— bis a wi ae Mada i ails ati gal tah Sli Saw i a cai. Be ae ee indice sak: . — es TS Hae FRET al — ae 7 aT m ier . cea icstilicinceneenmmmnt LMS Five Dotiars A YRAR, . | 3 | ; . 4 i ' * This is trae Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public. may speak free,”—Evripipes SincLe Cortes Two Cents, NEW SERIES. The Jarip Examiner xauiner eae 40 rner of Water and ‘harlottetown, iw ~ Island. SU BSCRIPTION— The at ' fe oh ‘ Prince | LATES OF Six PRGRG.. .cees Sbecee eee saneeees . $2.50 Three months...... re eek aes 1 25 oO Ds cees steel oecen eats 50 Advertising at moderate rates. Coutracts may be- made for monthly, quar- terly. balf-yearly, or yearly advertisemenis, on application ALMANAC FOR JANUARY, 1887, MOON 8S CHANGES, sarter 2nd day, 8h. 8m., a, m. KE. (below horizon. ) 111 Moon 9th day, 6h., 19.8m., p. m., S.E. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, F RIDAY, JANU, ARY rf ppanson . CTANIg WALAYS TO THE FRONT WITH THE [ Pil YROM this Fall's Importations manufactured, we are showing in Meltons, Beavers, Worsted, Vicuna and Tweed GVERCSATINGS, SUITINGS & TROUSBRINGS in all the leading patterns. NAP CLOTH REEFERS FOR $7.00. READY MADE (OUR OWN We are making MAKE) FROM $6.00, UP. 37 |. —- oO We A very large stock of Fur Coats, Fur Caps, Sleigh Robes, sell Imported Clothing with saGcerne for coat canvass. 5 47, Sian Lamb and other kinds, at prices lower than we ever before offered. our customers the‘ and it- hold upon public | was never Don’t buy till you see our stock. We are determined to give 51) Best Value for their money. BRU C.Bi. Ch’town, Nov. 29, 1886. 3 | } Last (Quarter 16th day, llh., 9.5m., a.m., W. New Moon 23rd day, 10h, 46.8m., p. m., N.| Ww horizon D Sun ‘Sun |Moon! High! Day's \Y OF WEEK : M rises'sets | rises {water len h mh m.morn!morn h m/} ) Saturday 7 504 19/11 31) 2 39, 8 29! 2 Sunday 50 2011 56) 3 26' = 30 3 Monday 50; 2liaft 6 | 4 26) 31 4/Tnesdiy | 50, 22) 0 50/535) 32 5 Ww sday 49, 23) 121) 644 33 6h lay 49 24) 2 2/7 48 35 7|riday 48, 25) 2 44) 8 42 § Saturday 48} 26) 3 38) 9 20) 33) 9 Sunday | 48} 28) 4 40/10 16) 40) 10, Monday | 47) 30) 5 5Oj1L 0 41) 1] Tuesday 47 aay 4)i1 43) 43 2 Wednesday 46) 31] 8 1d5j\aft 27) 13) Thursday 6; 33) 9 34) 1 9 14 Friday 5) 34/10 48) 1 54; 49 15) Saturday 45 36)11 59) 2 43, 16) Sanday 44, 37) |morn | 3 44) 53 | 17 Monday 43} 37) 1 10) 4 37 56 18) Tuesday 42 38} 2 18) 6 16 | 19 Wednesday | 42) 41) 317) 7 31) 9 20) Thursday 4] 42); 4 25) 8 29 21/ Friday 40; 44) 5 22) 9 16 22 Saturday 39! 45) 6 14) 9 59) 23/Sunday 38) 46) 6 59/10 29) 24) Monday 37; 48) 7 38/11 12) 25 T —_e 36; 49) 8 12)11 47 3 26 Wed sday 35) 50) 8 41\)morn| = 27 Tharedey | Mae Ss M 28) Friday 3! 54) 9 34 = 29’ Saturday 32 5b5110 2 ; 26) 24) 30) Sup jay 3) 57}10 24; 2 2 26 31 Monday 7 2914 58'10 48) 2 42) 8 29 -~roOo nm iP is a fact that you can always get, Something Novel, Something Striking. s G. H. BROWN'S rASZARD, BLOCK, QUEEN SQUARE. o——_——— English and American Fancy Goods, English and American Stationery, | English and American Novelties ' | --~oOo-—- at G. H. HASZARDS’, Something New, This is especially true in WINTER <arisumneslS 2 A T I OC N BE R ae THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. | igh Royal [rish Lover Note, Leave St. John for Bostoa, via Eastport and Port-' iand, every Monday, and Thursday at 8.00 a. m. Fare froin Chariottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2n class ; 39.50, lst class. For tickets and other information apply to L.Siu ARP, F, W. HALES, yr. &2E Bye P. E. L Steam Nav. Co. | or to your nearest Ticket Agent, 1886—eod wky CARD. Nov.i. RUTH wishes to announce to the; RS. E " I tudies of Charlottetown that she is prepared todo MANTLE AND DRESSMAKING in the newest fashions, having had many years prac- tical experience in the United