TH LLARS A YKAR. NEW SERLES. Che Daily Exaniver is issued every evening by The Bxamiuer Publishing Oo fice, corner of Water and uu From thetr Great (seorge Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. 2 : » 7 ‘ . / —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION — he SS. . «can SEE the 6 0b cebdékadee $2. 56 EIN 50 0 aks el 40s bo eennhes 1.28 COS CREED cob en ob cuacth* teenscandbes & Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on applicstion. ALMANAC FOR APRIL, 1888, MOON'S CHANGES, Last Quarter 3rd day, 8h., 28.8m., a.m., S.W New Moon Jlth day, 5h, 52.2m., a. m., E. First Quarter 19th day, 7h., 39.7., a. m., N., (below horizon. ) Full Moon 26th day, 2h., 9.6m., a. m., S.W. ea Sun ‘Sun |Mo igh! Day’ i DAY Gh WERE n ; un | loon’ High! Day’s M rises/sets 1 Sunday 0 f 2) Monday | 42) 25) 1 30; 255) 43 3 Tuesday 40} 26° 221)4 7; 46 {Wednesday | 33} 27 3 3) 530] 49 }| Thursday | 37] 29: 3 37} 6 52) 52 3) Friday | o0; 30; 4 10) 7 54) 55 7'Saturday | 33) 32; 4 37) & 32; &9 8/Sunday i 31) 33: 5 .1| 9 22113 2 9' Monday am) 3415 Mig ssi 4 10| Tuesday 27! 25) 5 4/10 32] 8 ll Wednesday 25 37 6 12)11 L 12 12) Thursday 23} 38) 6 38)11 33] 15 13 Friday 22; 40; 7 7|morn | 18 14! Saturday 20} 41/741) 0 4 21 15 Sanday | 18) 42) 8 20) 0 37; 24 16) Monday | 16} 43) 9 6} 113) 27 17| Cuesday | 15} 45) 9 59} 1 53) 30 tS) \Vednesday | 13] 411 OF 2 40) 23 19 Thursday | Il] 47/aftrn) 3 40) 36 20/ Friday | 9 48 5| 4 54] 39 21 Saturday | 50) 1 16) 6 17} 42 22| Sunday | 6} 52) 2 28] 7 32) 46 23| Monday | 4| 53) 3 50) 823) 49 24) Luesday 2; 54 455) 919)| & 25|Weduoesday | 0! 54) 6 23/10 3) 5A 26; Thursday 1458) 56) 7 43/10 45) is 27! Friday |} 57/8 58) 9 ltl 27 14 I 2x| Satarday | 56:7 0/10 I4/aft 10) 4 29 Suaday | 8} 111 19} 056) 6 30} Monday | 8217 3 on l = 9 eee MEDICAL. ee Dr, Jenkins & Dr. §, B, Jenkins, CAR R J A G E C 0 0 D S OFrTrICE : GREAT GEORGE STREET, Opposite St. Dunstan's Cathedral. feb24—2m wky tf wky pat her L. ARTHUR & ©O@.,, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, KECEIVERS OF Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS Poultry, Potatoes, Fruit & Vegetables. why itis that we SELL many lines of our own manufacture se rises water| len’h : “soars MARK WRIGHT & CO (5 44.6 23 0 30) 1 59 1239 = Charlottetown, March 26, 1888. “ This is true Liberty, when i Husiest Plage ou P. Isla, Ot ee é MARK WRIGHT & CO's URNITURE FACTORY. Oo ~— If you doubt it, call and see. You will then UNDERSTAND VERY MUCH CHEAPER than anyone in the trade. We are prepared for a rush in Repairing and Re-upholstering We invite inspection of our immense stock in Showrooms. cor WE OFFER Better Value won Biles BUGGY TOPS Than any other House in Canada. IN STOCK : BODiES ALL STYLES. A FULL AND COMPLETE STOCK OF OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. 20: GENERAL HARDWARE and MILL SUPPLIES, erm ene} 0) cree NORTON & FENNELL, City Hardware Store. — Charlottetown, March 5, 1888. 142, 144 Commercial Street, | BOSTON, MASS. FO nR- a3-43-S-T'-0-N SPRING ARRANGEMENT. THE PALACE STEAMERS fat -AMATIONAL S.S. C0. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port. lagu, every fueslay and Thursday at 5.00 4 m Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, Ind class ; $9.50, lst class. For tickets and other information apply to G. A.SUAKRP, F. W. HALES, P. £.1. RY.. or to your nearest Ticket Agent, Feb. 24, 1888 -904 wky ~ AM&S A. MORRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Rererences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; George Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown, WARREN & JONES, TuA MERCHANTS, 71 Easy Cacar ann 9 & 14 Mincine Lase, LONDON, ENGLAND. tepresented in Canada by Morrison & P. K. I. Steam Nav. Co. |. BEER & GOFF. Headquarters {or Siaple and Fancy Groceries. We Have Now on Hand a Very Large Stock of SANNED G 3. in Peaches, Pine Apple, Corn; Tomatoes, French Peas, Sardines, cmt Te ee bet, Dried Beef, Ox Tongue, Cared Tongue, Pea Soup, &c., &e. ; EK is”. W JESTER Sz XE, Tomato Sauce, Harvey's Sauce Mushroom cee ee ius. anaes Coatitr Capers, Ess. ehaetan China Say Olives, Curry Powder, Salad Oil, French Mustard, &c., &c. CROSSE & BLACKWELL'S MIXED PICKLES, Chow Chow, Onions, Piccalilli and Pickled Walnuts. KEILLER’S MARMALADE, JAMS and JELLIES of all kinds, POTTED HAM, Devillled Ham, Potted Tongue, LIEBEG’S EXT. MEAT, Fluid Beef, "An Fresh, Good Stock. "0; BHEHR. GOFF, Queen and King Squares’ Stores. Feb, 9, 1888—oaw & wky The Liverpool aud London and Globe. Insurance bo. Assets Ist January, 687, st ; - : . cen Assets in Canada, nt This Company offers every advantage of the most undoubted security, liberal contracts, low rates, and prompt piyment ol losses to the insured. Policies issued for three years on Dwellings, Churches etc., at reduced rates. LEONARD MORRIS, Agent, : Summerside. R. R. FITZGERALD, Agent, Charlottetown. Free Bora Men, having to advise the Public, may speak Mae ee se ee ee a DAILY EXAMI free.” — Evurteipes. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1888. . G SINGLE Copies Two Crys Es ——= VOL. 22.—NO. 127. . . TH a= Selections Erom the Poems of And blends their bloods, as those —AT THE— | : F. W. MOORE, Ch town, March 2, 1888. FOR SALE. ee ee Street, amd bounded on the north by land of Marshal Paqiei and William Canrwell, and on the west by Souris itiver, at present in the pos- session of Michael McCormack, Esq. office of ' McLEOD, MORSON & McQUARRIRE, Solicitors, mchi3—dy & wy law (tues) tf [WO NICE HOUSES on Pleasant Street, with Stables and Water. ALso—One House on King Street. Apply to April 4,-1883~ tf $50 REWARD. | City of Charlottetown to any person the 14th inst. By order ottthe Mayor, A. H. MACPHERSON, ap!8— 1 w eod City Clerk. like our Home, Farm and Business Crelopedia. It is. a large work, con- taining 900 pages, profusely illustrated, and al-o Dominion, Tae Home Department discusses | fully everything relative to Honsekeepiny in all} its phases. The Farm Department discovers, in | a peculiarly interesting style, just the informa-| tion every success/ul farmer must possess. The mation on Commercial Law and every form of Legal Decumenis, contains Goodwin's System of Prac ical Book-keeping. Kach Depar.ment of the work bas the advantage of being written by Canadian Specialists. We want an Agent in every Town aid County. For terms and full particulars address W,. E. EARLE, St. Jobn, Y. B. J. S. ROBERTSON & BROS., Patlishers. Z April 7, 1888—2aw & wky FOR SALE OR TO LET For.a Term of Years. — T AWNDALE, situate on the St, Peter’s Road, 4 about one mile and a half from the city, known asthe “GAR! Nek PROPERTY,” and recently occupied by kK. Bridges. On the pre- mises are a handsome 'Divelling House, good Burns, &c. This: lace consists of about Sixteen Aeres of Land, in good heart, and several pieces of land can be had adjoining, sufficient to make a Faim of about fifty acres. For further information apply to JOHN INGS, Ch'town, Aprii 11. 