= an ae a ee & YE PW clinnathncacctadediiae ta ee ac cttn tn Bartle! Le Eat AIDE BD . Pe Cat THE THE DAILY EXAMINER. > NOVEMBER 17 1888. Patriotism in the Pulpit. — << I~ the course of his sermon on Thanks giving Day, Mr. Carruthers, speaking ot! Canada, said ‘‘“Connected as we are with the Mother land. many of us fail to see that there is grow ing up here a great nation —in territory 600, 000 square miles larger than the United States. .in moral worth surpassed by no othe nation. I for one have no desire to see the link that binds us to the Motherland severed. But I cannot shut my eyes to the fact that in , short time there will be a nation here the Higher and higher is she ris gradually drawing to het the best, the hardiest sons of the old land; her great railways and steamboats drawing nearer to her than ever the east and the west. “In view of this, we should cultivate national seatiment. An enthusiastic love of equ sl of any. ing, country is one of the most pow erful factors ln moulding the destiny of any people. _No nation, ancient or modern, has ever attained No land, to the Briton, The same may and any other ant draws the vreatness without it. can excel his own native isle be said of Germany, France, eountry: that national sentime : together. people closer and closer " eatens us is sectional **The danger that ta pride. Every loyal Can adian must feel that the worst tendency of our national life is thac indicated by the setting up of Province, against Province. It was this that wrought) so disastrously with the United States. A solid North and a solid South ma le secession a bloody war inevitable. In! a solid Israel and a solid Judah that weakened the nation, an {im ude | them the prey to surrounding nations. Phe | auestions on the Pacific Coast, the North-west ner +} ; } ) le bec, wad woe possible, an I olden times it was erritories, in Ontario, the «questions wwer Provinces should be - ' us. It is here and on such 0 sions #5 is that true national sentiment can he cul ivated I religion of Christ, untting as 1t; l here that spirit is; ioes all hearts in oo here that spirit is; iltivated, which, when the hour ot triai; bad i] the mar owness ot! Mle S, ruso 8S ior . . ' cal jealousies and he ps ev loval **(,0d Di iif up its voic nd 8iy, ss our) Canada Cultiva this sentiment. Draw | loser to vou the land of your adoption, or | the landfof your birth.” Frown down the man | “ ho kr Ws DO love orc muntry. ‘* There are a few things this country can | lo without, but it has no use for the man, be | he Whig or ) word to! sav of his country, «ome other land **On the verge of Pray God omer .s } } country and hold her so ; ' } ry, Wno nas n ypoou und is forever i praising | : — | j Nationhood we honor ever dear. The sentiments here expressed are as as the words are eloquent. ly commend Mr. Car justand trae We cannot tvo high ‘Thanksgiving Day rutners teaching. fhe same lesson might fittingly be instilled soul to )Phe latter's i : , i 'and has received several accessions of | ritory, including the lonian Islands ceded|treatment of that He may help us love our} exhibitions he has been making of himself. | of human suffering. ua aks out of 1 r 4" ’ x —_ -_ -—: DAILY EXAMINER, [—Past one o'clock; the day bre darkress; Great morning star our hardness. II—Tis two! on season, [11—The clock is three! the bl doth merit The best ot praise from body, soul anc Varia. zi ameane 4 ‘eak According to some accounts England has appear, and bi been invited to make common cause with Germany in putting down the slave trade in Kastern Africa. Of course one 18 loth to discourage any effort towards the re- moval of this terrible curse, but it would Jesus wait this silent essed Three be well before entering upon anything like spirit. 