z ' . ome > Be cette ean anafatti>~-—-allapinediimrsiemeann OA ee os tan nm SA a le ~ THE DAILy EX Terms :—Five Dottans 4 YEAR, N EW SERLES. MINER. | * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having ‘o advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxirives. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER IR 28, 1889. Sinetz Corres Two Cents VOL. 25.—NO. 102. The Daily Examiner Is issued Every Evening by | The Examiner Publishing Co.,. * LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, | Charlottetown, P. E. Island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : hs iin oo os oe ' Kae ve $2 50 TROD FO Fi bie be ccsccccccces 1 25 Gene BE hi cbc css cance . 0 SO ef Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. $10 $5 $3 -TO THE— Three Families in P. E. Isiand —WHO SEND— WRAPPERS Representing the Greatest Value in Woodill’s German Baking Powder UNTIL SEPTEMBER 3ist. ugl3 JAMES A, MORRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receiv prompt attention. Rererences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashicr Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; VD. C. Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scotie Charlottetown. “Army and Navy Depot.” JAS. SCOTT & C0., ALIF AX. A Fall Stock of Wines and Liquors JUST RECEIVED. = (\ Cases ROYAL BLEND, 1 75 cases ISLAY BLEND & GALLIC, 100 Cases OLD RYE, 5) “ CHAMPAGNE, choice brands, 150 * CLARET, 25 ** HOCK and MOSELLE, 2 “ LIQUEURS—Cherry Brandy, Noyau, Curaco, Maraschino, Benedictine, 200 “ FINE PORT and SHERRY, 150 * HOLLANDGIN and OLD TOM, 300 * HENNESSY’S BRANDY, *, ** 0°? aul ¥. (D., 100 * BASS’S ALE, 26 * BURKE'S STOUT, 100 * APOLLINARIS WATER, 100 “ BELFAST GINGER ALE, 50 “ FINE OLD RUM, 50 “ KINAHAN’S L, L. WHISKEY, —And a Full Stock of— CHOICE GROCERIFS p24 By <=1889--— BOSTON DIRECT. Boston, Halitax and P. E. Island Steamship Line. Quly Direct Line Without Change. CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON. The Staunch and Commodious Steamships “Carroll” and “Worcester,” having been thoroughl refurnished and put into first-class condition in phan respect, will, during wae of 1889, run as follows, commencing “ CARROLL,” From Charlottetown, Thursday 9th May, at 6 p. ml. One of these vessels wi Sse) ill leave Buston for nnd ttetown EVERY WEDNESDAY, at Noon, DAY. sitlottetowa for Boston EVERY fT HURS- Raideos” o'clock, p. m. rates, nt Passenger accommodation. Low FARES tarnished ( © Xtra, Jabin, $6.50. Stateroom Herth, $2.00 cacy nandiog* "ehS which Ws sivas] oF OWES MACE, MUSTARD SEED, &c., always kept on hand. CARVELL BROS.. Agents, HaRkIson Lor ane nate KB Ganpwen. & ee we can confidently recommend to be first-class. Cider and Golden Syrup Vinegars always kept in Stock, First-class Passage Berth in wen-| Don’t buy poor Spices and thereby spoil your pickles. LONDON HOUSE. im VEG UL. —————-(\ )-—---- Ladies Waterproof Cloaks, Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks, Ladies Waterproof Cloaks. Mens Rubber Coats, Mens Rubber Coats, Men's Rubber Coats. Ready-Made Clothing, | Ready-Made Clothing, | Ready-Made Clothing. New Carpets, New Carpets, New Carpets. New Flannels, New Flannels, New Flannels. HARRIS & STEWART, McLEOD & McKENZIE Star Merchant Tailors, Have entered upon their Semi-Annual Season of giving Rare Bargains, 1 |jWE PURPOSE TO CLEAN OUT, 1F POSSIBLE, THE BALANCE OF OUR SPRING AND SUMMER WEAR, At prices we have not hitherto offered, in order to make room for our FALL IMPORTATIONS, This step was unavoidable, and a3 a consequence you may anticipate rare plums. HOURS—FROM SEVEN TO SIX. McLEOD & McKENZIE. Charlottetown, July 31, 1889. PICKLING VINEGAR & SPICES. Wholesale and Retail. x YHE season for Pickling Vinegar and Spices having come around again, we are prepared to supply our many custom- ers and the public generally with those articles at the lowest possible prices. ENGLISH MALT VINEGAR. | spirit of enterprise working hard in New ATRIP TO CAPE BRETON With the Maritime Press Association, NOTES Bi THE WAY. New Giasgow----lts Views, In- dustries and Prosperity. To the landsman crossing the Strait which separates our ‘‘Giem of the Northern Sea’ from the great continent which it adorns—as an emerald adorns the neck of a lady—*‘everything lies in circumstance.” if the breezes blows and the sea is high, the passage is begun in dread and continued in misery but when—as when we crossed —there is not wind enough to blow away the haze which has gathered and hangs lazily upon thes landscapes that loom on either shore, it is quite delightful to be on board one of our trim steamers, under the charge of one of our **Cameron men,” The pleasure of the trip is, of course, greatly enhanced when one meets com- panions who have travelled, and who can tell good stories or call to mind incidents of personal or historic incident. One of these came over to Pictou with us. Ap incident man, which he related, may be interesting to at ieast to one reader of THE EXAMINER. He said that Mr. Wightman had