ee ee Teams:—Five DoLLars A Year. NEW SERIES. Che Daily Examiner STRICT ATTENTION is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Qo. From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION — REE RATS ace ere E” 250) ES REI a ag A * 25 I nbdindacwsd auctiisiiies con a. 50 Advertising at moderate rates. | Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- | ioe This is true Liberty, when Free-Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.--Kurtripes, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD to Business, Honesty and Square Dealing, and paying Cash every time, is what has placed L. E. PROWSE to the front of all competitors, in CLOTHING, HATS, &c. He does not advertize to sell goods at cost, but he guaran- terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, | tees to sell from 10 to 25 per cent less than those who do adver- on application. ALMANAC FOR MAY, 1336. MOON'S CHANGES. New Moon 3rd day, 1Ih., 30m., p. m. N. First Quarter 10th day, 10h, 7.6 p, m, W. i Fall Moon 17th day, 9h, 346m, p.m,S EB. | D! D i i M| AY OF WEEK tize to sell at cost. He does not try to deceive the people by making a big blow and offering paltry rewards, but trys to do things right jand has the goods to back him up in what he advertizes, He has now about 6,500 HATS and $4,000 worth of; Last Quarter 25th day, 7b, 23 6m, p. m. NW.| CLOTHING, which he guarantees to sell from 10 to 25 per cent San |San |Moon| High 'Davs.|4€88 than any house in the trade, A lot of this Clothing was irisesisets | rises |water| len’h bought less than half price, and will be sold less than half price. h mjh m morojaft’n -h : : . 1 |saturdey sol7 ‘l'3 46\'9 14lta 12}... 2e does not ask the people to believe his advertisement 2/Sanday 49 ‘ 419 2 53! 15 until they see his prices; he knows then they will believe, and 7 tote ql orb ines 7 = knows that the goods and prices back him up every time. cltheredas” a diate All goods freely shown, or sent to any part of the town. 7| Friday 43} 11| 7 35/0 27| 2, , 8] 3aturday 4i| is} 833i iil 3a Wes Please don’t forget to call. 9\Sunday 39/ 13] 9 38} 1 59) 34 10 Monday 33; 14,10 46) 2 54; = 36 KB : 11 | Tuesday 37; 15/11 511 4 3) = 39 P 12| Wednesday | 35! 16jaftG4) 5 25) 41 , : 5 a | 34) 18) 2 21) 6 47 44 Si t the BIG 4| Friday | 33) 20] 3 20) 7 53] 47 igm of the HAT, 7 * t. 15\Satarday = | 32) 21/4 41/845) 49 Ch’ = , Or 12 Naeem Soper 16| Sunday 31} 21| 5 50| 9 30) 50| Ch town, May 7, ’86—eod wky 17| Monday 30, 22] 6 56/10 12} 52 _ a 18} Tuesday 29; 24; 8 1/10 50; 55 19}Wednesday | 28) 25) 9 0/11 28) 57 > 20 Thursday 26| 25) 9 53iaft 6} 59 21| Friday 25, 25/10 41| 0 43/15 1 22) Saturday 24; 27)11 22); 1 1 3 a ae 23; 28imorn| 2 3 5 S onday 22: 29; 0 3 2 47 7 10: 25| Tuesday 22) 31/030/3465 of ne $6|Weinestey | 91 3210 Sela aah ut ea secured the services, as Manager of my oe > 33) 1 26) 5 48 13 | Friday 34| 1 581 6 57| 14 29| Saturday 19} 35.2 19} 7 54] 16 BISCUIT F: 30 Sunday 13} 36; 2 56) & 43 18 ACTORY, 31) Monday 4 18\7 27) 3 19; 9 26\15 19 of MR. THOMAS RANKINE, formerly with Messrs. T. Ran- , — “= kine & Sons, St. John, N. B. S iscui THROUGH TICKETS S$} Works of Mesure, FA. Kecuedy & Co, Cambridgenort, Mase. Charlottetown Ticket Agency. I am now in a position to offer to the Wholesale and Retail HROUGH TICKETS for sale to all parts| 1Tade of the Island, anything in my line, guaranteeing a better of Canada and the United States, at the) article than can be imported, at reasonable prices, very lowest possible rates. Write for rates maps, time tables, etc. G. A. SHARP, Station Master and Ticket Agent, March 49~—2aw wky 3mo_ =séPP. E.. I. Railway. POR BOSTON. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT THE PALACE STEAMERS INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- land, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at | 8.00 a. m. ‘ Leave St. John at 80’clock every Saturday night or BOSTON JI. QUIRKE. PRINCE STREET. Ch’town, May 5, 1886—1mo eod KING SQUARE BRANCH GROCERY! \ E have rented for one year the large Shop, lately occupied by MESSRS. BEER & SONS, believing that families living in that end of the city will appreciate a First-Class Grocery Store, ON KING SQUARE, WITH DOWN-TOWN PRICES, DIRECT. and will patronize it sufficiently to warrant our keeping it for j ¥ Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50,2nd @ longer period. class ; $9.50, Ist class. i For tickets and other information apply to i G. A.SHARP, F. W. HALES, Py Wh BY. P. KE. L Steam Nay. Co. | or to your nearest Ticket Agent. ' May 7, 1886—eod wky Lie ARTHUR & CO. GENERAL Commission Merchants, 12] ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. Eggs and Produce a Spacialty. Jaly 15—dly wkly CAUTION. EACH PLUG OF THE MYRTLE NAVY IS MARKED IN BRONZE LETTERS. : : , None Other Genuine. Oct, 3. We are instructed by Messrs. Beer & Sons to clear out the