Che Daily Examiner JUNE 22, 1885. [The Franchise and Reciprocity. Tue following is the Hansard report the short discussion in Parliament respecting this important question to which Tar Examiner referred to Saturday: _— Me Mrrevert —With the consent «f the Houe, I wish to draw the attention of the hon. the First Minister, to a matter referred that very reliable paper called the Montreal Gazette, a paper that is charac terised by a great deal of literary ability aud truthfulness. In a letter to that paper { tind this matter referred to, which is of great interest, certainly, to the people of the Maritime Proviness. The letter refers to the fact that correspondence has been had and au arrangement entered into be- tween the Cabinet at Ottawa and the Gov- eroment at Washington in order to promote a settlement of the fishery question. The substance of the article is this, that an arrangement has been arrived at between the Cabinet at Washington and the Cabinet here, that no _ steps shall be taken to prevent American fishermen coming into our fisheries until Congress moets in December next, in the hope that in the meantime such arrangement will be arrived at to settle the question, not merely for a year or ten years, but for all time Now, as this is a very important matter, one that is creating a good deal of interest in the Maratime Provinces, and to which, | am sure, the Government is giving a good deal of attention, and as the fishery clauses of the Washington Treaty will expire in a couple of weeks, I would like to know what foundation there is, if any, for this article. Sir Joun A. Macponatp—I am very glad the hon. gentleman has asked the question. i think the hon. member for Digby (Mr. Vail) asked a similar question some time ago, and I told him the subject had cecapied the attention of the Government and that the papers would be brought down befors the end of the Session. At this moment we are applying to the Governor- General for leave from the Colonial Office to lay certain papers before the House, end I have no donbt that consent will be given at once unless the late change there will cause some little delay. I fancy, however, it will not, and we shall bring down very important documents to be laid before the House as soon as we have authority to do 80. Mr. Mirenest—Does the right hon. gentleman feel himself at liberty to declare whetuer the tendency of the article, the de- claration that arrangements are likely to be come to whereby our fisheries will be open to Americans during the present season is correct or not ? Sin Joun A. Macponatp—I cannot say that this is correct, but I do not thiuk it well to be more specific in my statement. It is not correct, hewever, that there is any engagement by which the waters will be open to the Americans, but the papers speak for themselves. I may say, however, that the tendency of ali this correspond- ence is to give strong hope that negotia- tions will take place, not only with regard to fisheries, but with regard to extended reciprocity. Mr. Macxenzig — The hon. member should state at once whether this statement in a Ministeriai organ is correct or not. Sir Joun A. Macponaty—In the first place, the Government has no organs. Mr. Mircuett—Except the Herald. Sm Joun A. Macpoyatp—lIn the second place, I have not seen the article ; in the third place, I do not think the Government con at all be forced, if they think it inex- pedient, to make statements prematurely, and they cannot make a full statement now or one tull o »ugh to be at all satisfactory to the House. Mr. Mackenziz—lt is cortain some Min ister has made the statement to the editor of the paper. Sir Joun A. Macvonatp—No ; that is not the case. Any statement that has been ot to in made has come from Newfoundland, which is also. interested in __ this matter. [have no donbt as to how the statement referred to has been made. Sir Ambrose Shea, who is not a member of the Newfoundland Government, and holds no official position whatever under the Gov- ernmen!, went to Washington not long ago on behalf of the St. John Board of Trade, on a matter relating to Custome, and had some communication with the American Government, and sume unofficial communi- cation with the British Ambassador, and I presume these rather imperfect statements have been made from the information he gathered when at Washington. Mr. Vati.