Terms :—Five Dowttars a YEAR. — NEW SERIES. _ CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. — A eile ct a st eesti enn at. a * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free,”—Evriripes. THE DAILy EXAMINER. Sinete Copies Two Centre ESDAY, SEPT ISLAND, TU a _ EMBE ——————— ae R 10, 1889. a ae Me re 25.-NO. 91. VOL. The Daily Examiner Is issued Every Evening by The Examiner Publishing Co., FROM THEIR OFFICE, LONDON HOUSE,” QUEEN SQUARE, Charlottetown, P. EB. Island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Gi: TGs 0.0 os on canescens bcs $2 50 Seen. TRUS. oss i dadiebawas és ve pull 2 25 Gnd FOS 666 iss Katies cn cés oes cl 4 O'50 e# Advertising at most moderateragea hp Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on a $10 $5 $3 Three Families in P. E. island! WHO SEND— WRAPPERS Representing the Greatest Value in Woodill’s German Baking Powder, UNTIL SEPTEMBER 3ist. ugl3 ., JaMuEs A. MORRISON GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —-AND— Commission Merchants, | HALIFAX a UO GU ss ————(x}—--—— Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks, Ladics’ Waterproof Cloaks, Ladies Waterproof Cloaks. Mien’s Rubber Coats, Men's 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. ee erences (o)— ’ HARRIS & STEWART, augl5—eod&wkly. : : ee — Consignments of Island produce will receive} “— ——= nr nan wd prompt attention. Rererences : Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; D. C. Chalmers, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown. a“ ” Army and Navy Depo aera es JAS. SCOTT & CO.. FIALIFP AX. — A Fall Stock of Wines aud Liquors JUST RECEIVED. Cases ROYAL BLEND, 15 75 cases ISLAY BLEND &G 2LIC, 100 Cases OLD RYE, it has few equals. Lawns free to guests. June 5, 1889—dy law wky SEASIDE HOTEL, RUSTICO BEACH. ————(x)—-——— This Beautiful Watering Place will open for the Season on July Ist. (x) For pure, bracing air, surf bathing, sea and river tishing, &c., Covered Bowling Alley, Tennis and Croquet TERMS MODERATE. Apply to JOHN NEWSON, Opposite Post Office, Ch'tewn. ——= 50 * CHAMPAGNE, choice brands, 150 “ CLARET, 25 ** HOCK and M@SELLE, 25 “ LIQUEURS—Cherry Brandy, Noyau, Curaco, Maraschino, Benedictine, 200 “ FINE PORT and SHERRY, 150 * HOLLAND GIN and OLD TOM, 300 *“ HENNESSY’'S BRANDY, *, ** w= ona ¥. O, 100 ‘* BASS’S ALE, 206 * 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 GROCERIES ==1889=>— BOSTON DIRECT. Boston, Halitax and P. E. Island Steamship Line. Only Direct Line Without Change, CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON. The Staunch and Commodious Steamships “Carroll” and “Worcester,” gris) other Hardware Supply importation. Aug. 22, 1889—2aw & wky a a x EALERS who will send us specifications of their wants for Fall Trade will find our Jobbing Prices Lower than any House in Canada. Order at once for Axes, Cross Cut Saws, Forks and Shovels, Nails, Horse Nails, Horse Shoes, Lron, Chain, Bolts, Traces, &e., —AND ALL— SILTHULEAIARDWARE |} NORTON & FENNELL. CHARLOTTETOWN. having been thoroughly refurnished and put into : lass condition in every respect, will, during withenzon of 1889, run as follows, commencing “CARROLL,” Charlottetown, Thursday, 9th May, at 6 p. m. From Ove of these vessels will leave Boston for Charlottetown EVERY WEDNESDAY, at Noon, and Charlottetown for Boston EVERY THURS. DAY, at Six o'clock, p. m. ‘ chatttient Passenger accommodation. Low FARES~ First-class Passage Berth in well- furnished Cabin, $6.50. Siataseens Berth, $2.00 extra, Lowest Rates for Freight, handled. carefully CARVELL BROS., Agents, Charlottetown, Ha w Lo R. BGs my Treasurer, ~' wi i ; which is always RECEIVED AT G. H. TAYLOR'S. ————(o) ee FINE ASSORTMENT of Ladies’ and Gents’ Gold and Sil- ver Watches, Gold Masonic and Oddfellows’ Diamond Set ings, Gold Ladies’ Engraved and Fancy Set Rings, Gold Spee- tacles with any kind of Lense fitted, newest patterns and g value in Silverware. Stand for $3.00. All goods sold engraved free. See onr handsome Silver-plated Cruet North Side Queey Square. Cugrlotietown, dug. 13, {Hitmen few jaebadne ‘Best of All: 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. “I have suffered for years from a bronehia) trouble that, whenever I take cold or am exposed to inclement weath- r, shows itself by a very annoying ckling sensation in the throat and by difficulty in breathing. I have tried a great maay remedies, but 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. **I consider Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral a most important remedy For Home Use. T 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, Iowa. “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 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 