told bim that after he (Wightman) came to the Island, and while still a young man, 4e en- gaged in fishing, and soon learned perfectly the navigation of the coast. At that time the British Government had soldiers sta- tioned at Quebec, Kingston and other towns in Canada, and men-of-war passed frequently up and down the Strait. Mr. Wightman was fishing off Cape Breton on one occasion when he heard in the fog the Hastening in the direction of the report, he found the vessel aground and the crew en- gaged in throwing the guns overboard, He was welcomed as an angel from heaven. and interrogated him as.to his knowledge of the coast. Assured on this point, and finding that all the efforts which had been made were unnecessary as well as futile, the captain gave Mr. Wightman full charge ‘of the ship; and the lieutenant approach- ing, touched “his hat, and awaited {Mr. Wightman’s orders. These were given with such good ‘that the ship — the svon aflvat, to the great relief of all concerned, particularly the officers, who immediately made up a purse of $700, and presented it to the saviour of the ship and their reputation. Subsequently they employed Mr. Wighiman to restore the guns, which they, in their panic, had thrown overboard, giving him £25 for each gun. It was inthis way that Mr. Wight- man got his ‘‘ start in life.” A more traditional incident was suggested as the steamer passed by Pictou Island and the Little Cariboo. Between the latter and the shore of the mainland the water course is only about two hundred yards wide. It is said that during one of the wars of the Mictnacs and Mohawks, the Mchawks found out that a party of Micmacs were in hiding on the Island. Thinking that they could swim the passage, they resolved to do se in the night, and kill their enemies while asleep. They accordingly plunged in. But the sea swallowed them up, anc on the following morning cast some of their bodies high and dry upon the beach, with their deadly tomahawks attached. The extension of the railway from Pictou to New Glasgow is evidently a great advan- tage to the former, while, contrary to the in the career ofthe late Hon, Joseph Wight- report of a British frigate’s signal gun. | The captain had him on board in a jiffey, | judgment |is boiled and so changed into steel. Inside Malabar — was|the furnace the molten metal was bubbling cellent goods in Ontario and (Quebec, as well as in the Maritime Provinces. They employ about 110 workmen. It is worthy of remark that the opera- tives were, in 1881, ali foreigners,—now they are all, with searcely an excaption, native born young Canadians kept at home. The process by which the sand is chang- ed into glassware, such as we see daily in use, is one of the most interesting that can be seen. Imagine a number of circular furnaces in the midst of a circular area, each furnace surrounded by a body of workmen: some are drawing forth the liquid glass and pouring it into moulds, others cutting the half cooled glass with | scissors, others disclosing the goblet or jug | as soon as it has hardened ; others, again, | blowing through tubes like gas pipe, forming from the liquid masses, at the ends | of the tubes, the lamp-chimneys which we | use for our kerosene lamps,—all the opera- | tions being carried on and completed before | the liquid glass has had time to harden,— | and you may form an idea of the work ' which is done at the glass factory and the | dexterity of the workmen. From the hands of the workmen at the! furnaces, the glassware is carried away as it | is made, and placed over a slow fire to be | subjected to various degrees of heatin order | that it may be annealed or tempered. Then | it is carefullyjpacked in boxes to be distribut- | ed throughout the Dominien. The quality of the glassware made at | New Glasgow is, undoubtedly, excellent,—- quite good enough for use by anyone. It was difficult to draW some members of | our party away from the glassworks—so | deeply were they interested in the opera- tions; but time passed, and the Steel Works were to be seen. | The plant of the Nova Scotia Steel and Forge Company covers fifteen acres, ex- tending slong the shore of the East River ; ‘and the paid up capital invested amounts | to $400,000, most of which is owned by jenterprising men in New Glasgow. The ‘Company was found in 1882 and re-organ- ized with larger powers and additional capital on the first day ofthe present year. the steel ingots, previously prepared, were | being passed through the roliing mills and _pressed out into long flat bars, such as we ;see at the hardware stores. Heated toa white heat in a furnace near by, the ingots | were conveyed to the rollers by means of a | crane, and passed by ready workmen from one rolling mill to another, each mill mak- jing them smaller and longer. Veritable fiery serpents they seemed as they squirm- ed under the pressure of the rollers. From this point we passed on, all too quickly, to the furnaces in which the iron like porridge befure breakfast. Workmen were