—I am sure I need not remind the hon, gentleman that this is avery im portant matter. As we are getting to the Ist of July, Lam quite sure he feels the necessity of taking early action, so as to arrive at some conclusion as early in July as possible. I presume any arrangements that may be come to, to leave our fisheries open to American fishermen, will enable our fishermen to send fish to the United States free of duty. Sir Joun A, Macponatp—I have already stated that we merely wait for permission to bring down communications which have taken place between the Imperial Govern- ment and the Government of the United States. PRESBYTERIAN circles generally in Hali- fax, and particularly one congregation of that denomination, are much disturbed over the discovery that two of their clergy- men have been guilty of sormon stealing. Last week Rev. Allan Simpson, pastor of the Park street church, and heretofore looked upon as one of the cleverest divines in the city, left for Mon- treal to attend the annual session of the Presbyterian General Assembly. On Sunéay his pulpit was occupied by the Rev. T. A Nelsor, a minister of the same deno- mination, from a town near Ottawa, Ont., who preached a sermon exactly the same as one delivered a month ago hy Rev. Mr. Simpson. The discourse in both cases was che and the same and consequently the ‘wo men must have been guilty of attempt- ing to gain credit for an effort that did not belong to either. The matter will, no doubt, be the subject of a Church Confer- ence, the deliberations cf which will be awaited with interest. e i THH DAILY ERTTERS TO THE EDITOR, > Coroners’ Laoquests. Most Righteous Judge! a sentence—Come, prepare — MERCHANT OF VENICE Srr,— Last Saturday's iesue of the Patriot devoted a lengthy editerial to the subject of ‘Coroners’ Inqueste.” ‘The writer, evidently a would be wag, inspired with a zeal worthy of Old Mortality himself, lappears to have ransacked the public records of the Province back to a very remote period in order to exhume some dvocuments from the annals of Coroners’ Inquests, with a view to bring that ‘‘ancient institution” into disrepute. In his re- searches, much to his delight, he discovered a@ rare specimen possessing ‘‘ the merit of originalty,” and bearing date the 12:h day of December, 1884, and another bear- ing no date—but still to the eye of the antiquary of great interest being as it was of the same species as the one of recent date. These would certainly find a place in the archives of the Historical Society of P. E. Island if that institution had not collapsed. He inveighs against the Ceroners’ Inquests of this Province in very strong language of his own, and calis to his aid a writer on the subject, who, he says, declares that the proceedings of Coroners’ ‘thave been a butt and laughing-stock ever since the days of Shakespeare,” and uses that circumstance as a stropg argument why they should be abolished. We have known some writers who had the audacity to hurl their shafts of ridicule at some of our most honored legal tribunals not even excepting the dignified and august Coun'y Courts. But the Editor of the Patriot protem would not therefore con- clude that these time honored institutions “*had out-lived their usefulness.” Referring to the inquests recently held in Charlottetown, he says :—‘‘EKach of these inquests terminated—as proceedings of this nature generally do—with an incon- clusive verdict.” Now, whether the ver- dicts of the juries in these cases were con- clusive or ‘‘inconclusive” in his opinion, will he inform his readers what other form of verdict could they have given under the circumstances / A suggestion from such an authority might prove invaluable in future cases, Will he give his opinion as to whether or not alcohol, pure and simple, ia a poison? The other pro tem Editor sezms-to doubt that it is, although seven jurors, who have pro- bably as much regard for the truth as he or any other irresponsible scribbler ia the Patriot, after viewing the body, recorded their sworn verdict to that etfect. The writer goes on dogmatically to lay down the law and asserts that ‘‘in our day the sole object of a Coroner’s inquest should be the detection of crime,” and in so saying he betrayaan amount of ignorance only equalled by his over-winning vanity. Oa the contrary, the detection of crime does not fall within the province of a Cor- oner. One of the most eminent medico- legal writers of ouv own times says : ‘*The Coroner's jury are called upon to deicide the cause of death. This, as a matter of fact, is the special if not the only object of the inquest. Hence, as a rule, a