1883-—-3a w;{ : a AMMONTA, ALUM, NOVaze~ But Purest and Best Materials used in the manufacture of Woodill's ae German * Baking Powder. Loril 11, 1333. $130,000 WATER DEBENTURES —OF THE-- City of Charlottetown. TENDERS will-be recéived at the Commission- ers’ Uttice up to the night of the 3h April, prox., for the purenase of $130.000 (One Hundred and Thirty Thousand Duilars) of the City of Cherloitetowa Water Werks Debentures. | These Webentures are of the denomination of $500 each, and are piyable in twenty-five years from date of issue, bea. ing interest at tive (6) per cent. per annum, payable half-yeariy, aud are issued by virtue of a Special Act of the Legisla ture, passed last veor, intital d: “The Char- lottetown Water Works Act, 1887.” Tenders © il! be received for part or whole. Of the above amount, $95,000 will be issued 15th May ; $20,000 15:h June; and about 310,900 moata- iy thereatter Ull whele are ‘ssued. The Camatesract do no —— the nselve3 to “ the highest or any teader. pone, ie ae b. LAIRD, ‘ Caairman. Water Commissioners’ Office, Chariottetowa, P. &. I, March 27th, 1833. moh23—2aw Muserave, Halifax. Out, Zi, 1867— February 11, 1898—~3m 2aw pd * [ dl | \ Alp Yes ! in the sea of life enisled, Dotting the shureless watery wild, | . The islands feel the enclasping flow, urine iG i ad But when the moon their hollows lights, And lovely notes, from shore to shore, is Siill Going On. ti in their glens, oi starry nights, 8 Many Fine : frades of Goods, ‘Oh ! then a longing like despair For surely once, they feel, we were LARGE DISCOUNT ae round us spreads the watery plain— less os ‘ ‘ 4 And every effort made to meet the require- We order’d that their longing’s fire p,)tis Spring, and will give all our patrons quick despatch’ and | ments of CASH BUYERS. . good value. : f , Who renders vain their deep desire ?— o-, i , a erie: | . ni Assignee of Harris & Stewart. And bade betwixt their shores to be | This is the curse of life! that not | A nobler, calmer train THREE ACRES OF LAND in the Vil'ace of Of wiser thoughts and feeling blot Souris East, fronting 33 chains onthe Main Our passions trom our brain ; ouig. S.ephen A. MeVonald. on the east by lands of But each day brings its petty dust Our’soon-choked souls to fill ; And we forget because we must For particulars apply in Charlotietown at the And not because we will. ‘From the twin soul that halves their own. _ And sometimes, by still harder fate, WILLIAM DODD... | Thy heart is mine ?— 7’rue, true! ah true ! __ Then, love, thy hand !—Ah no/ adieu! 'Come to me in my dreams and thea — | By day I shall be well again ! = above reward wiil be given by the Bor then the night will more than pay who will give such information as will lead to Gone as thou cam’st a thousind times the conviction of the person or persons who 4°) jess -pger from radians.climes : broke the glass in the shop windows of*Mr.' 4 nq smile an thy new world, and be Geo. D. Longworth; on Saturday night last, ‘4, ,jnd to othersas to me! Or, as thou never cam’st in sooth, | Come now, and let me dream it truth ; | And say :— My love / why sufferest thou ? contains po traits of the leading statesmen of the ‘Lhe hopeless longing of the day. Business Department, bestdes giving full iafor- To’ one another ! for the world, which seems ‘Better men fared thus before thee ; | What makes thee struggle and rave? Of theirs are bleat in them; So each new man strikes rout into’a far fore- time. Matthew Arnold. — TO MARGUERITE, amet Born into life. we bring A bias with us here, And, when here, each new thing Affects »s we come near; Tv tunes we did vot call our being must keep chime, With echoing straits between us thrown, We mortal