THE DAILY EXAMINER. TERM ive DoLLuaRs A YEAR, NEW SERIES. Fije Qalp Examiner sod every evening by The | xuuider Publishing Qo- corner of Water and Charlottetown, Island. From their ottics, Great Lc streets, Pro Edward —RKATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— Six months neeseosee cosennuleun $2.50 Se ED. . oc ceneseesévecsed Festus .25 Chime MORE 2.00 ec ccvccccveccscccccese 50 Advertising a6 moderate rates, Contracts may bx made for monthly, quar- terly. half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, ov spp ation ALMANAC FOR SEPTEMBER, 1687, MOON'S CHANGES, Zal! Moon 2nd day, 7h., 0.2m., a. m., N.W., below horizon.) Last Quarter 10th day, llh., 50.7m., a.m., SE. New Moon 17th day, 9h, 47.5m., a. m., S.E. First Quarter 24th day, Oh., 5).4m., a.m., nN. W low horizon). D .. Sun ‘Sun | Moon! High! Day's DAY OF WEEK ' ’ rises/sets _ rises | water} len’h 1h miattr'nimora' h m 1 Thursday » Qoie 6 2610 313 9 2 Friday 27; 32 6 53/10 37 5 3 Saturday 23} 30; 7 1911 10) 2 ‘Sunday 29, 28, 7 43/11 40/12 59 5 Monday 30/ 26 8 Tiaftl2) 56 3 Tuesday 32; 24) 8 32) 0 4: 52 7| Vednesday 3 S38 @ i 6 4 §| Thursday 3 1 St) 46 ; } 4; 20: 9 3! 3} 6 619)10 7] 2 37 43 9 Friday | 36 712 10/ Saturday 37 7/10 49) 3 32) 40 ii Sunday at 15,11 39) 4 42 37 12! Monday 39 13 morn! 6 8 34 13} Luesday 41! 12) 0 28| 7 26) 3) 14) Vednesday 42} 10] 1 44) 8 29) 28 15|Tharsday . 3} «| 8} 2 57| 9 21 25 16| ¢riday } 44) 6 41310 7) 2 17| Saturday i; 46) 4) 5 31/16 48; 18 Is; Sunday 47] 2; 6 S50j}11 29 Ld :9; Monday 48) 0 8 Oj|morn 12 20; Tuesday 5015 58) 9 24) 0 10 8 21| Vednesday 51} 56/10 39] 0 51) 5 22) Thursday | 52; 54,11 49) 1 36 2 2:\Friday | 53) S2laft 53] 2 27/11 59 24 saturday i ot 50: 1 50) 3 26 56 25| sunday | 55| 47] 2 40) 4 42 52 2t | Monday 56; 45132116 7} 49 2; | Duesday 58} 431 3581719) 45 2s Wednesday 6 O| 41) 430; 815} 41 29; Thursday | 4| 39) 4 58! 8 52 39 30| Friday 6 2/5 36) 5 25) 9 37)11 36 i i } ' ' L. ARTHUR & CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, RECEIVERS for Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS, Poultry, Potatoes, Frmt & Vegetables. 142, 144 Commercial Street, BOSTON, MASS. May 18, 1887 B-1)-3-'T'-O- N FAL? ARK ANGENENT. THE PALACE STEAMERS (Wicd JATIOWAL $8.60. Leave St. John for Boston, via Kastport and Port- land, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at $.00 a. m. ' Fare from “Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd Class ; 29.50, ist class. For tickets and other information apply to @ A. SHARP, F. W. HALES, P. KL R’y., P. E. L. Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. ! Sept, BR wWWI—and wky } ee Direel, BY THE— j bitin, Halifax and Prince Kdward Island Steamship Ling = The Only Direct Line Without Change. | i ie | Charlottetown to Boston TRE staunch and commodious steamships Car- refraielent gt orcester have been thoroughly every Samlento, PO" into first-class condition in Sedna eres eee eee eee Of each ae o'clock, p.m., on THURSDAY enamon for Charlottetown every SATURDAY, pnzoellent Passenger Accommodation! Low | * This is true Liberty, when Free Born ‘len, having to advise the P ublic, may speak free.” — Eurripes. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 80. 1887. Sankruvt Clothing, t All ——0 —- Cul Baral A()Y? SUITS, bought at a sacrifice, will be cleared out at & prices that will astonish all. The natives have got to be surprised, and the only way to’ do it is to show them our Clothing and tell the price. All-wool Suits, worth $10.00 (just think of -it) only $6.50. Extra good Worsted Suits, worth $14.00, now $10.00, Coat, Pants and Vest, separate, at tremendous low prices. Try us, we can do it, and the goods must go. L. & PRO WSE. SIGN OF THE GREAT BIG HAT, 74 QUEEN STRERT. Ch'town, August 8, 1887—eod & wky { now MARK WHI —_—— 0 —-—_—_ New Factory---New Labor Saving Machines--- New Designs---New Wethods---New Prices. = ee While our Prices are Less, we