=~ wee = ~~ orrFrtrhlCUM CUO et ee — ee ee — TET Ae SU EE ET RET EER NS Se eee lerws :—Five Dotiars A YRAI an em ener se ee = oa This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may speak free.””—Evxiriwes. SInGLe Corres Two CrEx7s. NEW SERIES —_— ee DAILY KXAMINER VENING, i Lik i ISSUED EV »} I By rue Bxaminer PosutsHinc Company FROM THEIR Orrice, Cy ’ RNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, . - P. E. Island. Rates oF SuPserirt! Six Months, - : $2 50 Three Months, - - . L 20 Une Month, - . . 0 50 ga Advertising at most moderat Contracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. -—— ss ALMANAC FOR APRIL, 1382. : rates. MOON'S CHANGES. Full Moon 3rd day, lh. 34m. p. m., N. (below horizon. ) Third Quarter Ilth day, 2h. !7m., a. m., E. New Moon 17th day, 4h. 26m, p. m., E. First Quarter, 25th day, 2h. 43m. a. m., 5. E. D . sep Sen San !|Moon|High ! Days M DAY OF WEEK rises |sets | rise s water | len’h. $$$ ee lh m jh m | aft’a| morn 1|Saturday |S 44/6 24) 4 49! 9 18) 12 49 2 Sunday 42} 24 5 50} 9 52 3 Monday |} 40, 27' 6 53:10 25 4, Tuesday 28:.. 38; 7 £6)10 53 5| Wednesday 35; 29, 9 O11 32) 6| Thursday 34; 30/10 2iaft 7 7|#riday | 33} 32llL 110 45 8 Saturday | 30) 33,11 56] 1 27/ 13 09 9| Sunday 25° 35) morn! 2 15) 10 Monday 27; 36; 0 44 3 13} ll Tuesday 25; 37; 1 26) 4 28: 12, Wedwesday | 23) 35) 2 3, 5 53) 13 Thursday 21; 40; 2 35) 7 12) 14 Friday | 19) 41) 3 5) 8 15) 1é Saturday | 17; 42) 3 33) 9 5) 13 32 16 Sanday | 16; 44,4 4! 9 51 17|Monday | 14/ 45] 4 35/10 33 18) Tuesday 2| 46: 5 12)11 14) 19, Wednesday 10, 43) 5 53.11 55) 20 Thursday ; 9 49) 6 40) morn} 2ilFriday | 7| 50| 7 52i 0 36! 22)Saturday |} 5, 52) 8 32) 1 19) 13 SI 23: Sunday | 4) 53) 9 33,2 5) 24) Monday 2} 541034! 2 54) 25|'Tuesday 0} 55/11 39] 3 52| 26|Wednesday '4 59, 57jaft 37) 4 57) 27 | Thursday 57; 58; 1 38| 6 7 28| Friday | 55) 59) 2 42/7 8) 20;Saturday | 547 1} 3 39) 7 59; 14 10) 4 52:7 2] 4 42] 8 42 30| Sunday INSURANCE OFFICE. —— Queen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. City of London Fite Insurance Company, CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptly and equitably. 5 F. KENNEDY, General Agent. Office—South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Feb. 3, 1852. St. Lawrence Hotel. HE above Hotel is now RE-OPENED, having been thoroughly repainted and refarnished in the best style. Being centrally situated and within three minutes walk of the Railway Depot and Steamboats, it offers inducements to the travelling public. Permanent and Transient Boaiders acco- modation unsurpassed by any other Hotel in the city. J WM. E. HICKEY, Proprietor Ch’town, Dec. 21, ’81, W. C. BISHOP, SHIPPING FORWARDING AGENT, Marins Insurance Broker, —_—AND— Cencral Commission Agent, BEDFORD HOW, BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. §, P. Gd PARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the | Shipment of “Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon, Hulls, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first-class offices at most favorable rates, Consignments of Produce solicited, and prompt returns guaranteed, Correspondence solicited and promptiy. Nov. 14, 1881—lyr Removed. A RS. W. W. IRVING begs to notify he 4 friends and the public generally that she has opened her Fall and Winter Classes for Painting and Drawing in all their different branches. For terms, etc., apply at her Studio —resi- dence of Mr. Peebles, South Side of King Bqnare, fau 29 tf answered _ For Sale or to Let. NHAT Freehold Property, with a front of eighty feet on Pownal Street and eighty- four feet on Sydney Street, the House con- taining 16 large rooms and two Kitchens. Can be turned into one Dwelling by unlock- ing adoor. Apply on the premises to MRS. BONS WALL. March 12, 1881~—-+f CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1882. RITISH WAREHOU B eae SE, QUEEN Oo—-—-—- -- — SQUARE. W. & A. BROWN & CO. Keep ip SLAP AIND FANCY DRY GOODS Kvery Department of their Establishment a full essortment of 7 of superior quality and texture, which cannot be surpassed either for price or quality, as they import direct from the best British and Foreigu markets. ANSPECT THEIR STOCK IF YOU WANT GOOD VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY. a ie el ————_—- AT CosT! Tweeds Readymade | Clothing, ee eee ee and Heavy | AS I WANT TO CLOSE OUT MY STOCK IN THIS LINE. | Some isxpensive Ladies’? Cloth Manties and Dolmans, and | Hur Lined Cloaks, Sealettes and Colored Dress Goods. } | A Se pw ewe >To, A Tn oe BG JUST GPENED AND MARKED LOW, act Assortment of Flowers, Feathers, Velveteens, Ladies’ Sacques, &c., &e. ed? OS i oe ae R. W. TREMAINE, 83 QUEEN STREET GOOD THEA, 25, 30 and 33 cents ; S-BT ent dee —A T-- . & HOLTGHESON’S. { shall Sell off my Stock of Groceries at RAISINS, 10 cents ; CRACKERS, 4 to 14 cents; MOLASSES, 47 cents; CURRANTS, 8 cents. SUGAR, 8 cents. A large lot of CONFECTIONERY from 15 to 20 cents; lot CHRISTMAS GOODS, very cheap; and sundry other articles too numerous to mention—all at cost for Cash only. Dec. 16, 1881—3m eod, wkly W. A. HUTCHESON, 109 Urrer Queren Srreer CHARLOTTETOWN ESUSINESS COLLEGE, (ESTABLISHED 1873,) Welsh & Owen's Brick Building, Corner of King and Queen Streets, Char- lottetown, P. E. L. REAGH & MILLER, - - Proprietors. Designed to Educate; Young Men for business. UR SYSTEM is conducted on Actual Basiuess and Scientitic Principles, and embraces ali subjects necessary for a thorough CoMMERCIAL Education. Our facilities for teaching these are the most complete that have ever been devised. Theory and practice are combined, ard the whole course rendered so interesting and practical that the dullest stu- dent cannot fail to be largely benefitted. The course of Study is short, practical, useful and reasonable ; it is just what every Man needs and will use, no matter what his calling or profession is to be. The youth commencing a business life with only industry and integrity as his capital, the clerk engaged during business hours, but desirous by evening study to repair the de- fects in his education, each have the advan- age offered by our sessions occupying DAY AND EVENING. Morning Session, 9.30 to 12, and 2to4p.m. Evening Session, 7.30 to 9.30. Diplomas granted to such as pass satisfac- tory examinations. Students may enter at apy time. No entrance examination required. Business men and others are cordially invited to call and examine our system. Teach your sons what they will practice when they become men. Full particulars concerning Terms, Tuition, Scholarships, &c., &¢., on application to L. B. MILLER, Principal, Jan. 7, '8l—eo da. Herring. Horsing. 100 bbls. Extra Fat No, 1, equal to Yarmouth Bloaters, 100 quintals Codfish, 100 do. Hake, 12 casks Cod Oil, 300 Mackerel Barrels (good stock), 1000 bushels Fishing Salt, On hand, a full supply of Cotton Duck Bolt Rope, Hemp and Manilla Cordage, Lines and Twines, Paints and Oils, DAVID SMALL. For Scotch SE ——- oe and English Twesds or Worsted Suits For Canadian Tweed Suits, For Overcoats of all Descriptions, J 6 H N ad Bi ¢ L E Gj Dp r : : | ACL ae br A | Ome: : ‘ r ‘ee rn i t? } j SRR) —_ 0 a 4 A Cry ee a a we — hse we i “AQ Do- UPPER QUEEN STREET, TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIE There you will find the largest and best ussortment of Cloths in the; bee rations. There are 100,000 catile Island. Prices very moderate. The best workmanship and a perfect fit tng not far from there. yuaranteed, ~— ALSO— A complete line of Gents’ Furnishings and Felt Hats, cheap, &e. &e. Remember the address, two doors above Apothecaries Hall Corner Charlottetown, Oct. 11, 1881. {ja 9 Cloths, ‘River and Wood Islands, with such un- ‘iverge of another unholy and disastrous S HALL CORNER | Pope to the authorities at Washington : CORRESPONDENCE, We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions or statements of our correspondents = Ye “ Commercia! Traveller.” 