KER sinners 2A naan a ee cr Rnenast abi. Fl techies se cmemmetpemmenmeetinmetiameaiats — aomminas es — = avr aus ;—Five Doutars a Yeas “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxiries. Greta Coren 2° Sa ae ee cena — _ — CLIARLOTPETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, TUESDAY, M AY 31, 1887. “VOL. 20.-NO- 8. The Oarip Examiner is issued every evening by ry Pewamemae bh : q%, Che Examiner Publishing %o From their office, corner of Water and Great George streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— Lace Gurtaims, A VERY LARGE STOCK TO SELECT FROM AT JAMES PATON & CO. ee Dk , oot comeee $2 50 | i, ae a0 ek o8 1,25 | Sy MURINE coco «+6008 beeebecce cece coe 50 Advertising st moderate rates. Coatracts may bs made tor monthly, qusr- terly. balf-yeariy, or yearly atvertisemen’s, on application. PASHIONS. JAMES PATON & CO. =~ MM | | James L. MacMillan, ¥. §.,| ae GRADUATE OF Ontaria Veterinary College, Poronto. | a Office in connection with Kennedy & = Livery Stable Great George Stre Chitown, April 21, 1887—law & wky L. ARTHUR & CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, REC RS OF Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS, | Poultry, Potatoes, Frait & Vegetabl s. 142, 144 Commercial Street, BOSTON, MASS. May 18, 1887. ee BOSTON. SUM ME 4:2) IRREMENT THE PALACE STEAMERS IATERMATIONAL S.S. OG. Leave St. Jotun for Boston, via Kastport and Port- land, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 8.00 a. m. Also leave St. John at 7.30 every Saturday night for BOSTON DIRECT. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd class ; $9.50, lst class. For tickets and other information apply to G. ASHARP, F. W. HALES, P. E. L R’y., P. E. L Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. April 18, 1887—eod wky CARD. THE EXAMINER PUBLISHING COM- PANY,” having lately added to their stock of type and material tor Job Printing, are better than ever prepared to execute orders for Bill Heads, Letter Heads. Handbills of all kinds, 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 Bole to fill all orders on the most favorable terms. The continued patronage of the public is respectfully solicited. _— : W. L. COTTON, Manager. Ch’town, Nov. 16, 1236 —— FiPe LUSUPauCE. Imperial Fire Insurance UCo., of London. ESTABLISHED, - - 1830. Capital Subscribed, £1,600,000 Stg. Capital Paid Up - - 700,000 Assets - 1,581,574 ———— Hartford Fire Insurance O0., ESTABLISHED. 1794. Capital Paid Up - - $1,250,000 Assets 1st Jan., 1887 - - 5,055,946 Net Surplus - - - 1,789,986 Insurance effected at current rates, FENTON T. NEWBERY, J. EK. WYATT, Summerside. J. J. HUGHES, Souris. Ch’town, April 28, 1887—6i & eod 3wks wiy ‘yho General Agent for P, E. Island, Sub Agents :-— | | tewart's | VEW MANTLE AND JACKET ROOM ' is well stocked with the Newest Shap sin Short Jackets, Cloth and Silk Dolmans, Jerseys and Waterproofs. All qualities at Strictly Moderate Prices for JAMES PATON & CO. | Millinery Department is very complete. New Gauzes, Laces, &e. : Ladies’ Hats, ia Eaglish, Canadian and American. Gur Dress Materials ave very extensive and Prices Extremely Low. Also a large assortment of Prints, Printed Muslins, Parasols and Ladies’ Underclothing, ———__— ' () '——__———- READY CASH. Ribbons, Flowers, CHEAP FOR CASH. JAMES PATON & CO,, MARKET SQUARE. Ch'town, May 20, 1887.—dy & wky ee IY OE a ET OE . , . = a TOCK NOW COMPLETE meena () - Perkins & Sterns have just received a full stock new DRY GOOBS qa for this season's trade. ture, purchased in ihe best markets, for cash: buying elsewhere. oe oO-—— -_———— May 4—dy & wky —— ¥ Se me = — DON'T FAIL TO READ ABOUT THEM SEE THEM ! QO" new stock of HATS is just opened, ani —, BE DISPOSED OF.” ——<—- Om = / “MUST | | ' We }éave the Largest and most Complete stock of HATS ever seen in the City and our We can beat the Island. prices afe away down. Try us, try us. sar WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. es eign EP wninarinn aia iL E PROWSE, SIGN OF THE BIG HAT, 74 QUEEN STREET. | Ch’town, April 11, 1887—eod & wky British, Canadian and American Manufac- Will Sell Very Cheap. Come and see before’ Perkins & Sterns Bleciiia of Water Commissioners By the Mayor. }N pursuance of an act of the General Assembly * of this Island, made and passed in the 50th year of thereignof Her present Majesty Queen Victoria, intituled : “Charlottetown Water Works Act, 1887,” I do hereby give Public Notice that an \Election of Three Water Commissioners for the City of Charlottetown ON MONDAY. the 6th day of JUNE, next, A. D., 1887. at the several places. that is to say: In Ward No. 1, ator near the store of Messrs. J. & IT, Morris, corner of Queen and Water Streets. In Ward No. 2, at or near the house of Thomas Connolly, opposite Mr. Kk. Heartz’s Warehouse Sydney Street, between Great George and Prince Streets. In Ward No. 3, at or near the Market House, In Ward No. 4, at or near the Fire Knyine House, fronting on Kent Street, east, between Weymouth aud Cumberiand Streets. In Ward No. 5, at or near the carriage shop of Carroll & McAleer, corner of Eausion and Great George Streets. And st the said Election the Poll