THE DAILY EXAMINER. om nae =. ete " This ia true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, miay speak free.”—Evniripes. Suvere Covies Two Cenrs y T Uy so 5 . ‘ i< t. * NEW SEREBNS WW AR LOTTET( ~ i oj oa 8 i a2 % ye er. me ? ~ ee x 4 3 = « e + ty ca % * Row ~~ £ ‘aigeee 2 h és é 7, ~ y g 4 ‘ ? c ‘ . :> & P . G ‘ c = As I Have Got the Goods A ave SwOt thie Goods to do it. . “¥ rx, . opm f ’ 7 —" ' e HAVE IMPORTED om the best Houses in the Old ¢ uuntry, SCOTCH and NY “a5 @rere’e) that cannat at — ‘ : . ENGLISat & VDS ar cannot be beaten in qui pavtierh or price, and cus- | tomers are c n inced a 81 rht, these , S$ Speak four themse!s e3. Five Hundred gud Sixty ! . 4 NI ALA MONS to select from, of the rettiest patterns, | LIGHT DARK bw RED S| ITIN ms in the newest designs, and WOR St] LS i { finest grades, w! icn I Wisi make up if prices to suit the times, as | intend to et no one underseil me. l invite the pu lic to come and examine ny stock. Good Fits warranted or no sal : AN vy. MURPH yT a a a LE om 2. Ch't wr, May 9, 18! " os Wercnant Tailors. ¢ )—--- yA, E ARE SHOWING the Jarget and Finest Line of Men's *Y Neckwear in the city. Uarge assortment of Men’s Stiff Fiex Hats; large assortment of Men’s Soft Hats (American) ; large assortment of Men’s American Straw Hats; large assort- ment of Men’s Fine White Shirts; large assortment of Men’s Fancy Flannel Shirts; large assortment of Men’s Fine Under- wear, Braces, &c.; Light Coats for summer wear; Laz Robes, in Mummie Cloth, the correct thing; large range of Woolens, in Suitings; Spring and Summer Overcoatings and Trouserings, in Scotch and West of England goods Mr. McDonald, late of Boston, has charge of our Tailoring Department, and you can rely on getting a good-fitting garment. Lot of MEN’S and BOYS’ READYMADE CLOTHING, at greatly reduced prices to clear. B. S. DAVIES & CO., CAMERON BLOCK. Ch’town, June 2, 15¥0. HE PLAGE T0 GET GLOTHES lo} | NUR SPRING IMPORTATIONS ARE NOW COMPLETE, and we are showing the Largest and Best Assorted Stock of Cloths in the City, consisting of SUITINGS in Tweed, Serze and Worsted Trouserings, in Newest Designs and Great Variety. The Nobbiest Goods in SUMMER OVERCOATINGS. Good Fits and Workmanship in every case guaranteed. A full line of GENTS’ FURNISHINGS always in stock: Cosa : - cee Sy ONT sng z OEN McLEOD & CO er feoth Sk eae ated vot” Near lane 6 120°—fri sat, then eod *Charlottetow _— WA ee wm, Y YWwAEIW AND JEWERELER very fine assorto : . ‘ 2S at i ! AS now added to his already large stock a een te cSUTET YD V Hi WATCHES of the best manufacture, an ithe newest patterns in JEW ELERY : 4 i turday) at 6 o’clock. gnar unteed. All closes every evening (ex ep MARKET SQUARE, CWTOWN. Go xis sold ire NORTH SIDE ap29—dy 2aw wky li, ee ), ta B eeetrk, te, Bh a i &. a: a ae é vai crn EXCELLENCE OF O tn i a” as 4 i 4 CAN SEE THE IR EADY-MADE CLOTHING OVER ALL IMPORTED CLOTHING. ry i*) ‘ , , HY? Because you can see no ear marks of the Shoddy VW Cl.thing, but are made by ourselves and look like a work made to order. SUITS 3 SUITS OF ALL-WOOL TWEED, - - a ee SUITS OF ALL-WCOL WORSTED, - Dp. A. BRUCK, MERCHANT TAILOR, —— Charlottetown, June 13, 1590, i ent of GOLD and SILVER | ; e G& 75 sa 7 r , “or ‘7 = - f i o OF ALL-WOOL SERGH, - - - - _® O40)" no amidship. 5 airy. : 6.85. saloon Fares $45 00 and $50.00, accordi 1g 11.00 to location of Stateroom, Ten per cent. 1 o QULEN STREDNT, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, Importers of British and German! | | Bry Gvods, Millinery, Simati- | wares, &¢. | AtLtso- | Warehouse Goods, WHOLESALE ONLY. | #4 Additions to our General jonly, at a smali advance on cost, Ch’town, May 22, 1890—-dy 2 Druggists & Gexeral Dealers in Prince Edward Island MAY NOW OBTAIN The Specific for Dyspepsia, ‘for their custemers, from the following Wholesale Houses: T. B. BARKER & SONS, St. John, S$. McDIARMID, “ BROWN & WEBB, Halifax, ‘SIMSON BROS. & CO., * KERRY, WATSON & CO., Montreal. DYSPEPTICURE is prepared by CHARLES HK. SHORT, St. John, N. B. WAREHOUSE TO LET. W E offer for lease the Brick Warehouse, ry on Pownal Street, owned by the trustees of the late Owen Connolly's Estate, Warehouse will be vagant after the 23d July next. Dated 2Iist June, 1899, FRED. PETERS, Solicitor for Trustees. junell june2] —tf Lime Juice ! FRURE MONTSERRAT LIME FRUIT JUiC*™ in pint and quart bottles. Also, W. 1. Lime Juice on draught. Just received, and for sale at low prices, at ARTHUR 8. JOHNSON’S DRU STORE, Corner Kent and Prince Streets. jnl9 OST.