‘an , ° =. . . . 9” ; - THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OV -TUBER 27, 1897 | = : — — : : : . } ; MEMBER Ottawa in his seventy-sixth year, suffering | NOTES AND COMMENTS. | MATRIMONIAL. —— a , , RIMON —— | and broken, on the warm May eveniog in — ia : Be . | - 22h BEB ee Ae eee ae Be ee “ wens. : st eix v’viock s morning Ip } 62422252 S224 Bae a a BL = Ss = & RE | 1891 when be came home to die. In the —Mr. Willard said m the course of his t At halt j ast tix Yelock this morning in A aepphaaniil z | third paragray bh of bis first electoral address | receut speech at Toronto that “there is no } * t, Peter's ee a s a i the af See =: = r ; ’ » | r , ’ 3 ardiver S-qui : Se EN | ee Sew eee yen CNOee SE “I | man whom women bonor 80 deeply and | se ae » Aerts p 1 7a ' ’ 14 “ ot ‘ therefore peed scarcely state my tirm be- sincerely asthe man of chaste life, the | au 1 liss Minuia ‘ mer, daugoter 0 » lief thet the prosperity « f Canada depends man who breasts the bulfeti gof tempiation | the i.te hief Just “ almer ‘ large | sad } A 6 4 > : . . 99 : te ri di ¢ “ \- j 6 | upon its permasent connection witn the | “like some strong swimmer in his agony, pumberof interested friends an 2 aattt ii» i | I udy i! ‘] ‘ » L SLOCK | es repres . ee i en t DY . (HB DAILY BXAMINER.. So OCTOBER 27, (897. THE NEW GOVERNMENT. of Hou. forenoor 9 Mr. Peters’ resigna- His Lieutenant-Governor immediately Hon. Mr. Warburton to administration. The task was immediately tbl was t(iw re eipt tion, this Honor the called upon form a new uneertsken, sand atthree o'clock afternoon the new Administration eworv in. It is composed of,— Hon. A. B. Warburtor, B. A., D.C. Premier. Hon. General. Hov. J. R. McLean, Public Works. Hon. Angus MeNil'an, Commissioner of Crown Laods and Provincial Secretars- Treasurer. W ithoat portfolio :— Hon. J. W. Richards, Bideford. Hon Hon L., H. C. McDonald, Attorney- Commisioner of -B Rogers, Charlottetown. . P. MeNatt, Maipeque. Hon. Anthony McLauchian, St. Peter’s. One seat in the new Cabinet remains unfilled. The sew Attorney-General only will have to go tothe country for re- election. +++ -“- MR. PETERS’ RESIGNATION. Mr. Perers waited upon His Honor Lieutenant Governor Howlan this forenoon aod delivered up the seals of hi- «flice as Premier and Attorney-General wf the Province. We have not yet heard that he has resigned his seat ia the Legislative Assembly. But, practically, he is out of politics. Thisisafact upon which we may congratulate both Mr. Peters and the public at large. Mr. Peters is no naturally a politiciao; and bis training base been rather that ofa lawyer than a states - man. He cannot bave bad unalloyed enjoyment throughout the period in which he has been atthe head of the Government, aod we feel sure that he will te glad to escape from the position of Premier, in- fluential though it is and powerful in it as he has proved himaelf to be. Upon the other hand, the people at large will rejoice thatan administration whieh must ever be associated in their minds with public debt and public taxation is no more. At the same time, we feel assured that they bear Mr. Peters no personal ill-ill aud that they will unite with Tue Examiner in the hope that bis namewill soon be added to the long iist of successful Islanders abroad. ere LADY MACDONALO’S LIFE OF SIR JOHN. No man bas lived in Canada whose caree was so completely in the public eye as that of Sir John Macdonald. Yet there are some points in it npor which his wife hes thrown some additional light in the short and well-written article "which las just been published. Referring to her husband’s early struggles Baroness Mac- donald says: “Practically bread-winning for the family fell to the hard-worked lad. He studied law, sat in an office, and ran home early to belp in the little home. There were breaks sometimes of course in the daily routine, when young neighbors met together and amused themeelves ; but for the most part-it wasa stern life, full of care and business, both further weighted with scanty means and sad want of op- portunities. The boy’s promise was only slowly realized. Seat to help in a country law firm when about twenty years old, he did well and made new friends, life Zradually brightened and enlarged as experience and income increased. He grew prominvert aod popular us years went on, and after being called to the bar, opened a law office in Kingston, started on his own account, rose steadily in his profession, made money, @od