suspected person is not present at the Coroner’s in- quiry. Again, the erudite editur states that ‘‘inquests should not be held in cases of sudden deaths arising from accidents and without the commission of a crime; and in allj cases where there is ground to be- lieve that a homicide has been committed, the preliminary investigation should be held before the Prothonotary or Stipen- diary Magistrate or, when their services cannot be procured, before two Justices of the Peace ; these latter having, of course, a legal training much superior to members of the legal profession (?) Our editor might profit by resigning such musty old authors as Unmfreville and Jarvis to his shelves, and take up the more ‘‘advanced” and ‘modernized’ works of such authors as ‘have ‘‘adapted’ their writings ‘‘to the requirements of the enlightened and pro- gressive age we live in.’ One of these eminent authorities, referring to the mat- ter, says : ‘“These (viz., the cause of death, and the person who caused the death) are really two different issues, and how- ever much they are necessarily asso- ciated, there are many obvious reasons why they should be regarded as distinct. An inquest is held whether suspicion attaches itself to any one or not, but a Magistrate's inquiry is only held when some person or persons are actually suspected of being concerned directly or in directly in causing the death. It will be remembered that while the Coroner’s in- quest was pending in the Callaghan case, the parties accused on suspicion were, by the direction of the Attorney-General, very properly handed over to the Stipendiary’s Court. The Attorney-Generol may, in the estimation of the Patriot scribe, be slow in eff-cting reforms, but he can undoubtedly teach this pempous writer a lJegsen in law. The medico-legal jurist of the Patriot ap- pears to greatly underrate the qualifies. tions as coroners of members of the medical profession, and mayhap for no better reason than had the author of the doggerel :—- “*I do not like thee; doctor Tell, ‘The reason why I cannot tell, But this one thing I know full well, 1} donot like thee, doctor Tell.” We have always understood that forensic medicine is a part of the course taken by every qualtfied practitioner—a fact which seems to have escaped the memory of the great man of the Patriot. This pro tem. Editor casts longing eyes to trans-atlantic covntries and would fain hope to see here as in Prussia; ‘‘the Judge of first instance” appointed as Coroner. It might not, per- haps, be amiss to amalgamate the offices of Coroner with that of the County Court Judge and Tem; erance Commissioners, and be thus a saving to the Proviuce while the work would, no dou!t, be efficiently done. A reform might also be etfected by copy- ing from the constitution of the United States not only the abolition of the offce of Coroner, a8 in Massachusetts, but that por- tion of it which makes the office of the Judges elective, and thereby give ample scope to such of owr Judges as might be anxious to exercise their brilliant talents in reforming legislation, which their positicn forbids under the galling statutes of the Dominien. STANLEY. June 22nd, 1885. . MEN’s under shirts at 25 cents each, for cash at the London House. jus (SeeciaL Despatcurs vo THe EXAMINER, ] TW WALL REBELLION liscape of the WeLean Family Another Chief and His Band Captured TROOPS COMING HONE. Winnivec, June 21. The McLean family have escaped from Big Bear through the assistance of the Wood Cree Indians. Yellow Sky’s band has been captured by our scouts, Twenty-thousand rounds of ammunition have been sent to General Middleton who is with General Strange one hundred miles northwest of Fort Pitt. Only ten men of the 90th Battalion and Grenadiers, have volunteered for permanent service; and the early return of all the troops is looked for, It is expected that the Mounted Police will be left to capture Big Bear. The British Crisis. The Deadlock Continues Lord Randolph’s Strength. ny Lonvon, June 21. The political deadlock continues. The bitter speeches of Chamberlain and Har- court make it look as though the Tories will refuse the responsibility of office, and Gladstone will return to power. If so, Earl Spencer will probably be sacrificed, and coercion dropped. Gladstone looks ten years younger, and has a greater hold on the masses than ever. The Parnellites are in high glee, and will gain whichever side triumphs. Lard Randolph Churchill has shown him- self to be stronger than either Northcote