—A ‘Dunlap Self Feeding Pen.”—R. 8S. FARQUHARSON, 2i pda—june2z . ne en STEAMSHIP CO. (LIMIT¥D.) STEAMER “PRINCESS BEATRICE,” CAPT. A. H. KELLY. ILL sail from Charlottetown every W Thursday afternoon, at 4 o'clock, for Halifax, calling at Port Hastings, Mulgrave, and Hawkesbury, Arichat, Canso, Isaac Harbor and Sheet Harbor. Returning will sail from Halifax every Monday night, at 10 o’clock, making same calls, and Souris. ; The above steamer will make the round trip levery week, making same calls until the close lof navigation, = | Freight and passengers solicited at lowest ‘rates, and through Biils of Lading granted to ‘any port on the continent or United Kingdom, A ) to ere W. W. CLARKE, Agent. i 6 OWtewn, May 3, 1890. ' ' ‘ Furness Line of Steamers HALIFAX TO LONDON. Date of Sailings for Above Line, Ia ings once every month via Boston. quired. Canned Lobsters carried at low rates. surance low. a. &. perior accommodation for passeng?rs. | duction on return tickets. | For any further information required ly t pes: W. W. CLARKE, mayl3——pat tf Agent, ie I i ai Sh ss ei » Full Lines of Teas, Groceries and Stock are being daily received from the different scureces of production, and will be offered, Who'esale | DYSPSPTICURE, addition te the above, we will have sail- Through Biils of Ladiag granted from Cher- lottetown and all points and to apy port re- In- ULUNDA and DAMARA have Staterooms large aad]andrunning back to Sherwood Cen ISLAND. SATURDAY. JUNE 28. 1890. WEEKS & BEER,| 7 | Stop that | {| CHRonic Goucn Now! For if you do not it may become con- sumptive. For Consumption, Scrofulu, ( General Debditity and Wasting Diseases, there is nothing like SCOTT'S | HYPOPHOSPHITES Of Ksiime and Soda. { { , Itis almost as palatableas milk, Far ( { better than other so-called Emulsions. { {4 wonderful flesh producer, SCOTT’S EMULSION is put up in a salmon color wrapper. Te sure and get the genuine. Sold by all Dealers at 50c. and $1.00, TENDERS. PF XENDERS for the several trades required in the erection of a Brick and Stene Store and Office Building, on the South Side of Queen Square, for Thomas Morris, Esq., will be received up to noon of the 7th July next. The lowest or any tender not necessarily agcepted. Plans and specifications can be seen at the ottice of CHAPPEL & PHILLIPS, june24—ead tl dte BEST ROUTE to BOSTON CANADA ATLANTIC LINE. ONLY ONE NIGHT AT SEA. eee Quickest and Most Direct Koute, Low Fares. The Magnificient Clyde-built Steel S. S. “HALIFAX,” Is the largest, safest, fastest and best furnished and most comfortable passenger steamship ever peees on the route between Canada and United States. Sails from Noble’s Wharf, Halifax, every Wed- desday, at 8 »’clock, ani Lewis Wharf, Boston, avery saturday at !2 o’clock. Pa-sengers by Tuesday evening trains can go on board on arrival without extra charge. Bag: gage checked through. Through Tickets oa sale by P. E. Isjand Nay. Co., and F. T. NEWBERY, Agent Ch’town, aps0—eod wky pat ‘Flour and Meal. TO ARRIVE NEXT WEEK: oO = Barrels ‘“* Kent” FLOUR, 0) 250 “ “White Star” “ “ CORNMEAL. IN STORE: 0 barrels Rolled Oats, 5 “ Standard Oatmeal, FENTON T. NEWBERRY. sugarand Molasses. To Arrive per ‘‘ Avenger,” about Ist July: G25 e “Idi *4\ Hogsheads BARBADOES GROCERY For Sale Low While Landing. FENTON T. NEWBERRY. june24—3i eod wy 2i jour wtch 2i PROFIT to the Gro cer who selis Economical to the 'W oodill’s German Baking S. S. ULUNDA will sail from Halifax for London on or about.........