millions live alone. And then their endless bounds they know, ; . . The world’s course proves the terms Ona which mau wins content, Reason the proof contirms, We spurn it and invent A falsy course for the world, and for ourselves, false powers. And they are swept by balms of spring, The nightingales divinely sing ; Across the sounds and channels pour— Riches we wish to get, Yet remain ependthrifts still ; We would have health, and yet Still use our botics il! ; Bafilers of cur own prayers, fiom youth to life’s Jast scenes. Is to their furthest caverns sent ; Parts of a single continent ! ¢ Oh! might our marges meet again ! i * . * * - * * We do not what we ought, What we ought not we do, ‘ And jean upup the thought A God, a God, their severance ruled ! | That chauce will pull us through : Lut our own acts for good or il are mightier po wers, . Should be, as soon as kindied, cool’d? The unplumb'd, salt, estranging sea, Yet even when man forsakes All sin—is just, is pure, Abandons all which makes His welfare insecare — Other existences there ere that clash with FROM ‘‘ ABSENCE,” Like us, the lightning fires Love to have scope and play ; The stream, like us, desires An vnitnpeded way ; Like us the Lybian wind delights to roam at large. FROM ‘‘ FADED LEAVES.” 4 Teo Late. Streams will not enrb their pride f O LT | Bach on his own strict line we move, The just man not to entomb, S, 4 e And some Ind death ere they find love ; Nor lightuings yo aside wns ‘So far apart their lives are thrown To give his vir. ues room ; Nor is that wind less rough which blows a good man’s barge. The lovers meet, they meet too late, Nature, with equal mind, Sees all her sons at play, Sees man contiol the wind, The wind sweep min away ; Allows the proud.y-riding and the foundering barque. Longing. And, lastly, though of ours : : No. weakness spi! our jot, Lhe hopeless longing of the day. | Thongh the non-human powers | Ot Nature harm us not, The ill deeds of ather inen make often our life dai k. What were the wise man’s plan ?— In this sharp, toil-set life, To fight as best he can, And win what’s won by strife,— But we an easier way to chva: our pains have found. And part my hair, and kiss my brow, > ! $ * AGENTS, — NX2.>oek will sell at present Come to me in my dreams and then Die ia tle eg ed By day I shall be well again! : ; : Shall we, with temper spoil’d For then the night will more than pay : ; ’ py q Health sapp'd by liviug ill, And judymeut ali embroiled By sadness and se‘f-will, Shall we judge what for man is not true bliss or is? FROM ‘‘ DOVER- BEACH.” Ah, love, let us be true {It is so small.a thing To lie before us like a land of dreams. in ; To have enjoyed ibe sun, So variog, so beautiful, so new, l'T> hav - ‘ Hath real neither joy, nor love, nor light, ‘To he sad HED* in the spring. — oe Nor eértitude, norpeace, nor help for pain ; ? ‘hans aver, te, hewn Shongny, +o Rave And here we are as on a darkling plain . ‘ Swept with coufused alarms of jarenaie and 2° sige a anced . ue friends, and beat down fight, MAL ling loes ? Where ignorant armies clash by night, . : . : ‘ ° ° . —— But thon, bec use thou hear’st THE LAST WORD. Men svotf at Heaven and Fate, Creep inta thy narrow bed,. Because the gods thou fear st Creep, and let no more be said ! Fail to make blest thy state, : Vain thy onset ! all stands fast, Grumblest, and will not dave to trust the joys Thou thyself must break at last. that are ! I say: fear not! Life still Leaves human eliort scope ! But since life teems with wu), Nurse no extravazant hope ; Because