1 To the Editor of the Examiner. Six,—Noticing a short paragraph under the above heading, I should be glad to! know what object the writer had in view! when writing. Does it come under the! head of ‘‘amusement”’ or * instruction,” | or, what is still more probable, the out- pouring of some envious person,who thinks that by belittling a more respectable busi- | ness than his own, he will make himself of | greater importance, The lady of Charlottetown has the mis- | fortune to know some exceedingly vulgar | people—if, in conversing with her, es use such slang ‘‘ Yankee” expressions as ‘** bummer, ’ which is never applied in Eng- land or Canada, even by very vulgar peo- ple, to commercial tiavellers; but to totally different occupation, which is not: necessary to mention here, If only gentlemen’s names appeared on} hotel registers, as this unsophisticated | maiden is said to have thought, and that | commercial travellers cannot be gentlemen, it would be interesting to know who in this community are entitled to be called gentle- “men, and what particular calling on this Island monopolises the claim to that title. | Commercial travellers have opportunities for observation and instruction possessed by few business men. Their employmeat 'is honorable, healthy and agreeable. Asa ‘class, they are better paid than Bank or , Government officials, or young professional ,men, causing little minds to be filled with envy and all uncharitableness. Yours, &c., A CoMMERCIAL TRAVELLER. Revere House, 17th April, ’82. i ; i To the Editor of the Examiner. Sir,—In the Patriot of the 13th inst., I noticed a communication, signed, ‘* One of ‘a Complaining Public,” and dated at Bel- ; fast. There are several references in said com- ‘munication beneath notice; but with ‘reference to the irregularity of the mails, I am of opinion, considering the stormy ‘winter, that the mail driver has done very ‘well indeed, when he only missed three trips during the winter. | Had ** One of a Complaining Public” to itravel three times a week between Vernon 'precedented snow storms, [ question if the isame satisfaction would be given. I igiven to understand, on gvod authority ‘that, when the roads are passable, the ' mails are duly delivered at the Eastern end Parties wishing to get their @ROCERIES Cheap should call at once and leave their orders. |of the route ca time, I know the mail carrier to be an efticient} ‘and obliging ofticial, and does all he can to | aatisfy the public. Yours, &c., Epon, Belfast, April 15th., 1882. -« > Grit Chances in Quebec. The following brief but important inter- view was published in Montreal on the 12th :-— What are the prospects of the Liberal party in the province of Quebec? a Star reporter to day asked an hon. gentleman who held a portfolio under the Mackenzie regime. Not very favorable, Iam afraid. I be- lieve we will be badly beatenin Quebec. What makes you think so ? Because the French-Canadians, as a rule, are protectionists and firm believers in the | National Policy, and in fact i myself have always believed that a young country like Canada required such a policy. —— —_$—~«+—>e—______- The United States appear to be on the 'Indian war. The cause of the present diffi- culty with the Apaches is concisely stated \in the following telegram from General :** The Indians cannot live on the reduced Rather than starve they will take by force the cattle needed to keep them and their families from starving. This will provoke Indian hostilities, which will lead God knows where. The only legal act the military can do is to make them starve peaceably, a most inhuman service. There will be fearful THE EXAMINER Queen’s Wharf, Sept. 10, 1881. *§ ULE place to get your Printing done is at: tea UVeMmiInny prre res reer NeR | BILL HEADS, BLANK ¢ GEQUES, NOTES OF HAND, UB R INT IN (; O EF | (HF Hoorskintism.