balance of their HARDWARE, yet remaining on the shelves at a BIG REDUCTION. :0- Wholesale Buyers will be given Special Bargaine BEER & GOFF, KING & QUEEN SQUARE. May 4, 1886 —2aw & wky BOOK-BINDING, PAPER-RULING AND BLANK-BOOK MAKING, OVER BOREHAM'S BOOT & SHOE STORE —_—_—_—————i) LL kinds of BOOK BINDING executed at Lowest Prices and with Quick Despatch" Ruling, Numbering and Perforating for the Trade promptly attended to. BLANK s@ A Share of Patronage Solicited, JAMES D. TAYLOR, QUEEN .SQUARE. Ob town, Feb, 23, '88:] Eee ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1886, Stixne.s Copies Two Cents oe ———-- = VOL, 18—-NO. 144 Churchil) on Home Rule. | Lord Randolph Churchill has written an- ‘other attack on Gladstone’s Home Rale policy. A citizen of Glasgow who de- scribes himself as a Liberal, recently sent Lord Randolph a letter asking his views on a proposition to unite the Liberals who op- pose Gladstone with the Tories on the basis ofasolemn pledge by thelatter that if in the next election they be returned to Parlis- ment with sufficient strength to undertake the conduct of the Government they will never propose Home Rule for Ireland, any peler which shall partake of the nature of ome Rule, beyond the concession of local /Government, and resist all attempts to (ts enact further speclal legislation for Ireland, SA RE" * To this letter Lord Randolph Churchili has . mms replied at length and his reply is published PRO MPT. and widely circulated. He says ; ‘‘I can- not admit that any incident in the history AWONDERFUL REMEDY ‘of the Tories gives any evidence of the es J xg ; necessity for such a pledge as you propose Adamson's Botanic Cough Balsam. because the mnlaininnan al the oa fo all hea eecasant 88 honey. Coushs, Colds, and its essential conditions is and has always | tmeeiyctnd bythe we of tosasowe Brenvaasey | been @ cardinal. principle of Tory. policy all other medicines have failed. _ Safferers from either The essence of the union is similarity in the recent or chromic coughs or bronchial affections, can laws for the kingdoms. As ageneral prin- resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining ‘ciple, Scotch or Irish habits and customs speedy relief. Do not delay, get it at once. FOR SALE EY ALL DRUGGISTS. Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, F, W. KINSMAN & CO., Druggists, 343 4TH AvVE., N. ¥. /may from time to time require special treat- ment, but these rare and minor incidents cannot detract from the general priuciple. _No Tory can ever propose Home Rule, be- a ae So _> | cause it violates this principle. The Tories Charlottetown Waterworks Compaily must ever resist such schemes as are pre- : ented hy Gladstone or any others that can — | be reasonably held to contain the germ of OTICE is hereby given by the under- Home Rule. My speeches advocating that AN signed, two of the corporate members of the Tories closely intimate the action of the the above Company, that the required num- Northern States in America during the ber of shares in the above Company having period 1861 to 1865, all indicate that that ia Does Saunas & fooeres meeting of the the only policy for Imperial safety. If teas will be ere ae ry above Com-' Parliament for the sake of purchasing a | Dany wilt ve neld at the offi of RR. FITZ: host illusory quietude, hand the Irish GERALD, Solicitor, in the Cameron Block, : : . in Charlottetown, Province of Prince Edward loyalists over. to their hereditary foes, Island, at the hour of eleven o'clock of the U/ster will fight and be victorious, because forenoon, on TUESDAY, the eighteenth day *2e Will command the sympathy and sup- of MAY next, A. D., 1886, for the purpose of Port of an enormous section of the British making, ordaining and establishing such bye- Community and the approval of the free laws, ordinances and regulations for the good | civilized nations.”’ management of the affairs of the Corporation —_ a ee a as they shall deem necessary, and for the pur- | The Big Gun. 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; The big gun recently cast at the South Province, incorporating the above Company. Boston iron works was recently moved Dated at Charlottetown this fifteenth day of from the ordnance foundry into the ma- April, A. D., 1886. : |chine shop for finishing in one of the large A. McKINNON, |120-inch lathes, This work of finishing April 16—tl 18 =e FITZGERALD. | requires the utmost skill and judgment, in om ee the variation from prescribed measure- | ments in the greater part of the work must /not exceed 3.1000 of an inch. It is to be ESTABLISHED 1873. MEMBERS CHAMBER bored for @ steel tube, to be inserted from COMMERCE. jthe breech, whose diameter ia about 22 jinches, and the length 154 inches. The |total length of the finished gun is 30 fest. When completed the gun will throw an 800 ;poand shot nye —- velocity of