oe Ba lah ae ‘Weert NEW SERLES. Che Daily Examiner ening by The Examiner Publishing Co., hoM TRIB OFFICE, ‘LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, ‘ rlottetown, P. E. Island RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months..... oe ees .. $2 50 rhree Months.... eee ca oe One Month,.... ‘4 . os £7 Advertising at most mo lerate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half yearly or yeariy uivertisements on application. - ALMANAC FOR OOTOBER, 1889. MOON S CHANGES. First Quarter, Istday, Sh., 20.6m., p.m., > W. Fol) Moon, Sth day, 9h., 13.3m., p.m., S. E Last Quarter, }6th day, Si, 20.0m, p.m, NE. below horizon. New Moon, 24th day, 10h., 13.4m., a.m., 5.2%. First Quarter, Sist day, 4h., 18.1m., a.m., N. below horizon. > Sun Sun | Moon High Day's a ra rises | Sets rises | water) ien’h h mi ftr'nimorn h m 1 Tuesday @ 315 36) 1 23) 2 3211 33 2 Wednesday 5 34, 2 22) o 4i 2Y 3 Thursday PS 32; 3 11) 5 58 26 4\ Friday §| 30) 3 51] 6 38 22 § Saturday | 9] 28] 419} 7 53} 19 §) Sand : 10; 26) 4 51} 8 48 16 7iMonday 2} 24) 5 11] 9 32 12 8| Tuesday 13} 22} 5 40/10 7 Q 9 Wednesday 14) 29) 6 1/10 46 6 10 Thursday 16' 18) 6 26 11 19 2 bl Friday ” ; > $2)Satu: day 18; 14) 7 25jat <s ” 13) Sunday 20 ee > ' I lt: 8 40; ] 43 50 14!) Monday 15i Tuesday 23' 9 9 29\ 2 27 46 16) Wednesday 24 7110 25) 3 10 42 17, Thursday 25 5\/}]1 24) 4 28 i) 13, Friday 27 4 morn} 5 44 7 19 Saturday 28} 2) 0 28) 6 56) = 34 20) Sanday ; 3 0. 1 31| 7 56 3] 21 Menday 30/4 57| 2 42; 8 44; 27] 22, Tuesday 31| 55| 3 52) 9 24) 24 B3iWednesday | 32) 53) 5 310 4 22} 24 Tharsday | 34) 52) 6 17/10 41) = 18} 25) Friday | 35] 50) 7 33/11 20) = 15) 26) Saturday 36; 458 8 50 morn 12 a7jSunday 38} 47:10 5) 0 1 9 28) Monday 39} 45/11 17| 0 45 iF 29 Tuesday 40} 44jaft19}1 31; 3} ‘ 43) 43) 1 11) 2 27| i 30 Wednesday 31 Thursday MARVELOUS aQ & HIS RY. Oxuly Cenaine Sve Pear Books Learved is ous + Cauing. Mind wandering cured. Ievere child and adalt greatly benefitted. # indacementa to Correspondence ¢ RoOg, r vectus, with Opinions of Dr. Wem. A. } mond, tne world-famed Speci’ ist in Mind D onict ¢) reentenf Thompson, tools ; ag @iditor a Chr Es se 1. °f,. Buektiery, D.D oft _ 4. ¥. Biehard Proctor, the Scientis it LW. Rater, dadge Gilson, Jadah P. ; nuit, and otbers, sent poct free by v f ’\. LOISETTE, 237 Fitth Ave., N. Y- Prot JAMES A. MoOuEISON GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS --AND— ‘ommission Merchants, MALIvVAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Scotia, Halifax; D. C. tank of Nova Scotia KREPERENCES : Bank of Nova ¢ ‘halmers, Manager Charlottetown. -= 185 — BOSTON DIRECT. —— Boston, Halitax and P. E. Istand le 45/4 42' 1 53) 3 33} 9.57] 4. E DAILY EXAMIN “ This is true Liberty. when Free Born Men, having te advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxririvgs, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. ALL AND WINTER (x) H} a4 ISLAND. MONDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1889. UL qI 3 PEREINS & STERNS. * i We y ¥ —(X)— ¥ K have to announce a complete stock of New Goods for the Fall and Winter Trade. Che varied requirements of our numerous patrons from i ‘low n and Country are fully met in the splendid assortment of Woclen Dress Fabrics, Jackets, Mantles, Ulsters, Millinery, Knitted Wool Goods, Staple Dry Goods, Carpets, Oil Cloths, Gents’ Furnishings, Nc., Xe, calculated to maintal goods at moderate tivures comparison In chi: ‘the cheapest, as heretof re our aim will be to have th 1 our reputation food and tne price moderate. or supplying We would remind those seeking a ges that the lowest-priced article is not always e article 5 ? i The whole now offered at prices ing the best in a few days we will open a big lot of Fancy Goods, which we Will dispose of at excepti mally low prices, You will save many a dollar by trading with PERKINS & STERNS. Charlottetown, Oct. 11, ISS9 iv wky ———- ee ae —_ 1 aXxv | ’ ‘ ~ © SCHIS AGOMANAA =< @ — cr Cy eS — : oe . s—e Ses mae as ° = a * i - = = _ i a Cn ss |, 5 3 emt J a ~ > om |e oe 33 - = ! = © ee ~ - - 5 tc a. & * -- = e o o te oo _ ao o gs ~~ «a i - wal % S 2 | z= Ze i - ad i C2 ts a os | + wee OR ; + — = cr ie » @ ‘O0TZO NT e Q Si 7 <P. xs Eon want = So fj! ERE est a Te cans we = Lg > eco a «6 “—_ cf ces = we ~ = =a an a @® os @ ‘ <j re a Oo cc se = @& ~ = 2os mers 2 Ww ws a - “3258 ~ . ~ mee [oad cor ee 4O0Q - a cre $880: 22 eS 75 636i @ & && -— - oto | ° = Sat 6 -— & es @ ' €¢- 4 as SS bt —- = Bess x ct "a = = Ale ¢ — S es” = ww = ee ~ os = ~ Ss ams & a — — pb OB ate oo cD 1 So mm 6S ac me m cr ee Re oN = =O Ma — . Saws - eed Sees 38 epeyy sig Ivey [wroedg UrBs ‘YOOM WOTFIQIYXY Surg