interested himself in politica. Sir John’s first visit to England was in 1842, a year after his father’s Toate and soon after bis return to Canada he was elected 10 sit for Kingston in the Legisla- tive Assembly of the two provinces, of which at that time the now far stretch- ing Dominion of Canada was alone com- poeed.” Of the difficulties by which he was beret and the triumphs which he won late: in life, she says: “For nearly fifty eonsecntive years he sat ip that Parliameut, entering the small legislative chamber in Mont a hearty young man of twenty-six, ful] of . hope, courage and iatention, creeping from the | Quarter it nay come) which may tend lo } @2na &ut | General hima of ' | } more splendid House of Commons at Mo ber Country, and that I shal) resist to the utmost any attempt (from whatever aod makes the port of perfect self-coniro:. —The S:. John Sun notes the Guardian’s remarks anent the “moral elements” in the Liberal party here, and remarks that “this is not only an iutimation that the | Warburton pariy are opposed by tbe moral! the community, ' but ahint that the Farquharsen party will weaken that uniov.” Through all the fever, th* struggles, the ssand fear-, dappolotments JOYS Boa SoTrToOWws, ADxielies aud rewards of those long, busy years, this battles, hop es-e8 and prudent element in fixed idea of a united empire was 216 not submit to the domination of the other. guiding star and inspiration. 1, who ca Che situation grows interesting.” speak with something like authority ot : : this point, declare that I do not think any —Montreal Gazette: When the frost is man’s mind could be more fully possessed | 09 the pum} kin, and the corn ia im tbe ah overwhelmning strong principle than | SHOCK, and ihe covuipess of the fall is lit was this man’s mind of this principle. | with the brightness of the summer Fup, was the “Empire,” snd**England’s prece- | ‘©?! pwed shrough av autumo haze, whep jent,” always, in things greatand smal:— he g s vet green and the hills and wus are lazing r = from the pattern oO: @ ceremobpy, OF epeliing ofa word, to the tharpeuiug o! laws and the modelling of a constitution. With a courage at once fierce snd gentle, { °°! the | we in scarlet and gold,when every breath of the air is asa new breath yf Ife, incentive to walk in the try is tible—then if ever are tdays, and October’s glory crowns the year. and the °Te@si- generally in the face of tremendous oppos tion, often against dangerous Odds, he car- ried measure after m»asure in the Canadian Parliament, each measu:e a Stone Iu the ed.fice of the empire wh.ch he so paseion ately believed in and was sojprond to help build rear. As List po it cal —The Montreal Gazette remarks thet it 8 & poor election inibe United States that Great Britain not get drubbed in. She is catebing in the New York aoes it bot and bis mavyoraity contest, utterance was the corner - o the com- | s-eking votes forthe Platt machine by pi-tion of the ( snadian 1s . sbailway referring to Croker, the leader of she might be consider sae ‘OP | Tammany hoste, as the friend of the stone «Of @ lifetime’s steaty WOrk. | Prince of Wales. Another is working up For ten years be fought that railway baitle with the skill, perseverance, aud ability of which oo history can tell,—o! course, in every way and at all times aided, strengthened and encouraged by the colleagues and friends he cherished, aod the supporters in whose intelligence and fidelity Sir Jobn had so firm a trust. No one disliked more than he did the with- holding of credit where credit was due, and agaiust nothing did be strive more carnest- ly chan that selfish assumption of one- man power which he migh! not uonatural- ly have been supposed to claim. Concerning his personal character she says: syropathy for Van Wyck, the Tammany nominee, by representing that his success will be a great step towards sending British tyranny to hell. It ia a somewhat difficu! task that is put on the voter of the metro- polis of Amerivan trade, that of finding out where hisdaty to his city lies when the guide posts are so divergent. _— << - <p UNCLE SAM’S PROFITS, The placing of corn on the free ligt has been advaniageous to the United States producer. He gets the Canadian market, and the Ontario farmer is as a consequence hit in the price for bis oats, which is three cents per buebel less than at thie time laet year. Ca: adian artieans are ruled out of the United States, but United States artisans have the freedom of the