. cme me eee a LER) Five DoLLARs a YEAR. NEW SERIES. > Mean therr office Great George street Che Dain Ex The Examiner Pub] irner Prince Edward | RATES OF Six months.. Three months One month .... ing Dy sland, Advertising at moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- | terly. half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, Serings and suits; neat and nobby patterns. on application, auiner shing Co. Stet of Wat 3, Charlottetown, er and yTEW STOCK of Fashionable Felt HATS, in hard and soft; {in all the leading shapes, at prices that cannot be under- ‘sold at oJ. B. MACDONALD’S. | oO | New Scotch TWEEDS and English WORSTEDS for trow- Will make to SU BSCRIPTION~— ALMANAC FOR APRIL, 1886. MOON'S CHANGES. order at short notice. Four Cases Boys’ Clothing, | Nobby and Cheap, New Moon 4th day, 10th., 18.1m., a. m. S. E First Quarter 11th day, 4%h, 315m, p.m, SW| New Stock of GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, in white and Lest Qearter 20th day, th:'3.6n, 6 @. © colored Shirts, Merino Underclothing, Silk Handkerchiefs, Ties, es San jSan Moon) High’Davs. | “° , at cheapest prices. DAY OF WZEK , , rises | water; len’h M rises | sets — " ane a J. B. MACDONALD 5 4416 23) 4 26| 9 8/12 39] : 3 1 Thursday 2 Friday | 42 3| Saturday | 40 4/Sunday | 35 5 Monday | 37 6| Tuesday j 35} 7 We ines lay 33 8) Thursday 31 9) Friday 29 10 Saturday 27 1? Sanday 25 12) Monday 23 13 Tuesday 22 14; Wednesday | 20 15 Thursday | 18 16 Priday b> 36 17 Satarday 15) 18| Sunday gg 19, Monday 2s 20| Tuesday a 2) We ine aday 5 22) Charsday ae 23 Friday i a 24| Saturday 2 25| Sanday }--@ 26| Monday * 58| 27| luesday 57) 28 Wednesday 56/7 99\ Thursday | 54) 30) Friday i* 027 25| 4 54/945, 42 UEEN STREET. 26) 5 22/10 20 45! Ch’town, April 14, 1886.—dy 4 wky ° 27| 5 49/10 53) 49 _—- 29; 6 17/11 27, 52! re dpe dereen ce selma tile 30| 6 48imorn/ = 45) 32/7 2310 2] 58) 0m t oy 34; 8 48) I 2) 5 a & 35,9 41/2 9 8 | P rE tos i 37/10 40, 3 6| 19) 3S/1L 46) 4 20 13 < dolafes6| 549) 16 SS QUEEN STREET. 41} 2 87 12) 21] 42| 3 21| 8 16) 94 , tele. te 43| 4 3419 7| 27] ee value for MARCH and APRIL in Table Damasks, a5' 5 47| 9 5 2 , . 1 . . . : itl 6 slt0 30, 3, 44 Napkins, Sheeting, Pillow Cottons, White and Gray Cottons, 47,8 TIN 7) 36 Towelings, Tickings, White and Colored Knitting Cottons, 8 913 9} 639) ' ¥ 50/10 12/aft26| 42 —— s2it1 12) 1 5) 46! 2 ‘| | ‘ > Homies *@ CARPETS AND OILCLOTHS, 55) 0 45) 3 26) 55) a i i } 56| 1 24) 4 32) 58) siisisaail OQASH BMMBROLDERY, 0} 2291651; 4! a ee 1] 257, 7 46) direct from Switzerland, just opened. 2} 3 23| 8 33/14 9 i | - i ' THROUGH TICKETS ! Charlottetown Ticket Agency. A. Le BROWN. Ch’town, March 15.—wkly. . of Canada and the United States, at the very lowest possible rates maps, time tables, etc. Write G. A. SHARP, Station Master and Ticket Agent, March 19—2aw wky 3mo_ —i*&PP. E.. I. Railway. | | ryYHROUGH TICKETS for sale to all 7 | | -FOR- BOSTON. SPRING ARRANGEMENT. THE PALACE STEAMERS| OF TE INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. {EK Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, for rates STANDARD GOODS ee LOWweEsT PRICES! FPKING & STERNS’ | LARGE STOCK OF SEASONABLE GOODS : 400 Pieces Grey Cottons, | 53 Pieces Hessians, 220 Pieces White Cottons, | 48 Pieces Table Linen,’ 150 Pieces Print Cottons, | 140 Dozen Towels. — oO —— = d Knitting Cotton, White and Colore 36,50, 2nd | ion canbintanatitiingasioas Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port-| ar a 0¢ 6 0 ore Tess 00 land, every Tuesday and Thursday, at 8.90 a. m. | ® (reer cla $9.50, Ist class. For tickets and other information apply to F. W. HALES, E. L’ Steam Nay. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. | G, A.SHARP, Pe Be. BY P. Feb 8, 1886—eod wky L. ARTHUR & CO.,' GHNHRAL CC Black French Merinoes, Biack Cash- | mere’, Biack Cords, Black Nuns’ Veil- : ing, Black Costume Cloth, Xe. eo: and Wool Tapestry Carpets. mee O ‘Brussels, Bommission Merchants, ORLCLOTHS & LINOLEUMS. [21 ATLANTIC AVENUE, MASS.) Ha. BOSTON, Bros and Produce y 15—dly wkly a Specialty. or PERKINS & STERNS. C A U T i O 3, 86. —_0—-———- | China and Twine 0 Largest Stock of ROOM PAPER on PB &. Island. —_—_—_—- O a Cocoa, Matting N | Ch’town, Feb. 23, 2 eens —= sscarreor=ns BOOK-BINDING, PAPER-RULING MYRTLE NAVY IS MARKED — AN D—. BLANK-BOOK MAKING, OVER BOREHAMS BOOT & SHOE STORE ) LL kinds of BOOK BINDING executed at Lowest Prices and with Quick Despatch ba | Ruling, Numbering and Perforating for the Trade promptly attended to. BLANK @ BOOKS A SPECIALTY. gs A Share of Patronage Solicited. ~ JAMES D. TAYLOR, None Other Genuine. Oct, 28, IN BRONZE LETTERS. QUEEN SQUARH. Ch town, Feb, 23, '86.