lls alta comm a 7 Cont : quarterly, half-, ments, ON appiicati ~~ ele ALMANAC FOR MARCH, 1882. racts mW Full Moon 4th day, Third (Juarter int DCIOW DNOTIZG New Moon 19th d First Y tarter, 26% ' DAY OF WEEK M) a nn 1} Wedn asday i6 2! Thursday 3 Friday 1 40 10) Friday 11 Saturday 12 Sunday 23 13 Monday « » 14 Tuesday | 196 Of 2 49 6G 15 Wednesday ms 29 7: 16; Thursday L5! 3 5 17) Friday 18 Saturday Be 5 10 ] 19 Sunday 9 7) 5 37:10 53 20, Monday Pag 113 21 | Tuesday 5 22) Weduesday ae 23|Thursda‘ 24 Friday TF Be Se EP eS OS Ret LT ee s true 7 ee ee ee CHAKLOTPETOW oY Scene smear ome A rm weno +s oer seein LO Re RC re ER Ae ce ED oma A CL LN A Ee UL tt Y.tharty. w? i eee tae ivine to advise the £:s1DGITY, Wie & It DOI 1201 ie ‘6 & a4UVIS© cae SP ee we ere we ree > oem es Il ? Public, may speak free.”’—Evnirizs. er te ey neers Fo 2 ; NX, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, OC CAR. ET Re Rl en ee ee ar ra é i Ros: s CJOS TL! | “Pen - 4 permet me Readymade Clothing '‘Tweeds and Heavy Cloth Y, e474 {I ‘ i ay iat 7 Lif} i ad wives wily Lyte boty ty! we WLLL, sls VV GUM add. a savy Ob Dy LS [I WANT TO CLOSE OUT MY STOCK IN THIS LINE. . ail ne ati 2 ee on an £1s.. eee Bi cin ae , all p22) af BmSsiye *4hGiecs «oth Manti ‘S Ana besoin ans, an » : 4 c Xj © i. ‘ ine ‘ pale ‘ os } a ee 26> j D Wes “oS ve ol ia ii 4ehneg Cloaks, MOCAICTTeES Ahad Go} reQ Bress é<OOdS. _- dd Je fet GE be. DD UW Cie. oo ue ; JUST OPENED AND MARKED LOW, Noloot Acanntmant of i] wend Feath na Valveiee} i i yy Qs y X X DELECL «ASSOPEMENS OL FLOWGES, Feabiers, Veiveueens, Ladies sacques, &e., &e, ? | } sCovecans ana 25/ Saturday 57 2 26/ Sunday 5 iG, 10 44 27 Monday 53 W7ill 4 28; Tuesday | 51) aft 4 29)Wednesday {| 49 20) 1 47 7 30|Tharsday 48 20] 2 47) 7 57 31|Friday 15 46.6 22) 3 48) 8 i2 49 | SUR Afi? Ohi pUDAHUN Uli dud, enranro 3 finmnany (usen Insti GHUG Mie Ly, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION Rs ' i ea rAnKG arcrany City of London Fire insurance Company, CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS Insurance eflected all & perty at current rates. L ptly and equitably. aid Office—South Side Qn Ch’town, Feb. 3, 1882 BOSTON BRAN [+ me » ’ ‘ 5 ” ws Rew ch HE BOSTON SILVER PLATLNG CO are Gold mow prepared to do all kinds of and Silver Plating, such as Spoons, Cake Buskets, Ice Stands, Tea Seta, Watche: every description, Carrriag* Dashers, ete., etc. Pitchers, and Jewelry Work, Handle -0 Knives, Forks, ' ’ . Cruet {1ng on ine ‘ ' a My t Also, Sewing Machines snd Guns repaired, and all kinds of fine Machinery. Every job warranted to give entire satisfac-! tion or no charge made. WILLIAM BROWN, Ma aager. ? ; ; Shop on the corner o! Piince and Graft | treets. Cherlottetow, Feb. 4,82 CHARLOTTETOWN BUSINE S CGOLLEC mn (ESTABLISHED 15873,) Welsh & Owen's Bric! uilding, King and Q lottet BRAGH & MILLES, - - Prov Designed te } cu ; fer i ° embraces all su})j for a t) CommerctaL Edu O teaching these are 1! ever been devised. Theory a combined, and the whole course rem deat cannot fail to b ‘ course of Study is short. practical, usef; reasonable ; 46 is just wh ) and will use, no matter what his calling o profession is to be The youth commencing 2 business ! only industry aud integrity as his capita ‘. Men | ' re 3, |Cape de Meule, Magdalen Islands, and _ re- “<“* | ,aaining one day at the Islands for exchange aan clerk engaged during business hours, desirous by evening study to rey fects in his education, each have the a age offered by our sessions occur AND EVENING. Morning Session 12, and 2to4p.m. Evening Session, to 9.30. Diplomas granted to such 2 pass tory examinations, Stadenis may any time. i Business men and others are cordial! to call and examine our -ystem Teach your sons what they when they become men. No entrance examinativ Full particulars concerning Terms, Tuition, | Scholarships, &c., &c., on application to L. B. MILLER, Jan. 