; 18} 95 Sua lay | 35° 51/6 24/11 26' 15 26 Monday 36 50) 7 idlaft 7) 2) 97 Tuesday | 33, 45) 8 38) O 49 9 | Wednesday | 39, 47; 910) 136) 9] 29'Tharsiay 41l' 45,10 17] 2 28) 3} 30 Pridey 43, 44/11 26! 3 32 0 ZljSaturday (6 45.5 42\morn| 4 49 9 57 NOTES. The Dechess of Edinburgh’s birthday, the 17th. The battle of Trafalgar (1805) the 21st. Sir Stafford Northcote’s birthday (1818) the 2th. ls this month the mornings decrease 51 minutes ; the afternoons | hour, 3 minutes. — > $$ i —_— - - THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE, For the convenience of the travelling public, we have carefully arranged the fol- lowing table of arrival and departure of trains on the P. E. Island Railway, accord- ing to local time :— Going West. ai oe eh Charlottetown ............ 647 912 402 Royalty Junction.......... 702 947 422 North Wiltshire........... 7327 1039 509 ee... 747 1065 622 eg 812 1132 557 County Lime.............. 819 1143 607 TCs ccocccccccccell a Beane Om P. M. i ai eg 842 1222 642 OntEO. 0 chs 907 1257 712 Sammersice, . depart...... Sas Miscouche oe glial oa eae RRR: 1001 329 Port gma 1029 420 0 Leary i hm &é& Alberton hb anasscaeee 1205 657 Ns cock occecede 1242 747 — West. at ae I 207 647 ce 245 757 PANY coc eceeee eves eeee 29 9 02 SEEMED Seo cesses senses 420 1029 peilington Deri ses coo 449 1116 Sckc occ ccccscce ON En ae : atrive......622 WG Summerside, ; A. M, ee. depart......5642 112 667 Ns on «5 ols o oid 607 149 729 SRieiss occas ail 622 212 749 Se a 622 227.:388 SO Sees cee 633 237 812 unter River Edeeedoca tae 702 315 847 North Wiltshire........_.. 712 332 90! yalty Junction.......... 747 432 947 lottetown............802 462 1007 Going East. ait? DO. Vharlottetown pee cc cess shun anl 707 417 bins osecceeacuntae 743 444 Eun s secon ccaeme ame 804 457 Mount Stewarj, ) AFUiVe.......837 522 > (dopants cic ous 857 527 Ry... tee 942 556 St. Peter's Mb Ch ce dess cee 1015 617 “ed PS si 600. chu dae amen 1107 652 BMD 0 005000... conbldy snout 1157 7 22 SNNNRS.. . . 0'vs conn Jdaued 902 532 tdigan........ onan cine MI 1015 6 25 SES Ff 1037 642 rom East, A.M. P.M, ris TE th040 0 eb .ennn cul ce 64 212 a... 7 7 3 02 ng, ee 752 354 | RRR $14 427 Mount Stewart. ) AtTiVe......00 842 517 Bedf ” (Geparts..csses 847 537 a, TIN Wie + v0'tee.deawel de 912 614 Charlot ieee ceeeeceees 926 635 SO s és .0s bacuatimaeal 952 712 Georgetown VWss cccccdcecitibban 732 337 M end sscki, coepeiel Aen 749 400 POOWENe, .. 5. 00 chdescde $842 512 McLean, Martin, & MacDonald, BARRISTERS, ATTORNEYS - AT- LAW, Notaries Public, &c., BROWN’s BLOCK, CHARLOTTETOWN, A A. MACLEAN, L, L. B.|D. C. MARTIN, H. C. MACDONALD, B. A. July 4 dly—iaw wky3m her <n Che Daily Lanier. This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.””"—Evriripgs, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDW a pen ap MARK WRIGHT & GO., P.E. |. FURNITURE WAREROOMS, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. Oo— Furniture, Furniture AWAY DOWN! "0: INS in Dining, Hall and Kitchen : IMMENSE BARGA Furniture. CHAMBER SETS, in Walnut, Mahogany, Cherry, Elm, Ash, Painted and Grained, new patterns, good finish and posi- tively the Best Value ever offered. | CHAIRS from 40 Cents each, up. WINDOW FURNISHINGS, and Cheap. _ CHILDREN’S CHAIRS, Reed and Rattan Goods, Oil Paintings, Chromos, Carpet and Fancy Chairs, Parlor, Croquet, and Bagatelle Boards, Beds and Matrasses very low. SPRING BEDS, the Best in the World! :0 Drawing and Parlor oults, Superb, Elegant, New ! AND AT PRICES NE in endless variety, New VER BEFORE HEARD OF! :0 PICTURE FRAMING, Cheapest in the Dominion of Canada We are pleased to SHOW OUR GOODS to all, at all times VIARK WRIGHT & CO. Ch’town, Sept. 28—3aw wkly aT G H. HASZARD, Printer, Bookbinder, AND IMPORTER AND DEALER IN ALL KINDS OF ENGLISH AND -AMERICAN STATIONERY, SCHOOL-BOOKS, &C. 70: UST RECEIVED, THE FOLLOWING LINES OF FASH- IONABLE STATIONERY :-- The Crazy Edge Correspondent Cards, JOS DON COURT STATIONERY, LOPES oh in Hem-stitch. Octavo Note, and with ENVE S to match, ENVELOPES OPALESANTE CARDS.| FLORAL NOTE, with ENVELOPES. very Cheap in boxes, The Mother Hubbard Mucilage Bottle will never upset and can be hung up to desk, The Pocket Mucilage Bottle, very handy in every way. A Large and Beautiful Assortment of Memorandum Pocket Books. If you want something that will please ip every way, call and see my stock. THE PERFECT MUCILAGE BOTTLE. This i eal em and will always give ; canieaued . . : in a great variety of styles and very Cheap, ENVELOPES! ENVELOPES! by the Box of half or quarter Thousand, in all Sizes and Qualities INK STANDS, INK BOTTLES, Writing and Copying Inks, in CARTER’S, STAFFORD & TORIAY’S are the Standard Inks and are the Best. WEDDING STATIONERY. Oo I always keep in stock a large line of the Latest and Best Styles