s Steamship Line. | Only Direct Line Without Change, GHARLOPTETOWN 0 BOSTON. “Carroll” and “Worcester,” having been thoroughly refurnished and pat into first-class condition in every respect, will, during Charlottetown, Oct. 12, 1889. Eiorse Powers. the season of 1889, run as follows, commencing with the “CARROLL,” From Charlottetown, Thursday %th May, at 4 p. m. One of these vessels will leave Boston for | Charlotietown EVERY WEDS ESDAY, at Noon, and Charlottetown for Boston EVERY THURS- DA 1. at 51x o'clock, p. m. Excellent Passenger accommodation. rates, , : FARES— First-class Passege Berth in well- furnished Cabin, $6.50. Stateroom Berth, $2.00 | extra, Low carefully handled. i CARVELL BROS., Agents, | © yn. HAkkinon LORING, Treasurer, eee Ki. GARDNER, : Lewis’ W . Boston. Combined Threshers », 7 4/5 w a NOTICE Webb, Bristles, TO SHOEMAKERS Headquarters for French Calf Tops, Leather, Upper, , Pegs, Pincers, Nails, Shoe Thread, Eye le ts, Hammers, gm cthan can be imported. attended to. ‘ . GC... Calf, Brass N GORE BROS. —_—+0) —-AND—- an wee eee ny tw ve caners. > (GOFF BROS FALL BOOTS Beat Them All! We Goat, Kid, ails, sold cheaper Orders by letter carefully and promptly THRESHERS AND SHAKERS .— Kare manufacturing these Machines, and have some ready to ship. They combine the latest American improve- ments, are fast Threshers, very light running, and easy on horses, We believe them t» ke superior to any machines of the kind ever sold on P. K. Island, and we guarantee them to give } e . e * ‘i ~ : . oP ne o« om 6 Lowest Rates for Freight, which is always S@tisfaction in every respect. Terms liberal. For sale at MARK WRIGHT & COS. Charlottetown, Oct, 14, 1889~2aw wky Ask For Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and be sure you get it, when you want the best blood-purifier. With its forty years of unexampled suc- eess in the eure of Blood Diseases, you can make no mis- take in preferring Ayer’s Sarsaparilla to any other. The fore-runner of mod- ern blood medicines, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is still the most pop- ular, being in great- er demand than all others combined, * Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is selling faster than ever before. I never hesitate to recommend it.’’—George W. Whitman, Druggist, Albany, Ind. “‘T am safe in saying that my sales of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla far excel those of any other, and it gives thorough satisfac- tion.’’— L. H. Bush, Des Moines, Iowa, “ Ayer’s Sarsaparilla and Ayer’s Pills are the best selling medicines in my store. I can recommend them conscien- tiously.’”—C. Bickhaus, Pharmacist, Roseland, Ill. - *““We have sold Ayer’s Sarsaparilla here for over thirty years and always recommend it when asked to name the best blood-purifier.”’— W. T. McLean, Druggist, Augusta, Ohio. “1 have sold your medicines for the last seventeen years, and always keep them in stock, as they are staples. ‘ There is nothing so good for the youth- ful blood’ as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.”— R. L. Parker, Fox Lake, Wis. ** Ayer’s Sarsaparilla gives the best satisfaction of any medicine I have ia stock. I recommend it, or, as the Doctors say, ‘I prescribe it over the counter.’ It never fails to meet the eases for which I recommend it, even where the doctors’ prescriptions have been of no avail.’—C. F. Calhoun, Monmouth, Kansas. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass, Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle, DRUGS a yy is f Physicians’ Prescrip- | : tions and Family sett, © © \F : t Recipes | | are our specialties, and will | receive prompt aud careful| gs attention. We warrant all Drugs, © | Chemicals and Compounds | bearing our label and_passing Suecess of a Nation—On What Does it Depend? lhe following essay was prepared by the tate Fred J. Hoyt, of Murray Harbor, for- iuerly of Windsor, N.S. 1 feel sure that it will be peculiarly acceptable to those who had the privilege of an acquaintance with its talented and regretted author, B. ta. Gi Who are the men to whom the thanks and reverence of every age will be paid—an un- fiiling tribute of honor and veneration so long as time shall endure? Patriots and philan- thropists, men who struggled and died for others, men who sacrificed all ea'thly comfort .od hope of earthiy advantage that they might bequeath to the generation to come the lesacy of treedom, or raise up those who are bowed down and oppressed, and restore them tu the rights and privileges of manhood, The stories of ‘fejl and Bruce have again and again inspired that undying love of liberty that has saved a country on the brink