7, ’Sl—eod. Principal > k, ane mye lta’ LvUULDNe | ana sug s for nileat at hata Mpicce wena have } - «€ ie are wed interesting and practical that the dulles ‘"° may appoint, and proceed to Amherst and r : na ue witif . st bulb ie de-| Magdalen Islands to Gaspe and back before Livan |Teturnipg to Pictou, calling for exchange of ying DAY} 9.30 to, permitting. “ Vv satisfac-| scription of the steamer offered —specifying enter at| name, tonnage, speed and accommodation for nrequired. | passengers and freight, also the price asked ly invited |for each round weekiy trip between Pictou will practice| monthly round trip between the Is:ands and _|noon eon WEDNESDAY, the 5th of APRIL ‘| MEXT, for the conveyance of Her Majesty’s . 6 R. W. TREMAINE Bais Wee o BS a oe my N 1, 1881 83 QUEEN STRERT oA mera perce ony ae weengrrs Dorr: c hu pacers rom « & ¥ a. 2 3 oe ; | ss tii io tL INS Ge CO) -B'F — £r 7" i LW EO BID om. 4 CRESBR Ca” % f & 2 ¢ e ¥, } j wih ‘ 4 New : ¥ , W Wy iW ¢@ x Wy IOs ‘ y er’ - a , g a ‘ 4 | ny Stock of Groceries at | ete ae | (ie a % <x a af » $ €> < 2 SD Jk, © ‘arties wishing to get their G@ROUERIES Cheap should call at once and leave their orders. A large lot CONFECT | GOOD TEA, 25, } ' | . of i Keep in very Depar 2 oon, eee INSPECT THEIR & en | Re oy -. Teo | God Fa Kee premises lately oc: | ' | “AVING rented the cupied by ©, F. Uanris, the subscriber | - begs to intimate to the public that he is carry- OnasTEs MIICT Se TINSMITH SUSINESS branches. Orders punctually at- A call respectfully solicited. lL. W. HARRIS, tipper Queen St. jin ali its {i mnded to. eb, 8, 1882. For Sale or to Let. SYHAT Freehold *, with a front of & eighty feet on Pownal Street aad eighty- > 7 aAnoaw> Property J four feet on Sydney Sireet, the House con- ltaining 16 large rooms and two Kitchens. ' b-ageee . Carn be turned into one Dweling by unlock. Apply on the premises to MRS, ing a door. $34 IWA LL. March 12, 1881-—+7 “team Commuricaiion with the Magdaicn islands. \'E*RNDERS addressed to the Postmaster. | & General will be received at Ottawa until |Mails by steamer once a week, during the ‘iseason of Navigation between Pictou, N. S., jandthe Magdalen Islands and Gaspe, under | la contract for four years, commencing with | | the opening of navigation ia 1582. | The steamer to leave Pictou on such regular day in each week as the Postmaster General jot Mails, to return to Pictou, calling both }waysand exchanging Maiis at Georgetown ‘and Souris, Prince Edward Island, On every fourth trip the steamer is to proceed from the Mails at Gaspe Basip, and at Perce weather | The Postmaster General will re- quire a first-class sea-going steamer for thia service, and the tender must give a full de- ‘and the Magdalen Islands, and for each , Gaspe. WILLIAM WHITE, Secretary. Post Office Dept., Ottawa, March 11, 1882. [ma 21 3i | 30 and 33 cents ; CRACKERS, RAISINS, 10 cents ; BRITISH WAREHOUSE, QUE STOCK IF YOU WANT GOOD VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY. 4 to 14 cents; I'S, 8 cents. MOLASSES, 47 cents; SUGAR, 8 cents. ITP RAN UL RRAN IONERY from 15 to 20 cents; lot CHRISTMAS GOODS, very sundry other articles too numerous to mention-—all at cost for Cash only. W. A. HUTCHESON, _ ne es = act rere npn Oo = f = W. & A. BROWN & CO. tment of their Establishment a full assortment of STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS, 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. [ja 9 Se ee oe oe meee Kor oes - = en See Fenn ——— 4. peotch and knolish Tweeds or Worsted Suits For Canadian Tweed Suits, Mor Overcoats of all Descriptions, |e Se we Tose i rt } | } Pe pat | om a ) Ba SE, eg) | oS — — , aioe os 8 Ee SS) ew = ae et Ce —§ -GO TO- i | ry | aaa 4 , 3 FH & = > ae! es | ee es N ae) UPPER QUEEN STREET, TWO DOGRS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HALL CORNER There you will find the largest aad best assortment of