preparing to draw a charge. A great pot stood ready to re- ceive the steel as it spurted out, and eighteen moulds—each capable of holding a ton—were extended in line along a trench underneath the pot. A piece of ‘the place. ‘with unlnown quantities of iron ore close at hand, possessing limestone and freestone We entered the works at a point at which | amount to about $10,000 a month—a nice litile supplement to the ‘circulating me- dium” of New Glasgow. Besides the glass works and the steel works, there are in New Glasgow many in- dustries of more or less importance. In- deed, the spirit of enterprise seems to be awake to ali the advantages within reach of The centre of a vast coal area, in abundance, having communication with the world at large and Canada in particular, by sea and Jand, the possibilities of New Glasgow, and indeed the whole of Pictou County, are great beyond calculation. W. L. C. ‘Best of All: Cough medicines, Ayer’s Cherry Pec- toral is in greater demand than ever. No preparation for Throat and Lung Troubles is so prompt in its effects, so agreeable to the taste, and so widely known, as this. It is the family medi- cine in thousands of households. “IT have suffered for years from @ bronchial trouble that, whenever [ take cold or am exposed to inclement weath- er, shows itself by a very annoying tickling sensation in the throat and by difficulty in breathing. I have tried a great many seennition. kab none does so well as Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral which always gives prompt relief in returns of my old complaint.’’— Ernest A. Hepler, Inspector of Public Roads, Parish Ter- re Bonne, La. “JT consider Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral a most important remedy For Home Use. ¥ have tested its curative power, in my family, many times during the past thirty years, and have never known it to fail. It will relieve the most serious affections of the throat and lungs, whether in children or adults.’”’ — Mrs, E. G. Edgerly, Council Bluffs, Tova. “Twenty years ago I was troubled with a disease of the lungs. Doctors afforded me no relief and considered my case hopeless. I then to use Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, and, before I had finished one bottle, found relief. I continued to take this medicine until a cure was effected. I believe that Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral saved my life.””— Samuel Griggs, Waukegan, IIL “ Six roam ago I contracted a severa cold, which settled on my lungs and soon developed all the alarming sym toms of Consumption. I had a cough, night sweats; bleeding of the lungs, pains in chest and sides, and was so prostrated as to be confined to my ed most of the time. After trying various prescriptions, without benefit, my physician finally determined to give me Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. I took it, and the effect was magical. I see to rally from the first dose of this medicine, and, after using only three bottles, am as well and sound as ever,” — Rodney Johnson, Springfield, Ill. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, metal spouting was placed with one end at the mouth of the furnace and the other on | the edge of the pot; and over this was spread a covering to shield the operatives from the terrible heat of the fluid, steel. One of the men then took up a crow bar and inserted it into the mouth of the fur- nace; another stood by with a sledge ham- mer in hand. One blow, and a million sparkles envelop the men; another blow or two, and the bubbling tide in the furnace’ gusbes out. Eighteen tons of it and more are poured forth ere the huge pot is iull to the brim. As soon as it is full, the spout- ing is knocked away, the liquid — still remaining in the furnace being permit- ted to run out into the trench below. The pot, with its contents, is then propelled by means of a steam engine and | crane, directly over the moulds in the} trench, When the first mould is) reached, a lever, attached to the pot, is ap predictions of the croakers, it is a benefit rather than a hindrance to the continued | progress of the iatter. An impetus has! been given to Pictou; and we found the} Glasgow with a determination to develop the magnificent resources,. in coal and iron, by which the town is sur-! rounded. That the people may have} an idea of what they are doing in this respect, carriages were placed at the the disposal of the Maritime Press Associa- tion by the New Glasgow Board of Trade. We had thus an opportunity to see the magnificent views afforded by a drive to the top of Fraser’s Mountain, and thg in- teresting operations which are carri€a on at the glass factory and steel works. The mountain’s side is are for splendid prospect far and wide.” We have on hand a large stock of this Celebrated Vinegar, which is, without doubt, the best Pickling Vinegar in the: market to-day. As we import this direct from England our-| selves, we can guarantee the quality. WHITE WINE VINAGASR. We have received a consignment