rerMs:—Fite Doutars a Year. NEW SERIES This is true Liberty, when red: Born Men, padihe to — the Public, may naaienle pc ~-EvRIPIDEs. CHART OTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, ‘TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1886. Srxneie Cortes Two CENTS VOL, 18—-NO. 120 Che Daily Examiner is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Go. From: their office, corner of Water and Great George Strests, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. ~—RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— GK WROUG . ae sb. od al. ce fee bed? $2.50; 7 hree months ‘states tts eee 1 26 i ; | eee “CHRISTY LUNDON HATS | Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly, or yearly Seana on application. Si ALMANAC FOR APRIL, 1886. -MOON’S CHANGES, New Moon 4th day, l0th.; 18;Im., a. m. S. E. First Quarter llth day, 4+ cb, 3t 5m, p. an, SW Full Moon) *th day, 10th, 46.7, «. m, N, Last Quarter 26th day, 'h, 3.0m,a m. E. ‘San [San | |Moon) High! Davs. } ‘Fisesisete | ‘rises | water, len’h D DAY OF we M EK! i [h mh mmorn faftn jh m 1) Thursday 15 44/6 23} 426| 9 812 39 2|Friday § | 42 25)4 54) 945 42 3|Saturday ri 26/5 22}10 Boh - 45 4/Sanday 27; 5 49)10 53; 49 5 Monday 7 | 29, 6 lj ll 27) 52 6) Tuesday 35! 30, 6 48\morn; 55 | Wednesday 33; 32) 7 23,0 2] 58 5 ‘Thursday 31 33| 8 2) 0 40:13" 2 9) Friday 29; 34) 8 48| 1 2h} 5 10 Saturday 27} > 941; 2 9 3 1! Sunday 25; 37/10 40, 3 6, 19 12) Monday | 23 38 tl 46) 420) 13 13, Tuesday | 22) 40jaft 56) 549) 16 14 Wedne ay 20, 41; 2 8712 @ 15| Thurs 18) 42} 391) 816 2 16| Friday | 16) 43 ; ~ = 7 27 | 17 | Satarday | 1s) 45 47 951| 30) 18|Sunday , J 13) 46 57/0 32) 19) Monday lt) 47; 5 7jll 7] =636) 20) Tuesday” ¢ 9 48| 9 13/11 49 39 | 21| Wednesday 8; 50/10 12jaft26; 42 22| Thursday 6} 521) 191 1 6} 46 23) Friday 4) 53} morn | 1 48). 49 24 Saturday 2) 54,0 1) 233) 52 25| Sunday 0; 55) 0 45| 3 26) 55 26| Monday 4°58 66) 1 24)-4 32) 68 27| Tuesday 57), 58] 2 55| 5434 1 28, Wednesday 56'7 0) 2 29) 6 51 4 29 Thursday 54) 1) 2 67/7 46) 6 "7 Friday 4 - 2) 3 ~ 8 33/14 9 THROUGH TICKETS 1) Charlottetown Ticket Agency. ry \HROUGH TICKETS for sale to all parta of Canada’ and the United States, at the very lowest possible rates. Write for rates _Apaps, time tables, - A, SHARP, Shation Mdscthe and Ticket Agent; March 19—2aw wky mo PP. E. I, Reilway. ow FO h— BOSTON. SPRING ARRANGEMENT. THE PALACE STEAMERS INTERNATIONAL $.S. CO. Leave St. John for Boston. cone oe Eastport and Port- land, every Tuesday d Thursday, at 8.00 a. m. Fare from Charlot et to Boston, 36,50, 2nd class ; $9.50, Ist class. For tickets an@ other information apply to G. A.SSHARP, F. W. HALES, P. E. L R’y., P, E. L.'Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. Feb 8, 1886-—-eod wky L. ARTHUR & CO, GHN HRAL Commission Merchants, | 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASSB. a eee Eggs and Produce a Specialty. _" 15—dly whiy) CAUTION. EACH PLUG UG OF THE MYRTLE NAVY IS MARKED Te Bi IN BRONZE LETTERS. None-Other Genuine. Oct, 2, ee eee (emeee= ame | Spring Stock Just Opened —AT THE— LONDON HOUSE! --—--—- Newest Styles! Lowest -—O— ear TAILORING DEPARTMENT—A fine stock of Scotch and English Tweeds and Worsteds to select from. egeaeeenyannge) men emeapeecoaae HARRIS & STEWART SUCCESSORS TO Prices! ! GEO, DAVIES & Co. Oh’ town, March 22, 1886.—dy & wky BRITISH WAREHOUSE, SS QUEEN STREET. ee ee ee XTRA value for MARCH and APRIL in Table Damasks, Napkins, Sheeting, Pillow Cottons, White and Gray Cottons, Towelings, Tickings, White and Colored Knitting Cottons, CARPETS AND _ OILCLOTHS., LL OAS EH BMBROIDHRY, direct from eee just opened. Axe Lie BROWN. Ch’town, March 15.