Cloths in the Island. Prices very moderate. The best workmanshlp and a perfect fit yuaranteed, —ALSo— A complete line of Gents’ Furnishings and Felt Hats, cheap,&c. &e. Remember the address, two doors above Apothecaries Hall Corner Charlottetown, Oct. 11, 1881. — pled cepeaoren meiner anor nanan ssn ——— THE EXAMINER _ JOB PRINTING OFFICE WITH A Lares Supply of Printing Types and Material, GP THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, ander the Careful and Skilial Supervision of itr, J. W, Mitchell, oo aes. ae LETTER HEADS, RECEIPTS, POSTERS, DODGERS, dc., K&e., HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED BILL HEARS, BLANK CHEQUES, NOTES OF MANE. LAND BILLS, On Shost Notice, in Good Style, at Cheap Prices. TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1882, | Where flits the yellow bird, anc eae |The Marquis of Lorne’s New Poem { By the kindness of Messrs. Isbister & Co., the Toronto Mail's London correspondent was nabled to forward us sdvance sheets of the new poem by the Marquis ef Lorne, which is published in Good Words for April, with Ulestrations by the Princess Louise :— @ QUEBEC, By His Excellency the Merquis of Lorne, O fortress city, bathed by streams Majestic as thy memories great, Where mountains, floods, and rorests mate The grandeur of the glorious dreams, Born of the hero hearts, who died In founding bere an Empire’s pride ; Prosperity attend thy fate, And happiness in thee abide, Fair Canada’s strong tower and gate ! May Envy, that against thy might Dashed hostile hosts to surge and break, sring Commerce, emulous to make, Thy people share her fruitful fight, In filling argosies with store Of grain and timber, and each ore, And all 4 Cuntineat can shake Into thy lap, till more and more Thy praise in distant worlds awake. Fo: all must drink delight whose feet Have paced thy streets, er terrace way ; From rampart sod, or bastion grey, Have marked the sea-like river greet The bright and peopled banks that shine In front of the far mountain’s line ; Thy g'ittering rcofs belew, the play Of curreits where the ship’s entwine Their spars, or laden pass away. As we who joyously once rode So often forth to trumpet sound Past guarded gates, by ways that wound O’er drawbridges, through moats, and showed Tie vast St. Lawrence flowing, belt The Orleans Isle, and sea ward melt; Then past old walls by cannon crowned, Down stair-like streets, to where we felt The salt winds blown o’er meadow ground, Where flows the Charles past wharf and dock, And Learning from Laval looks down, And guiet convents grace the'town., There swift to meet the battle shock Montealin rushed on; and eddying back, Red slaughter marked the bridge’s track: See now the shore with lumber brown, And girt with happy lands that lack No loveliness of Summer’s crown. Quaint hamlet-alley’s border-filled a purple lilacs, poplars’ tall, — eave shalennn nere Wher e ant’s si 79, a b Bari ey From silve res the Church bells call To gorgeous shrines, and prayers that gild The simple’ hopes and lives of all. Winter is mocked by garbs of green, Worn by the copses flaked witb snow, — White spikes and balls of bloom. that blow In hedgerows deep; and cattle seen In meadows spangied thick with gold, And globes where lovers’ fates are told Around the red-doored houses low ; While rising o’er them, fold cn fold, The distant hills in azure glow. Oft in the woods we long delayed, When hours were minutes all too brief, For nature knew no sound of grief ; But overhead the breezes played, And in the dark grass at our kn2e, Shone pearis of our green forest sea, The star-white flowers of triple leaf Which love around the brooks to be, Within the birch and maple shade. At times we passed some fairy mere Embosomed in the leafy screen, And streaked with tints of heaven’s sheen, Where’er the water's surface clear Bore not the hues of verdant light From myriad boughs on