Dominion. Canadians cannot hold United States Government contracts; but the contracts for printing bank notes and for bnilding locomotives have been given to United States firma, our own people not being permitted to contract on even terms. Ontop of all this we have the log quettion. ‘Lhe Ontario Government has so handled this matter that Michigan booms while Ontario suffers. if “He thoroughly believed in patience and perseverence,” which we are told “con- quer a)] things,” and had bis temper absolutely under control. Whea he show- ed anger I believe it was used as @ weapon and very seldom because be could not help it. Attimes when I knew be was most anxious and worried, he would sit in par- liamect listening to the greatest provoca- tion with an air of placid content; and as years went on,from my constant seat in the speaker's gallery at Uttawa I noticed bow still more averse he became t any display of irritation or impatience. In all the political situatios preceding Confed- eration, “Jon A,” as he was called then by friends aod foes alike, continued to be the central fignre. One can recal! It is to be feared that there is bad mau- him, elways apparest!y unconscious, | agement, anc » good deal of it somewhere. though noticed everywhere, careless, | —Mail and Empire. debonoa'r, fail of life aud fuo, a tall, slight, rather restless figure, which seemed to attract others as it moved about. He sftected no importance at any time, not eve: in. his most sueceseful hours, and yet, in a strauge way, mavaged to keep alvof, to ayoid over-interruption, and to tind time for constant reading, sides the never- endingstrainofwork. After Couf-aeration, in 1867, when he returned from Bazland and tock a tul.er responsibility in # mure enlarged sphere, nv One can testify b-tier than I to the enormous pressure of busi- ness he was capable of, acd managed s0 effectively and brilliantly to do. A _ hoet of pew subjects occnpied his attention, each to him of absorbing interest. It is no eXaggeratien to say that the nation he was’ building up now looked to him and him alone for the perfecting of the scheme he Ladies Hats—Another lot today.—T. J. Harris. 104 feet gauge, 14 hay bale ties in stock at the City Hardware atore.—R. B. Norton & Co. 250 21. =— ees OPERA HOUSE Friday Evening, October 29th The only production Canada of DAN STEWART’S had proneered and carried through amid WONDERFUL @ountless difficulties. What Sir John called in the later years “plain sailing” VERISCOPE PICTURES seesned to me, atthe time, very difficult navigation in very troubled waters. Every detail was on its trial, and every move had —OF THE— to be watched and tested with greatest care; each province fought ite own baitle, aod it was above sl] Sir Johu’s task to draw and weldthem together. I, who watched them during the proéess, knew well what work, early and late, what long nights and anxious days it cost him, while all the time his cheerfulness and courage were unabated, even when unexpected difficulties stared him in the face.” Certainly there ie much in the life of Sir John Macdonald that is .worthy the consideration of the ambitious youth of th present day. CORBETT-FITZSIMMONS Contest at Carson City, Nevada, March 17th, 1897, i AN ELECTRICAL TRIUMPH, A faithful representation of the World’s Greatest Fistic Encounter. The, only genuite production of the Famous Battle. Tickets on sale Thursday morning. Prices 25 and 25 cents. _ — oct27-— lite is short Hnjoy the comtort of perfect fitting Mattress. One that will fit your body and make your weary bones rejoice. We have them. We make them, We sell them. Mark Wright & Co, Ltd HOME MAKERS. One set of patriots is wiebers gathered to witness the ceremony which was performed ‘v Rev. James Simpson, M.A, Priest Luc rmnbent, assisted bv Rev. Hibbert H. Roche, of the diocese of New Jerzey, cousin of the brite, who read the open. ng address n th- sarriage service and the exbur.ation wi ii wich it conciudes. The chancel ele pd and the entrance to the sanctuary were decorated with palms aod other potted plant-; and the aliar was br ght with cut flowers and lights. The service was fully choral and heartily sung. The bride who was iv her travelling dress, was attended by Master Kenneth Richards as page, ard was giyen away by her brother, H. James Palmer, Es4, S M. The guerts includel Lue intwediate relatives aud friends of the bh ji eand the members of the Women’s Guild of St. Peter’s§ot which she is e member. Mr, and Mre. Gardiner