or Salisbury. The former he expelled from the Commons ; the latter he forced to his terms. All sorts of political rumors are in circu- lation, and it is universally felt that Salis- bury has a strong lever in the last stages of the Redistribution Bill. Future developments are awaited with - the keenest anxiety. irish Emigration Condemned. Dvusuin, June 22. The Freeman's Journal publishes an interview with Bishop O'Connor, of Nebraska and Wyoming, in which the prelate depreciates Irish emigrants. The Bishop takes the ground that for two- thirds of the people who leave Ireland as emigrants to America the change means misfortune and physical hardehip of a most terrible kind, besides moral degradation still more appaling. In the great cities of the West, says Bishop O'Connor, the Irish new comers sink daily until they become the scorn of the population. Without money and without friends they are compelled to do the hardest and must menial labor, and from this position they can seldom rise. March of Cholera. Maprip, June 21. King Alfonzo has abandoned his pro- posed theatrical trip to the cholera districts, and the ministerial crisis has been overcome. There was some street fights between troops last night. Four hundred new cases of cholera are reported. There were 200 deaths yes- day. Rebellion and Murder. Lonpon, June 20. It is reported here that the people of Bokashard have risen in rebellion against the Ameer of Afghanistan and have murdered the Governor. Natal Celebration—Death. eee Hatrrax, June 22. This city celebrates its one hundred and thirty-sixth natal day to day. Wm. Hedley, manager for Dun, Wiman, & Co., is dead. Age fifty. Earthquakes in Cashmere Catcurra, June 21. The earthquake shocks at Cashmere have killed 3,100 peop'e and 33,000 animals, and have destroyed 10,000 houses. Weather Bulletin. Probabilities for the next 24 hours for the Maritime Provinces, Tononro, June 22--10 a. m. Strong winds; generally cloudy weather, with rain and thunder storms, METEOROLOGICAL OFFICE Charlottetown June 22 ,1885. Highest Temperature Saturday.......... 69,8 Lowest do de neta -..539 Highest Temperature yesterday, (read at i) is 4 ots tp 'kn 40 nknv eee ave Lowest Temperature yesterday, (read at es ae TL ETE EET ete 53.5 Lowest Temperature this morning ....58 5 Temperature this morning,at 8 o’clock,, 63.3 Temperatore thia afternoon atlo'alock 71,0 9.1 HOTEL ARRIVALS. OSBORNE HOUSE, June 20—Jabez Henderson, Victorin; Geo O'Neill, Vernon River; James McLanchlan, Souris; H F Coombs, St John, N B; Jas 8 Gordon, Alberton; John E Chapman, Roches- ter, N Y;J W Fitzpatrick, St John, N B; P R Baker, Summerside; J O C Goodwin, North Rustico. BX AMINER, JUNE a a COA IL >Y Auction, tomorrow, TUESDAY. June 23rd, at 11 o'clock, on Peake’s Wharf (No, 1) #56 Tens ROUND COAL, Kr, Schr. “Ottawa.” from Ontario Mines, Glace Bay, C B, A McNEILL, Auctioneer, June 22ud—1j A GRAND MILITARY PICNIC WILL BE HELD AT WEST RIVER, ON THE Oth JULY. inst. Gg Full particulars in a day or two. GEO, PASSMORH, Capt., Chairman of Com, WM, A. WEEKS, Lieut, C.E., Secy Com, June 22, 1885. Furniture and Croekeryware. YY Auction, TUESDAY, JUNE 23, at 2 o'clock, in front of my Auction Room : Household Furniture, in Parler and Bzed- room Sets, Dining-room aud Kitchen Chairs, Tables, Bedsteads, Matrasses, Bookcase (new), Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine (aw), nice Sofa and other articles. —ALSO— 20 dozen Cups and Saucers, 12 deza3an Pp Piates, Bowls, Teapots, Mugs, &e, A. McNEILL, Auctioneer. June 22, 85. RH® sSsPARHAM FIRE PROOFING. ne mee ee GET THE BEST. THE Sparham Mineral Fire Prooeg for shingle roofs, outlasts several coats of ordinary paint, PRESERVING THE SHINGLES AND— Making a Surface en Them Like Slate. Only two cents per lb.. by single Barrel. One dollar and fifty ceuts per one hundred ounds. Five bbl. lots. Delivered at Moncton, N, B. Address : J. J. MILLER, Millerton, N. B, June 20, 1885. COAL, COAL. ERSONS requiring orders for Cargoes cf Coais can obtain them, on the usual terms, from the Subscriber, at his Office, NO. 35 WATER STREET, viz.:— Gn the Old Sydney Mixes, Lingan and Victoria, 0, B., —AND ON THE — Wiines, Pictou. G. W. DeBLOIs, Ch’town, June 19, ’885—tf. Albion Has taken first prizes wherever exhibited. Holds six Medals and many Diplomas. Dent be fooled into buying a high priced powder for the szke of its so-called purity. The COOK’S FRIEND is made of as pure materialas money canbuy. It posseses more raising strength in proportion