Terms :—Five Dotuars A YRAR. ‘* This is true Liberty, whea Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may ee ee speak free,’*—Evniprpszs. Sincie Corirs Two CrEnts. ——— NEW SERLES CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1889. Eee 126, VOL. 10~NO. BRITISH WARHKHOUSE, QUEEN. SQUARE. —_—— O- cnctaiiaceentenenter-tinnaiinaiiliintin W. & A. BROWN & GO. Keep in Every Department of their Establishment a full assortment of STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS, of superior quality and texture, which cannot be surpassed either for price or quality, as they import direct from the best British and Foreigu markets, INSPECT THEIR STOCK IF YOU WA EES a = a Readymade AT COosT! Clothing, NT GOOD VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY. [ja 9 Tweeds and Heavy Cloths, AS I WANT TO CLOSE OUT MY STOCK IN THIS LINE. Some Expensive Ladies’. Cloth Maniles and Dolmans, and Fur Lined Cloaks, Sealettes and Colored Dress Goods, AT A LABGED BPO wWoTrion. JUST OPENED AND MARKED LOW, A Select Assortment of Flowers, Feathers, Velveteens, Ladies’ Sacques, ue, ue. Nov. 1, 1881. Rn. W. TREMAINE, 83 QUEEN STREET on oe ee W. &. BUTCHESON’S. I shall Sell GOOD TEA, 25, 30 and 33 centa; RAISINS, 10 cents ; SHLDING OFF —m = \ off my Stock of Groceries at Parties wishing to get their GROCERIES Cheap should call at once and leave their orders, MOLASSES, 47 cents; ORACKERS, 4 to 14 cents ; ; SUGAR, 8 cents.’ CURRANTS, 8 cents. A large lot of CONFECTIONERY from 15 to 20 cents; lot CHRISTMAS GOODS, very cheap; and sundry other articles too numerous to mention—all at cost for Cash only. Dec. 16, 1881—3m eod, wkly W. A. HUTCHESON, 109 Urrer QuEeen STreet = CHARLOTTETOWN BUSINESS COLLECE, (ESTABLISHED 1873,) Welsh & Owen's Brick Building, Corner of King and Queen Streets, Char- lottetown, P. E. 1. REAGH & MILLER, a Proprietors. Designed to Educate Young Men for Business. UR SYSTEM is conducted on Actual Basiness and Scientific Principles, and embraces all subjects necessary for a thorough CommerctaL Education. Our facilities for teaching these are the most complete that have ever been devised. Theory and practice are combined, and the whole course rendered so interesting and practical that the dullest stu- dent cannot fail to be largely benefitted. The course of Study is short, practical, useful and reasonable ; it is just what every Man needs and will use, no matter what his calling or profession is to be. The youth commencing a business life with only industry and integrity as his capital, the clerk engaged during business hours, but desirous by evening study to repair the de- fects in his education, each have the advan- age offered by our sessions occupying DAY AND EVENING. Morning Session, 9.30 to 12, and 2to4p.m. Evening Session, 7.30 to 9.30. Diplomas granted to such as pass satisfac- tory examinations. Students may enter at any time. No entrance examination required. Business men and others are cordially invited to call and examine our system. Teach your sons what they will practices when they become men, _ = Full particulars concerning Terms, Tuition, Scholarships, &c., &c., on application to L. B. MILLER, Jan. 7, ’8l—eo d. Principal? Herring. Herring. 100 bbls, Extra Fat No. 1, equal to Yarmouth Bloaters, 100 quintals Codfish, . 100 do. Hake, 12 casks Cod Oil, 300 Mackerel Barrels (good stock), 1000 bushels Fishing Salt. On hand, a full supply of Cotton Duck Bolt Rope, Hemp and Manilla Cordage, Lines snd Twines, Painis and Oils. DAVID SMALL. Queen’s Wharf, Sept, 10, 1881. er A NN ——— 2 svar aacuaeneeep ae For Scotch and English Tweeds or Worsted Suits For Canadian Tweed Suits, For Overcoats of all Descriptions, —JFOQ Wor JOHN “AACLEOD UPPER QUEEN STREET, TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HALL CORNER There you will find the largest and best assortment of Cloths in “the Island. Prices very moderate. The best workmanshlp and 2 perfect fit yuaranteed, —ALSO— Acomplete line of Gents’ Furnishings and Felt Hats, cheap,&c. Xe. Remember the address, two doors above Apothecaries Hall Corner Charlottetown, Oct. 11, 1881. THE EXAMINER 0B PRINTING OFFICE HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH A Large Supply of Printing ‘Types and Material, OF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, Under the Careful and Skilful Supervision of Me. J. W. Mitehell, TO: FPRianw TT LETTOR HEADS, RECEIPTS, POSTERS, DUDGERS, dc., &e., BILL HEADS, BLANK CHEQUES, NOTES OF HAND, HAND BILLS, TYTHE. place-to. got ‘your Printlag done is at RR PRINTING PnOMs. On Short Notice, in Good Sty'e, at Cheap Prices. ; TO ARMS ! For Economical Government, For Praden' Legislation, For the Red nction of