mountain height, Or the shadowed banks were seen The sparkles that in circlets bright Told where the fishes’ feet had been. And when afar the forests flushed In falling swathes of fire, there soared Dark clouds where muttering thunder roared, And mounting vapours lurid rushed, While a metallic lustre flew Upon the vivid verdure’s hug, Befere the blasts and rain forth poured, And slow o’er mighty landscapes drew The grandest pageant of the Lord ! The threatening march of flashing cloud, With tumults of embattled air, Blest conflicts for the good they bear ! A century has God aliowed None other, since the days He gave Unequal fortune to the brave Comrades in death! you live to share An equal honor, for your grave Bade Enmity take love as heir ! We watched, when gone day’s quivering haze, The loops of plunging foam that beat The rocks at Montmorenci’s feet Stab the deep gloom with moon.lit rays ; Or from the fortress saw the streams “Sweep swiftly o’er the pillared beams ; White shone the roofs, and anchored fleet, And grassy slopes where nod in dreams Pale hosts of sleeping Marguerite. Or when the dazzling Frost King mailed, Would clasp the wilful waterfall, Fast leaping to her snowy hall She fled ; and where hr rainbows hailed Her freedom, painting all her home, We climbed her spray-built palace dome, Shot down the radiant glassy wall Until we reached the snowdrift foam, As shoots to waves some meteor ball. Then homeward, hearing song or tale, With chime of harness bells we sped Above the frozen river bed. The city, through a misty veil, Gleaned from her cape, where the sunset fire Touched Louvre and cathedral spire, Bathed ice and snow a rosy red, So beautiful that men’s desire For May-time’s rival wonders fled. The glory of a gracious land, Fit home for many a hardy race; Where liberty has broadest base, And labor honors every hand. Throughout her triply thousand miles The sun upon each season smiles, And every man has scope and space, And kindliness, from strand to strand, Alone is born to right of place ! | Union point of view. Fand. _' tthe time of Such were our memories, May they yet Be shared by others sent to be Signs of the uvion of the free And kindred peoples God hath set O’er famous isles and fertile zones Of continents! Or if new thrones And mighty States arise, may He Whose potent hand yon rivers owns, Smooth their great futare’s shronded Sea! _— om + The Temporalities Fund. (Prom the Montreal Gazette.) Mr. Sandford Fleming hasissued a memo- randum in reference to the legislation sought by the Presbyterian Church in Canada for the disposal of the Temporalities Fund. He states the position of the con- troversy to be thus:—At the union of Pres- byterians in 1875 the Presbyterian Charch of Canada in connection with the Church of Scotland embraced 150 ministers or beneficiaries; of these 140 entered the Union body, while the remaining 10 © : ized a new body and sssumed the name of the Presbyterian Church in Canada in con- nection with the Church of Scotland. The Unpicn body propuse that the funds and properties of the Old Kirk Church shall be divided between the contending parties on the basis of their numbers—that is to say, fourieen-fifteenths to the Union vie and one-fifteenth to the anti-Union body. On the other hand, the Church of Scotland body claim the whole fund. Such in a word is the position from the It will naturally be asked upon what reasonable ground the anti-Union party claim the whole fund, when they number so small a minority of the late Presbyterian Church in Canada in connection with the Church of Scotland, and we understand the basis of their con- tention to be this: When the Clergy Re- serves were commuted there were seventy- ‘hree members of the Presbyterian Church of Canada in connection with the Church of Scotland who became entitled to an annual stipend of £150. They agreed to draw only £112 of this amount and