poate ago I contracted a severe -cold, which settled on my lungs and soon developed all the alarming sym toms of Consumption. I had a cough, night sweats, moatias of the lungs, ns in chest and sides, and was so rostrated as to be confined to my Pea 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 al. I seemed to rally from the first dose of this medicine, and, after using only thres bottles, am as well and sound as ever.” — Rodney Johnson, Springfield, Ill, Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, PREFARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Bold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5. - Cough medicines, Ayer’s Cherry Peo- ‘oral is in greater demand than ever. s No preparation for Throat and Lung —_——{x )--——-—— : ae emp ste eases > acnanpeitlaggepccemeteetnctitarssmnstiiiameatll ‘ON CONSIGNMENT, And For Sale at a Bargain. BARRELS FLOUR, slightly damaged. For sale by E. H. NORTON & CO. FOR SALE BY E. H. NORTON & 60,, In Lots to Suit Purchasers : 100 barrels Flour, warranted equal to the best ; price per barrel, $5.25. 5 octaves Vinegar, 1 cargo Rooting Gravel, 15 bars Copper, 14 in. square, 5 large Plate Glass Mirrors, 1 Emerson Piano, only in use six months and cost $350, will be sold at a bargain, as the owner is leaving the Island. 10 barrels Pure Cod Oil (no mixture). Some choice Building Lots in different parts of the city. Apples and other goods arriving daily. E. H. NORTON & CO., sept6—dy eod & wky Auctioneers. A COOK BOOK FREE By mail te any lady sending us her post office giben. Weills, Richardson & Co., Montreal. ORGANIST WANTED Two Manual Pipe Organ, HE Trustees of the First Methodist Chureh, Charlottetown, P. E. Island, are desirous of securing the services of a suit- able person as Organist and Choir Leader. Applications will be received up to 2Ist Sep- tember, inst., stating terms and when the Satis- and ‘engagement could be entered upon. factory testimonials as to character - ability required. Address, REV. JOHN READ, sept3—2w Jaw Pastor. JUST RECEIVED CONNOLLY & CO’S,, 200 BARRELS Extra No. 1 Herring, In Barrels and Half Barrels. WILL BE SOLD LOW. sept2—2w eod House & Lot | AT GAYTOWN, a ee N THE PREMISES, Wednesday, the 18th September, at 12.30 o'clock, and immediately following the sale of Mr. Robert White’s property at Spring Park, we will sell by AUCTION, by instructions from Mr, M. P. Hogan, his lot facing 50 feet on Young Street, and running back 80 feet, with a new double tenement house thereon. Free from city taxes. Yielding annuai rent- al of $100. A good paying investment. Terms at sale. ane. tym HORGOR & jcruiser measurement, then it is high time LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Who is Married? Six,—In your issue of the 7th inst., Varia complains. of your common form of announcing marriages as incorrect. He says it is the woman who is married to the man, and not the man to the woman, and there- fore we should say—Married, Mary Maide toJohn Bachelor, rather than John Bache- lor to Mary Maide. Now, sir, I do net wish to find fault with Varia, or the authority he cites for this point of etiquette ; but 1 think it would have been better had the reason for it been stated as a matter of history, and not as a sober fact in our modern life. Uf course we all remember the legends of the savage Romans carrying off the Sabine women by force and arms, to be their wives, and of Paris of Troy taking French leave and stealing away the poerless Helen from the Greeks. Those were —- when it might have been said with truth of the marriage contract, ‘*He married her.” The mar was active, the woman passive. But does this express the position of the parties to the contract in ourday, and especially on this side of the Atlantic? In most cases ] trow, the tables have been turned. Job may flatter himself with the possession of the forms and sembiance of power,—but Mrs. Caudle holds the reins. Such a thing )48 8 man marrying a woman, whether she would or no (the common case in those barbarous times) is now unheard of. The evolution of woman is proceeding. The next step will doubtless be to make perpetual the rules observed (or which should be observed) ir. leap year. The error Varia says you have fallen into, is, at most, a piecadillo, but ** straws show which way the wind blows.” Yours hopefully, Maroarer Cavupie. The Cruisers and the Lebster Law. Str, —I believe in having all good laws upon our Statute Books properly enforced. I also believe that what was intended at first as a good law often becomes very ob- noxious to the people when improperly ad- ministered. The Act for the protection of our fisheries, for instance, is, in the main, ugood one. But