of ruin. he name of John Howard, the philanthropist who devoted his life to visiting prisons and alle. viating the sufferings of their miserable in- mates, will be remembered and revered, wil be crowned wich praises and blessings so long as the power to venerate and the heart stirred by admiration of a noble example shall remain among mankind. But these brilliant examples of heroism and self-devotion which challenge our admiration and cast a glow over the true history of human progress, are not the only self-denying workers for the public good. [t is an error, common and dangerous, to overrate the importance of the work done by the few great men who dazzle us by their mag- niticence, while the unrecorded labors of thousands as worthy, though not as gifted as they, and whose endeavors are as necessary to success, are forgotten or disiegarded, We praise the general who wisely desires and resolutely executes the plan of battle which results in victory ; bat we too often forget the sturdy soldier of the line, without whose stal- wart arm and unflinching bravery that victory would never have been won. We reverence the apostle and the martyr, the reformer, the missionary; but we too often tose sight of the fact that the efforts even of these, would, humanly speaking, ac- ‘complish but little if they were not seconded by those of thousands of unknown and unre- corded laborers inspired by the self-same spirit. The very eminence of these great ones sometimes proves a source of discouragement rather than of emulation, for we feel ourselves so much beneath their stature that we forget that ‘* God has his plan for every man,” and that in the accomplishment of his beneficient designs the life of the most humble and uan- obtrusive laborer may be as acceptable to him as the apparently more costly sacrifice of the gifted intellect or heroic soul. ““God bas his plan for every man,” and it is when all are laboring earnestly in the capacities In which he has fitted them to } erform that the work of good will to man 18 Most rapidly progressing. I am not one of those who believe in the de- generacy either of the human brain or of the human heart. Progress is the law of the lworld. ‘1 have been all my life,” says Lord ee fa oe s0yN7 | i | Macaulay, ‘ bearing of nothing but decay, be- Lt. = sates o> . holding nothing but improvement.’ As brave | Cor Prince and Kent Strects,) |men live now as ever trod the earth. In gor, sage 4 - 2" | modern Christendom the virtue of heroic self- y E € j i a 'devoation counts its followers by multitudes, apes 3 e and in the cave of at least the majority of oct8—ly eod Pe eS SS * e > a a Fee = ae oe] ~ nas aes Seer e arte SAUSAGES made daily at R. | BRIDGESY’, pound, Houses. and sold at 12 cents per Special rates te Hotels and Boarding Qaw tf—oct12 AWE \E\ EF w ARRUAL MERTING. ? 2 General Annual Meeting of the Hills- borough Skating Rink Company will be held on WEDNESDAY, 30th day of October, inst.» A. D. 1889, at Hight o’clock, p. m., at the office of Messrs. Palmer & McLeod, Char- lottetown. D. C. McLEOD, oct9 tl 80th Secy-Treasurer. Chariettetown Driving Park and Previneial Exhibition Association. 27 E ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING of _ the Stockholders of the above Association will be held in Mr. J. ). McLeod’s Hall, on WEDNESDAY EVENING, the 23rd inst., at 8 o'clock, sharp By order of the Directors. A. B. WARBURTON, Secretary. oct8—tl dte Ss. S. “COILA.” — FWNHIS Steamer is due here on WEODNES- DAY NEXT, 16th inst., and will receive freight at Charlottetown aud Summerside (also Crapaud, if convenient), sailing for Bos- ton on SATURDAY, 19th. D. FARQUHARSON & SON. octl2 FOR SALE OR TO LET. EPPOCH FARM, containing about 240 acres. Apply to WM. WELSH, octl4—lw King Street. NOPEICHK dy & «UR friends and the public generally i) oblige us by paying their respective amounts due by them to us as early as possi- ble. We will allow 5 percent. off all accounts paid this week. After that time full amount must be paid. E, W. TAYLOR, octl4—3i Cameron Block. ‘mankind there is deep-seated in our natures ithat which bids us rejvice at the prosperity lof others and sorrow at their misfortunes, | which prompts us to put ourselves between them and danger, and take upon ourselves | some portion of their loss, covered up it may j be, and well-nigh destroyed, but yet there to ibe brought out by the occasion. It isa pleasure to kuow and to feel this, ‘and it is well sometimes to look into our {neighbors’ faces and remember that in spite lof disappointment and annoyances there are jmen and women there with generous, human ihearts who inthe hour of need would sink | all