ud repeater en mgaenanciennagenenenene mrageneetennet te on 0 asi ~ Perera moat . _— siidtineetennabnandiemmmindateemenent Neen eee eee ena ata emi ~<a = ea ° Ce Five Douuars A Yrat “ This is true aaiete, when Free Born Men, pales: to advise the , Public, may speak free.” hia ee ee SINGLE Copigzs T w Cees ¥ may ’ 7’ } 1. )» . - , ere a cinclatacnen NEW SiS. CHARLOTTETOWN, EK. IS LAND. "THURSDAY, N OVEMBER 8 1888. VOU. 23. -NO. I 35. a ; 7 mais {83 ac a0002 Gleanings From My Common-place company ; it was said that he had received _ ae pRCURES Th F i Books. his + ellectual real i fro saa eravorite | ee be tana Sa coon sole SR i MVvening by AGES OF BRITISH PRIME MINISTERS. > The Examiner Publishing Co., M THEIR . LONDON HOUS) By" OFFICE, QUEEN SQUARE, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. \TES O i RIPTION Six i S2 50 | vi i 2 a 0G 50 £ ging } e rates Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- teriv, riy or yearly advertisements on ann a DAD rarawan Al VANAU FUL NOVEMBER, 1888, MOON S CHANGES, New M _ a iy, 7h, 49.9m. a. m., S.E. First \ , 10th day, Oh., 3.3im., p.m., E., i thh., 3.4m, wo. m., N., nat ( UG 1h., 8.0m., p.m., W. | Dp Sup loon High! Day's M er ee i ‘ at r len’h i 1m mo nialtr’n h m 17 i 6 47'4 41| 3 22) 8 55 9 54 2/1 is; 39 4 39) 9 41 51 3/8 LV 85 ASI 10 25 438 > Vi > s 7ih1 5 2 , 1 S ot ; % o2l morn 40 = \\ > 10 59 Fs) 37 81] ula iki 601 I Z@ 34 g lay y 6 Wi aitasi BS iG 31 OS ae 7 <= B8i 1 B3i 32 14 28 li Su ! 27; 1 53} 4 25 26 12;M i ; 26; 2 7 5 43 23 le i ’ - 2 $i cde 21 14: \\ » ) 2 3S 77 & 18 15) Th 41 22; 32 34 15 16) } ; 2 3 32] 9 33 13 i7is 10; 20; 4 Is; 9 49 10 ik Su l} 19 4 46/10 23 Ss if Mon \ 5) IY) 5 181310 5d 6 20) [Tuesda i4 IS! 5 S56) 11 29 4/ Zii\v i Ly i> 17| 6 43'aft 5 l 22) Thurs : 17} 16) 7 32] 0 41] 8 59 23! Friday 15} $ 31} 1 20) ~=—-57} 24'S day 2 14, 9 33) 2 2 54 25\Sund 2i} 25:30 39) 2 5t 52) Bo M ae I3i1i 43: 3 49 50 2iit 5 23 i2 morn db QO 45 28) Wednesday 2 li} 0 531 6 19 47 29’ Thursday 2b cat @ Aal i Se 45 30 Fri 17 28/4 10) 3 27} 8 27) 8 43 ! L. WHEAT. J.G@. BRIDGE. &. L. BURR ; WHEAT, BRIDGE & BURR, | Rece.vers and Commission Dealers’ | POT: .TOES, EGGS Butter, Cheese, Poult ry; ame, &e. Consiznments of EGsS and POTATOES eoli- cited and liberal advances made. COMMERCIAL STREET, 44 & 46 Bostor, MASS. Bo n Chamber of Commerce Weekly Offic ial! Market Kep seat to aus ficm on application, septzs—wky 3m dy law pO B-— §B-93-S-'f'-@-N SUMMER ARKANGEMENT nee o.eee ;? de cade ded s tote ne ode \ and olan OF, THE 8.5. 69. oe ; aa iy ERHATI QuAa Leave St. Jo ostou, via Eastport and Port- Wednes. ley and Friday, at | > — maa Fare f — vn to Boston, $6,50, 2nd | + & ’ . ss ‘ i ts and « :formation apply to G, ASSHARP, ¥, W. HALES, r. E.L R’y., P. K. L Steam Nav. 0. | or to your nearest Ticket Agent, May 7, IRR ~and wiles | JAMES A. MORRIEON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, OKERS ’ _AND-~< Commission Merchants, | HALIFAX A Consi om nts of Island produce will receive prompt attention. ss : Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Beak of Nova Scot ia, Halifax ; George Macle ral, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlotte stown, WARREN & JONES, ‘ N 1ERCH ANT Se m r > t . ay oD 1 Ba reap AND 9 & 14 Minctne Lave, ON, ENGLAND. ' Rep ite | wnada by Moreaisos & Mus i Ont 1 "04 om, et PS iow ? may bo found or T a > é Xs 9 fil ; nt 4.0. SF bids oy i ae wrDL Co’s | ing DB &. Newspaner oon “ua (10 Spruce Stree b, Ww . 2 aion e ii YORK. rg cor Santee Chains, Bracelets, | Spectac A Large Stock of Gera Flan IN PLAIDS AND STRIPES, Just Opened at Stanley Bros’. Loti CHILDRENS’ UNDERCLOTHING, CHEAP, At Stanley Brothers’. LADIES A Large Stoek —_—— :0:———— UNDERCLOTHING, af Stanley Bros’., Brown's Block. ULSTER CLOTHS, DRESS GOODS, TRIMMINGS & PLUSHES, Now Opening at Stanley Bros’. September 15, ISSS8—eod & wky You nts 8 Z.cb0 88 50! $4.50 CUSTOM MADEFPANTS $7.00! $8.00! $9.00 At above prices we have on hand make to order NAP REEFERS, guaranteed to give you solid comfort. [x]- S800, $1009, $1200. We have OUR OWN MAKE of OVERCOATS at above figures. This is the chance of the bargain-hunter’s life. You