will be opened at nine o‘clock in the forenoon, and continue open until five o’clock in the afternoon of the same day. DESCRIPTION OF WARDS. Number One shall comprise all that part of Charlottetown which lies south of Dorchester Street, and the parcel of land formerly known as the Military Barrack Ground. ; Number Two shall comprise all that part of ‘Charlottetown which lies south of Richmond Street and north of Dorchester Street. Number Three shall coimprise all that part of Charlottetown which lies south of Grafton Street and north of Richmond Street, Number Four shall comprise all that part of Chariovteiown which lies south of Fitzroy Street add north of Graiton Street. Number Five shall comprise all that part of Charlottetown which lies north of Fitzroy Street, including the Common of the said ‘Town, NOMINATION DAY. MONDAY. the 30th May., from the time of Twelve at noon until the hour of Four o'clock in the afternoon of the same day. Qualification of Electors. see Act 50, Victoria, intualed “Charlottetown Water Works Act, 1887,” also, Act 43, Victoria, Cap. 15,sec 20 and 64 and 48 vic. and Cup. 8, Sec. 12. {L. 38. T. HEATH HAVILAND, Mayor of the City of Charlottetown. A. H. MACPHERSON, City Clerk. Mayor's Office, Charlottetown, May 16, 1887. )T) —We desire to engave a jLady WANTED. or Gentieman to manage some business for usin Charlottetown, and also ina few of the other towns and villages on the Island. Wages, liberal. Must be a Catholic; re ferences required. All who enclose stamp will roceive a reply. Mention this paper. Address: “WW.” P. O. Box 103, St. John, N. B. maylz . GOA RD. To al! who are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, lossof manhood, &e., I will send a recipe ; that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE, This great |} remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self-addressed envelope to the REY. JOSEPH T, INMAN, Station D, New York Gity. iat Tishwiek EXDTESS Line, SEASON OF 1887. Steamer MM. A, Starr, Capt Ferguson, WIL leave Halifax every TUESDAY Morning for Charlottetown, calling at Sheet Harbor, Canso, Arichat, Port Mulgrave, Hawkesbury, Hasting and Bayfield, and Murray Harbor on every alternate trip; return, leaves Charlotte- town every THURSDAY afternoon, making same calls. ag” FREIGHT LOW. Through Bills Lading granted to New York, Great Britain and Continent. W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Qieen’s Wharf, Ch’town, May 17, 1887.—2mo pat CHARLOTTETOWN HERALD OFFICE, APRIL 23RD, 1887. ‘MRS, McNRILL, REVERE HOUSE ; speaks VERY HIGHLY of, and wishes you to SEND | HER ANOTHER Cask of samme tatincn te, on Minin ct ee sneer ere Se ee as : May 2, 1887. CITY LAUNDRY. \ E beg to announce to the citizens of Char- lottetown that we have opeved a Laundry at Great George Street. and having (96 Upper . \seeured the services of a first-class Laundress, we guarantee satisfaction to all who will favor \us with their patronage, Gents goods a specialty. BALLEM & GAY. Ch’town, May 23, 1887—1mo eod pd “ALL RIGHT,” IRE of George Lee, (record 2.23}) Black Pilot, | (2 334) Defiance, (7.394) will stand at Newton: 'Large’s Stable every inursday afternoon and | Friday, till Saturday morning. | Qh’town, May 5, 1887. 4000 POTATO BAGS (3. teak | —~ AP — CHRVELL BROS, May 17; 1887—t? The Fisheries Question. a GOVERNOR ABOUT IT. WHAT THE GENERAL SAYS In the course of his speech before the National Club of Toronto Lord Lansdowne said :— ‘““To those who believe, as most of us no doubt do, that we are bound, not only by con- siderations of self-interest, but by the close ties of kinship and origin, which unite us to our brethren on the other side of the frontier, to cultivate the most neighborly and amicable relations with them, it must be a source of pain, I would almost say of humiliation, that we should for so many months have been un- able to adjust a dispute which, although not without its local importance, is after all not one of first rate magnitude. Upon the other hand it is, I think, satisfactory to know that throughout these intricate transactions we have kept in line with and been well sustain- ed by the Imperial Government, and that upon uo material point affecting any principle of importancet have “any substantial difier- ences of opinion arisen between us and it. It is also satisfactory to note that both your Government and that of the mother country have from the first shown an earnest desire to mitigate the intensity of the differences which have arisen and to facilitate their sett!ement. (Applause.) In spite of all that has happen- ed | may say, and I speak with some know- ledge of the facts, that both Governments have shown the greatest anxiety to avoid any local action likely to increase the tension of feeling existing upon the spot. I may be asked, how do you reconcile this statement with the fact that there have been so many cases of remonstrance against our conduct in enforcing our treaty rights upon the Atlantic seaboard ? My answer to that is that I am surprised, not that there should have been so much friction upon the spot, but that there should have been so little. The case is emi- nently one