—wkly. ee — = - _— _—--- — —— a STANDARD GOODS LOWEST PRICES 0 PERKINS & STERNS’ LARGE STOCK OF SEASONABLE GOODS : 400 Pieces Grey Cottons, 220 Pieces White Cottons, 150 Pieces Print Cottons, 53 Pieces Hessians, 48 Pieces Table Linen, 140 Dozen Towels. vO White and Colored Knitting Cotton. ‘Large Stock of Colored Dress Goods. Black French Merinoes, Black Cash- meres, Biack Cords, Black Nuns’ Veil- ing, Black Costume Cloth, &c. o-—— ——- Brussels, Tapestry and Wool Carpets. OILCLOTHS & - LINOLEUMS. China aad: ‘Twine —- 0---——- Largest Stock of ROOM PAPER mm Pp & Island. PERKINS ; & STERNS. Ch’town, Feb. 23,’ tact Cocoa, Matting. ag, PROMPT. | AWONDERFUL REMEDY. Adamson’s Botanie Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as‘honey. Couzhs, Colds, and Asthma, Which lead to Consumption, have been j speedily cured by the use ef ADAMSON’S BausaM after | all other medicines have (ailed, Sufierers from either recent or chronic coughs or bronchial affections, can resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining } speedy relief. Do not delay, get it at once. ' FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGEGISTS, Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, Ff. W. KINSMAN 4 CO., Druggists, 343 47H AveE., N.Y, W. H. PETHICK, VETERINARY SURGEON: Office: Next Dodd’s Medical Hall, Grafton Street - Charlottetown, March 26—-dy 3aw wky W. WHEATLEY, Produce aud Cowmmission Merchant. ~ 1 PEOIAL Aten ivion given to consignments, Lavge storage accommodation. Satidfattion guaranteed. 269 Rarrington St., Halifax, N. s. | Mareh 24--3mos eod BARCLAY & CO, GENERAL Commissn & Shipping Merchants, 94 Atlantic im, Araeme, Boston. Bee tobe tonibe in this market, Sey wevand 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. a@ Specialties-_Potatoes, Mackerel, Can- ned Lobsters, Eggs. March 17, ’°86—3mo eod P. E ISLAND. RAILWAY, Sale of Unclaimed Goods. A SALE of Unclaimed Goods will take place at the Freight House, Charlottetown, on MON- DAY, 19th APRIL next, at 10 o'clock a.m.,(Stand- ard time), JAMES COLEMAN, Superintendent} Railway Office, Ch’town, March 27, 1886. —dy tu fri tl sle pat mon th tl sle wky prs 2i ALL PERSONS |} AVING Accounts with the undersigned, same being past due, will please take notice that settlement, either by cash or note, must be made forthwith or they will be handed over to their Attorney. BEER & SONS, March 29th, 1886—mar3l 2wks ecd wy Imo WE HAVE SOLD NEARLY ALL OUR Stem-Winding Rockford Watches, |: which are giving good satisfaction, and as the! Company, in the interest of the public, say | they will not send any watches by mail, we | shall defer getting a fall supply until we can safely do so by express. In the meantime we have several Key- Winding Rockford Watches on hand, accu-| rately timed, and purchasers of any of these| can have the privilege of exchanging fora In stock, a nice assortment of Waltham & Elgin Watches, in heavy silver or gold- filled cases. BB W- TAYLOR CAMERON BLOCK. Charlottetown, March 5, '86. To Lobster Packers, FOR SALE. 400 boxes of TIN PLATES, suitable for Lob ster Cans. 22 pigs of LEAD. 22 ingots, TIN. 1 bar of COPPER, Apply to PEAKE BROS. &{C0, Ch’town, Feb. 10— -tf 3aw SEED WHEAT BES? WHITR RUSSIAN, FOR SALE CHEAP, JOHN NEWSON, 'Ch’town, March 4, 1896.—Swks dy wky | Eight cases of smallpox have been dis- 2 1 going out on strikes. : ... It is rumored that Mr. Childers ie waver- : : = ' ing in his loyalty to Mr, Gladstone. charity. 'factured butter are registered in the U. 8 | May jor the first time since 1851, when she Psalms,” THE NEWS OF THE DAY. Carefully Collated by “The Ex- aminer’s” Reporters. In the good old Spanish days bull fights cost about $15,000. Pretty soon the baseball players will be "thes in Longueuil, Ont. The servant girls of St. Louis boycott the mistresses who discharge any one of their ; number. The Prince of Wales is selling large tracts of his Cornwall estates in small holdings. There are said to be 500 Americans in London living in absolute squalor of It is reported that 150 patents for manu- , Patent Office. In France at the present time there is ‘one drinking place for every 97 inhabitants, or every 26 electors. There is a fortune for some man who can invent a rattlebox that can be heard only by the baby using it. Christopher Columbus is teaching school in Michigan, and William Shakespeare is ‘expounding law in Iowa. The import duties levied by England on wines made in her own colonies are so high as to be almost prohibitive. A prayer book in the hand is worth two hours in the church, says a cynical observer of feminine manners during Lent. Queen Victoria will visit Liverpool in was accompanied by the Prince Consort. ** can February March ?’ asked the pun- ster with a sickly smile. ‘‘ Perhaps not,” replied the quiet man, ‘‘bat April May.” A farmer of Scotia, Neb., found particles of gold from the size of a pin head to a pea seventy feet below the surface while digging @ well. The first binocular opera glasses were made by an optician of Paria named Chorez, and presented to King Louis XIII, in 1620. According to the Bishop of London, school life is shorter in England than in any other well instructed country in Europe. Glowing tributes were paid to the mem- ory of Hon. W. E. Forster by Mr. Glad- stone and Sir Michael Hicks-Beach in the British House of Commons, The Shah’s heir apparent has commenced his travels. We think it strange that aman who has as many wives as the Shah has should have any hair apparent. The waters of Lake Michigan are rising at the rate of four inches a year upon Chicago. This is the first cold water movement that has ever promised to be a success in the city of pork and sin. In the House of Representatives, Wash- ington, a few days ago, O'Neill of Missouri submitted resolutions endorsing Gladstone’s Irish p licy, but they were objected to and were not received by the House. Twenty-five English gentlemen farmers, well provided with means, who have pur- chased farms at Regina, Northwest Terri- tory, on which they intend settiing, are at present staying in Montreal before proceed- ing to their newly acquired property. Mr. Frederick Russell Nourse, an Amer- ican who started from London for Liver- pool to take passage by the Adriatic, has mysteriously disappeared, and despite ad- vertisements, rewards, and the efforts of detectives, no trace of him can be obtained beyond Euston Square railway station. A large party of well-to-do agricultural immigrants from England and Wales left Railrcad Warfare. GOULDS CHANGED OPINION ABOUT THE KNIGHTS OF LABOR. New York, April 6.—Jay Gould aid yesterday : ‘* The strike on our railroad is practically over. I have been astonished at much of the revelation that has come through the recent disturbances, but noth- — has been so surprising as the proof | have had of the weakness of the Knights. They have no such organization as I had supposed. Their demonstrations and as- sertions had led me to believe them not only formidable but practically unconquer- able. They are not the sort of organization that wins victories, They are not what they led the public to believe them to be ; they are readily overcome. So great was my apprehensicn as to the strength of the Knights, and SO GREAT WAS MY FEAR of what might come from a fight with them, that for over a year we have been carrying hundreds of men on the Misswuri Pacific Railroad’s Pay roll for whom we really had no need. We were paying them their wages only because we were apprehensive of an extreme emergency to follow a strike by the Knights. Now we tind that the money spent in this way was practically wasted. We had no such things to fear as we anticipated. Up to this time we have taken back 25 men who have been active in the strike troubles at St. Louis. We can get ALL THE MBN WE WANT without having to call upon a sing'e one of the strikers. Labor, in fact is over-abun- dant in all the strike districts. There is no lack anywhere of material for trainmen. Here in New York, for instance, the elevated railroads have constantly on the applications from between 1,500 and 2,000 men who will answer a call for work. The same condition of affairs exists in the South West. We have decided to give the men in East St. Louis until one o’clock on Mon- day afternoon to return to work, such a number of them, at least, as we require. If they refuse this generous effer they will get no further chance. Krupp. Alfred Krupp, owns probably the largest business in the world dependent on one individual. The works within the town of Essen oceupy more than 500 acres, half of which are under cover. ; According to a cen- sus taken in September 1881, the number of hands employed by Mr. Krupp was 19,605, the members of their families 45,776, making 65,381 persoas supported by his works. Mr. Krupp owns 547 iron mines in Germany. He owns four sea steamers, and’there are connected with his Essen works forty-two miles of railway, em- ploying twenty-eight locomotives, 883 cars, sixty-nine horses, with 191 wagons, and forty miles of telegraph wires, with thirty- five stations and fifty-five Morse appara- tuses. The establishment pessessess a gravd chemical laboratory, a photographic and lithographic atelier, ® printing office with three steam and six hand presses, and a book-binding room. The establishment even runs a hotel in Essen. —~——~atinldpeieipaindtipeiaiats Sox, She Got Acquainted. ‘Hold on to the young man in front,’ said a young lady’s escort, as they seated themselves on the toboggan. ‘But I don’t know him.’ ‘Well, take hold and get ec- quainted,’ ‘Sir!’ said the Puritanical miss, with an offended look, Her escort chuckled and dropped the conversation. The toboggan started. ‘Oh my!’ squealed the nervous young lady, taking a very light hold of the blouse of the young man in front. The escort chuckled a little more and the toboggan flew faster. As the sled struck the level the young lady bobbed into the air. She threw her arms around the neck of the young man in front and clung to him like a well-licked postage stamp to a letter. When the toboggan came to a standstill the young lady was still tightly clasping the stranger. ‘Well, did you get acquainted ?’ inquired her escort with a grin. ‘You horrid Montreal a few days ago by the Canadian Pacific Railway for Winnipeg. The ma-| jority have already secured homesteads at) Cal ulgary, Moose Jaw and Turtle Mountain, | on which they intend settling with their families. Sam Jones and Sam Small—‘' the Two as they are irreverently called— iwent to Chicago to reform the city, and the city has reformed them. Both have given up the use of tobacco, and have publicly | Stem-Winder, when they arrive. }announced the fact from the pulpit. As to Chicago, it is about as far off from reforma- tion as ever. The United States Gcvernment is the most prolific publisher in the world, hav- than 4,000 titles. Four hundred composi- ing priated over 7,000 distinct works, the | annual output being at this time not fewer | thing, was her oniy answer.—St. Paul | Letter. _ nnn oOo -ee ADviceE TO MorHers,—Mrse. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain, and the little shrub awakes as ‘‘bright as a button,” Itis very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gume, allays all | pain, regulates the bowls, and is the best | known remedy for diarrbc », whether arising from teething or other causes, Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for ‘‘Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,” and take no other kind. [feb 4 cod wkly — Special Notices. tors and 50 proof-readers are steadily employed, besides 44 pressmen, 145 press- feeijers, and 34 ruling machine feeders. An attempt has been made to arrive with | some accuracy at the loss inflicted directly | and indirectly by the strike of the Knights, earnings to the railway companies is esti- [mined at $2,200,000, damage to property at | $300,000, and expenses for guards, $200,-| 000, in ail $2,700,000. The strikers have ‘lost, at least $500,000 in wages, and the ‘strike has deprived six thousand other| | employees of the railway, of wages to the ‘amount of about $800,000. These figures| cannot, of course, be added to the previous) ones as they only show what part of the loss of $2,800,000 is borne by the men. What ithe indirect cost to the public is, can only | guessed at from the fact that fifty mill- ‘ions worth of goods ha. not not been trane- | ‘ported, and four or five thousand men em- ployed in various establishments dependent | ‘for supplies on the railways have been thrown out o? work. of Labor on the Gould system. The loss of | McCatw’s Bazaak Patrerns,Spring Sheets, | just received at the London House, ap i2 Cuoice TamaRinps, 12 cents a pound at | Beer & Goffs. ap 12 Buyker Hitt Pick es in bulk just receiv- ed by the N. Light, at the Fish Market. ap 10 3i | Care Cop CRANBERRIES, No. 1, selling at cost at the Fish Market, Grafton Street. ap 10 3i | New Valencia Oranges (swe t) at Beer & Goff s, ap 9 3in | A ¥FREsH supply of Condensed Coffee and | Milk just received at Beer & Goffe, ap 9 3in Hichgst price given for Bank Prince Ed ward Island Notes in exchange for goods at the London House. ap 9 eod 1 wk Exceccest Half-shell Oysters at Joy’s. ap 7 lm | Five Sheemakers can get work at Dorsey, Goff & Co's. tf apl Fresu Bedeque Oysters receivéd three times a week at John Joy's, opposite Eankin House, ap 7 lm a vee wieeeiterste al i ical e ” M rae) amine hn Ghee tr ore ee ecient en een LS eT SE I a Oe eR FIT Bie nb Os nanan mi ee (i nore | lt ceinatatpee ctnowape cana : ran ms } i ii Bi 4 2 . K eS al ee omens te