set ut on their journey as man and wife attended by the good wishes of the community, to which Tue Examiner sincerely joins. | They will visit Boston and New York and spend the coming winter in Jamaica. Woile in the vestry afier the ceremony a telegram of congratulation was received vy the bride and groom from her siete Mrs. Canning and Miss Palmer in London, England. rs A MICKOBL’s WORK. A microbe is about the emallest thing one meets in a day’s journey, but it can do moreharm for its #:ze than auything known. Boils, pimples, ete., are simply m crobes in the skin which cause irrita.ng biood disorders, if not stopped at once; and it is they that prevent wounds healing also. *“Quickcure” kills the microbe immediate. ly afier application, and any sore beals rapidly where “ Qickcure” is used. eter Montreal Gazette: It is learned from the Libera! press that the appointment of Dr. Fiset to the Senate is a part of the move- ment to reforin that body. Dr. Fiset is a Liberel who replaces a Conservative. The Sevate will be reformed, evilently, in some people’s minds, when toere are no Tories ieft in it, Nervous people fiod relief by enriching their blood with Hood’s Sarsapariila, which is the one true blood purifier and nerve tonic. THINK — OF THE WINDSOX FIRE then take out a policy in the PHOENIX of Hartford. Cash Assets over $5,000,000 wr. H. BEER, Great George Street AGENT FOR P. EF. ISLAND LIFE. ACCIDENT. FIRE. ForSale or to Let “ SIDMOUNT.” The beautiful residence of the Hon. F. Peters for sale or to Tet. This property comprises 20 acres excel- lent land, with large and commodious dwelling house, aed outbuildings, all in good repair. The house is fitted with modern improvements, having hot and cold baths and heated with hotwater, and lighted with electric light. The grounds are beautifully Isid out aad planted with ornamental trees. If notsold by private sale, it will be sod by auction on Tuesday, the 9th day of) November, at 2 o’clock p. m. —alLso— Ooe driving mare, one superior eow, carriages, sleighs, robes, hai nese, farming implements, and a lot of hay and straw, etc., ete. The extensive sale of superior furniture will take place the following morning at 10 o'clock, R. BEAIRSTO, Auctioneer. oct 20 GREAT CLEARING OUT SALE SUPERIOR FURKITURE, For Sale By Auction I am instructed by the Hon F. Peters to sell by Auction at his residence, Sidmont on WEDNESDAY, 10th NOV., Next, commencing at 10 o’clock, a. m. All his household effects comprising Superior Piano, Drawing Room, Dining Room Hall, Bed Room and Kitchen Furniture. Terms cash. R. BEARISTO, Auctioneer. ect 26 | i f «tl Blankets Were Nover So Cheap From the best Canadian blanket makers—and Canada makes the best blankets —we’ve gathered such blanket guodness as will appeal to every house- wife, On a few lines pricesare the same as those quut ed just a year ago when we broke the record in blan ket value giving, but many lines are cheaper now than then, and we’ve seen to it that the standard of excellence has beer raised in every line of blankets produced to our order. Fresh, clean, good, luxurious bed clothing. Stocks are at their best. Prices are at their lowest right now. Comforts Comforts be found the best Comfort time is here and here are to Comforts, best in size, best made and lowest in price. Thc, $1, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 and $2 Will buy you a good Comfort that will keep “Jack Frost” from under the bedclothes; you know he pinches. Our prices won't pinch your pocket book. Yours fer Comforts. JAS. PATON. & CO Blankets Blankets ait ai({ «th «ij ait{| «tl «i(} «(| «il «si{{ aill 4 ai{i ati] «iff ait “W aii VV IVE IVT FSC ITEC TIE 4 Aas «f S224 «tl £4 —————— Men's Wool Beare Underclothing — Men's Cardigan Jackets. See our Stock, T J. HARRIS ¥ * ‘ - Ot sep nde BAD ces Fn 200 Bicycles Wanted To be stored (free of charge) for the winter, and cleaned | repaired, nickeled or enameled, thoroughly renewed, ready for spring. ENAMELING We use the highest grade Enamel (black or colors) thal money can buy in New York, and daée it on in a manner nol the most fastidiovs cannot criticize, and the cost is the sf ° cn = te as others charge for ordinary paint, See sample at shop. W. P. DOULL, Kent Snel oes we CHEAP FOR SPOT CASH 14 TONS a BEST QUALITY HAY BALE WIRE | Cut 10} feet; gauge 14, at the CITY - HARDWARE - «++sQUEEN STREET.... | Pronounced bert quality by ali who have used it. § R. B. NORTON 3TORB| “ > Am J. F. Norton Proprietor. —