claim that our Goods, for Design, Material and Workmanship are second to none. We do not make a practice of running down or trying to depreciate other people’s goods—ours sell on their merits. Ch'town, Sept. 17, 1887. PERFECT “TREASURE — 30: People using the WANZER LAMP say it is a “Perfect Treasure.” No Chimney to clean; ho Smoke; no Smell; big Light; very little Oil required ; better than an Oil Stove for Heat- ing Water, Milk, Xc. Indispensable in the Nursery and Sick-room ; Will save its cost in oil in one year. Now that the long nights are coming it will pay to buy Wanzer Lamps for the House, Store or Workshop. GOFRF Ch’'town, Sept. 24, 1887—eod & wky BROS, A GEN TS. Pickling Vinegar aid ples. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. English Malt Vinegar.—This is without doubt the Best Pickling Vinegar in the Market to-day, and as we import it ditect from London, England, we are prepared to give the best : oney. yao White Wine Vinegar.—We have lately received a large supply of this article from one of the best Vinegar Factorys 2 the Dominion, and we guarantee it to be strictly pure an unadulterated. Cider Vinegar.—A stock of this nice Table Vinegar FARES :—Cabin, $7.50; Stateroom Berth. $9.50, always kept on hand. ow fiiliy o mee for freight, which is always care- CARVELL BROTHERS, Agents, Chariottetown, Managing Owner, Jui Lewis Wharf, Boston. uly 21, 1880, FOR SALE. Hirntsoy LORING, ees US BHR + A SULTANA (base burner) Stove, used for two cheap. *** only, in perfect order; will be sold Apply to Sep, Naw Pickling Spices.— We have just received a large quantity of Choice Mixed Pickling Spice, which we can recommeud as a first-class article. It con aromatic seeds, and 1s m1xe It cont:ins sixteen different kinds of highly d by an adept in the business. QUEEN SQUARE AND KING SQUARE STORES. Hy J. CUNDALL. Ch’tewn, Sept. 6, iss7—eod wky | SURE. PROMPT. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. It is.as pleasant as honey. Asthma, which Iead to Consumption, have been Coughs, Colds, and | speedily cured by the use of ApaMson’s BAUSAM after all other medicines have failed. Sufferers from either | recent or elvenié coughs or bronchial affections, ean resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining speedy relief, Do not delay, cet it at once. FOR SALE BY ALL PRi CGISTS, Bottled at St, Steve NR the proy F. W. KINSMAN proprietors, of 47 AVE... N. Y. . WANTED. | .—SEA & LAND is the most popu AGENTS lar book of the day. Contains over 800 pages, 300 fine eauravings, and sells quick; low priced. One agent reports “25 sub- scribers for 22 hours’ work;’ another, ‘43 books jin 55 days.” Wemight quote others. J. Buel is ; tae popular and wel/-kKnown author. Exclusive | territory to active canvassers. For terms and outfit address: } W. E. EARLE, St. John, N. B., Manager. J. S. ROBERTSON & BROS., Publishers. August 31, 1887.—2aw & wky To all whe are suffering from the errors and n-iseretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c., I will send a recipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE. This great | Yremédy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self-addressed envelope to the REY. JOSEPH T. INMAN, Station D, New York City. | PUBLIC NOTICE, PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that it is my _ intention te apply at the next meeting of the City Council of Charlottetown to have my new Hotcl, in course of erection, on Water Street, exempted froin taxation under the provisions of the eightheenth section of the 48th Victoria, cap. 8 Dated this ith day of September, A. D. 1887. JOHN J. DAVIBKS, Sept. 15, oaw wy 41 H. W. VINNICOMBE, Instructor of the Violin, formerly of the Exeter Oratorio and Phi!harmonic Orches- tra, pupil of John Rendal, R. A., England. Tuition given op the [ustrament individually— jnot in class. Danclas’ conservatory meth ‘used. Age preferred—tweive lo sixteen years. ' There is an Orchestral Ciass in connection for i those that are sufficienuly advanced, free of } charge. : la } For particulars apply to H. W. Vinnicombe, } Fitzroy street, near st. Jamies’ Church. 