—The spectre of hoop-skirt looms up in the distance, and HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH A Large Supply of Printing Types and Material, OF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, Under the Careful and Skilful Supervision of Wir. J. W. Mitchell, TO 2 Bae LETTER HEADS, RECEIPTS. POSTERS, HAND BILLS, DODGERS, de, &e., Qi Short Notice, in Good Style, at Cheap Prices. resporsibilities somewhere if this matter is not settled now. It can be done in an hour. Should I find nothing done when I reach Reno I shall probably assume the responsibility myself. I had rather suffer anything myself than see an Indian ont- break so inexcusable, unjust, and fraught with such dreadful cunsequences.” the the dire report that crinoline has made its appearance in London has filled ssthetic Paris with dismay. It will be a great nni- sance if Crinoline is once more donned by the gentler sex. It was revived by the Empress Eugenie in Paris in 1855, and thereafter introduced into England, where it was worn for ten years, having spread to extraordinary dimensions, until it hecame so common that ladies ceased to war it, and left it to their domestics. Crinoline has almost disappeared, but there is never anything certain about women’s clothes, except the bills. If fashion says so, the big hoopskirt must be, and one might as well be out of the world as out of the fashion. Nervovs PkRosrratioy, vital weakness, debility from overwork or indiscretion is radically and promptly cured by that great nerve and brain food known as Mack’s Mag- netic Medicine, which is sold by all responsi- ble druggists. Sold in Charlottetown by Apothecaries Hall Go. See advertisement in another column. 2w wly-—aps ne nn et yee am, poor fishermen of Norway will is tasamseneiarsoanesntenenthnonin RY Anmimernnets:temsornaithen methine mie VOL. 10,---NQ. 125, Census of Canaaa. The first volume of the Census of Canada has been before Parliament, and from it the following summaries are taken. The total area of the several Provinces is put as follows :-— Sq. Miles. Acres. Prince Edward Island 2,133 1,3¢5,400 Frowe Sootis....... -.»> 20,907 3,382,003 New Brunswick...... 27,374 17,383,410 OneneRcs « ink sda cen 188,658 120,764 651 I nn ee co 101,73: 65,111,462 Manitoba....... 123,260 78,848,040 The Territories. ,... 2,665,252 1,705,761,28 The table of dwellings, families, popula- tion, sexes and conjugal conditien gives the fellowing :— New Brunswick has of houses—0,956 | inhabited, 2,397 uninhabited, 901 beiag built, 199 shanties and 11 vessels ocenpied as residences—total occupied, 51,166. Nova Scotia has a total of 74,154 eccu- pied dwellings; P. E. Islend 17,724; Quebec 216,432; Ontario 359 293; Mani- toba 12,803 ; British Columbia, 9,793; the Territories 11,652 ; a grand total of dweli- ings 753,017. As regards families, the Provinces etand as follows :— Prince Edward Island.......... . «se» 17,973 Nove Bootitn, sevcnccesccocssssvesepstecesss SE New Brunswick...........0c0ss0sceseee00 00,088 RRO. 3. tivcuitacddssrschticsiicadidetiiaal + 204,841 Ee, | SONOS... . . - : soscoosssvonccase, fi CPt British Columbia. .........+++-++ sebekabs . 10,439 The Territories ereere te eteeeee teereenes. . 