in which each side ought to make some allowance for the other. There have, no doubt, been a number of cases in which there have been complaints and recriminations. If, however, there is irtitation among _ the New England tishermen, we must not forget that the circumstances of the case render such irritation perfectly natural, and that we have to deal with a large body of men, who for many years past, have been in the habit of resorting to our waters without hindrance,and who, not from any fault of ours, or, indeed, of their own, find themselves suddenly excluded from privileges valuable to themselves and hitherto exercised in the most restrained man- ner, and who not unnaturally resent any in- terference with the exercise of an industry which they have pursued so long without restriction. If, on the one hand, there is ir- ritation amongst vur people in the Maritime Provinces, let it not be forgotten that this is the second occasion upon which our commer- cial arrangements have been dislocated by the abrogation of treaties between ourselves and our neighbors. (Applause.) were terminable, and we have no right to complain if they have been put an end to. On the other hand, let not our neighbors com- plain of us if, in the face of such action on their part, we are driven to take steps for the protection of rights secured to us by treaty and forming a valuable portion of the national estate. (Renewed applause.) Any govern- ment which did not Aofthis would be culpable, and no government has shown itself more alive to responsibilities of this kind than that of our neighbors. (Hear, hear.) If each side will approach the question in a moderate spirit and with the determination to make some al- lowance for the difficulties of the other, I feel that we need have no apprehension of the re- sult. For more than fifty years we have been at peace with our neighbors. During that time there have been moments of tension such as that through which we are passing. Such moments occurred in connection with the Foreign Enlistment Act in 1856, and again at the time of the Trent affair, five years later, and once more when the Alabama difficulty arose four years afterwards. In all these cases there was a temporary estrangement and bitterness, and in all of them wise councils ultimately __ prevailed. To-day those who are most familiar with public feeling in the States all agree in believing that amongst the most thoughtful and trustworthy and intelligent classes there are steadily growing up sentiments of in- creased good will towards the British Empire. (Applause.) I do not believe that the devel- opment of those seutiments will be arrested by what is now taking place. It may occa- sionally happen that our harmony is in appear- ance or for the time checked and interrupted, that some question arises between the two nations, perhaps trivial in itself, but sufficient —either on account of its special surronnd- ings, or because of the local interests and pre- judices which are involved—to occasion a conflict of opinion, limited and restricted to that question, and not extending beyond it. There was a time when such differences might have been regarded with apprehensions as likely to lead to a wider and more general divergence of opinion, or to a lasting estrange- ment between the two countries. This is not sonow. The great mass of public feeling on the other side of the Atlantic is, I believe, completely sound, and these pussing quarrels will do no more than ruffle the surface, be- neath which there flows an ever-broadening stream of mutual friendship and good will. (Loud applause.) Each side will, at any rate, do well to remember the admirable precept expressed by an American poet, and so to conduct itself that its opponents may not be able to quote against it the words :— “You're riled just now, best proof your canse ain’t strong ; The one that first gets mad’s jist allus wrong.” (Laughter.) — ee ee ee Apvice To Motsrrs.— Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natura) quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain; and the little cherub awakes as ‘‘bright asa button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all ain, regulates the bowels, and is the best nown remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for Mrs. ‘ Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other | kind marl] eod & wky | In a tribunal at Paris the other day the } | judge suggested to a wordy lawyer that he 'had better be brief, and that worthy re- ‘sponded as follows: ‘‘He is waong, | am wht, andyuur honvr is # good judge.” ent he sat down, Those treaties / The Highlanders and Lowlanders. By Philip Gilbert Hamerton. They are spoken of equally as Scotch, yet the difference is not less marked, in reality, than if they were sepurate nations. Che Highlanders still retain (or did retain when I knew them) many of the character- istics of a social state from which the Lowlanders have jong since emerged. They were noble rather than industrial in their tastes and instincts, disposed for field sports more than for the improvement of their condition than by labor. Dr. Mac- culloch’s description of