1 Orders for riano tuning left at ©. P. Fletcher's, | will be attended to promptly. | N. B.—I have two fine old Violins fcr Sale, ; August 20, 1887. ar (altyae ORING EX SHOESBE ‘A nS KING: 78 4 PE PSOE ir FP A ERALS 2 GOLD MED 1SILWVER MEDAL S Bronze M \ en Sg ‘MM 18 DWDERED: Eee : Bese ak oh cele By A aU <i /” PURE:GOLD MANFG.GO.s9 Rem aglee ss eme sol BAe is27 = = = 1887, T. & EK. KENNY, Dry Goods and Sh'pping, HALIFAX, CANADA. Y & E KENNY. (F. ©, MAMON) Ship Owners avd Brokers, General Commission Merchants. i6i GRESHAM HOUSE, Bishopsgate Street, LONDON, E. C., England, Scott's and Vaughare Codes Mroh 29, 1¥87,, 4 os ~ oy ih EDITORIAL CORRESPONDENCE, | eopreguiiial Ottawa to North Bay In a0. P, R, Colonist Car. | WHAT WAS SEEN THERE Successful Islanders. ‘Some The C. P. R. train, going west, leaves Ottawa shortly after midnight. The train Tam travelling on is composed ot three Colonist cars, crowded with passengers, a first-class car not so full, and a *‘ sleeper.” Allthe C. P. R. cars I have seen so far seem, at first sight, to be quite new—so that the first impression they convey is a favorabie one. It is only after you sit | down, and begin to look around, that you \observe the worn upholstery and other |marks of usage, and mentally conclude that the new and fresh appearance must be maintained by the frequent application of paint, oil, varnish, and elbow grease. The motion of the cars is very easy. While they are dashing along at the rate of thirty-five or forty miles zn hour, [ am ex- tending my notes; and so smoothly do they move that, I flatter myself, the com- ,;positors and proof-readers will find the ;manuscript as plain and legible as mine usually is. To me the Colonist cars and their occu- | pants are most interesting. These cars are | cane-colored—bright-looking and _ clean. |The backs and bottoms of the seats are hinged together, and by asimple contriv- ance supports are furnished upon which the backs and bottoms of two seats can be drawn. Thus two seats can be changed into one first-class bedstead. For these improved bedsteads the railway furnishes at terminal stations cheap mattrasses, rugs, etc., at first cost, orthe passengers may bring their bedding with them and rest and sleep quite comfortably while journeying across the continent. Shelves about four feet wide, each six or eight feet long, are attached to the roof of ‘all the Colonist cars. These may be drawn ,down or thrown back at pleasure, and are used to stuw the luggage and provisions ‘immediately required by the colonist as he jtravels along. Inthe case of families, the youngsters sleep in them by night, while ithe old folks rest onthe improvised bed i below ; or when the cars are overcrowded (as they are at present) the young men and boys sit orlie onthem, while the older | persons and the girls remain below. Each car is provided with a lavatory, or washing place, and if the passenger is pro- vided with a piece of soap and a towel, he ‘(or she) may keep clean as well as com- | fortable. This latter provision is, however, thrown jaway upon a portion of the immigrants now | going West—Russians or Icelanders, | am told. Filthy and foul smelling, the car in which they are is an abomination, and will need a vigorous scrubbing after they are , out of it. . Very different is that which a party of | British Colonists has made its quarters. |The odor which greets the nostril is not offensive, the sight which greets the eye is must pleasing. There is an aspect of clean- liness and health about the British party. Good people these for the new country ! A number of young men are just out from London. They were quite disposed to exercise an Englishman’s privilege wher they entered the train at