- May 25 Ss. S. DAMARA Or ee pee hees ee June 10 Ss. 8. ULUNDA % >t . Scab Coed en July 7 S 8. DAMABA = °F 20 Leiaenes July 25 OW eT le S ULUMDA “ — ......0-+-kt © e a 6 A ssa .. Sept. 8 its SHERWOOD FARM FOR SAEE. iatery. The farm, containing about 50 acres, is in 2 high state of cultivation, Commociio comfor able buildings, with @ urs Orchard, make this a very desirabie pas verty. For particulars apply on the preméses to SARAH STEWART, June 20, why 2m See eeeke VOL. 26.-NO. 30 f . r amy rT re | Contributed by the W.C.1'.U. of Charlottetown. Local and Other Items Thrall. natant na eam - (istic) ACKNOWLEDGEMENT. —The followingsums ae 4s have been received at the Chariottetown nilete Greil Gaaswots. Hospital : G. T. Haszard $2; J. T. Mur- yt thee? phy $3; a friend (per Mrs. J. D. Mason) I am held like a captive knight, $2; Captsin Welsh $1; Rev. Allan Me- I am hidden away from sight, Donald $2. l cry like a child for the light. | Tour Rounp tne Worip.—Citizen Geo rge _Fraucis Train is busiiy preparing for another , world circling tour. He intendsto make the ate in fifty days. Editor Radebaugh, : ; , )of the Tacoma Ledger, and a big party are to ur elise ase viietes obese gleams, | ene him. ‘Train is to act guide, leader For at night I dream a slave's dreams. and chief of the lightning tourists, The party intend to start on September I} and they ex- pect to complete the tour by October 20. Se I am bound by the ecruelest thongs, I quiver with outrage and wrongs, Like a slave I sing a slave’s songs. At morning, at evening, at noon, The thong far or near, late or soon, Makes me cry out for death as a boon, | One Case Celebrated J. Fennell’s ‘Horse Boots received to-day at I quail ‘neath a tyrant’s dread eye, |W. E. Dawson's lw eod—jn24 I mutter vague threats, and still try - To sunder the horrible tie. A CLEeRGYMAN’s DrLemMA.—A clergyman in | Somerville, Mass,, has come to understand the |misfortune of prosperity. His church :ecently (received a fine homestead by wiil and demand- , ed that he should occupy it. Oahis part he /explained that on his salary he coulda’t live \ 8p te the level of such an establishment, and | the upshot of it is thet he has resigned and is But my struggle is all in vain, My captor claims me again, And anon, I clank the same chain. O, cruelest bondage of all, Which well may the strongest appal, Body free, but a soul in thrall. 2” SUGAR, 250 -| CHOICE 25 Tes. BARBADOES 75 Brls. | MOLASSES, | P i | \ I Housewife Who uses — POO ; Reform Needed. Those who plead for temperance reform are daily charged with exaggeration. There never was prophet or reformer against whom the. same charge has not been made. We have no cause to exaggerate, our cause is overwhelm- | ingly strong in unvarnished realities, and we | have nothing to do but to set forth things as they are. The highest scientific authorities tell us that even the moderate use of liquor is the cause of many painful disorders, and thousands of premature deaths. Alcohol is a drug which has the power of creating a crave. To be a drunkard means an awful shipwreck of life and body. Nor isit only the bodies of men that suffer, it is their souls. The curse does not stay with who caused it. The drunkard drags his wife and family into the whirlpool of 1etribution. To follow the drunken man or woman into the place they call home, while threats and blows resound, the children ragged, miserable, half-starved, huddle together in terror. The money that should feed and clothe his wife and litile ones is poured into the tillefthe rum shop. Do not these men, these women, these children deserve our pity and demand our efforts at reform. The Remedy. looking for a poorer church where he can afford to live. ee Recerrat.—Next Thursday Miss Mc- Garry will give one of her celebrated re- citals in the Y. M. O, A. Hall. Let there be afull house to greet her—the most famous of Canadian Elocutionists. iss McGarry was excellent in her comic delivery, and threw the andience into convulsions of laughter. —Montreal Star. —_——_>__—- AVore or Tuanxs.