with the balance coustituted the Temporalities Fund for the benefit of the widows and orphansof deceased ministers of the Church. In the deed creating this Fund it was declared that it shonld bo maintained ex- clusively for the benefit of the Presbyterian Church of Canada in connection with the Church of Scotland, and that if any of the original seventy-three commuting ministers” should withdraw from that Church they should forfeit all rights in the Temporalities 1.3. forty of eae |ingwinisters of the Church of Scotland had and of the surviving thirth-three twenty-six entered the Union body, and seven rey, ained out and continued the or- ganizaypa, as far as they were able, of the old Church. Now the whole controversy is as to whom the Temporalities Fund shall revert, whether it ought fairly to be taken into the Unien body of the twenty-six com- muting ministers who joined the Presby- terian Church in Canada, or whether it should be handed over to the seven who desire to continue the Church of Seot- land. {[t will commend itself as a just and proper thing, in view of the great dis- proportion of numbers that the Fund should revert to the Union body, especially as they express their will- ingness to hand over to the nen-con- curring ministers their portion of the Fund. But, say the anti-Union men, what is to become of the proportion of the forty who have died? These ministers, it is contend- ed, commuted their stipends for the benefit of the Church of Scotland, and expressly provided that any minister withdrawing from that Church shall forfeit all his inter- est and right in the Fund. We understand that the anti-Union party would not be averse to a compromise on the basis of a division of the Fund in the proportion of 26 to 47, the Church cf Scotland receiving the interest of the forty who have died, but to this proposition the Presbyterian Church will not consent. The chief dispute thus appears to rest upon the disposition of the moneys of the forty commuting min- isters who have passed away. Whatever legal grounds for their position the anti- Unionists may have, we cannot think that their attitude is a reasonable or just one. The Church of Scotland is to all intent and purpose now merged in the Pre i Church of Canada, and the orif tion of the establishers of the ties Fund will be practically carried out b handing it over to the Union body, whic has absorbed the Church of Scotland, and which will administer the Fund for the benefit of the ministers ef that Church. Taking the Dominion over, the adherents of the old Church of Scotland are now so insignificantly small a body that no fair- ness can be said to exist in their demand for the whole fund. The Union body is prepared to divide the mouey in dispute proportionately, giving those who decline to jain the Presbyterian Church their just and equal share, and whatever legal quibbles may be introduced looking at the question from an impartial standpoint, we cannot come to any other conclusion than that the interests of the Presbyterian bedy will be promoted b plecing the management of the Tem - ities Fund in the United Church, that equal justice will be done to all parties by such acourse, and that the spirit of the intention of the original seventy-three com- muting ministers will be carried out. ————* +> Mack's Magnetic Medicine—the great brain and nerve food—will restore lost nature to young, middle-aged and old. Life is too short to waste away. Read the advertisement in another column, and jf you are affiicted make no delay in procuring the cheapest and best medicine ever sold. Sold in Charlottetown by Apothecaries’ Hall Co. Tue only place on P. E. Island, where you can get every part of « Gun made, is at Brown’s Shop, corner of Prince and Grafton Streeta. nov | tf wky HAvILL's Loxa HEALER—a sim )remedy for a troublesome cough or cold—for sale at The Apothecacies’ Hall, ee ee nae Se 7 QS ae