one of the junc- tions and found them already crowded; but they quickly subsided when initiated into the mysteries and uses of the shelves which the train officials drew down from the roof of one of the Colonist sleeper cars. I passed through these cars while their inmates were for the most part under the benign influence of tired nature’s sweet re- storer. Husband and wife, brother and sister, young men seeking their fortunes, girls seeking places—or husbands, elderly men and their wives to whom fortune had proved unkind in the East, here a young mother with three little children at her side,and in the next bed an old mother and her grown up daughter,—all locked in the arms of Morpheous, passing peacefully but rapidly to the Western land of promise. | went through the train again in the early morning, and found most of them at break- fast--drawing their supplies from well- filled hampers. A family of four had a small kerosene oil stove, and were, by its weans, enabled to have their ‘* coffee hot” as cheaply and pleasantly as when at home. Surely this is immigration made easy ! On thestrength of my observations I| would strongly advise those Islanders who may intend to go out West by the C. P. R. and who are not able to afford the luxuries of the sleeping and dining cars to provide themselves for the journey with a good hamper or valise full of provisions. To this add a towel.or twoand a piece of soap ; and if they should take the second class cars, a small mattrass and a few rugs. The latter can be obtained at the station in Quebec for a dollar or two. Before morning dawned we had passed Arnprior (where there is a marble quary,) Carleton Junction (population 3,600,) Ren- frew, (population 2000,) Pembroke, (popu- lation 4000,) and several other villages and stations. 1 was informed that the railway for some distance past Carleton Junction, lies through a fine farming country ; but I could not, of course, see it in the darkneas. We had reached Chalk River before it was possible for one to note the features of the country. By the way, the station master at Chalk River-—as | afterwards discovered ~~is an Islander, Mr. Hayden, of Charlotte- town. The countr Mattawa is hi between Chalk River and antl rocky With low sedgy SINGLE Copres Two CEnTs. VOL. 21.—NO. 110. flats at intervals, and there a spot of earth cul- tivated or capable of being cultivated : though one wonders how farmers could be fond to settle down in such places while an abundance of good land can be had, east and west for the asking. To my mind, the country here resembles Nova Scotia very strongly indeed ; and it is,like Nova Scotia, rich in minerals. Mr. James Hughes, of Charlottetown, is now in this vicinity as- sisting ia the development of mines of gold and crystallized phosphates. As far west as Mattawa the railway fol- lows pretty closely the course of the Ottawa River. The site of Mattawa is for all the world like that of Windsor Junction, near Halifax. But west of Mattawa the railway leaves the Ottawa, striking westward to- wards Lake Nipissing, and we soon enter a better section. A tine growth of wood begins to appear; rocks are not so often seen. As we approach North Bay the Islander might almost fancy himself home again. The lay of the land, the character of the forest, the tall birches, the fir, spruce, juniper, hemlock and cedar are the same; the raspberry bushes and thick underwood on either hand are the same; the stumped fields, partially ready for the plough, passed from time to time, are the same. But the gray rock, cropping through the soil here and there, and the yellowish gray sandy soil, which appear on the edges of the road-bed, dispel the illu- sion, if it has been entertained. The last man with whom [ shook hands at Ottawa was Mr. John Wellington Hughes, lately of County Line—now a transient, or, it may be, a permanent resi- dent of Ottawa. By a curious coincidence, the first man by whom I was greeted on my arrival at North Bay, was his son, Mr. Mortimer Hughes, who is a clerk—and a highly respected and rising clerk—in the Station House, at this place. Mr. W. E. Bagnall is also here—chief of the staff of train dispatchers stationed at this import- ant terminal point. 