have here an opportunity which should (<}—— $13.00, $17.00, $19.00. Of the OVERCOATS in this line, we have only to say: COME AND SEE FOR \* OURSELF. We agree to give you Bona Fide Value for your Money. Don’t forget that our CUSTOM TAILORING DEPARTMENT is making its ‘eee happy with good fitting garments. FUR CAPS, CLOTH CAPS and HATS, FUR CO ATS, RUBBER COATS, and all zouds in our line marked very low with a view to exchanging them speedily for “Dp. A. BRUCE. Charlottetown, Oct. 24, 1888. and » not be missed. MercHant TAILOR. = rise the Lile of Tre -————[x]— —---. ‘The Pulse and Heart Beat of Healthy Business. ' Seentinpelil ataeticeme CTING upon this conviction, B.S. DAVIES & CO. have im- _ ported two splendid Tailors from the “Land of the Heather,” and having now at the head of their CUSTOM TAILORING DEPARTMENT, Charlottetown’s efficient and popular Cutter, MR SYLVANUS KEITH, are now prepared to ‘make the most fasbionable and nicely made garments that can be turned out in this city. Our Stock of Cloths, in Scotch, West of England and French ‘manufacturings, in Suitings, Overcoatings and “Trouserings and ‘Mens’ Furnishings, are unsurpassed, and equal to any to be shown in this city. Our Importations were completed last week, ex “Nova Scotian.” We carry everything to be found in a First-Class Mens’ Outfitting Establishment. We import direct and buy from the leading Houses on the ‘Continent, which enables us to place our goods at lowest possible prices, and guarantee to our patrons value unsurpassed by any first class huuse in the trade. B. S. DAVIES & C®O., CAMERON BLOCE. Charlottetown, October 25, 1888. Twenty Years’ Experience. ——-— 0 NEW GOODS. \ ' YE have just re ceived a large selection = Gook 9 We are now selling Watches from : $3.50 up to $10.00. Weare selling Clocks from $1.00 up to $15. 00, nice patterns. i vs, Wedding and other Rin: gs, Lockets, Cutf Buttons, Charms, Studs, Brooches, Earrings, s sles, &c., a very large selection, and the prices are such that will We are now prepared to do REPAIRING TO CLOCKS, in a thoroughly scientific manner. Having the latest moss ¢ »xperienced workmen, we are prepared to give EVERY JOB WARRANTED, t! our approval. eet eee A ,ND JEWELRY 1 Lathes and Tools used by the fa git faction to all work entrusied to our care. ca J URYs the utmost satis Please give us @ call. haa North Skle Queen Square, ~ ~ jon t Say So! Medicine for Throat and Lung Difii- culties has long been, and still is, Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. It cures Croup, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis, and Asthma; soothes irritation of the Larynx and Fauces ; strengthens the Vocal Organs; allays soreness of the Lungs; prevents Consumption, and, even in advanced stages of that disease, relieves Coughing and induces Sleep. There is no other preparation for dis- eases of the throat and lungs to be com- pared with this remedy. “*My wife had a distressing cough, with pains in the side and breast. 6 tried various medicines, but none did her any good until I got a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, which has cured her. A neighbor, Mrs. Glenn, had the measles, and the a h was relieved by the use of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. I have no hesitation in recommending this Cough Medicine to every one afflicted.’’~-Robert Horton, Foreman Headlight, Morrillton, Ark. “T have been afflicted with asthma for forty years. Lastspring I was taken with a violent cough, which threatened !dian Church to terminate my days. Every one pro- nounced me in consumption. I deter- mined to try Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. Its effects were magical. I was immedi- ately relieved and continued to improve untilentirely recovered.”’—Joel Bullard, Guilford, Conn. ‘‘Six months ago I had a severe hem- orrhage of the es brought on by an incessant cough which deprived me of sleep and rest. I tried various reme- dies, but obtained no relief until I be- an to take Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. A ew bottles of this medicine cured me.”’ Mrs. E. Coburn, 19 Second st., Lowell, Mass. “For children afflicted with colds, coughs, sore throat, or croup, I do not know of any remedy which will give more speedy relief than Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. have found it, also, inv oe able in cases of Whooping Cough.’ Ann Lovejoy, 1257 Washington Seren, Boston, Mass. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, PREPARED BY Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Bold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5. A Large and Fine Stock ilies WATCHES SELLING LOW AT G. H. TAYLOR'S North Side Queen Square. nov2 NEW MUSIC, By Rev. Fred E. J. Lloyd. Twelve Tunes for Familiar Hymns, PRICE, THE SET, 25 CENTS, To be had on sale at the Diamond Bookstore. IR JOHN STAINER, Mus. Doc., late of St, Paul’s Cathedral, London, writes:—** Your tunes are melodious and well written.” T. Lewis, E-~q., Mus. Doc., President of the Guild of Organists. London, England, writes :— * Thank you for your excellent tunes; they are worthy of being sung by our best Cathedral Choirs.” They have also been favorably reviewed by the Moutreal Gazette, Quebec Chronicle, Cana- Magazine, and by the Church Tunes of London, and they are used in a large numver both of Canadian and English Churches. octlo BLEW RAPPER The Cheapest, The Purest Bald = SOLD ABOVE GROUND. TRY IT and be CONVINCED. sept27 CLOCKS. We have more Clocks than we can find Room for, sou inant the same ine B comparing Inmself to a banker who possessed the Wealth of his friends at home, though he moned by the Queen, in 1885, to be Prime carried none of it in his pockets ; or as Minister; a faet which the curious may that judicious moralist Nicolle, one of the cure to uote, because it was at exactly the Port-Royal Society, said of a scintillant eo mene wae soqe we wit—‘*He conquers me in the drawing- y 8 am O carry on the room, but he surrenders to me at discretion Government, and consented. It might also nik thd etal ae iad ‘ * urease.”” Such may say with 9@ borne in mind that— desperate as the Themistocles, when asked to lay on a fortunes of his party then appeared—Lord juru— cannot fid le, but 1 . kea Melbourne contrived to remain at the little villag et great cit E en head of affairs, with a brief interval, for a Peet Bgpuet te y. It was at the age of fifty-five years and four months that Lord Salisbury was sam- The deficiencies of Addison in conver- the next seven years. Of living politi- : aia: tala Ma ‘ H . cians, Mr. Gladstone entered on his first erietadlo asap . paw = ’ ** rigid silence amongst strangers: but if he Premiership and his sixtieth year in the same month of December, 1868. Lord Granville was but forty-four years old when asked (in the summer of 1859) to undertake the formation of a Ministry. Lord Hart- 4. pice e. ington attained tothe like honor in the Vir il course of his forty-seventh year. It may be remarked that no leader of party in the present century has been offered the supreme — @y .yoor was more facetious iu his tales post in the Government till well past his 4), a pre bt ciiadei as alk ul : Cour prey eighth lustre; and some of the most eminent of ie eilinn i ae all i si j a ae have had to wait very much longer. Lord that } or : Stiga ” ‘y a > porns Palmerston had turned the point of three- jy) mere aqroontne, Se. Ree I “S- than his conversation score and ten before he was invited to take : the Treasury; and Mr. Disraeli had ad- vanced into his sixty-fourth year when he . Dryden says of himself : ** My conversa- received a certain command to repair to tio” is slow and dull, my humor saturnine Osborne, in the spring of 1868. In spite and reserved. In short, Lam none of those of the start which weaith and rank coulu Wo endeavor to break jests In company, or give to great abilities, Lord Derby had not ™*ke repartees.” been *‘ sent for” till he was fifty-two, and anuther twelvemonth elapsed ere he could succeed in constructing a Cabinet. was silent, it was the silence of meditation. How often, at that moment, he labored at some futurs Spectator ! Mediverity can talk, but it is for genius was heavy in conversation, and resembled more an ordinary man than an enchanting poet. 2. Sh. Et. 