there is one section of it, the section relating to the lobster tisherivs, which cannot be literally enforced without closing every lobster factory on the Island. Take last year’s experience in the business. The commander of the fishing cruisers took 8 hand in enforcing that law, and here is how he did it. On the 26th of June the steam™ cruiser Acadia — at Cape Spry, near Annan- dale, and sent a boat on shore in charge of chief officer Kent, who, on landing, search- ed the lobster factory there for unlawful fish, He and his men tursled the bulk of the fish on the cooler about until they sueceeded in finding seven lobsters which Mr. Kent declared to be of unlawful size. In measuring the fish a very uncertain and unfair way was resorted to. A kind: of box was provided, into which the lobster was put, and if the lobster did not fill the box it was decided to be under-sise. It did not seem to matter much to the officer of the cruiser how crooked the lobster was as he did not straighten out the fish to measure him. The boiling kettles, bath kettles and every nook and corner were then searched, but there were none found under size except the seven to which I have al- ready referred. One ofthe proprietors of the tactory, Mr. McPhee, was then taken on board the cruiser where Commander Gordon had the lobsters again measured, five of which he declared to be too short, and the remaining two he called ‘“trubbers.” He said that Captain McLaren and he had decided to make the fine for the first offence fifty dollars, and asked Mr. McPhee if he was prepared to pay it. If not paid forthwith, Mr. McPhee was promptly told that he wouid have to go to jail without further ceremony. Fin- ally, however, he was allowed to go on shore on condition that he would pay the fine fine within two hours. The tine was paid, after which Mr. McPhee was con- deecendingly allowed to goat liberty. Now, sir, | would ask what authority had Com, Gordon for acting as he did? He was sworn in as a fishery magistrate by a Justice of the Peace of Souris. It is the first time l ever heard of one magistrate swearing in another. The Judges of the courts have heretofore done the swearing in of Magistrates. But in any case, what right, I would ask again, had Com. Gordon to condemn and tine any person without a trial? I was always led to believe that, while under British rule, none shall be even arrested for debt, trespass or other Even the Queen herself cannot com- mand anyone by word of mouth to be arrested, but she must do it by writ or order of her courts, according to law. It would appear that some of the captains of our cruisers consider themselves greater than either queen or law. I need only add that if lobster packers are to be fined fifty dollars and over for every lobster found, when boiled; measur- ing one eighth of an inch short according to to agitate for a better state of affsirs. Everyone knows, who has taken the Jeast trouble to find out, that Jobsters, in boiling, will shrink from one-half to three-fourths of an inch. Jf the length of the lobster when boiled ia to be the rule, then the law should say so, and instead of 94 inghes as prescribed by law now, let the length be lessened to correspond with the boiied lobster, or cruiser measurement. {f the present law is to bef enforced by the cruisers next season 43 it was this, the only thing for some of jthe packers in King’s County to do is to iget out of the business altogether, which means a dead loss of thousands of dollars to them and next tying to stayvgtion to a civil cause of action, but by virtue of 4 his precept or commandment of - some court. bis that this matter may be well ventilated in Parliament next session, and that, asa re- sult, the law will be modified, and those who shall administer it instructed to act with @ sense of justice and strict impartial- ity in every case. Yours truly, A CONSERVATIVE. Souris, Sept 9, 1889. —— Bishop Ireland for Prohibition HI8 ADVICE TO CATHOLICS, In & speech delivered by Archbishop Ire- land at the annual State Convention of the Minnesota Catholic Total Abatinence Union, held in June last, he said ‘* We thought we meant business in this warfare, but I hope God wi torgive us for our weakness, for we went into the battiefield without sufficient resolution. We labored under the fatal mistake that we could argue out the question with the liquor sellers. We imagined there was some power in moral suasion, that when we would show them the evil of their ways they would abanden the traffic. We have seen there is no hope of im- proving in any shape or form the liquor trafic. “There is nothing now to be dene but to wipe it out completely. I have lost too much of my time striving in the past