minor differences, and aid and comfort leach other, forgetful of self. Llike to recall ithisfact. it quickens the sympathies and nerves the arm to labor in the good cause. In our times of quiet and order it is not ‘often that a man has an opportunity of dis- itinguishing himself by some single act asa |hero, or a philantrophist, for what is re- quired of us is that quiet, persistent endeavor from day to day, which is felt, not seen. But loccasionally events cail for a striking display of bravery; and that the brave man is not wanting to the occasion has been frequently shown in our own little country, and in our own times, Let me mention two instances. In a humble igravevard in a county town of Nova Scotia, 11s a plain slab telling a simple story which ‘inight become a part of history,—if history were a record of the growth of virtues in the |soul of man,—not a chronicle ot the quarrels lof kings. Two men sailing in the harbor were thrown into the water by the upsetting of their boat. A single oar was all that was left them to cling to. As neither of them could swim their struggles soon exhausted their strength, and lit became evident that their frail s»pport could not sustain them both. Then came the time of trial. Who of us could tell how mad- ly we wou'd cling to the last hope of life if sensible. We were looking our last on sun, and earth and sky; or how madly shrink back from that ghastly terrer—death, if we stood with it face to face. Bet the struggle here was of a nebler kinds ‘One man, voluntarily resigning his chance for life, gave himself up to death to save the lite of his friend. A few simple words of farewell, last messages of love to friends on shore, and all was over, An- jother was added to those heroic souls whom ithe sea shall at last give up. Nor was his igacrifice in vain. ‘The friend for whom he died was a short time after rescved from the |shore, to perpetuate the memory of his noble action. Within our own memory another ex- ample of self-devotion has been given, more lremarkable even than this. A few years ago ithe Asiatic cholera was in LKurope. |The ready communication between Nova Scotia and the Mother County rendered it probable that it would be brought to the city ‘of Halifax,—and men worked and watched, — and it came. And two physicians, devoting | themselves to almost ce tain death, gave up} ;qualisy. will [themselves between the city and its foe as if!crockery, and don’t forget the place is at 'by the sacrifice of two noble lives to satisfy |R. K. Brace’s. ' th This is what I cal) poetry, a} | poetry of the sublimest kind, the poetry of a | jabout their mens’ and boys’ clothing (over- 'a\i that man holds dear on earth, and placed ithe destroyer. jnoble action. SrveLze Copies Two Cents VOL. 25.-NO. 126. possesses it, no matter how humble and in- significant he may deem himself, will find appropriate opportunities for becoming a benefactor of mankind, I believe that it ex- ists in us all to some extent, requiring only to be called out and utilized. In every community there are public spwit- ed men who labor only for the good of that community, seeking only the satisfaction that is the reward of success. Everywhere there are living around us, men and women whose hives of simp.c goodness, charity and self- sacrifice would put to shame the records of chivalry. Where is the man whose heart does not gladden at the thou..i:t that his neighbors are happy and successful, that this country is prosperous ?—gladden not merely because a share of the common prosperity must neces- sarily come to him, but because God has set the feeling in his heart to witness against what is sordid and in favor of what is wort4y. This is what I undestand by patriotism. Not a vague sense of allegiance to some in- definite thing we call our country; not a drowsy heroism which might be-stirred into activity by the prick of an invading bayonet, but a well-defined sense of duty which re og. bizes our country in our country men, which willingly acknowledges the obligation to labor for the good of the community in which we reside, and makcs it an ambition to further with all our might every measure which aims to secure the highest good of all, It should be the ambition of every one to so live that he may leave the world better for his having lived in it. It is wonderful what opportunities there are for doing this. He who plants a tree by the wayside, he who makes one place ina village a joy to look upon, he who strives to spread around him an atmosphere of cheery good will is a public benefactor. He who has a word of encourage- ment for the desponding, he who thiaks it not beneath him to help