their inertia at the beginning of the century was stiil applic- able. The people did not move, of them- selves, toward a better condition; they had not the spirit of improvement. They were surrounded, it is true, by natural circum- stances of seme difficulty, especially those caused by the severity of the climate, but they were far from making the most of such opportunities as they possessed. For example, in gardening, they did not grow, and they could not be induced to grow, the vegetables which the climate allows, even though the want of them brought on scu- vey. Their habitations were wanting in every comfort, being almost in the lowest stage of cottage-building, irregular walls of rude stone, with a smail hole (glazed, how- ever) for a window and a low thatch, the fire very commonly on the floor, and the pest-reek escaping through an opening in the roof. Three was no spirit of enterprise to improve the ground about the habita- tions, or to make communication when the public road (due to English military energy) did not happen to be close at hand. In a word, there was nothing of that fruitful discontent which leads the advancing races to incessant improvements. Without the neighborhood of the Lowland Scotch, and the visits of the English, the Highlanders would certainly have remained in a very early stage of civilization. That early stage has its qualities and merits. The High- landers have good manners. Poor or rich, they are naturally gentlemen, and they show a fine endurance of hardship which, from the stoic and heroic side, is evidently superior to the love of luxury that develops itself so wonderfully in the south. On the other hand, it is not the High- landers, but the Lowland Scotch, who have made the name of Scotland great. It is they who have made the land famous as a leader in literature, with a certain dis- tinction in the fine arts, and a considerable emjnence in science, and a very great and notable eminence in all industrial pursuits. The Lowlanders have written the famous books, and built the great fleets of ocean- going steamers. It is they who made Edinburgh a capital of intelligence, and Glasgow a capital of industry. The High- land race had nothing but its valor and a few legendary poems ; no architecture be- yond the building of a few rude small cas- tles, no arts beyond the design of a brooch or the arrangement of the crossing stripes in a plaid.—May atlanti. ee Sun and Rain. Could we but utilize all the water power lifted from the ocean by the sunbeams and wafted by the zephyrs over the land, what vast factories might be run. What magni- fied Niagaras might we create. In a recent paper to the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Mr. John Murray sought to give the world’s rainfall in figures. The areas of country having an inland drainage, equal to 11,486,- 350 square miles, receive 2,243 cubic miles of rain yearly. The total areas draining directly to the ocean equal 44,241,000 square miles, of which 38,829,750 square miles have more than ten inches of annual rainfall, and discharge into the sea 6,569 cubic miles of water each year. By these means rather more than 5,000,000,000 tons of solids are carried to the ocean annually, The manuscript of a famous sermon which John Knox preached in Edinburgh in 1565 has been sold lately for $1,045. ~_—>-- Reports of Parnell’s bad health hare been much exaggerated. He suffers from bad digestion and dysentery. i> - > ie Dress suits made in one piece are now worn in Paris. The waistcoat has no back, the shirt consists of front, the cuffs are stitched into the coat sleeves, and a single set of buttons fixes the whole contrivance. << --- A man died of starvation recently in a Liverpool, Eng., prison. He was arrested for alleged drunkenness and died during the night in his cell. The sapient officer who ran him in was astonished on being informed by his police doctor that the man had died of starvation and that he was ex- hausted and not drunk when arrested. —— --<oe——- — — Philadelphia girls are odd. Not long ago one of them fell in love with and mar- ried a living skeleton who was on exhibi- tion there, and now another one has mar- ried a bald-headed fortune teller who has po roof to his mouth and twists himself out of shape when he tries to talk. Love is a strange thing, and no one can give a key to its riddle. _——_- From W. L. Shotwell, 204 Orange St., Newark. N. Y., Messrs. Kinsman*& Co.— Gents: 1 am pleased to recommend Adam- son's Cough Balsam as a sure cure for ali it claims. I would not be without it. It has done me more good than physicians prese-ip- tions in three years. Trial bottles 10 cents. dy wy lw WasutyeG Mane Easy.—I have on exhibi- tion in my shop window a washing machine that does away with the old and laborious way of washing clothes ; you can sit in your easy chair and rest while your washing is go- ing on. It has been tried and proved genuine. Please call and examine this great Washer and Bleacher. Purchase one and thereby save labor and expense. They are sold for $2.00 each. G. G, Jury, sole Agent for tle Afonarch Wasber aml 6 her, North side Queen Subse} inetd Ay Ba wy2m a i a ile