of Wedding Stationery, Ball Programmes and At-Home Cards, and will print at short notice all kinds of Visit- ing and Wedding Cards. G. H. HASZARD, BROWN’S BLOCK, QUEEN SQUARE. Ch’town, Sept, 12, *8d. ARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, GREAMERY BUTTER | TWENTY-FOUR CROCKS ied Choice Creamery Butter, F< DER A a, Dy A T BEER & GOFPS. Sept. 21, ’85. CORBA BRLND C£TLON TEA Something — Extra | In Original Quarter-Pound Tinfoil Packages. souchong, 18cts. a Package, Pekoe, 22cts, a Package, These Pure Teas are Worth Drinking. FOR SALE AT BEER & GOFFS. August 21. Pickling Vinegar and Spices, English Malt, White Wine, —AWD— CIDER VINEGARS, CHOICE QUALITY. BEER & GOFF. Sept. 41, 1885. AYER’S Cherry Pectoral. No other complaints are so insidious in their attack as those affecting the throat and lungs: none so trifled with by the majority of suffer- ers, The ordinary cough cr cold, resulting perhaps from a trifling or unconscious ex- posure, is often but the beginning of a fatal sickness. AYER’S CHERRY PECTORAL has well proven its eflicacy in a forty years’ fight with throat and lung diseases, and should be taken ix all cases without delay. A Terrible Cough Cured. “Tn 1857 I took a severe cold, which affected my lungs. I had a terrible cough, and passed night after night without sleep. The doctors gave me up. I tried AYER’S CHERRY PEC- TORAL, which relieved my lungs, induced sleep, and afforded me the rest necessary for the recovery of my strength. By the continued use of the PECTORAL a perma- nent cure was effected. I am now 62 years old, hale and hearty, and am satisfied your CHERRY PECTORAL saved me. HORACE FAIRBROTHER,” Rockingham, Vt., July 15, 1882, Croup. —A Mother’s Tribute. “ While in the country last winter my little boy, three years old, was taken ill with croup; it seémed as if le would die from strangu- lation. One of the family suggested the use of AYER’S CHERRY PECTORAL, a bottle of which was always kept in the house. This was tried in small and frequent doses, and to our delight in less than haif an hour the little patient was breathing easily. The doc- tor said that the CHERRY PECTORAL had saved my darling’s life. Can you wonder at our gratitude? Sincerely yours, Mrs. EMMA GEDNEY.”’ 159 West 128th St., New York, May 16, 1882. “TI have nsed AY&R’S CHERRY PECTORAL in my family for several years, and do not hesitate to pronounce it the most effectual remedy for coughs and colds we have ever tried. A, J. CRANE.” Lake Crystal, Minn,, March 13, 1882. “T suffered for eight years from Bronchitis, and after trying — remedies with no suc- cess, | was cured by the use of AYER’S CHEB BY PECTORAL, Jos=PH WALDEN.” Byhalia, Miss., April 5, 1882. “1 cannot say enough in praise of AYER’s CHERRY PECTORAL, lipving as I do that but for its use I should } ng s nee have died from lung troubles. . BRAGDON,” Palestine, Texas, April 22, 1882. No case of an affection of the throat or lungs exists which cannot be greatly relieved by the use of AyzR’s CHERRY PECTORAL, and it will always cure when the disease ip not already beyond the control of medicine.” 4 PREPARED BY Dr.J. C.Ayer&Co., Loweil, Mase, ures: g 3 ou in more money in one month than anything else in America. Your fortune if THIS OUT and return it to us with 19% or 4 3: stamps, and you'll get by return mail a Golden Box of Goods that will ou start Do gags NOVELTY CO., armonth, N, 8. may! OCTOBER 3, 1885, ——— Se a } Prohibition in Iowa. The following report of how prohibition is made a dead letter in-lowa is interest- ing :— There is a great demand just now amon wholesale liquor-dealers in Chicago for old the like. A dealer on Fifth Avenue was heada a few daysago. They were taken in- to the store, and an hour later taken out and hauled away on adray. Bits of straw protruded through their cracks, their tops were carefully marked ‘‘glass” and they were not too heavy for one man to handle easily. But they contained not ‘‘glass”’ only, as could be told by the broad smile which lighted up the dealer's face as the ungainly things were being hauled away. **You surely do not mean to say that you ship glassware over the country,” inquired a@ reporter. *“O, no,” he answered, ‘‘not that. You see, when lowa became a prohibition State the inhabitants had to resort to some new method of securing liquor. If we were to ship a barrel of whiskey to an Iowa dealer without having a permit to show the rail- road company it would refuse to carry it. Consequently, to accommdate all those who have no permit for selling liquor, we have adopted this method. To some we ship a hogshead marked glass. It is nearly all filled with straw, but in the centre is a neat little cask of liquor. Some prefer to have it sent as though it were groceries, while others receive it in old trunks, or even among an invoice