States, patrons can feel assured of getting every. satisfaction. Kesidence, Richmond Street, near Hills- borough Square. Nov. 29 3mo eod & wky CARD. + THE XAMINER PUBLISHING COM- Pp AN y * having lately added to their stock of type and material for Job Printing, are better oe ever prepared to execute orders for Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Handbills of all kinds, z visiting or Business Cards, &c., promptly and cheaply, in the best style of the art. None but first-class workmen are employed in their office; and, as they import their printing papers direct from the manufacturers, they are able to fill all orders on the most favorable terms. Tt ie continued patronage of the public is respecifully solicited, i. W,. L. COTTON, Manager. Nov. 16, 1886. L. ARTHUR & R & CO, GEN HRAL Jammission Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. Ch'town, Roos and Produce 2 a Specialty. Inly 158—dly whily BARGLAY & GO, GENERAL Comuission & Shipping Merchants, i91 Atlantic Avenue, Boston. NIGHT years’ experience in this market, 4 Over tifty thousand bushels P. E. potatoes received by us last fall. Onur pstrons all satisfied. Vessele chartered for potato freights at short aotice, Write for market reports Ypevialties -Potatoes, Mackerel, Can- ned Lobsters, Ege Jant (7, ‘86 —Sm06 ‘edt of which I have, this season, imported a very choice and extensive line. 1 would also call attention to my large and varied assortment of FANCY G@QODS for Christmas Presents. Stationery Novelties for Ladies —The Note, The Forget-Me-Not, The Old English Note. Xmas Presents for Gentlemen -Handsome Writing Cases, Pocket Books, Inkstands, Gold Pens, Memorandum Stationery Cabinets, Gentlemen's Primrose Gents Photo Albums, Stylograph Pens, Shaving Sets, Books {in cases), Daily Memorandum Calendars, | Address Sets. Xmas Presents for Ladies Beautiful Photograph Albums, Autograph Albums, Writing Desks, Scrap Albums, Photo Frames, Ladies’ Hand Bags, Ladies’ Pocket-Book Sets, New Style Purses and Wallets, Ladies’ Writing Cases, Screen Albums, Sealing Cabinets, Card Cases, &e, Xmas Presents for Boys—New Books, Writing Desks, Pocket Knives, School Sets, The Boys’ Own Annual, Drawing Sets, Paint Boxes, Pocket Books, Purses, &c. a@ You will find in our goods something for every one. If you want to be up to the times, go to C+. EL HAS ARD, Dec. 8, 1886. BROWN’s BLOUK. FURS! FURS! a— N° MATTER what competitors may say in their advertisements, it is apparent to the general public that the BEST BARGALNS can be had at our establishment. It is not our claim that we offer FURS as cheap as other houses—we claizn you save 40 per cent by trading with us. We have not the time to enumerate our bargains in Muffs, Caps, Gloves, Coats, Sacques, Robes, Collars, &e., but we invite you to call and examine them—satisfy yourself that our bargains are genuine, and our prices the LOWEST OF THE LOW. STUARTS NEW FUR STORE, NEWSUN BLOCK, CHARLOTTETOWN i, 1886. Ch’town, Dec. X THE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON AND GLOBi INSURANCE COMPANY. Assets, Ist January, 1886 eee 70: (>= FIRE RISKS accepted upon the most Favorable Con $36,606,822. 03. ditions and at Lowest Current Rates. R. R. FITZGERALD, Jan. 3, 1887. some of the VERY BEST CLOTHS | OVERCOATS | | | Driving Gloves, in Per-| } } i | PROMPT. bos | AWONDERFUL REMEDY | Adamson’ 8 Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey Joughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have been epeedi.y cured by the use of ADA) V'3 Basam after al) other in nes have faijel. Sua y om either } recent or chronic co 8 ' ] affections, can resort to this great res n speedy relief. Do not delay f ice Tet Pe GGIsTsrs i FOR SAL: BY ALT Bottled at St. St en \ } to F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druegists, 