the Legislature, For the Stock, For the Repeal of the Unfair aud Ob- noxious Poli Tex, For the Repeal of the Assessment Act, importation of Improved Turmoil and Indignation Meetings, For careful Administrators aud Honest Men,— Acainst a Party of ill-considered meas- ures and exiravagant acts, AGAINST a Party whose Legislation, as a whole, was hasiy, crude, and un- suited to the country, Acainst a’ Party of deficits and mys- terlous suspense accounts, Acatnst a Party which misled the coun- try with false Departmental Re- ports, Acarnst a Party of illegal contracts and corrupt jobs, AcAixst{a Party which passed the As- sessment Act and inflicted the Poll Tax, the‘ people of Prince Edward Island are Called to the contest of a general election. The notice is short. But the issue is clear,—touching the pocket of every tax- payer, and the peace and comfort of every home. Let uot time be lost by those who are for economy and practical thrift in the administration of our public affairs. The election will take place just after the rigors of winter are over and just be- fore the work of spring begivs. While the notice is short, the time is propitious for gITY'S GANDIDATES HON. NEIL McLEOD —AND— PATRICK BLAKE, ESQUIRE. Sa ea INSURANCE OFFICE. Jueen Insurance Uompany, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. City of London Fire Insurance Company, CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. . Losses settled promptly and equitably. Sci F. KENNEDY, General Agent. Office—South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Feb. 3, 1852. St. Lawrence Hotel. mee mee ree 5 x 7 FYVIE above Hotel is now RE-OPENED, having been thoroughly repainted and refurnished in the best style. Being centrally situated and within three minutes walk of the Railway Depot and Steamboats, it offers inducements to the travelling public, Permanent and Transient Loaders acco- modation unsurpassed by any other Hotel in the city. WM. E, HICKEY, Ch’town, Dec. 21, ’81. Proprietor W. C. BISHOP, i? RETEST IS FORWARDING ACENT, Marina Insurance Broker, —AND== BEDFORD ROW, P. 0... BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. 8. yARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection, of Custem Drawbacks thereon. Hulls, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first-class oftices at most favorable rates. Consignments of Produce solicited, and prompt returns guaranteed. Correspondence solicited and answered promptly. Noy, 14, 1881—lyr For Sale or to Let. FEXHAT Freehold Property, with a front of eighty feet on Pownal Street and ecighty- four feet on Sydney Street, the House con- taining 16 large rooms and two Kitchens. Can be turned into one Dwelling by unlock- ing adoor. Apply on the premises to ~ MRS. BOSWALL March 32, 1581 ~-tf General Commission Agent, Sons of Temperance. Tur iollowirg isthe Address of Welcome presented to the Grand Worthy Patriarch, G. W Bentley, Esq., at the public tem- perance meeting, held last Tuesday even- ing:— My Dear Brorrer,—In behalf of the three Divisions of the Sons of Temperance; and the temperance peeple of this city generally, it |affords me very much pleasure to extend to ‘you a most cordial welcome into our commun- ,ity, a8 a representative of the Grand Division lof the Sons of Temperance of P. E. Island, of For Peace snd Quiet. in the place of, Which you have the honor to be the wérthy jhead. Many reasons combine in opening our hearts for your cordial reception. | We welcome you because we are painfully | conscious of a great and growing evil in the |midst of us—an evil more prolific in heart- | rending results than any other—an evil that | wastes cur national resources, peoples our j jails, fills our penitentiaries, impoverishes ; homes, brings sorrow to hearts, disgrace to | families, and sends untold millions down to a | premature grave, and a drunkard’s awful hell; \for ‘‘no drunkard shall inherit the kingdom of heaven,” We welcome you because we recognize in your noble order a great power directed against this hell-ordained and devil-directed traflic, and we cannot close our eyes upon the work that your order has done in the past, is now doing, and is calculated to do in the ‘uture, in checking the fearful current of in- temperance, by saving the youth, rescuing the drunkard, and influencing legislation against the curse. Ve hail your coming to us at this particular time (the very day that the argument on the vexed question of the constitutionality of the **Seott Act’’ is begun before the. highest tribunal in the realm) as an auspicious omen. We kuow that your presence will help to en- courage hearts that are growing faint in the conflict, and thus prepare us to enforce