te repair the fearful evils wrought by the liquor traffic, 1 have lost too much time in speaking of tota> abstinence in hal] and ulpit to men who, while listening, were with me, but who, out in the streets, would be invited by the saloon keeper to come and take a drink and forget their resolutions. Well, some of us are grow- ing old, and do not intend to be throwing away our time in arguing with people who will not be converted, and I for one am going to go in with terrific earnestness in the future in this war against liquor in all shapes, I mean business this time. ** Now in order to succeed, I wish to enroll every man. We Catholics will unite with our tellow citizens of all classes and all denomina- tions todo away with that terrible sin an shame and disgrace of the saloon. All those who violate the law and disgrace us go into the saloon first, and would we be patriota, would we be Americans, if we did not tura round and meet with our whole strength the spring of crime, the accursed saloon? ** 30 come and say to your friends that you have enlisted for war, bat meaning business this time, clean out.the whole institution of dram-telling. Weare blessed in every way. There is not in the world a country equal to our own, and what we have to fear is intem. perance, the one curse in country or city,” ears ago News Notes. Desertiuns from the warships now at Quebec are reported to be numerous. It is stated that as many as 72 men have dis- appeared from the lerophon since her arrival in port. Probably the whole of this number have not really desert- ed. Many of the missing men are, doubtless, still somewhere about town. Meanwhile, the ships patrols are kept pretty basy mghtly looking aafter them, and picking up the stragglers, who esem bent on thoroughly enjoying themselves when they get ashore, and making night hideous for the citizens. Considerable activity in railway building is expected at Quebec this fall and winter. The Harbor Commissioners have granted permission for the erection of a bridge over the mouth of the river St. Charles for the joint use of the Lake St. John and La Bonne Ste. Anne railways and its construc- tion, which will cost about $100,000, will be shortly begun, as will also a union station and a change of the line of Lake St. John road from Loretto to Quebec to avoid the heavy grades. Further the Inter- colonial premises at Levis are to be en- larged and it is said that effectual steps are about tu be taken to compel the Loeal Government to cause the Canadian Pacific railway to respect the conditions of the city’s million vote to the old North Shore railway by extending the line along the river front to the Montreal Ocean Steam- ship ©o’s. wharf. — EE mee Personal. The New Glasgow Znterprise says :— Louis Desbrisay, who has been in the em- ploy of the Bank of Nova Scotia here for & short time, left for Montreal last [Mhureday, to take a position in the Bank of Montreal. One of Mr. Gladstone’s conversational ad- vantages is that he has known every celebrated person for 50 years, and has endlegs reminis- gences of all of them. On one occasion, at a dinner party, somebody was illustrating the Duke of Cambridge's remarkable command of damnatory rhetoric. The Duke has a fiery temper, and at a review one day he made a forcible observation about a certain officer’s eyes, The officer promptly re- quested him to confine his objurgation to his own eyes. ‘“Yos,” said Mr. tone, “but the Duke of Cambridge is mild compared with uncles. I remember the old Duke of Cum. rland, who was famous for his habit of gar- nishing other people's remarks with his own oaths: When the first bill for the abolition of church rates came before the House of Lords, the Duke was asked to ex to the Archbishop of Centerbury the wish of the ma- jority that he should move its rejection. Off went the duke with this commission. Pre- sently he returned, and in a loud voice, for he was very deaf, exclaimed, ‘The archbishop seys that he will be devoted to ogra se fire if he does not work the re bill.’” It need scarcely be ssid’ the tne lan- a which his Grace ot Cumberland pro- essed to quote from his Grace of Canterbury haa been somewhat softened. _- Piano For Sate.—Attention is called to the advertisement in another column of « Fischer Piano for sale. The ee is a super: ior instrument, and a splendid opportunity is offered for securiag it. Apply to Prof, J. H. Logan, Kent Street. A Pugasasr Eve season for t-door wand coacerts will soon he . ming 0 & CiOs€, & Jet is ati goto the square to- night an’ evj y the svext music of the new band, ‘The disaing spreys of the fountain aad the flowers wuica ore iooking | beautital, veya t NING -ihe age tyr oF Oe Wop! ipa We ong ge