—The Annual School Meeting was after due notice held in Little Harbor Schoolhouse on the 17th June, and all schoo] matters pertaining to the district were disenssed. Upon accept- ing the resignation of Leonard E. Me- Donald, teacher, a vote of thanks was ;Unanimously teudered him for his valuable services in the schoo! during the past two years, and for the steady progress to be noted therein under his management. amensihigienbinate Tue Serastipe Horer.—We regret to learn that there is some doubt about the opening this season of the Seaside Hotel. The Patriot reports that this is owing to the illness of Mr. Frank Newson, son of the proprietor, John Newson, Esq., and says: ** Lhis young The Rev. Canon Wilberforce, of England, delivered a temperance address in Tremont Temple, to an audience which filled the hall with an appreciative and enthusiastic as- semblage. He charged directly home upon the conscience, and fired the moral nature of his hearers. His own radical convictions were impressed by his personal impact and tre- mondous earnestness. High license he char- acterized as an attempt to make a bad business respectable, remarking that if Judas had re- ceived a thousand pieces of silver it would not have made his conduct more respectable or less traitorous. The remedy for intemperance, he said, is simple, and is found in the text, ** Be not drunk with wine, but he filled with the Holy Ghost.” If men and women will substitute for the exhilaration of wine the enthasiasm of life enkindled by the Divine Spirit, they will have genuine iuspiration. It is the duty of Chris:ians to work on this theory, and when they attempt to work on any other they are of no more use than a lighthouse when its light is extinguished. America, he said, has the opportunity to lead the world, because she is not tied up by the usages, customs, and hoary institutions of the Old World ; but America can lead in the moral contest only as she owns allegiance to the ** King of kings.” ‘* This terrible evil,” he said, ‘‘is creeping into your halls of legisla- tion, to taint your law-makers, and I come here to warn you of your terrible danger. There is nothing that so weakens a nation as to have laws upon its statute books that are not enforced.” He quoted the Bishop of Lon- don, that ‘if you people who have power and respectability would abstain at once and _for- ever from the use of fiquor, the bitter cry of the peor of London would cease in three years.” Of the temperance movement in Bosten he said, “‘Its promoters need the ower of Christ. Get you this instant at the feet of the Crucified One, and you will be holier, happier, and keener of intellect than ever before.” Canon Wilberforce was very powerful in his arraignment of Christians who are aristocratic and yet ‘‘ dead in their ortho- doxy.” 77 Temperance Notes. An English M. P. asserts that, as a result of the drink habit of the parents, 50,000 children in London go to school each morning unfed. It isas plain to me as the sun in a bright summer sky, that the license laws of our country constitute one of the main pillars on which the main fabric of intemperance now rests.—Rev. Heman Humphrey, 1833. The law which licenses the sale of ardent spirits is an impediment to the temperance legislation. Whenever public opinion and the moral sense of our community shal] be so far corrected and matured as to regard them in their true light, and when the public safety shall be thought to require it, dram-shops will be indictable at common law as public nuis- ances,--Judge Platt In the following vein a contemporary serves up one of the greatest social “institutions,” of the era: “‘Have you a boy to spare? The saloon must have bovs or it must shut up shop. Can’t you furnish it one? Itisa great factory; and unless it can yet 2,900,000 boys from each generation for raw material, some of these factories must close out, and its oper atives must be thrown on a cold world, and tie public revenue will dwindle. “Wanted— © 900,000 beys” isthe notice, One family ous of every five niust contribute a boy to keep up EAUTIFULLY situated