more rigidly the existing ‘‘ Act” which, we humbly pray and fondly hope will, at this time, be confirmed as the law that goveras us, We welcome you, brother, and the honor- able order which you now represent, and, in the name of all the temperance people of this city, we wish youa hearty God-speed, and pray that your visit may be productive of, much good to us—thus making it pleasant to you. Yours, in Love, Purity and Fidelity. D. G. MacDonap. Ch’town, April 18, 1882. The G. W. Patriarch responded to the above in a very pleasing and well timed address. He said the Grand Division ap- preciated the kind reception extended to them at this time by the friends in Char- lottetown. The Sons of Temperance aim only at the removal of the liquor traffic, the giant evil, and the moral good of the community; and by the united action of all the professed friends of temperance, we are soon to win the day, _--——_—--—- --—-_« <De @& oe —. A Finger as a Nose. A little over two years ago the medical and surgical world was deeply interested in the experiment of grafting og a nose, says the New York Daily News. The case was that of Thomas O. Colt, who had lost his nose, and the surgeon who had charge of the case was Dr. Thomas T. Sabine, of Bellevue Hespital. The operation con- sisted of grafting the large finger of the left hand on to the face, to supply the place of the missing nose. In order to do this the finger had to be split open, the nail re- moved, and it to be held in position for three months when it was amputated. Later the nostrils were formed. The other day Tommy, as he is called, was taken before the New York Surgical Association, in Sixteenth street, between Fifth and Sixth avenues, where, the sutures having been removed, an examination was made, and the operatiom pronounced a success, The bone of the figure forms the bridge of the nose. There was but one place in the nostril where the juncture was not com- plete, and an operation will shortly be made to remedy this defect. The whole case will be made the subject of a thesis in the journal of the association, and will be illus- trated by means of colored plates. Dr. Fox will prepare the article, and will, in fact, supervise the entire work-plates and ali Tommy is feeling particularly happy over the result of his case, and was very much annoyed at the report that it had been a failure. conimerniemacnionn exantionntiliiinn A huge joke was perpetrated on Mr. John Charlton the Reform member for North Northfolk, the other evening. He went down to Cornwall on ‘‘ special invita- tion” to enlightea the benighted dwellers of that town on the ruinous results of the National Policy and the disastrous con- sequences of Sir John Macdonald’s Pacific Railway policy. He plodded away for an hour and a half, and at the close of his address the following resolution was moved and seconded : ‘‘ That the meeting thoroughly believes that the policy of the present Government, properly termed the National Policy, has tended to the‘materia! prosperity of the Dominion, and that that ‘policy is fully deserving of the support of ‘the people of Canada; and further, they | believe that the Government pursued a wise aad enlightened policy in arranging with the Cauada Pacific Railway Company for ‘the construction and working of the rail- ‘way, and the consequent opering up ‘of our vast fertile territory in the North- West for the purposes of settlement upon terms that are peculiarly advantage- ous to the farmers of Ontario and others who desire to take uplands.” Mr. Charlton is now of opinion that Cornwall is a bad place to get off his rehash of Sir Richard Cart- wright’s speeches, and te deliver himself of his stale jokes and antiquated funny stories. —Guelph (Ont.) Herald. ee Railway Committee at Ottawa, on the 13th, adopted amendments to the till respecting railway tickets, fixing the punish- ment for selling tickets without authority, providing fur the redemption of unused tickets, and giving passengers a right to stay over at any station for not longer than oon days for every fifty miles of distance travelled, NEWS NOTES. The Allan Line steamer ‘‘ Manitoban ” is ashore near Greenock. ; Anamnesty is to be granted to the Her- zegovinian insurgents, who return to their homes and labor quietly. Over 720,000,000 gallons of spirits was produced in the United States during the year ending 30th June last. The peace congress of the North and South American States will probably be held at Washington in November. The ceremonies attendant on the corona- tion of the Czar of Russia will last a fort- night,and will cost ten million roubles. _ The Governor General gave a grand ball in Montreal on the 13th. The