7 ke sup- joint action, to be better informed as to} [V—’Tis, four o'clock when three make I : " : ‘tas ' ‘x- ication the origin of what is certainly an unex plication, | cities ; r , , , shat oK pected outburst of philanthropy on Prince The Lord will be ihe fear, 0 caslon. Bismarck’s part. Is it the single object of both powers to make short work of this traffic? Or is the secret-of the German detestation of it to be looked for in its m- terference with their own trading opera- tions? Whatever be the reason, itgwill be a cause for rejoicing if the slave trade is put down; but the wisdom of an alliance between powers actuated by motives which have no real or lasting resemblance, 18 to be questioned. The ultimate discovery that two allied powers have all along been going on different lines is apt to prove & fruitful source of quarrel. * * \-—Five is the clock ! five virgins were dis: carded, When five with wedding garments were rewarded. ; V1—The clock is six and I go off my station; Now, brethren, watch yourselves Jor your salvation. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. A Humane Socicty. Sir, —The Rev. John Read, at the close * of his sermon on Thanksgiving Day, very Milan has foilowed up the divorce | fittingly called attention to the need that (?) of his wife by suspending two Bishops | exists here (he might have said in every who dared to protest agaist the high-j}town in Canada) fora Humane Society. handed proceedings of the Metropolitan. | The good pastor did well to give promi- Fearing lest so many acts of impudent des-} nence to this cardinal trait of Christianity, motism should alienate his subjects, he has| which jis first merciful, and to inti promised an immediate revision of the] mate to this se'fish and covetous generation Constitution, and a thoroughly representa | that religion is something more than a mat- Sve Commission is to take the matter in| ter of talk. A Humane Society should be hand at once. something more than a Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, although King * * n that direction there is room for improve- * . In Greece and Denmark the respective For instance, from sheer thought- l Kings are just celebrating the twenty-fifth | ment. ; anniversary of their accession to the throne. lessness, many tie their sheeps’ legs toge- It will be remembered that the crown of | ther and transport them long distances in Greece, after being offered to a number of | that,way, the poor,sheep suffering agony all Princes, including the present] t The constant ill-treatment to European he while. Duke of Edinburgh, was finally accepted which horses are subject is too ap- by Prince George, second son of Prince parent, but there 1s another tield in Christian of Sehleswig-Holstein. A fort-|which there is need for effort, viz., night after the young Prince, who was}in the protection of the human animal. then only eighteen years of age, ascended | Fatal accideuts are of almost daily occur- the throne of Greece, his father became|rence. Take the case of McGregor, a most King of Denmark; so that both father and | estimable citizen who lost his life through son have now reigned for twenty-five years. | getting his foot caught in a railway frog on reign has been a decided gain|{the P. E. Island railway. These man traps for Greece. Not oaly has the country re-|are the cause of serious loss of life. The covered from the iawless state in which it] coupling of cars is a fearful cause of accident was when King!Otho}was deposed ,{but itfhas | and death. Then again, the annual loss of life made great strides in the art of eivilization, lat sea from ill-feund vessels and badly ter-} equipped boats, to say nothing of the ill- women and children by drunken fathers. The writer disclaims any * intention of censure on either ship owners in France General Boulanger has come] or railway managers, many of whom would by Great Britain in 1864, » * stand. | once more to the fore, in spite of the feeble willingly assist in efforts to lessen the sum For «a humane society He has been feted at a banquet, and has/there is a large field ; and who, in this turned the marriage of his daughter to! Canada of ours, with means and public political account. spirit, will take up the mantle of the late : ” x *| Henry Berg, who was not only the friend [t is very difficult to get at the real facts|of the dumb animal, but of the weak and which took place at the interview between] helpless of human kind. the Pope and the German Emperor. The H. F. Coomess. 