} This is true Liberty, when Free-Born Men, having to advise the P “x, isis AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. Tt is as pleasant as honey. <2 Coughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have been speedily cured by the use of ADAMSON’S BALSAM after all other medicines have failed. Sufferers from either recent or chronic coughs or bronchial affections, can resort to this great remedy, confident of btalning speedy relief. Do not delay, get it at on / FOR SALF BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, F. W. KINSMAN & CO... Druggists, 343 47H Aveg., N. Y. ESTABLISHED 1873. MEMBERS CHAMBER COMMERCE. WE BUY Potatoes, Spiling, R.%. Ties, Eumber, Waths, Canned Fish, Hlay, Egge, Produce, And sell on commission. Write us fully for quotations. Ship to HATHEWAY & (C0., 22 Central Wharf, Boston, Gen- eral Commission Merchants. Consign your vessels to our house. Will receive personal attention, Charte:s, Freights and Vessels for the United States, Newfound- land, West Indies, South America Ports. Lumber, Stone and Oil Freights. April 12, ’86 —3mos W. WHEATLEY, Produce and Commission ‘Merchant PECIAL atteation given to consignments, Large storag? accommodation, Satisfaction guaranteed. 269 Barrington St., Halifax, N. 8. March 24--3mos eod BARCLAY & CO. _. GENERAL Commission & Shipping Merchants, 191 Atlantic Avenue. Boston. yoo years’ experience in this market, Over tifty thousand bushels P. E. I. potatoes received by us last fall. Our patrons all satisfied. Vessels chartered for potato freights at short notice, Write for market reports. s@ Specialties— Potatoes, Mackerel, Can- ned Lobsters, Eggs. PAINT UP! oo uudersigaed begs leave to intimate to his customers and the general public that he has resumed business at his old stand, Kent Street, opposite Rocklin House, where he is prepared to execute all orders entrusted to him in House, Sign and Fresco Painting. Parties intending to have their Ceilings and Walls decorated in the latest style of art, can be suited at reasonable rates All work warranted to give satisfaction. Orders by mail will receive prompt atten- tion, : P. H. TRAINOR, April 8, 1886—eod 3wks Charlottetown Waterworks Company. OTICE is hereby given by the under- signed, two of the corporate members of the above Company, that the required num- ber of shares in the above Company having been subscribed, a general meeting of the members and stoakholdevs of the above Com- pany will be held at the office of R. R. FITZ- GERALD, Solicitor, in the Cameron Bleck, in Chsrlottetown, Province of Prince Edward Island, at the hour of eleven o’clock of the forenoon, on TUESDAY, the eighteenth day of MAY next, A. D., 1886, for the purpose of making, ordaining end establishing such bye- laws, ordinances and regulations for the good management of the affairs of the Corporation as they shall deem necessary, and for the pur- pose of choosing seven directors, being share- holders and members of the Corporation, under and in pursuance of the rules and regu- lations contained in the statute of the said Province, incorporating the above Company. Dated at Charlottetown this fifteenth day of April, A. D, 1886. A. McKINNON, R R. FITZGERALD. SALT! SALT! a" arrive at Point du Chene, on opening of navigation, 8000 SACKS LIVERPOOL COARSE SALT. Orders solicited. JAS. FRIER, Shediac, New Brunswick, April 2, 1886, ublic, may speak free.—Evairipes, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, A Sa Sl MS ONS OTAN, | '70 feet in width, is being built on the ‘|The Reform School will raise him until he 'N. S., have been capturiag large quantities PRIL 24, 1886. THE NEWS OF THE DAY. Carefully Collated by “The Ex- aminer’s” Reporters. Mr. Parnell is reported to have written a novel. Yon can’t make a horse drink. It is dif- ferent with men. Capital punishment-—making the bad, boys sit with the good girls. The recent floods have caused great damage to the crops in Tennessee. Tokgeco from American seed is being grown in the province of Kharkov, Russia, A number of coal lands in the Northwest Territory have been opened for settlement. It is said that eating onions will keep the lips from chapping. Most girls prefer the chaps. Tae Freach fleet is at Tahiti for the pur- pose of annexing several of the islands to France. The Belgian Government has introduced bills to strengthen the laws for the mainten- | ance of order. A floating planing mill, 170 feet long by Alleghany River. The man who never does any harm might crawl into a cave and stay there ten years without being missed. A member of a certain musical society, speaking of their instructor, said he not only beat time—he murdered it. The fishermen of St. Margaret’s Bay, of mackerel for the last few days. Mrs. Ada