chiidhood pass a happy hour is a philanthropist. A word of praise judiciously spoken to a boy by the parent he loves aad respects will often touch the hidden springs of life and action and arouse ambition, and be mighty in accomplishing good which hours of the most solemn lectures could never achieve, orgseldom realize as we ought how much good a little good will do. The well-being of all—t» be accomplished by each laboring earnestly for the good of all —this is God's great work, committed to human instrumentality. How shall we, each of us, become helpers in the great work, so that our lives may become centres of good in- fluences, not only for those with whom we come in contact, but those around us and away from us, and these who are to live after us? To accomplish so mighty and important a work as the general improvement of the people of a whole country, a mighty engine seems to be required. A mighty engine is required, and these modern times of ours have supplied that engine. We have been taught not only what we are to labor for, and whose spirit and teaching are to inspire us, but the very method we are to adopt has been clearly in dicated. ho you ask what is this method to be followed, this mighty engine to be em- ployed’ I tell you it is voluritary association, united, systematic action. See what examples of the power of this principle we have before our eyes every day. A desirable object is to be accomplished. There is no one man to do it, Ten resolute men join hands and say, “We wiil do it,” and the thing is done. A village requires a public hail, a reading room, or some other desirable institution that shall be of public utility by spreading information and cultivating those refined tastes that war against the grosser vices; and after sighing for the liberal rich man who shall furnish the necessary funds, and who, be it said in passing, seldom puts in an appearance whon called for—its inhabit- ants determine to do it themselves, and the work is completed. No one is overburdened, and the benefits »esulting are tenfold greater than can ever spring from an act of private munificence. What ene man, oi a number of men working disjointedly, cannot accomplish, a society achieves with ease; and in societies, be the benefits they strive to secure indas- trial, intellectual, moral or religious—be they mechanics’ institutes, fruit-growers’ associ- ations, literary societies, temperance organ- izations, or churches—we have instarces of the mighty power of voluntury organization. We have new before us two ideas: First, ‘it should be the ambition of every man to live so that he may leave the world better for his having lived in it.” The Jength of life is not great even at its longest. The things we labor for do not always satisfy us, even when we grasp them. Who of us is here who would not wish at the end of life to look back and say, ‘I’ve not lived in vain.” In the second place we have seen that we have within our power means of the most potent kid, means more powerful than ever king or despot could wield,—that of uniting ourselves voluntarily to labor as one man in the great work . of general improvement for whatever object may be truly worthy. [ContTiInveD IN Our Next.) For Delicate, Sickly Children Seott’s Emulsion is unequalled. See what Dr. C. A. Black, of Amherst, N. 8S., says; “I have been acquainted with Scott’s Emalsion ot Cod Liver Oil, with Hyphosphites, for years, and consider it one of the finest pre- parations now before the public, Its pleasant ilavor makes it the great favorite for children, and I do highly recommend it for all wasting diseases of children and adults” Sold by druggists, 50 cts. and $1.00 ne metre I hr neem em News of Bargains! News of Bargains ! Hark ! tis ringing down the street, And she store is overcrowded, For our Shoes they can’t be beat. News of Bargains! Where’ll I find them? Tell me quickly if you can You will find them at McEachen’s— Truly he’s the cheapest man ! octl9 2i Crovkery—our first arrival, this fall's English Crockery (13 crates) has just arrived at Halifax, and will be here next week. We buy direct from the manufacturers and are able to sell cheaper than any firm on P. E. Island, We ave determined not to be undersold by anyone. If you want bargains give us a call. We take the lead every time in prices and Keep your eye on the sign cheap {octl2 —a => Gae-~- what our competitors say Never mind | Now, although the occasions that cail for | coats and reefers) satisfy yourself by going to ac- isuch acts as these are rare, the spirit that in-|the great cheap clothing store, J. B. spires them should not be rare, and whoever | donald’s, POF oct 19 Gi