1” erate comeremation. Cleécéliness in| Sztemt rumors are constantly receiving —- + a ee fresh additions. The Vienna correspon An Explanation. nxin to Godliness; so is love of country ;| gent of a leading London newspaper says <neniiie wd the clergyman who utters patriotic}that Prince Henry told the Austrian Im- Srr,—In your leader of last evening you sentiments is working within the lines of perial family all about it. From this re-| state, on whose authority I cannot con- his duty as a preacher of righteousness. port it appears that the Pope in vain tried | ceive, that the railway cannot supply cars Canada has not, it is true, a ** storied past , vast about ; but if her sons and daugh_ ters are true to her, there is iu store for } a. ae her « glorious future. — ——_++¢-e—_—__—_- —- ‘Basincss by Bail. lv is pleasing to learn, from one who knows, that the supply of cars is fully adequate to the demands of our merchants and traders, and that the complaints made to Tue Examever on that score are base- less. The fact that there is discontent the line—on the part of merchants of which al if and traders—is, however, one Tus Examiner may be better informed than the railway officials. Nor are we prepared— without a fuller explanation than our cor- respondent has afforded—to admit that it is wholly without cause. It is, for instance, true—if we are not wrongly informed— that the freight ona bushel of potatoes from Tignish to Boston is ten cents, and from Kensington to Moncton seven cents ! No doubt the comparatively low rate to Boston is due, in great part, to competition amoung the and that the saine sortof medicine would have a good effect Navigation Company. boston steamers, upon the gentlemen of the Steam But the gravamen of the merchants’ complaint against the railway is that, while the railway charges full rates for freight in connection with the Intercolonial Rail- discount Island boats and the way, U iakes a considerable or reduction for freight in connection with tho Boston steamers. We are free to admit that it is very ‘rapple practically with the matter, and that it is right to give traders dificult with Boston every facility which can, in justice t. this country and its interests, be afforded. Hut we think that if the railway tv make considerable abatements of freight by the Boston boats, it ought also to be able to afford to make de abatements on account of freight by the Steam Navigation Company’s and the Interco!onial railway. that is given with the goose wiven with the gander. —____~_- «$+ @ege—— Pauper Immigration. Tis assertion that the British Govern- ment have been shipping their paupers to Canada to get rid of them, is not borne out The London Local Govern- can 4bore on account cons! rab 0 sreariers J ne sauce Lett } Snouid Ye by the facta. ment Board have recently submitted a report which goes to show that only 411 children and 369 other poor persons were seat to the Colonies and the United States ‘uring the past year. This is a small showing whon the number of paupers to be found inthe Qld Country is considered. the Londou Times, in commenting on the to lead the Emperor to talk of che temporal | enough to meet the demands of merchants power. According to the correspondent Of] and traders; that complaint is rife anfong the Daily Telegraph, His Holiness is great-| business men whvse freight is delayed y displeased with the rudeness of the Em- | ajong the line; and that the railway officials peror in cutting short the conversation just] furnish cars for the transport of produce to when it was becoming interesting; but I] Boston steamers at rates more favorable think it may be safely affirmed that intet-|than can be obtained by merchants who viewers