11,726 Granc Total. ...;...0.. . sesceceB1B, 108 The exact population of the Provinces is as follows :— Prince Edward Island, 108,891—viz, 54,729 males and 54,162 females. P+ Norwegian Fisheries. News has been received to the effect that the NW fisheries, up till the 23rd instant, proved a failure, being then 12,000,000 codfish short of the previous * year’s catch. The informotion refers to the Loffeden and Sondmore fisheries, which are the principal ccd fisheries of Norway. They are prosecuted from the Ist of Feb. till the 12th of Apri]. As a rule, 60 per cent. of the eateh are taken in March, and only 19 per cent. in April, so that when at such 2 late date, the amount taken so short of the average, there was little hope of recovering lost ground afterwards. This failure will be likely to en- hance the price of codiish in foreign markets; and what will injure the probably benefit those of Newfoundland as the Nor- wegians have been,of late, Newfoundland’s most formidable competitors. By the application of science to their fisheries and great care in curing the fish, they have greatly increased their catch and improved its quality. In 1871, the Norwegian catch was 36,700,000 cod ; in 1875, 42:750,000 ; 4877, 70,000,000. The latter was the largest fishery on record and, of course, exceptional ; its valee was $6,300,000. The number of quintals in the aboye returns may be found by allowing forty codfish to a quintal. The Loffoden fishesies employ 27,000 men, 4,915 boats, and 722 vessels. An average yield is reckoned at 20,500,. 000 cod, of which 21 per cent. are taken in February, 60 per cent. in March, and 19 per cent. in April. In 1878, 24,- 600,000 cod were taken, Of these 14,000,- 000 were caught with nets, 9,250,000 with lines, and 1,250,000 with deep bait. The hand-line fishing is rapidly disappearing in Norway before the improved methods, with gill nets, trawls (bultows), and bottom nets. The telegraph is largely used in Norway, in connection with the fisheries, to inform the men where the fish have appeared. Much is to be learned from the Nerwegians, who are far ahead of all other nations in their methods of catching and curing ecdfish. oe & eo <a om Canadian Butter. NECESSARY TO MAKE If A FAVORITE ABROAD, WHAT Is —_— Mr. A. A. Wright, of Renfrew, who re- cently went to England to sell Canadian butter, writes a letter to the Merowry, in which he points to the depressing effects of butterine competition on the butter market of Great Britain as a warning to Canadian makers to take especial care that none but the very best samples of Canadian butter are sentabroad. He states that ‘‘ during the past year the Danish and French manu- facturers, by adding a certain percentage of butter, have brought their butterine to such a state of perfection that it is almost impossible to tell it from the best dairy butter. Consequently the demand for ordinary to fair goods is now almost gone, except in the inland towns, and even these are now beginning to use the manufactured article. On Satur- day I went into one of the largest re- tail provision stores in Liverpool. On the counter were three packages of butter and seven of butterine.- These were marked in large figures as follows: The butter pack- ages 40c., 45c., and 50c., respectively, whilst the butterine ranged from 10c., to 30c. For the 30c. butterine the proprietor stated that he paid 112s., or 25c. per pound. furthermore, he said that he could seli three packages of Danish but- terine to one of butter, and ihat now he only bought the finest grades of the latter, an‘ that he had given up haudling Ameri- can and Canadian goods altogether.” Mr. Wright returns from Birmingham in a few days, and will bring with kim a carefully preserved sample of the article which threatens to drive Canadian butter out of the Engyjish market for the inspection of Renfrew farmerss. EE Tue Detroit Post and Tribune warns the Boston girls who have taken to wearing helmet hats, that if they imitate the Boston police they will never catch a man. 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