4 Iss7. HARPER'S WEEKLY. ILL UsSTR ATED. HARPER'S WEEKLY maintains its position as! ‘the leading illustrated newspaper in America; esteem and confidence stronger than at the present time, | Besides the pictures, HARPER’s WEEKLY always | contains instalments of one, occasionally of two} ofthe best i | Agents — peors 16 novels of the day, finely illastrated, with short stories, poems, sketches, and papers-on | jimportant current topics by the mest popular i writers. The care that has been syccess sfully exercised in the past to make HARPER’s WEEKLY a safe as well as a Welcome visitor to every house- hold will not be re'‘axed in the future, Harper’s Periodical | Ch j Per Year. | HARPER’S WEEKLY....... cappieee bimkuis $4 00) HAKPER’S MAGAZINE ....... oo 4 00} HARPER'S BAZAR........ . 400) HARPER’S YOUNG PEOP LE «o- 2 00) }HARPER’S FRANKLIN SQU ARE LIB RARY, One Year (52 Numbers)...........10 00 HARPER'S HANDY S#HKIeKS, One Year 6B NOTA OGRRD. 6 ocn cons ds sbiatadndes sss 15 00! Postage Free to all subscribers in the United | States or Canada. | The Volumes of the WEEKLY begin with the} first Number of January of each year. When no, time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with | Nuiaber current at time of receipt.of order. Bound Volumes of Harper's WkeK Ly, for sent by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of | expense (provided the freight does not exceed one | doilar per volume), for $7.00 per volume. Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for bind- jin his nose.’ ing, will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of | $1.00 each. Remittances should be made by Post-Office | Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. not to copy thts advertise- of HaRPeR & Newspapers are ment without the express order BROTHERS. Address : = ARPER & BROTHERS, New York | Dec. 28, 18%¢€ iS87. | Harper's Young People. An Illustrated Weekly. HARPER’s YOUNG PEOPLE has been called “the model of what a periodical for young readers ought to be,” andthe jastice of this commenda- tion is amply sustained by the large circulatien it has attained both at home and in Great Britain This success has been reached by methods that must commend themselves to the judgment of parents, no less than te the tastes of chilaren namely, by an earnest and weil sustained effort to previde the best and most attractive reading for youn, people at a low price. The illustrations are copious and of a conspicuous high standard of excellence. An epitome of ovied}tKing tt that is attractive and desirable in juvenile literature.—Boston Courier. A weekly feast of good things to the boys and girls in every family which it visits, Brooklyn Union. It is wonderful in its wealth of pictures, infor- mation, and interest.--Christian Advocate, N. Y. Terms : Postage Prepaid, $2 per Year. Vol, Vill. Nov mle PB 1886. COMMENCES SINGLE NUMBERS, Five Cents each. temittances should be made by Post-Office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertise ment without the express order of HARPER & BROTHERS. Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, N Dee. 23, 1336. “Nothing Injurious.”’ tew York Contains Nothing Injurious. MAYNARD BOWMAYS, DOMINION ANALYST, Halifax, N. 8, Dec, 2, 1886. > COTFEE, COFFEE Fresh Roasted & Ground ciean ee Sie BEER & GOFF’s. iy will be | pe unionship of the | certainty that the originators of the {and premiers and chief justices of the ' ; thus honored now, |The honor of knighthood will ifeved to Kx roerside ‘An honest but poor couple, | were 'she could. | was only red flannel lin lieu of socks, while bride. three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be | Esq., 1887. Honors for Canadians, A London (G. 6B.) correspondent writes Sir John Maclonald, the Canadian Premier 'who now wears the highest honors ever fe rred on a colonist, and isa member of the Imperial Privy Council, wili i sated a peer ‘of the realm, with the appro- | priate title of Earl of Ottawa. 