of XXX WHITE WINE VINEGAR, irow the best manufactory in the Dominion, which | —-—(1} ——-- ——1] PICKLING SPICES. We have received another lot of the same kind of Spice as we had last year, and which gave such good satisfaction. WHOLE PEPPER, ALLSPICE, CINNAMON, GINGER, | stately sailing craft which ply upon the ‘river and harbor, fill the scene with variety jand life. There can be seen, in the distance, a faint outline of Prince Edward Island, and the bolder features of of the Cobequids; nearer, Pictou, with its famed academy set upon a hill, anda broad valley with the winding Kast river in its midst. Farmsteads and the cot- tages of workmen in the mines and fac- tories, and the puffing steamers and more The whvie forms a grand landscape—one of the grandest that I have seen. But there is no money in_ landscapes. For the sake of those who are interested in| ‘the development of industries,” and the building up of the country, we must hasten down the mountaiu’s side to a lower and less ethereal level. The Nova Scotia Glass Company began’ operations in the year 1881. The town of | Trenton, a surburb of New Glasgow, was, then—nowhere. The glass factory was erected on the border of a scrubby wood ;' and the houses of the first operatives were | | plied anda comparatively small opening made in the bottom, through which the liquid steel falls into the mould. A_ work- man stands by, and, as soon as the mould is full, stops the flow, and moves the pot on to the next mould, repeating the operation until the pot is empty and the moulds have all been filled. To a looker-on the easy manner with | which the workmen regard the heat of the | furnace and the flowing steel is amazing. | **They soon get used to it,” is the ready es PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Bold by all Druggists. Price $1; six botiles, $5. MOLASSES. ee ee PUNCHEONS in Store of the best 200 quality ever imported by us—real choice. CARVELL BROS. septl7—2aw 1889. explanation of our guide—the. manager of | ¢gyqyj Clipper Bark “ERMA,” 300 tons the works. When cool, the ingots of steel are taken from the moulds; and, again heated many times, are register, P. Ledwell, Commander, will a number of processes “ve Magy signed . Sail from Liverpool for Charlottetown ready for market. ‘The company do not, we believe, make watch springs, but they make, besides bars of steel, many of the small articles which enterinto our manufactures. We noticed, among others, tons upon | tons of fittings for agricultural machinery, | such as spring teeth for harrows and hay rakes. Most of these fittings are sent up to Ontario, where the machines are made up,—and then they come down again, in large quntities, to our farmers ! Isn’t there something wanting here, when we have to pay freight both ways and the doors? I was very glad to see at the steel works a member of the enterprising firm of Mark Wright & Co., and I am not ‘without hope that more of the products of the Nova Scotia Steel and Forge Compat.7 will enter into our local manufacturers 1, the future than in the past. ia It must not, however, be supposed that © | should like to see stopped the rapid in-| crease in the company’s business with the! Upper Provinces. What this increase has evident by the fact that in 1884 the com-' about the ist October, and will carry Freight at through rates to the ‘different railway points on the island. For Freight apply in London to Joun Prr- CAIRN & Sons, 7 Union Court, Old Broad St.; in Liverpool to Wit1amM Bu ven, 51 South John Street, cr here to the owners, PEAKE BROS, & CO, Ch’town, 2nd Aug. 1889. eod tld profits of the Ontario manufacturer and “ a his agent for agricultural machinery, the | i ij nWG J 0 FAK ' chief part of which is produced at our own BY AUCTION. ee AM instructed by George J. Wright, Esq., to sell by Auction, on the premiees, On Thursday, Oct. 3rd, AT 10 O'CLOCK, A. M., |The Farm Property of the late George Wright, ew ‘situated on the St. Peter’s Road, and within been is made |9, inites of the city. This Farm comprises 144 acres of land, built among the bushes. In less than aj}pany sent to the Upper Provinces only | nearly all clear, wel! watered, and ina high a thriving manufacturing town. The Glass Company make lamp chimneys, | lantern globes, jars, tumblers, goblets, tea tumblers—in short all kinds of table ware; BEER & GOFF, a Ch’town, Sept 13, 1889—oaw & w Rvs “ a veees wy ha thi 1nd oe U ~~ > pe Save ais ‘men, nearly every one of w setts, plates, jugs, bowls, nappies, jelly manager to the stoker, is a native born ‘Nova Scotian. | he i decade, the wilderness has given place to 2,280 tons of stecl, and in 1888 no less than | gtate of cultivation. | 12,000 tons. They now employ about four hundred which are all in good condition, will be offered hom, from the with 60 acres separately or with all the land, The Dwelling House and [arm Buildings, 8 g as may be desirable. : GEO, M. HARRIS, = hie hileieatndls U Licichimseb ae eer renee Soa F ne ? noomneanfonrsnncncmagre G zymes hon nice