H. Kepley ran against her hus band for school trustee at Effingham, Iil., and defeated him by twelve majority. An exchange remarks that men are strongest in the morning. The same may also frequently be said of their breath, The reason why capital punishment is becoming unpopular is because there is a growing aversion to leaving a man in sus- pense. The half breed holstein bull, 11 months old, raised by F. R. Parker, Shubenacadie, N. 8., weighs 836 lbs and has girth 5 feet 6 inches. The authorities in Russian Poland have promulgated a decree wnich levies a tax of 50 roubles on foreign sojourners in the country. A Panama despatch states that a clerk belonging to a well known commercial house in Valparaiso has absconded with $80,000. There are over 100 wholesale poultry dealers in New York city, and some of them handle daily 100 barrels, holding 175 pounds gach. A boy aged 15 years at Hastings, Neb.,, succeeded last week in raising several notes. is 21 years of age. The enguiry into the loss of the Cunard steamer Oregon, sunk off Fire Island, N. Y., on Sunday, March 14th, has been com- menced at Liverpool. At Little Rock, Ark., on Wednesday, a negro held a boy twelve years old over a hot fire till the flesh on his body and legs was cooked to a crisp. The eight leading base ball organizations in the United States will employ over 700 players, whose salaries for the season will aggregate about $800,000. During 50 years’ service as clerk and cashier ina bank at Providence, R. L, Deacon Salesbung has not lost a day's salary on account of sickness. Michael Egan, a Chicago boy, aged 10, committed suicide by hanging himself last week, because his father locked him in the house while he visited a neighbor. The traflic receipts of the Grand Trunk railway for the week ending Aprill@ were $300,736, an increase of $13,303 compared with the corresponding weck last year. The son of a Russian general has been arrested for complicity in the recent plot to kill the Czar, Upon hearing of the ar- rest the offcer attempted to commit suicide. Dredging boats are now taking away 2,000 tons per week of the debris of Flood rock. Dynamite surface blasts are used to break up the boulders left by the submarine mine. People who believe the stories about in- telligent dogs, will read with pleasure that a lost dog in Norfolk, having seen his mas- ter’s advertisement in one of the local papers, returned home. Among the Zulus the mother-in-law can- | not face the gon-in-law, but must hide, or pretend to do so, whenever she sees him. In this country the custom is reversed; it is the eon-in-law who does the dodging. A sharp-sighted observer is firm in the belief that a woman works harder and gets madder in putting up a clothes line on a} windy day than aman would do in build- ing a line of telegraph nine miles long. An eccentric street walker in Cleveland seems to have a mania for accumulating old | boots, and already has the loft of his shanty | full of them. As he is too deaf to be an-/| noyed by cats, it is surmised that he con- | templates stariing a brewery. A young couple eloped from Pendleton, | Ky. last week, and were pursued by the girl’s father At Chilo, O., they secured a! minister and were married in a skiff on the) river, while the father stood on the bank | with a shotgun and wrathfully watched the | proceedings. The coolnesa which arose between the Sultan of Zanzibar and Portugal, in rela-| to the Portuguese claims to territory in the Sultan’s dominions, has disappeared, and Suxscir Corres Two CEents VOL. 18---NQ, 129 been suceeeded by the re-establishment of frie: dly relations. The Sultan has ordered that the Portuguese flag be publicly saluted. The defa!cation of bank cashier Robin- son, of Angelica, N. Y., amounts, as far as known, to $41,000. Robinson was also executor of the Graves estate, which will lose $11,000. Rvbinson is in Canada, where he has been joined by his wife. The money was lost in wheat gambling in Chicago. A young wife who had never learned the art of cookery, being desirous of im- pressing her husband with her knowledge and diligence, managed to leave the kitchen Goor ajar on the day after her return from their bridal tour, and just as her husband came in from the oflice, exclaimed loudly : ‘*Hurry up, Elizabeth! Haven't you washed the lettuce yet! Here, give it to me! Where's the soap!’ A singular piece of enterprise in the way of marrying has recently occurred in the family of William Matiinson, a sprightly citizen of Blount County, Ga., aged 60 years. His two sons married into the Brown family, and his daughter, Jane, was caught on the fly by Pleasant Gentry a few days after. This left the oid man ell alone, and so he concluded to get married too. He wooed and won Mary Blount, and a few days ago they were united as one. Thus ¢he whole family changed hands within the space of a few weeks, If the London 7rwth may be credited, the Imperial Government has agreed to subsidize the line of steamers between British Columbia, Hong Kong and Aus- tralia, to the extent of £100,000 stg. a year. The steamers will requirc to be capable of carrying troops and guns, and they will be liable to go exclusively into the service of the Government in case of war. It is not probable that even the fall of the Gladstone Government would prevent this arrangement, assuming it really to have been made, from being car- ried into effect. The standing army of the United States consists now of only 25,000 men. There are twenty countries which maintain larger armies than ours, thoush at a much smaller proportionate cost. Our army of 235,000 costs us $49,000,000 a year, while Turkey pays but $23,000,000 for an army six times as large. Spain pays $25,000,000 for the maintenance of her army of 152,000; Great Britain $90,000,000 for 181,000 men; Austro-Hungary only $50,000,000 for 284,- 000 men ; 500,000 men cost France $121,- 000,000, while Germany maintains her army of 445,000 men with an annual expenditure of $84,000,000, The bone industry of Awerica is am im- portant one. The four feet of an ordinary ox will makea point of neat’s-foot oil, Not a bone of any animal is thrown away. Many cattle’s shin-bones are shipped to England for the making of knife handles, there they bring $40 perton. The thigh- bones are the most valuable, being worth $80 per ton for cutting into tooth brush handles. The fore-leg bones are worth $30 per ton and are made into collar buttons, parasol handles and jewelery, thongh sheep’s legs are the staple parasol handies. The water in which the bones are boiled ia reduced to gluewnd the dust which comes from sawing the bones is fed to cattle and poultry. The Russian Government has decided to attempt tea cultivation upon a large scale, Under advices, it is the intention of the government to import Chinese coolies, and the position chosen for the first plantation is Soukhum Kale. That tea can bo suc- cessfully cultivated in the Caucasus has been often proved, but whether it will prove a success commercially is question- able. Itis argued that there is quite an extensive home market, the imports amounting to about 72,000,000 pounds an- nually, valued at $30,000,000, the Russians drinking tea of much supericr quality than is consumed in this country. 1t is question- able if there will be the kind of lebor available to compete with the Chinese and Hindostan laborer. At the same time it is impossible to develop the industry to any extent without the assistance of foreign capital. The condition of affairs at Stry, Aus- tralia, among the people who lost their homes by the great fire, is most pitiable. Most of the victims are without food and means, and are rendered desperate by the thought of starvation. Farmers in the vicinity have been visited by mobs of men, who have first demanded food, and then, if refused, stole it. Owners of farms are now compelled to barricade their houses as the only way to guard them from being plun- dered of food by the mob, which, on ac- count of hunger,is becoming uncontrollable. Numerous struggles for food, resulting in bloodshed have taken place. Thus far 68 bodies charred so as to make recognition difficult, have been taken from the ruins. There have been 20 deaths in the fields since Sunday of invalids, young and old, who were taken out of the town to escape the flames. The Russian Government has recently directed overtures to the British authorities with a view of ascertaining whether it would be agreeable to the latter to extend the Indian railways to Herat, for the pur- pose of forming a junction with the Russian railways at that point. As at present ad- vised by the Indiar Government, the Home Government is not inclined to consent to the extension, though ultimately it may be found advantageous to doso. The steady progress of the Russian railroad continues to attract the attention of the British mili- tary experts, both here and in India. The road is now completed ‘o within 140 kilo- metres of Sarakha, and at the present rate of extension will certainly be completed to Merv by the middle of May, and reach Amudaria by the end of July. The opinion among military authorities here is divided, but many believe that the Indian railways should be carried to Herat without delay, otherwise the time may come when the extension of Russian railroads beyond Herat must be resisted. FS & ‘ i LRG ;& J 4 i @§ 7 a ' ; : ; ; ; : : = : ; ' A x 4a a . oe _ > he < ‘ 4 a - * Zé. s «