are not always on their vuard}are sending freight via the [ntersolonial, against hasty inferences from a silence] thus assisting to foster foreign trade at the which they think significant, and in this] expense of inter-provincial traffic. case the words attributed to Leo XIII may} Had you called at the Railway Office be- represent what the correspondent thought | fore giving currency to these statements, I he meant rather than anything actually | think you could have dedu'eutisfied that no spoken. reasonable cause for complaint exists. In : “< the first place, cars are being supplied as Your readers have, I dare say, often/readily as in ordinary seasons in come across curious old advertisements, but | the past, and with much less delay the following examples are quaint enough, | than last fall. Again, if complaint I think, to merit a place in this column.|js rife among business men, we They show the mercantile light in which| hear very little of such at the Railway the negro was regarded in America, while] Office, there being so far only one case in yet under British rule : — which a shipper complained of not having FRANCIS LEWIS HAS FOR SALE been accommodated with cars as quickly as A Choice Parcel of Muscovado and Powder ” Gamal to the more serious charge LX Sugars, in Hogsheads, Tierces and Bar- : : i rele :.Ravens. Dack anda N Ww of the Railway favoring the Boston steam rels ; ns, and a Negro Woman and] ri *incial in- Negro Boy. Inquire of said Francis Lewis.— | °™® t Gempeee See : New York Gazette, April 25, 1765. terests, I have to say that the —— - Ie day run away from John McComb, entirely a, = spaces Sail is Junier, an Indian Woman about 17 years Toh ov thas the ogy Nah otro h me th: t of age, pitted in the faee, of a middle stature, yey flut *’ this fall, ees wee b ‘ and indifferent fatt, having on her a Drugat, | W*Te it not for the ‘‘war of rates “now be- Wastcoat, and Kersey Petticoat of a light |1"S carried on between the two rival lines Collour. If any person shall bring the said | of direct steamers, and steamers and Rail- Girl to her master, shall be rewarded for their | way had charged regular rates, our people Trouble to their Content.—American Weekly| would nothave been able to place a bushel of Mercury, May 24, 1726. Island potatoes in that market this season, ‘ Female Negro Child (of an extraordinary unless at a cost which no shipper would be “% good Breed) to be given away; Inquire foolish enough to incur. The Railway of Edes & Gill. — Boston Gazette, Feb. 25, 1765. management arranged a through rate from + * stations along the line in connection with both lines of steamers, this fall, as has been dene every season in the past, in which the interests of the Railway required a reduc- tion to be made from regular rates; but the Railway’s proportion of this year’s rate is Here is an advertisement equally as curious as the above, which appeared in a London newspaper in 1726 :— ‘*On Tuesday next, being Shrove Tuesday, there will be a fine hog barbyqu’d whole, at)" ; ( the house of Peter Brett, at the Rising Sun ;| higher than it has been for several years, in Islington Road, with other diversions. higher than its proportion of through rates Note--It is the house where the ox was|to St. John, Halifax, Boston and other roasted whole at Christmas last.” poiats via Summerside and Point duChene. Barbecu’d is a West Indian term and} ‘Talk about opening the railway to the means a hog roasted whole, stuffed with| prejudice of our own line of steamers ! I spice, and basted with Maderia wine. It | say this: that until such time as the owners is related of Oldfield, a noted gormandizer | of these steamers, or some other corpora- of former years, that he spent a fortune of|tion or individual furnish better facilities fifteen hundred pounds a year in such ex- | for the conveyance of freight to che Main- pensive cooking as this. Pope alludes to|land than is now affurded, it is folly to this eminent glutton thus :— complain of what is