of clothing. Many a clothing merchant receives a cask of liquor in his box of clothing and then quietly passes it out to some acquaintance or thakes it to his house. It is more ex- pensive to send it packed, as the recaiver has not only to pay for the liquor but for the packing and the trunk or whatever it is shipped in.. In consequence of this, per- sons living in Davenport have it shipped in barrels or casks to Rock Island, Ill, or those at Council Bluffs have it sent to Omaha, and soforth. They then put it in a boat and carry it across the river at night.” ‘‘Has the stringent law in Iowa had any depressing effect on the sale of liquor for consumption in that State ?” ‘On the contrary,” answered the dealer, ‘four sales have increased. They can’t pass laws enough to keep liquor from people if they want it, and just now lowans seem to want it worse than they did before the law was passed. Itis nothing to us. We are licensed to sell it by the Government, and if they want it sent in sham boxes it is nothing to us. But bear in mind it is not only ovr house that does this, but many others in Chicago ship liquors in a similar manner. We get paid for it, and that is what we are here for.’”’ a British Columbia Boundary Line. The people of British Columbia are again urging the Government to take steps to have the boundary between that Province and Alaska definitely settled. New mining locations are constantly being taken up in the vicinity of the imayinary boundary line, and it is feared that trouble may some day arise if the limits of the British territory are not definitely settled. The British Minister at Washington has forwarded to the Dominion Government a copy of the report of the Governor of Alaska to the United States Government regarding these boundaries, which reads as follows: ‘' The boundary line from Portland Canal to Mount St. Elias should be speedily and definitely determined by joint survey of the English and American Governments. This matter I deem of first importance Several highways in the interior of British Columbia begin within the limits of the district, notably the Suskeen River. I am informed that rich placers have been dis- covered on the head waters of other rivers, the Juno, the Lake Ann, the Chilicat, and unless the boundary is definitely deter- mined much trouble will ensue. It is pro- bable from what can be learned that the United States Government will be invited to co-operate and have a joint survey made next year. Nothing could be done until then, as no appropriation was made for the work last session.” HS 7 ——-—— Accidentally Killed. The Newcastle Advocate says that Mr. John Sinclair, an old and respected resident of Douglastown, was accidentally killed on Monday last. During the forenoon he went with a horse and cart to work about his farm, and not returning at dinner time, his daughter sent a boy to find him, but he not succeeding she went herself in search of him, and at last found him with one of the cart wheels pressing heavily on and against his breast, and quite dead, and the horse still in the shafts, but lying on the ground. The deceased was 77 years of age. Mr. Beecher on High License. The Rev. Henry Ward Beecher sends the following to a Rochester paper from Peeks- kill, N. Y. :—‘* Lam decidedly in favor of the insertion of a high license plank in the platform of the Republican State Conven- tion, because absolute prohibition is an absolute impossibility. High license is feasible and equitable. The moral sense of the community will sustain the demand. The result will be a greater protection of society from the evil of liquor selling than by any other method that can be enforced. ee A Sad Case of Drowning. Miss Floyd, of Sussex, N. B., was missed from her home early on Wednesday morn- ing, Ist inst., and upon search being made for her, her dead body was found in Trout Creek, a short distance from the houses. It bulistic state. years ago on the railroad when she was attempting to cross the track. grocery boxes, hogsheads, sugar barrels and | is supposed she was walking in a somnam- Her sister was killed a few) under the very shadow of the State House. SINGLE Corres Two Cents. VOL. 17.