to costthan any other. Sold by storekeepers generally and raade only by W.D. MCLAREN, MONTREAL. Buy tt, try it and be convinced. Temperance Pic-Nie, \HE members of the Mount Stewart Tem- verance Union intend having a grand Pic-Nie on the grounds of Mr. Ronald Mc- Donald, Meple Hill, on WEDNESDAY, 24th inst. All the games customary on such occasions, such as base ball, hurdie race, sack race, potatoe race, tug of war, &c., &ce, wili be provided, A first-class Danciug Saloon will be erected on the ground. Refreshments of all kind will be provided In the evening a grand entertainment will be held in the Hall, when a carefully pre- pared programme of Vocal and Instrumental Masic, Readings, Recitations, Dialogues, &c, will be rendered. Members of the Union are respectfully re- quested to assemble at the Hall on the morn- ing of the 24th, when the procession will start for the ground, All friends of Temperance cordially in- vited. Tickets will be issued at one first-class fare from Charlottetown, Souris, Georgetown and intermediate stations to Mount Stewart, by morning tra‘ns, on 24th, good to return on 25th inst., thus enabling par'ies desirous of atterding the Pic-Nic aud Coscert to do so. Regular trains to stop opposite Pic-Nic ground, Best value in the market. By order H. F, FEEAAN, Secretary of Tem. Union. Lovely New Style all Chromo Cards Mt. Stewart, June, 11—junl2 wky2i dly22 23 with name and a prize for 10c. 12 packs, 12 names, for $1. A sample Al) rack and agent’s outfit with illus- trated catalogue of Tricks and Novelties, for a 3c, stamp and this slip, A W KINNEY.?Varmonth, N & nar 2, 1886_ jeetng tr Senecnnnteeceeeeenee ee =o 2 a CITY SCHOOLS. Charlottetown Public Schools will be held as follows, viz: ‘t Queen 'quare School, On WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24th. At West Kent Street “ehool, On THURSDAY, JUNE 25th ° : At Priace Street Schoul, On FRIDAY, JUNE 26th. Commencing each day at 10 o'clock, a.m. At 12 oclock, noon, the pupils will be con- vened in the Main Hall, where the Governor General’s Medals and Certificates of Profi- ciency from the School Board will be pre- sented to those entitled to receive them. The parents of the pupils and citizens gen- erally are invited to be present, I*AAC OXENHA™, Secretary of School Board June I7ih, 1883—til 26%h FISHERY REFUND. OTICE is hereby given that I have re- ceived from the Dominion Government the amount required to pay the claims for refund of duties paid in the year 1874. Checks for the amount ellowed will be for- warded by mail to the several claimants entitled. Dated 17 June, A. D., 1885. R. BR. FITZGERALD, Commissioner. June 18—pat her jour li Boys’ Jersey and Tweed Suits PANIC PRICES! Boys’ Jersey Suits at $3.85 and up. Boys’ Black Worsted suits at $5.00 and up. Boys’ Heavy Blae Serge Suits at 4.25 and up. Boys’ Tweed Suits at $5.00 and up. Child’s k ilted Suits at $3.45 and up. Child’s Navy Blue Knickerbocker Suits at $2.25 and up. Child’s Worsted Suits at $3.50 and up. Youths’ Blak Worsted Suits at $6.50 and up. Youths’ Navy Blue Suits at $4.65 and up. Men’s Black Worsted Suits at $3.50 and up. Mcu’s All-wool Pants at $1.50 and up. Men’s Working Shirts at 30c, 65c, Thc, $1.00 and up. Men's Dress Shirts at 70c, 85c, $1.00 and up. Men’s Linen Collars at 10cts and up. Men’s Regatta Shirts at 85cts and up. Men’s Hard Feit Dats, in newest sty es at 50cts and up. Men’s Soft Felt Hats at G6icts, worth $1.00 All-wool Tweeds at 55 and up. Ali-wool Worsted Coatings at $1.10, only. Tryon Tweeds without end, Yarns, all kinds. Wool bought for cash and exchanged for goods of all kinds. Come and see our 5-cent Prints, $1.00 to $4.60 saved on every suit of cur- tom. Raab BROS. June 10, 1885. Raisins, Rice, & Beans. LANDING TO-DAY : 50 boxes choice ‘ Eleme’’ Cooking RAISINS, 1s barrels BEANS, 25 sacks RICE. FENTON T. NEWBERY Special Notice see i Parchasers of (Cotton Warp. ee W* find it necessary to sall the attention of those who USE COTTON YARN OR WARP to the fact that the yarn made by us isthe CNLY REAL Water-Twist Yarn Made in the Dominion—no other mill having the machinery on which to make it. Ovr Yarn is, consequently, very much superior for weaving purposes to any other in the market—a fact which is well known to those who have used it for the past TWENTY YEARS. All our Yarns have our name uyon the labe!, and none other are genuine. For sale by all Wholesale Houses, —— ——— Wi, PARAS & SONS, (LIMITED). New Brunswick Cotton Mills. June 9, 1885. GANNERS’ SUPPLIES. Y stock of Lobster Packers’ Supplies is now complete in the following : — 10,000 cases ial! Cans, 500 boxes Tin Plates, 50 ingots Refined Tia, 50 pigs Soft I ead, 5 bars 14 inch Copper, 3 casks Gold Lacquer, 2do Brown do, 10 casks Turpentine, 50 dozen Suits Oilclothes, 20 do Duck Overalls, 500 bris. Bulk Herriug, 300 brls. Superior Flour, 50 bris Prime Mess Pork 20 bris. Beef, 50 firkins Lard, 20 tubs Butter, 10 bris. Beans, 100 chests Teas, 50 bris. Sugar, 25 puns. Molasses, 4 dozen Herring Nets, Trap Hoops, Bows and Sil's, Sail Cotton, Duck, &e, HORACE HASRARD, Lower Queen Street, Ch’town, May 30, 85—Imo eod “~y _ nanan, MASONIC FEstive ST. Jo i "a Members of the ¢ the 20 te Sebratlon wilt be ft Tene ier ONC fare on rely “PDlicatia Secretary of Committee for tb t af «>. eee ee ifivate ‘me Masonic hratervity of “harlot purpose cele rating the . their Patron Saint, on WEDS ESD yo 24+h inst , by proceeding in p : Y, the the lwige Room to the Meth sdigt from Church, for Divine Service, thence thr some of the principal streets : a returning te their Hall, Transient and visiting brethren at the Lo. City members, will meet With the at 2 p.m.. in full Masonic clothing In the evening the brethren wil dine gether at the Rankin Hous, to Tickets $1.50 each, to be » any member of Committee, : A. 8, URQUILART, Secy of « ‘ ‘h’to ™), J uae 12. 1855 —4i caw eee rocured from Mammoth Excursion and ea, subway Across the Straits of Northumberland, First Railwa; Excursion on the apg Traverse Branch, fFXHE Congregatioa of St, Panl’s Catholic Church, Summerside, have made arrange. ments for a COLOSSAL EXCURSION from all points on the P. E, I, Railway 4 Cape lravurse, ? On Tursday, 7th July, prox, For beauty and picturesque scenery Cape stands unrivalled in os Lower ‘an vinces, and is famous as the point at which the Ice Boats have landed mails and : gers frem the mainland for more than thirty winters, The Capes’ Disaster of the past winter has created public interest io this locality, and this interest has been further imereayed by the proposed scheme of en Island Senator to con- struct a Subway or Tannel from this across the Straits of Northamberland. This being the first «xcursion on the new branch th: tares have been made low, and include the Tea on the grounds. A Programme of eporis and amus many «f them novel, together with the Ex. cursion [aies, will appear next week. The proceeds of the Excursion and Tea will - applied to the discharge of tao Church ebt CHARLES MURPHY, See’y of Cem, June 8—2aw mon thar The “Noisy Boys.” FO TH TRADE. 7 KE “N iey Boys” Cigar; the best Cigar on the market Sole Agevt for Prince Fdward I land, % holesaic Only. JAMES BYRNE. Ch'town, June 12—20ins LORNE HOTEL Grand Tracadic Beach, Place will This Favorite Watering Re-Open on Dominion Day, Ist duly, under experienced Managers from the United States, Visitors will find this p'ace agreeable during the warm weather. tf —jane6 eo a WAATS, LAPSE, FOUND ae. (kK WANTED _ Wanted immediately a competent young Man with seme busines experience ; must write a good h —Fenton T. Newbery. jun22—% WT OST--Between Henry B. Smith's aud Lu Charles Reardon's, Uovebead Read, # biack waterprocf Coat. Any pereen tinding it will be suitebly rewarded by leaviag & at the Public Works office, Charlottetowa. jun20-3i ETT Se EEE eae ee Oe ell Ay ANTEUD—Firet-class S« rvant for light ‘y housework in small family; 90 ° ing or irening ; none highest wages ; 5? 2 experienced girls need apply. Apply to this ollice. jun20 a OUSE TO LEL—On Upper Queen Sts containing five rooms; « large also if required; possession immediatel y- Apply to James fF. Curtis. jan! UND - Keys, tied together; the = can have the same by paymg for advertisement. Appiy at THe Fxamixee office, janls JT OST—Two Phot: graphs ; the finder will covfer a favor on the owner by saa to J. P. Ross, Osborne House. junl ee ANTED-—A Girl to do general house Mrs. W. D. McKay, work. Apply to Prince Street, janl3 a rs en FEXAILORS WANTED.—Coat, Pant and Vest Makers wanted immediately by the Subscriber at his Tailoring Establish Sidney Street, next door to Dorsey § F J. A. McDoxacp. j V dress A. B,, Post Office, ing what experience and reference ————— ANTED—An expzrierced Saleswon for a dry goods store in this city. Charlottetown, J 3 B o's, 4 coat, ruc Cont t Jame ANTED—At D. A. pant and 2 vest makers, hands will! get the highest prices. rHVO LET—The Dry Good Store 9 Street, lately occupied by Mr. if Shand. Apply to M. Stevenson mare