belng done by the Bos- ‘¢Qldfield with more than harpy throat endu'd | ton steamers. It is a fortunate thing for Cries, ‘Send me, O, gods, a whole hog bar- the people of this Island, under existing becu'd !’" ; circumstances, that lines of steamers ply from here to Boston direct. Are you not There has always seemed to me to be|aware of the fact that at this season every something pretty about the watchmen of | year railway traffic is crippled to a greater old and their way of making known the] or less extent in this Province owing to the hours of the passing night. The following | lack of facilities for the regular transporta- —the manner in which the watchmen in-| tion of freight between Summerside and timated the clock at Herrnhuth, in Ger-| Point du Chene? What was the position many—will, I think, be interesting to your | of affairs at Summerside a yearago ? From readers : the middle of October until the close of ViII—Past eight o'clock ! navigation at that point, from five to thou ponder ! twenty cars or upwards of freight were left Eight souls in Noah’s ark were living behind by the steamer every day, the boat * O, Hernhuth, do _ yonder. on some trips taking as few as four cars IX— Tis — o'clock! ye brethren, hear it|from the railway. So great was the freight striking; blockade at this point that the railway was Keep hearts and houses clean; to our Saviour's liking. obliged to send instructions along the line not to forward any freight thither for some etl X—Now, brethren, hear, the clock is ten _and passing; None rest but such as wait for Christ ; embracing. XI—Eleven is past ! still at this hour eleven, The Lord is calling us from earth to + Heaven. X1i—Ye brethren, hear, the midnight clock is hamming; At midnigh? our great Bridegroom will es : ul ’ - ; Board’s report, says that ‘‘in the future as in the past our paupers will probably be with us,” and adda that ‘tthe notion that the colonies and other countries will absorb them has received no countenance in the report. There is plenty of room in sae er for ali the able-bodied farmers igisnd can send ua; bus we dv not wen any of her paupers. ? days. Even on the very day you com- plain of injustice being done our own line of steamers, the boat left five cars freight behind at Summerside, and this is likely to be the daily report from there for the re- mainder of the season of navigation. Rarway. The first instalment of Christmas Cards just opened at Lewis’. SATU Fire at Summerside. [sp c1AL BY TELEPHONE. | A fire occurred at Summerside about half-past eight o'clock last night in a barn on the west side of the Market House, used asa stable by Levi Silliphant. In about eight minutes after the alarm had been given the hand engine was throwing quite a stream of water cn the burning building, and in a very short space of time the steam engine Beaver threw two heavy streams which soon put the surrounding houses out of danger, and stopped what might have been a very serious conflagaration. Phe fire is said to have been caused by a spark falling from & pipe into some straw. —— Personal. Mr. John P. Brennan, Collector of Customs at Alberton, returned from North Sydney, C. B., last evening. Lord Stanley is trying to inaugurate a series of free lectures on popular subjects for the benefit of the working people of Ottawa. Cardinal Manning and other English Catholic prelates have sent an address to the Pope protesting against the Italian penal laws. Mr. D. T. Johnstone, of. Chatham, N. B., SDAY NOVEMBER 17, 1888. - —_ —— - ee ay Seasonable Goods va NS & STERNS’ ! | ~ Ix] ‘White Blankets, Hiorse Rugs, arey Blankets, Sleigh Robes, Bed Comforts, Far Coats, Colored Counterpanes,| Wool Carriage Wraps, Railway Rugs, Fur Jackets, merece resenignine Fine Display of Pacey Goods for Ghrismas Presents, [x] } who has accepted a responsible position with | the Charlottetown Milling Co., arrived here | last evening. He is accompanied by Mrs. | Johnstone and family. _~—eom + Our Advertisers Daniel Davies gives