---NO. 115. Devotional Exercises for Catholics | His Holiness, Leo XIIL, has directed , that during the month ot October—from the first of that month to the second November —in this and following years the same de- votional exercises be observed as directed in the two years past in all public churches and oratories of religious communities; ' seen to purchase half a dozen empty hogs- ;namely the daily recitation of at least five decades of the rosary of the Blessed Virgin with the litany of Loretto. When these exercises take place in the morning, the mass is to be celebrated during the recital of these prayers; when they take place in the afternoon, they may be accompanied by the benediction of the holy sacrement. His Holiness grants to all present and taking part in these exercises and indulgence of seven years and seven forty days each time they shall assist thereat; which is also to be gained by those who, for lawful causes being absent from church, perform their devotions privately. To those who assist at such devotions ten times during the said month, either publicly in church, or privately elsewhere, and who shall have confessed and communicated, he grants a plenary indulgence; as also to those who on the festival of the holy rosary, or within tho oc‘iave of that festival, shall have re- ceived the sacrements above inentioned,and shall have prayed for the intention of His Holiness. =e Chignecto Ship Railway. Mr. Ketchum has succeeded in obtaining from the Government a change in the terms of the subsidy, whereby instead of $150,900 per year for twenty-five years, the work will receive $172,300 per year for the first twenty years on and after its comple- tion, and provided it be operated during the entire period to the satisfaction of the department of railways and canals. The change, while it will not involve any great outlay on the part of the Dominion, will, it is confidently believed, meet the views of the London capitalists, who are anxious to take hold of the work. Says the Sackville Post :— ‘Few public works possessing at once the magnitude and novelty of the Ship Railway, have gained in so short a time as ten years, so great a confidence among scientific men, capitalists and business men. Regarded at its inception as a most vision- ary and impracticable scheine it met either silenceor hostile criticism on the part of the press. To-day, the press of the United States as wel] as Canada speak in warm ap- proval of it,not only as an nndertaking that is perfectly practicable, but as a commercial venture of high merit. Those who have most closely examined its claims are the most enthusiastic of its advocates. Should the work be successfully consummated the Isthmus of Chignecto, will suddenly be- come a locality of world-wide interest.” _-__—_—_-< p+ -—___—_ The Scott Act in Halton. A correspondent visiting Halton, Ont., writes :—‘‘ [ called on Mr. R. M. Switzer, . P., of Palermo, a most worthy and in- telligent gentleman, who had been a resi- dent in Halton for nearly half a century. I am told that he was at the first opposed to the act. He said in reply to my enquiries: ‘There can be no question respecting the act having done much good in this neigh- borhood. Yeung men (giving me names familiar to me from boyhood) used to spend a good deal of time every week about the tavern just across the way.’ Said he, ‘I know that there has not been one drop of liquor sold in that house since the act came into force, and those young men are spend- ing their time at home on the farm, and are saving their money instead of spending it for liquor.” Monument to Gen. Gordon. Lord Tennyson has appealed to Canadians for subscriptions to the national memorial which is to be raised to General Gordon, The memorial will be in the shape of a training school for waifs and strays of boy- hood in England. One of General Gor- don’s greatest pleasures in life was the rescuing of boys and the training of them for sailors. A better memorial, or one which would please the great hero more, could not have been proposed. The appeal coming from Lord Tennyson, whose works have been enjoyed by Canadian readers with but little return to the poet himself, should come with double force. Mr. Geo. Stewart, jr., of Quebec, has been asked by Lord Tennyson to receive voluntary sub- scriptions. —— ———— The Use of Cream of Tartar. A person who went to his doctor for the fourth time to be vaccinated, former efforts having failed, was earnestly questioned by the physician, who elicited the fact that he was using cream of tartar. The doctor, it is said,told him that he need not expect vaccin- ation to take while he was using that. Cream of tartar is not, however, to be re- garded asa direct antidote to the disease, but it has the effect of preventing those feverish conditions which are favorable to catching it, and after the disease has been taken is admirable for a similar reason. —>- —-- The Use of Opium. A Boston morning paper publishes five columns giving some startling disclosures with regard to the use of opium in Boston. The reporters give the addresses of a nam- ber of resorts outside the usual Chinese dens where money has been lavished to fit them up in the most luxurious manner for their purpose. These places are in the most fashionable thoroughfares and heave been flourishing unsuspected for months Persons who patronize these gilded hells ‘move in the best circles of society.