1 was not long in find- ing him out; and at his kind invitation “stopped over” for a day and a night. WwW. L. C, here and LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Those Passes. Sir,—The public was informed, through the newspapers, that passes would be issued on the P. E. Island Railway to Exhibition Commissioners attending the Prince and the King’s County Exhibitions, Acting on this information, several Commissioners applied to the Secretary of the Provincial Exhibition, Mr. A. McNeill, for the passes aforesaid. What was the result? It turned out that these passes were only intended for Queen’s County Commissioners—and for Prince and King’s County Commission. ers, tov, providing the latter saw fit to go to Charlottetown and leave and return by special train at 90o’clock a. m., for their respective County Exhibitions! “Tis ever thus. Everything isdone to accomodate Queen’s County, while Prince and King’s are compelled to play secund fiddle. We don't begrudge the Lieut. Governor a special car, but thereis no necessity of giving in connection with it a special train for the accommodation of Queen’s County Com- missioners and « few of their friends, Such av arrangement amounts to*this : Charlottetown Exhibition Commissioners, &c., can travel free to Prince and King’s County Exhibitions, while the Commission- ers residing in those two Counties cannot attend their own County Exhibition with- out having to pay, if they go by train, the full fare exacted on such occasions. Why not treat all Exhibition sioners alike? A special train costs about sixty dollars aday. In the way of dollars and cents then the special from Charlotte- town is no saving to the Government; and besides if that amount were expended in providing passes for bona fide Commission- ers on the regular trains, it would be much more like fair play to those who happen to reside outside of Charlottetown. The fact is, there is no need train to Summerside and Georgetown on the day of the Exhibition. Give the Lieu- tent Governor a special coach by all means. He is worthy of it. He would not, how- ever, object to travel by the regular train. In any case, free passes should be made available to all Commissioners, city and Commis- of a special country alike. Either this, or do away with the passes altogether. Yours, a AJP. Sept. 29, 1887. Crop Prospects and Other News. Sirn,—As | see by ,the Summerside Journal and other western papers that par- ties are giving accounts of this years crops it might not be out of place to hear from the south end of Queen’s County. Thehay crop, to begin with, much better than last year, as some that only had a box cart load then have housed lifteen tons this season. The wheat has been fair, the Messrs Sqnarebrigs having thrashed two hundred bushels. The oats have turned out more bushels than stooks. There are some complaints about the potato crop, as we had prospects of an abundant crop, but in digging find a shortage to the acre. Tho turmp crop is somewhat light, as the majority of the peo- ple had to seed the second time owing to drouth. The Dominion pier, which is now almost completed and ready for shipping upon, has undergone a thorough repair under the supervision of Hector D. Morrison, The shipping of produce has commenced, and would no doubt be largely carried on here had wethe pleasure of having the steam dredge tu improve our harbor, which Belfast had the promise of if William Welsh got a seat in the House of Commons. The seat has been well warmed, but the sand has not been removed. has been erop LBEeLPrastTEr. Pinette, Sept. 26, 1887. wee ron ean A AA tn ce ih yl ep