some 1,800 3. Spili z : \feet per second. With a powder charge of Potatoes, Spiling, =e. Ties, :265 pounds, the 12-inch breech-loading Eumber, Laths, Canned | rifle, 54-ton gun which was sent to Sandy Fish, Hiay, Eggs, | Hook last June, has been fired 98 rounds Produnee with most satisfactory results, having ob- uCce, tained a velocity of 1,680 feet per second And sellon commission. Write us fully for; with an 800-pound projectile and 265 quotations, Ship to /pounds powder charge. This rifle is HATHEWAY & CO., mounted on 12-inch Powlett pneumatic gun carriage, whose weight with the gun " mounted on it is 88 tons, is worked entire- Re Central Wharf, Boston, Gen- \ly by one map by the system of compressed eral Commission Merchants. gir. The South Boston iron works are Consign your vessels to our house. Will noe building a gun loader for this carriage, receive personal attention. Charters, Freights which will carry the powder and projectile and Vessels for the United States, Newfound- | ftom the magazine to the carriage and load land, West Indies, South America Ports.| the gun, doing away with any hoisting or Lumber, stone and Oil Freights. lifting hand or cranes, and will be worked April 12, ’86—3mos entirely by one man. In the ordnance pelicans shops of the South Boston works the 12- inch 53.ton rifle, called the Hooped and is27 ir oh tee HE. S86, Turbed gun, as the cast-iron body is to be ry bed . TY i banned with two rows of steel hoops and a ++ & E. K ENN Y ¢ |steel cube inserted from the breech, reach- : winte , ing about half-way to the muzzle, is bein Dry Goods and Shipping, |::5 4 f —* oe. ———— Wholesale Swindling. rapidly pushed to completion, one row of HALIFAX, CANADA. hoops having already being shrunk on, and " T T & HE. KENNY, Ship Owners and Brokers, Paterson, Kissock, affair. All interest General Commission Merchants, seems to centre there, It is in every one’s iG} GRESHAM HOUSE, mouth and the pros. and cons. of the case a }@ comparatively young one, is rated at LONDON, E. C., $55,000 to $60,000, and last year turned England, jover half a million dollars. The frauds Scott's and Vaughans Codes. . covered, already involve over $10,000. For every charge against McLachlan Bros., HERRING NETS they claim to haye discovered twenty : 2 are alleged to have been substituted, dupli- NE dozen MOUNTED HERRING NETS | cate invoices used as originals for passing for sale by lt eeenenn goods of greater value than in the original pond with the number of the consignment of greater value than represented by in- voice, and many other irregularities too at the Custom House are still busily engaged ; investigating the case and claim to be con- WoOOBDILL & tinually discovering irregularities and 3 ss placed under seizure, the onus of clearing oz. Tins Retail 7 Cemts | ihemselves by proving that the full duty has been paid, lies with the firm. A some- : * oe GE RVMAN tion with the case, is that ail invoices of to have been destroyed. The explanation ‘Moz. Tins Retail 12 Cents of this is that the firm, being enabled to obtain more favorable terms than their in the United States, aud fearful that its employes should convey these prices to i other houses, destroy the invoices every Soz. Tins Retail 22 Cents six months after the bills have been paid. POWDER Horsford’s Acid Phosphate, Quality Equal to Any. Dr. J. N. Robinson, Medina, O., says: “Tn cases sf eee, constipation and nervous prostration, its results are happy.” the steel tube inserted.— Boston Herald. (F. ©. MAHON) The resigning Montreal sensation is the . . /are warmly discussed. ‘The firm although Bishopsgate Street, | which the authorites claim to have dis- March 29, 15886. against Paterson, Kissock & Co, Invoices Ch'town, April 12, 1886. invoice; invoices altered so as to corres- Why Pay Higher, When (numerous to mention are alleged. Clerks frauds. Now that the stock has been what remarkable circamstance in connec- the firm prior to December 5th, are said B AKIN G competitors from exporters in England and i i ! | IN CONSTIPATION. ‘Murch 1, 1886. The Policy of Secession, The passage of the repeal resolution in the House of Assembly at an early hour yesterday (Sunday) morning, supported by every Grit member in the House, (with the solitary exception of Mr. Pipes) is a fitting finale to the career of the present legisla- ture. Burglara and murderers not. infre- quently seek to destroy by fire the scenes of their crimes in order thereby to destroy the evidence of their guilt. it is witha similar motive that the present local gov- ernment, after the most inglorious career that ever disgraced a government, propose to convulse, and if possible dismember the country in which they find thenselves so thoroughly discredited. After four years of power they are able to point to no one act that reflects the elightest credit on them. Nota mile—not even a