8ir Charles | Tupper, Canadian High Commissioner to Eng- advanced to the Grand Com. Bath and made a Privy {Councillor of the Empire. Mr, San ford | | Fleming, tho first Chief Engineer of the Cana- | di: an Pacific railw ay, and the originator of the | | twenty -four-hour sytem and of the project | just launched for laying British con c able s trom |Columbia to Australia ail Japan, who is now | Bath, will be made a it is also regarded as a Canadian Confederation now living, the members of the Dominion Cabinet, the lieutenant-governors various knighted, or, where advanted in rank. doubtless be of- leider of the Libera! ia C ompanion of the knight commander. provinces will also be will be iward Blake, ‘party in Canada, i ee A Bad Seare. A Western correspondent of the Sum- Journal relates the following :— living up we: lately married. Provisions me ither short, the husband started with his axe for the woods, to earn an honest penny. | While chop yping, the axe glanced from a tree, guving deep into his boot. Nearly \fainting, he dropped his axe and started ‘limping home. His wife, who was washing ) up the } breakfast dishes, happening to lock up, beheld her husband with much diffi culty dragging himself home. She at once ran to his assistance and got him into the house, when the large red mark in his boot proved too much for his nerves. His wife was oblige ito get off his bcot alone, as best Expecting toefind a fearful she was happily surprised to see had imagined to be blood which he had put on his only pair were dried protruding from | wound, ‘that what both being washed and his boot. TS + ei 6 BRE Quaint Old Marriage Recerds. The world discourages, and rightly so, he marriage of December with May, and |when such marriages took place in former were usually recorded in some such way as this: ‘‘22nd August (1782.) At Bath, Captain Hamilton, aged 30, to Mrs. Munson, « lady of rank and fortune, aged 85, ie ighty years between an old In February, 1769, * of Cooksbure, Ireland, aged 95, to |Miss Annie Nugent, aged 15. He served iin King W liam’ 8 wars, and received a ball Particulars of height, as well as of age, fortune and length of courtship were often given : ‘‘December (1755.) At York, Mr. Thomas; a gre nadier in the Yorkshire Militia, six feet two inches hich, with a fortune of tive thousand pounds.’ /And on April 5th, 1785, at Ripely Church, iMr. Robert Long was married to Miss times, they man and_ his Robert Judge, Reynard; between them there was disparity both of age and size, ‘“‘the bridegroom being thirty-seven years of age, and more than six feet high ; the bride twenty years old and little more than three feet high.”} 2 The record of a marriage in 1779 ofa couple aged respectively 80 and 85 con- cludes thus: ‘‘And what is still more re markable, there has been a courtship be twixt them for more than sixty years.” January Brooklyn Magazine i> <p> «(se ——— The Brooklyn Magazine. ‘The Romance of a For, gotten Village,” is the fascinating title of a de i ghful story of love in an old New Jersey village with which sessie Chandler opens the Broo Alyn Maga for January-—a number that is replete with the most entertaining array of bright and readable articles and poems. Ella Wheeler Wilcox sings of the ‘Mother-in-Law’ in pleas ing metre, which 8S. E. Archer follows with a highly interesting paper on ‘Some Famous Unequal Marriages.’ Laura C. Holloway has a gossipy description of Miss Cleveland’s home-life at Holla: 1d Patent, that will be widely read as giving an inside glimpse of the home of the President’s sister. A sparkling series of ‘Stories and Memories of W ashing- ton’ is begun by Mr. Seaton Donoho, and if his succeeding papers are one third as bright as is the present one, the series will be one of the most attractive features of coming nnm- bers. ‘A Midnight Lecture’ gives Re v. Z. De Witt Talmage anopp ortunity to tell a charac teristic story ty how he delivered a discourse midnight. classmate of President Garfie i i describes the "tdade President during his life at college, and how he appeared to his fellow- students. Mrs. Beecher’s ‘Monthly Talk’ contains much common sense in her discussion | of the ‘Coarse Language and Free Manners’ of some of our young women, and writes a second article on ‘Girls as Housekeepers. Rose Hartwick Thorpe, John Vance Cheney, Earl §Marble, George Cooper, Sophie L. Schenck, furnish the poet ‘y, and Rev. Henry Ward Beecher supplies tour of his recent ser- |< Beside this, there ‘Winter in the mons revised by himself. are still further articles on Forest, ‘Courtship Among the ‘Italian Singing Slaves,’ ‘The Actresses’ Jewels,’ ‘An Algerian Wedding,’ ‘The Art of Spending Money,’ etc., ete. The ‘‘Brooklyn” f our brightest magazines, and is withai one of one of the cheapest : 20 cts per number, or $2 per = year.—- The Brooklyn Magazine, 132 Pearl Street, New York. -_-_—_-— -—__- ~- oo -—3 @ @ Seoit’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil, with Hypophosphites | is not only very palatable, but the remedial! power of these valuable specifics is gveatly in- creaged, and as a remedy for consumption, scrofula, emaciation, or where there flesh and nerve power, it is rem results. Take no othei is ke SS of wkable in its a atecll Dr. Pierce’s Pellets—-the original little liver pills (sugar- coated)—cure sick am billous beech, sour stomack, aad billows pte druyyists, f aw >| Stop writing it :| Stop whistling doubtless be | bois ing } We may find even a distance of indians,’ | VOL. 19.—NO. ** Pe Low te Live This Year. ISS6. airs from the iby Spec ial requ st. Mikado. unless Stop TE liing ultra venerable stories. Stop telling fresh whose point can | only be apprehended aid of a doubk | stores by the j convex ke bs, Stop shirking your political duties. borrowed books. than one hundred inch, Stop neglecting to return top } pounds « induiging t seit- in more onceit to the Square Stop subs: ribing to the theory that a work man is known by his poker chips. Stop tarrying atthe flowing bowl or other | flowing re: stimulants. world would not i get along fair to middling without you, S00) ) fighting the inevitable, top | looking at the dark side of life Stop giving way to fault-finding. Stop furnishing your friends with the minute particulars of your bodily ailments. epta le for alcoholic Stop supposing that the oe taking pessimistic views of men, things, and the theory of the universe. Stop wo! king g too h urd, Stop working not hard enough ree ; } . Stop voting out the acts for the betwee n aromatic ciove, Ser proct astinati ng Stop se nding to ne ewspapers ** somethi 1 l've just dashed ow and haven't stopped to eorre o white hlonds forming your conscien that lies or any lies tl) don't t count ) top using langu wwe ' ’ (you! Le Pnone had oll from unht for publication to when you are unabie to catc! the other fellow. " Stop tellinga busy man “Il know you're busy so I'll only keep you a minute,” as a pre lude to an hour and a half's attempt to talk | his head off, mtLop being to have 80 engrosse i in money-making as to be pul lic -spirited > Stop llattering yourself that you thoroughly understand the Irish qu Stop trying to earn your living by the sweat lottery tickets or stock gam- HO time estion. of race hor ses, pling. Stop laying the unction to you can brush your hair so that won't show. Stop discussing. Hamlet’s madness, the per sonality of the XVIIth Louis, the difference between