invitations ae 800, and the attendance exceed- e ; A monster petition in favor of Chinese immigration, which has been signed by four thousand New York firms, is to be present- ed to Congress. The coronation of the Czar is officially announced to teke place in August next. The expenses of the ceremony are eati- mated at tea million roubles. The Catholic clergy of the diocese of Cashel have passed resolutions pledging themselves to use all their influence for the prevention of outrages. His Excellency the Governor General has been handed an address, to be presented to the Queen on her next birthday. signed by 50,000 Canadian ladies. The German-Polar commissicn has decid- ed to erecta station in the North Arctic region at Cumberland Sound, Davis Strait and another in the South Arctic on the Is- land of Georgia. The German Union Telegraph Company has completed laying the new direct cab‘e from Emden to Valentia for direct commu: nication between Germany and the Angloe American systeni. A Utica clergyman had occasion to refer in a sermon to the prophet Jonah, and the report says that he delicately spoke of him as having ‘‘ passed three days and three nights in the—ahem—society.” The Dominion Exhibition is to be held in St. John in 1883. At the same time our neighbors will celebrate the cente of the landing of the Loyalists. They are already preparing for the great ewent. It was stated at the National Land League Convention at Washington that the total receipts since the formation of the organization were $180,600, the remit- tances to lreland amounting to $169,000. The United States Baptists are of starting an independent Bible society, in consequence of the refusal of the American Bible Society to print in foreign languages Bibles with a certain translation relative to baptism. Five hundred and eleven suspects were in prison in Ireland at the beginning of the month ; of these thirty-five were charged with murder, either as principals or as ac- cessories, and twenty-four with s hooting with intent to murder. The exports from Sheffield to the United States for the first quarter of the present year show an increase of fifty-three thous- and pounds over those for “the same period last year. The improvement is chiefly in steel and steel rails. Paris advices state that the Marquis of Anglesey, who married in 1880 the widow of Henry Wodehouse, daughter of J. P. King, of Georgia, U. 8., has separated from his wife. The Marquis announces that he will not be responsible for her debts. Dr. Lamson, the condemned murderer, has issued a statement in connection with the crime of which he has been convicied, but many of the statements therein have been proved to be untrue. It is stated that evidence of his supposed insanity has been obtained from persons who knew him in England. The April number of ‘‘ Geod Words’ contains some contributions of no common interest to Canadian readers. There area series of admirable illustrations of scenes in and around the ‘‘ Ancient Capital,” from the skilful pencil of H. R. H. the Princees Louise, and a poem on the same subject by His Excellency the Marquis of Lorne. Fifty thousand bushels of oats are being shipped from Montreal to Manitoba on ac- count of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company. One hundred theusand bushels have been purchased in Ontario for the same destination. The Grits would rather see these oats imported from the United {States than sent from the older provinces. The Allan Line steamers ‘‘ Sarmatian” and ‘‘ Phoenician” sailed from Liverpool on the 13th with a large number of passen- gers destined for Manitoba, Tenants on Lord Derby's estates are coming out to select homes in Ontario and Manitoba, and will be followed by tenants from Lord Sudeley’s estates. Mr. Dyke, Canadian Emigration Agent at Liverpool, has gone te the continent with a view to securing a portion of the large emigration from that quarter. A reporter of the Norfolk (Va) Vir- ginian, recently referred in that toa conversation with Prof. Cromwell, the world-renowned art exhibitor, wherein he states that he had some year or so before suffered excruciating torments from rheu- matism, and that he had tried all kinds of medicines and so-called cures—all without effect. He heard, however, of St. Jacobs Oil, and resolved to give it a trial, which he did, and he stated that its effect on him was almost magical. A yee en cure was effected, and since then he never suffered from rheumatism. But in order that he might be at all times popes for the enemy, he never travelied without carrying in his trunk a bottle or so of 8t. Jacobs Oil. A ee See me heer en Pane ee Sv oee™ oe £2 et ees eet Seer eee ca again ae : 3!