half mile— of railway has been constructed. The province saddled with a bonded deht of about a million dollars, provincial property worth miilions of dollars . traiiorously jiven away, solemn pledges regarding the iegisla- tive council fiagrantly broken, a valuable institution of learning closed, and a hu- mane institution ruined in a struggle to maintain the spoils system, a legislature corrupted in the most profligate manner, and the laws of the province generally mutilated, and the administration of the government generally degraded,—theso are all they have to show the people as the results of their four years of government. It is no wonder, therefore, that they seek to cover their retreat from the legislative halis by applying the torch of the incen- diary to the constisution of their country. It would have been strangely inappropriate for them to have closed their career of idiccy and impishness in any other way.— Halifax Herald, May 10. te The Chicago Outrage. The cruelty of an indiscriminate dyna- mite attack upon the police, will at once excite public attention. The officers are acting on behalf of the community. They are appointed to preserve the peace. They are under military discipline, and are taught to obey without question, the orders they receive. While acting in this capacity, they are the representatives of the whole people. Any attack upon them, is an offence to everybody, who is responsible for their official existence. To single out for murder a few officers who are in the dis- charge of their duty isa wanton and mani- acle crime. These oflicers presumably, are men of family and far more respectable and useful members of society than any of the ruffians engaged in the attack upon them. To slay them Tuesday, because some other officers Monday, defended themselves against rioters in another part of the city, is to exhibit a degree of madness that we had not believed even the Anarchists to be capable of. We hope and believe the mur- der of the police officers last night, will in- stantly result in a consolidation of public opinion in favor of upholding the law and punishing those that violate it. There ought to be a public meeting called and such an expression given to the feeling of honest men that no alien assassins can re- main in doubt what side the power rests with in this contest.—Chicago Tribune. — A Sad Case of Death from Overwork. An inquest was held in London, last week, upon the body of Jane Shaw, a girl of seventeen, who was employed in Margaret Browne's dressmaking establish- ment, in Keppel street. Evidence was adduced to show that owing to the pressure of work consequent upon the Drawing- room, which was held on the Oth, and Tuesday's function at the Colonial Exhibi- tion, the deceased, with a number of other girls, was working overtime for nearly every night during the past fortnight, and that Tuesday night, about 11 o'clock, she fell back in her chair and died immedi- ately. The girl, who presented a very delicate appearance, had been working for several days from 8 o’clock in the morning till near midnight, with short intermissions for meals. Heart disease was the cause of death, and the coroner, in directing a ver- dict from natural causes, told Mrs. Browne that she narrowly escaped being indicted for menslaughter. Before leaving the court she was served with a summons for infraction of the Factory Act, by keeping her employes at work during prohibiced honrs without notifying the inspector, ~-ooo-- — Profits of Stage-Robbing During the past fourteen years 105 men /have been engaged in the business of stage- { robbing on Wells, Fargo & Company's Pacific Coast stage lines. That it is a business pursued with great diligence and skill is shown by the ‘‘ Robbers Record,” kept by the compaay for the use of its own detectives. It has in the last fourteen years cost Wells, Fargo & Company $927,- 726.55, or an average of {$66,266 per year. The robbers are charged with $415,312 58, rewards for arrests, etc., $73,451; attorneys, 2,367 ; expenses incurred in arresting end convicting robbers, $90,079; guards and special officers, $326,517. In this is not included the great amount stolen from the United States mails in the same robberies, and the still greater total of cash and valuables taken from the stege-csach pas- sengers, But taking the sum the robbers have secured from the Wells-Fargo boxes alone, $415,312, it is seen that the 106 men who have engaged in the business, have averaged $8,835, or $600 per year each. What the money and jewellery have ee the road-agents it is of course im- possible to even estimate.—San Francisco Chronicle. —- <a A union of all the French-Canadiana in Canada and the United States has been formed, under the title of ‘Alliance Na- t?unal des Bi. Jean het (meme i lt GG ETI a ES i ll da nae RO ii ile IE ee: Sate ee ile Shen iil . hm i ee ae