notice of an import- ant reduction in the price of gas. George E. Full wants 10,000 bushels potatoes for his starch factory. C. Lewis advertises a stock of picture mouldings. James Keegan, the well-known horse buyer, wants thirty or forty good horses. To-day. 95 OF ope, x READ THIS: LEWIS has the largest stock of Ameri- 1 L; can and Canadian MOULDINGS in the city, Wholesale and Retail, very cheap. Also—FRAMES made to order. novl7—3i THE PRICE OF GAS. A* a meeting of the Directors of the Char- 4 lottetown Gas Light Co., held at their ottice this morning, the following resolution was unanimously adopted :— Resolved,—That the net price of Gas to con- sumers be reduced to Two Dollars and Fifty Cents per Thousand Feet, on and after the first day of December next. and that no discount be allowed thereafter on the piyment of Gas accounts, DANIEL DAVIES, President. Ch’town, Nov. 17, 1888—-pat he guar WANTED! 10,000 Bushels Potatoes, FOR STARCH FACTORY. All sound kinds taken. Large and small not picked. To be delivered at Freight Shed, Charlottetown. FULL. d. HE Subscriber will be on the Island for a : few weeks longer, and will purchase about thirty or forty good Horses. JAMES KEEGAN, GEORGE &. novl7 —dy 6i wky li orses Wante novl7—dy 4i HE s. 8. “BONAVISTA,” for St. John’s, Newfoundland, w:!l be due at Charlottetown on MONDAY MURNING, !9th November, and will carry Cattle and Sheep on deck. For Freight or Passage apply to PEAKE BROS. & CO., nov!6—2i Agents. ere SS ye ET. OR ONE OR MORE YEARS, as may _ be agreed on, the HOUSE AND PREMISES on Dundas Esplanade, lately occupied by the subscriber. Immediate possession given. Apply to THOMAS MORRIS. nov16—3i American Baldwins. Y AUCTION, on WEDNESDAY, 2st inst., at 10.30 o’cluck : 150 Barrels Extra Choice WINTER. KEEPING BALDWIN APPLES, ex steamer Carroll from Boston. Ordered for positive sale. A.- McNEILL, novl6 Auctioneer. LECTURE Y. M. C. A. HALL, san AN IMBIERSE STOCK OF WINTER DRY GOODS AT PRICES WHICH CANNOT BE BEATEN. ——{x]}-— ” >» * * PERKISS & S'TERNS, Charlottetown, Nov. 14, 1888—dy & wky — — ~——-|x]—— ASTRACAN SACKS, SUPERIOR QUALITY. Beaver and Hare Capes, A LARGE VARIETY. FUR-LINES CLOAKS, LATEST STYLES. Beaver, Seal, Persian Lamb, Astra- can and Hare Muffs, SVLENDID VALUE. FUR BOAS AND CAPS, A LARGE STOCK. FUR TRIMMINGS, BEAVER, NUTRIA, HARE, &c. Mens’ Fur Coats, AT VERY LOWEST PRICKS. SLEIGH ROBES, AT VERY LOWEST PRI ©". All Fur Ccods, CHEAP, AT Charlottetown, Nov. 16, 1888—dy & wky ’ iNew Winter Clothing, now open, \Mecns’ Nap Reefers, —— —_—)— i¥iens’ Nap Overcoats, seboys Overcoats, AD AKT, LUNUQN rete Hats, Caps, sGuloves, Hosiery, LOW PRICES FOR CASH, a eo Molasses. Flour, Rice, Beans, Raisins, Sugar a Iw Stockett AND ARRIVING : 750 bris. Kent, a 50 puns. Choice TRINIDAD MOLASSES, 250 ‘** Howard, Choice Roller, mi) 50 ** ANTIGUA - 375 “ Jewel, ‘* Family, -S | 200 cases LAMP CHIMNIES, 500 ** Tadusac, ‘** Bakers, S | 200 gross WICKS, ima | Ogilvie’s Hungarian, Family, ¥ | | BURNERS, 100 bris. Hand-picked BEANS, 400 bxs. Cheice New Vaiencia RAISINS, 150 sacks RICE, 100 bris. HERRING, Monday & Tuesday, i9th & 20th Inst. THE FAMOUS ORATOR, JOHN R&. CLARKE, Wili Deliver His Celebrated Efforts: * Gough in Humor and Eloquence,” -—AND— *Rose, Shamrock and Thistle. 30 hhds. PORTO RICO SUGAR, 10 “* BARBADOES o 125 puns 200 sides SULK LEATHER, 20 tierces >» BARBADOES MOLASSES, 50 cases Orlando Jones STARCH, 33 bria. | 20 * NO. 1 WHITESTARCH, &c., Se 8,000 GRAIN SACKS, 300 casks KEROSENE, a =) ALSO-A FULL STOCKH OF Baking Powder, Brooms, Blue, Blacking, Baking Soda, Biscuits, Butter Salt, Currants, Cheese, Corn Starch, Cream Tartar, Flavoring Extracts, Mustard, Matches, Wooden Pails, Zine Pails, Pipes, Potash, Pickles, Rope, Paper Bays, Soap, Tea, Twines, Vinegar, Washing Soda, Washing Crystal, AT LOWEST WHOLESALE PRICES. Doors open at 7.15 p. m. Chair taken at 8. Admission, 75 cents, Tickets to Ve had at G. H. Hagzard’s and at the dgor. novi2 FENTON T. NEWBERY. Chartotietuwn, Nov. 14, 1888—lw ’