the old and new school Presbyterian church, the probable date of the arrival of the millenium, and the best way to dress a let- tuce salad. q Stop casually reminding your wife of mother’s method of making mince pies. Stop entertaining the impression that apples haven't the flavor they used to have. Stop boasting of how practical enough to find eat if you are row. Stop over-eating and under-exercise. Stop casting motes out of the eyes of rela- tives, friends and acquaintances until you are convinced that there are not beams enough in your own to start a lumber yard. Stop entertaining the impression year of the past was a better year year. top envy, tableness. your soul that the bald spot your you are long not merely nar- that than any this unchari- hatred, malice and all —- + —» © 2 — — - -- —-— —- Free Trade. The reduction of internal revenue and the taking off of revenue stamps from Proprietary Medicines, no doubt has largely benetitted the consumers, llas relieving the burden of manufacturers. Especially is this the with Green's August Flower and Boschee’s German Syrup, as the reduction of thirty six cents per dozen has been added to increase the size ot the bottles containing these remedies, thereby giving one- medicine in the us we home case iifth more cent size. The A gust Flower £: Complaint, and the and Lung > ; 88.2 Of &Ny ia rv Dyspepsia and Liver German Syrup for Cough have perhaps the largest medicines _ int ie world. The ad re of increased size of the bottles will be greatly appreciated by “the sick and afflicted, in every town and village in civilized coun- tries. Sampie bottles for 10 cents remain the same size. ; American Universities. troubles, vantag rn i ee ae The dollars seem to flow into the coffers of the great universities of the United States in a never-ending stream. Scarcely a year passes without one or other of them receiving a magnificent bequest to swell their already enormous endowments. The latest to have this good fortune is Harvard College, which has just received a bequest of $400,000. The donor willed that a fund to that amount should be established, the trustees being directed ‘‘ to devote apply the annual income thereof to aid of young men only, who are poor, but show indications of talent, energy and ipplication in procuring an education ; that each young man who any benefit | from said fund shall own promis- sory note therefor to the president and fellows of Harvard College, bearing legal interest, to be regarded and paid by such recipient or beneficiary as a debt of honor, fb and in no case shall the payment thereof be tenforced at law.” the receives give his | -_>- ' Apvice to MorTHuers. | Soothing Syrup should always j children are cutting teeth. It relieves the | little suff rer at it produces natural | quite 8! ep by relieving the child from pain; and the little “bright as a Mrs. Winslow's be used Ww hen once; shrub awakes as button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gur °, allays all best arising bowe ls, and is the pain, regulates the ther wa, whether known remedy for from teething or other ises. Twenty-five icents a bottle. Be sure and ask for Mra. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other | kind feb4 eod wk i —— - Special Notices. Wiawam Siippers at Dorsey Goff & Co's. dec 22 tf | OvK cus tom boots are giving great satisfac- tion,—-Dorsey, Goff & Co. dec 23, tf i POLE ied cheap at Dorsey, ( r0ff & Co dec 23. tf SoLEING slippers, neatly end quickly done at Dorsey. tioff & Co dec 23, ti Tur only Steam Sewing Machine and Gun |Repairing Shop in the Dominion, and the only place where you can get ever) wt Or a Sewing Machine or a Gun made is at Brown 6, at the Athunwum, Uh’ towm Mw and | ” ie | | | ee ty Ee em 5 aohtenesetaacassatieeas one a ti tit - ~ ; ‘ : ; t ; i : a