on the Royalty | boys will it be? Road, fronting on the Malp que Road Clase | + acd ‘i = lyre you satisfied, veting to keep the saloon and then coing nothiug |, the eupply. Will vou heip? Which of your x Have |é» keep up the supply for this great public in- is itution that is heiping to pay your taxes and | ) ial Have | +g and'}ou contributed a boy? If not, seme other | i} idly electing public cificisls tor you? | f.mily has had to give more than its share, |c pen to grind up boys, t> keep ap the suppay - —— eee Adminiswassiss Jig D, C, Cures Dyspepsia. | managernent of the hotel which they conduct- you given your share} - man and his mother had of late years the scie ed in a highly efficient manner. The chief | difficulty now is to procure a capable house- keeper. The Seaside was one of the chief summer resorts on this Island, and many per- sons abroad and at home will leara with re- gret that it is not likely to be opened this season.” = ——— LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. The Reason Why. Sir,—In answer toa letter of enquiry signed ‘* Clerk,” which appeared in your issue of Saturday, the 21st inst., also in ex- planation to the grocers who so unan- imously complied with the request, I may say that I had frequently, been asked why the half holiday might not ex- tend to the grocers’ clerks, as well as to other branches of trade in the city. So, with the concurrence of the firm of which I an employe, I started on Monday iast with @ requisition, and succeeded in getting six- teen uf the principal grocers to sign it, but when I reached the last, but not least, of the most prominent grocers of (Queen Square, I met with a refusal, which, 1 must say, I did not expect. That was on Mon- day. On Tuesday, I renewed the attack, but with the same result, and on Wednes- day, after exhausting al! my stock of per- suavsives—failed. The worst of it was, he had net the ghost of a reasonable excuse for not closing, and of course, the scheme failed to take effect, as the condition was that all should close. So you see, Mr. Editor, that a small thing of that kind de- prives about sixty persens of a few hours’ pleasure, while the profits on the goods iseld in those few hours would not pay the wages of one small messenger boy, as the trade on Monday afternoon is hardly worth keeping open for. J. R. Davison. Personal. | Mr. George E Full returned from Frederic- iton, N. B., on Tharsday evening. e Edward Hackett, Esq., Inspector of Fish- leries, wrs at the Osborne yesterday. He left \for home this moraing. : John L. Sullivan pleaded guilty to the 'charge of prize fighting and the court fined him $500. ; Sarah Bernhardt is said to have fallen in love with Henry M. Stanley, and expresses ‘eagerness to accompany him to the heart of Africa. A London despatch says Mr. and Mrs. Chamberlain have put off their visit to the United States till the end of July. Revs. George Steel, Pownal; li. P. Cowper- thwaite, Tryon; G. W. Fisher, Alberton; E. Bell, West Cape; E OC. Turner, Margate, land W. J. Kirby, Winsloe, returned hom: ‘from the Methodist Conference at Fredericton ‘on Thursday evening. | Edward Hanlan is greatly excited. Some thief has rebbed him of the very valuable golu lm dal which Lord Dufferin presented to him ‘in honor of his victory over Courtney at Ta chine in 1878. i Mr. Farrar will receive $5,000 a year as \ chef editorial writer of the Toronto Gere, an ,in crease upon his re muneration wiit¢ ig cou- |p: stion with the Mar. ee ee Your Life in Danger. fake time by the fore lock cre that racping sky cough of yours carries you whee «sc ny consumptive have preceded you, 1036 time, but procure a « doval nedy for Lang and f Cod Liver OU sold by ali ei r bot ie oO1 the I Bronchial dis mses, aE is ith) fess i. oft s Ereuision « b 1s | p.orphites. It will cure you. Rengataeeeccneinmetateris 6 = or ie se < ma eae is a, singh 6 te Ps ante Re ee ee a a ae <i Al tin Me Hike Ps jae Oe i thesia, Sind alia pletely ili i gp tes ea ee preen—eaae, iat oe RAT AE Sects fouls. 9p “ ce cai