5i:h November, 1888. Mr. Gladstone ‘Talks. FROM THE DIARY OF THE PRESENT MR. PRPYS. ON RULE, THE FISHERIES AND THE November 26th, 1880—The Lord Chief SACKVILLE INCIDENT, Justice Cockburn buried ; many to witness nae his burial, and much unseemliness thereat; Mr. Gladstone arrived at Birmingham on and tc-morrow the newspapers will agaiu Monday, where he will remain most of the be busy with his name, and then from that Week. The entire city is en fete in his hour it will fall into forgetfulness: as is honor, On arrival inthe city, he was the everlasting way of things. Thinking “riven tothe town hall in a carriage drawn of him, and of the few yet alive who were by four horses. A great crowd awaited young when he was young, reminded me of hisn, aud humerous deputat ions presented a story that Lord Dalling told me when he him with addresses. Gladstone ina speech was yet Sir Henry Bulwer: though for #4 his addresses fully recognized the fact that matter the story concerns another tht the Irish question was really an more than Cockburn. We were talking of English-Scotch-Welsh question, and until Mr. Disraeli, of whom Sir Henry said that this question was settled the country could his genius was manifest all his life long, Kvow neither solid peace nor effectual pro- ‘*[ remember,” said he, ** when I first met cress. He said ail efforts to solve the Mr. Disraeli ; it was in a company of five {8heries question with the United States ambitious, confident, very young men— Were egregious failures. The liberals did nobodies then, but all of whom (if you can "0t wish to increase the difficulty of settling allow me to say so much of myself) have the matter in dispute, but were desirous come to distinction since. There was my that by a judicious choice of persons and brother Edward, Moncton Milnes, Alexan- the Suggestion of measures the question der Cockburn, Mr. Disraeli and myself, would be settled in a manner tending to Now at thattime none of us were per- draw both countries into cluser relations. sonally acquainted with Mr. Disraeli except The Sackville incident, he said, was extreme- my brother, whose dinner party it was. ly unfortunate. It resulted in the infliction I well remember that Mr. Disraeli came 0! 4 Serious slight and disparagement upon late, and we were speaking of him, sume of Englind. He hoped the mutter was us with frank dubiety, when he came in; SUSceptible of satisfactory explanation. and a strange appearance he made. lu rhe INC) lent ougat to serve to inoderate those days dress was not so severe as it ig the little spirit of vaunting and bragging now, anda certain licence was tolerable, Which is in vogue among many tories. But Mr. Disraeli, then a far more athletic . ~— figure than you imagine him perhaps, ap- Sackville Dismissal, peared ina daring coat of, 1 now forget. — what bright color, a yellow waistcoat, green | The Paris Journal Des Debats, referring velvet trousers, and low shoes with silver to the motives for the dismissal of Lord buckles. The impression he made was not Sackville, says: ‘It is permissible to favorable; and I for one, and I am sure think that these are not very exalted and also, instantly pre- motives which can be admitted without a pared to find that my brother Edward had sense of shame, but then they are very vastly over-praised his man. So we sat practical motives, and if they were ignored, down to dinner; and every man talked his this Sackville business would be utterly in- best, and there was such bright rattle of comprebensible.” ae conversation as you may suppose. We The London Times, in a long editorial on were all in good cue, all emulous, and all the presidential contest and the Sackville well satisfied with ourselves, depend on it. matter, says: ‘* There is not the slightest There was not one amongst us who had not reason to retaliate on Minister Phelps, and plenty of confidence in*himself at all times, yadvises the Government to show delibera- and more than a hupe of Witure greatness; tiem in choosing a successor to Lord Sack- and yet if when we separated we had each ville. It aids that the election may involve been taken aside and put upon our konor a change in the government, that the mat- to say who was the cleverest man in the ter is oe of perfect indifference to English- party, every one of us would have answered, men, but that March next will be fully HOME ‘The man in the green velvet trousers.’ ” |tiime enough to appoiut a successor to Sack- So far Sir Henry Bulwer: who was first of | ville.” that little company of gay and bright young | men to leave the world; and then their host; and now Cockburn. But they man- aged to grow old first. Mr. Disraeli (Lord Beaconstield) survived until the 19th of April, 1881, when, full of years and laden with honors, he also joined the great ma- jority. SHIP NEWS. PORT OF CHARLOTTETOWN. ENTERED. Nov 5—Agility, Gerrior, Sydney, coal; Mag- gie Mcbeth, Sinith, Buctouche. THE PERSECUTED LEARNED. Nov 6—Frank, Grant, Wallace; Isabelle Those who have labored most zealously Deanees Taek “ete Cremend os a ea i. rasers pe . iC LA an, ap uqd, Pp Us to instruct mankind have been those who tiver Queen, Jacobs. Tetameapuche. ber- ° «' ; ‘ m, f ~ ; have suffered most from ignorance, and ring; Brilliant Star, Hartlin, Halifax, bal; the discoverers of new arts and sciences have hardly ever lived to see them accepte’ by the world. With a noble perception of his own genius, Lord Bacon, in his pro- Miunie R McKenz.e, McNeill, Pictou, coal; stmr William, McDonald, Sydney, coal; Eldora, Crearer, Hawkesbury; Maggie H, Landry, Newcastle, lumber. phetic will, thus expresses himself: ‘* For | Nov 7—Minnie Mac, McConnell, Halifax, salt; every name and memory, | leave it to} V4, McMillan, Isaac’s Harbor, cran- ‘men’s charitable speeches, and to foreizn bei ries. nations, and the next ages.” Before the CLEARED, times of Galileo and Harvey the world Nov 5—Mary B, McDougall, Pownal, bal; Se ~ the aes oe blood, aud |* Mayzie McBeth, Smith “Buctouche, Hattie the diurnal immoveability of the earth, and Louise, Barnard, S’side, mdse; Frank, for denying these the one was persecuted rant, Wallace, Elise, Jamison, £ have. and the other ridiculed. The intelligence | Noy 6—Wallace, Davis, Port Hawkesbury; and the virtue of Socrates were punished| stmr Wallace, McDonald, Sydney, bal; with death. Anaxagoras, when he attempt-}| Annie, Lellanc, Pownal, do; Hector, Skinner, do, do; Opal, McLel! lan, Pugwash, mdse; Lavinia Jane, Landry, Pownal, bal; Lady Franklin, Power, St Peter's, C B, do; ed to propogate a just notion of the Supreme | Being, was draggedtoprison. Aristotle, after a longseries of persecutionswallowed poison. The great geometricians and chymists, as Rustic, Keeping, Pinette, do; River Queen, Gerbert, Roger Bacon and Oornelius Vicks, Orwell, herring. . Agrippa were abhorred as magicians. OTHER PORTS, Descartes was horribly persecuted in Hol-| side, Nov 5—~—Ent, Richard Thompson, land, when he first published his upeienns, Walsh, Picton, coal; Arzoo, Kennedy, New. Voetius, a big: + of great influence at | castle, lum; Kate, Walsh, Pictou, coal. 6— Utrecht, accused him of atheism, and had/|Pora, Newell, Pugwash, stoves. 5—Cid, paves projected in his mind to have t! vis | - Althea, Paoli, Shediac, bel, Mite Boat, Le- | philosopher burnt at Utrecht in an extra- ie Blanc, Buectouche, bal; Kate, Walsh, Pictou, And for a few days will offer SPECIAL BARGAINS IN CLOCKS: All Warranted as usual, One Year. E. W. TAYLOR, Oumerda Dlook, Ui, | venl—2w ‘Jaw : - Opposite the Post Oflice | ‘of books | the seventeenth century. $1038, shipped by 7~—Lodi, Day, Pictou, 13200 | Hon John Lefurgey. 3 vaiue, | ordinary fire, which kindled on an emin- ushels oats, val ence, might be observed by the seven pro- | vinces. Mr. Hallam has observed that |°*** 6 ¢ Te rs 2 the ordeal . are wae ae persecution of “My stork of Boots, Shoes, ®ub- aud men. uS perse | bers. Overshoes, Feit Boots, Over- science and genius lasted till the close of) .4e15 slippers, &e., is now com- plete, and is be tier assorted, larger en ua and cheaper than ever. Please ‘MEN OF GENIUS DEFICIENT IN CONVERSATION. | omqcj and examine. —R. K JOS f. Descartes, whose habits were formed in ibovobeun's aid ). dobitude wn muddtutivn, Weel we mal’ vew vod wy of By i > i