thou must not dieam, thou need’st net t eu despair] hey out-talk’d thee, hissed thee, tore thee? Fired their ringing shot and pass d, Hotly charged—and sank at last. Charge once more, then, and be dumb ! Let the victers when they come, When the forts of folly fall, Find thy body by the wall ! a: The Belfast Mail. “ ee Srr,—I see an article in this week's Patriot, sigucd by ‘One of the Boys,” /Orwell, complainmg about the mail-con- itractor on the Belfast and Char.ottetown ‘ruate. The person who wrote this mast FROM ‘‘ EMPEDOCLES ON ETNA,” Why are men ill at ease ? i 3 . bah that the lot they have ure Reliab} e. Fails their own will to please ; . ad a 3 ; faded man would make no mourning were his surely be one vi ‘the boys,” >and entirely ignorant of the trials and hardships of mail- |driving, especially at the present tiwe of ithe year. Any person Knuewing the route i Tis that he makes his will from Charlottetown to Bellast, must know The measure of his rights, that it is impossible for the mail driver to And believes nature outraged if his will’s goto Belfast from Charlottetown and back gainsaid. |im one day, in the present state of the road and ferry. Everyone knows that the new contractor 'Could’st thou but once discern | (Geo, O'Neil) has been up to time every Thou hast no right to bliss, | day since lie git. the eontiact for the Bel- No title from the gods to welfare and repose, fast route, (excepting waen there are bed ; | roads). It is easy tor people (ike ** one | Then thou would’st look less mazed, |of the boys") to sit at their’ Giesides ‘and hee bbaait beh woes al,” But it they wont thei. any 6 When thy own lot went hard, a let let oem aa teed = But we are all the same—the foels of our own Mr. silisioes’? = eer esletibie aan i woes. : . remain, For, from the first faint morn | Of life, the thirst for bliss Deep in man’s heart is born ; And, skeptic as he is, He fails not to judge clear if this be quenched | er no. , will obeyed. And why is it, that still Man with his lot thus fights ? 'Could’st thou, Pausanias, learn How deep a fault is this ; Yours, &c., Quix. jen ro Wooden »>wearing. There's a kind of swearing dear children, which many people are given to when they lare'angry. Inctead of giving vent to their His welfare his trve aim. feelings in oaths, they siam the duors, kick He errs because he dreams the chairs, stamp on the floor, throw the The world dues but exist that welfare to furniture about, and make all the noise they bestow. | possibly can. It is practically the ‘same thing as swearing, springs from the same | kind of feelings exactly ; but avwics saying A new-made world upsprings, | those awful words ; they force the furniture Meant merely for his play ; to make the noise, and so I call it wooden No, we are strangers here; the world is from swearing. of old. vain our pent wills fret , a (nd w sald the world subdue ever fur a few weeks to make rvom for pew An oui 2 ri > . ot SS ‘wockery Store— imi re ai ‘ 2 Importations ab tix Cheap Cro . penis soit eae . tea setts, dinner setts, chamber setts, and a Born into life we are aed ‘life must be our large variety of asset ted crockery and gilass- Tien 2 ware.—W. P. Conwi1ii.—mar 21 eod Wy bw mould. ; | Nor is that thirst to blame, Man errs not that he deems We mortals are no kings For each of whom to sway —_- We are now offering Crockery cheaper than 500 CuILpren’s suits just opeped aud selling ‘eheap at L. E, Prowav's. ap 19 Born into life !—man grows Forth from his parent’s stem, eee one es oo al eliiaininiie cs nate wie ee