« a CT: Atta Nt ttl tc ee ec ie s:~-Five DoLtars a Year. NEW SERIES. CheDaity Examiner N & W D R Y G v #s D S, The Examiner Publishing Oo. nn From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, , Prince E iward island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— coe vel die Guba os cvs uae) 2 i ] 5 cee oennat nee oan 5 usual, our stock has neat perineal selected in the best Advertising st moderate rates. A British and American markets, and comprises, in addition Coutracts may be made for monthly, quar- to a Fall Range of Staple Di} tioods, all the novelties to be terly, half- ar! . @ I j e “yearly, or yearly advertisements, found. plication. Y ij London, Paris and New York Mil- linery., Fancy Goods, Hats, Bon- nets and Shapes. ‘and Umbrellas ! ALMANAC FOR MAY, 1886. MOON'S CHANGES. New Moon 3rd day, I1h., 30m., p. m, N. First Qaarter 10th day, 10h, 7.6 p.m, W. Full Moon 17th day, 9h, 34 6m, pm, S E, Last Quarter 25th day, 7h, 23 6m, p. m. NW, | 2) ' Sun |San Moon High Days. M men - ” EK rises sete | rises lwate r| len’h New Parasols 7 mih m morn | aft’n h rm ] | Saturday " 450'7 2) 346) 9 414 12 PO ee 2)Sunday | 49 4) 419) 9 53 oi k f N gjMonday | 45) @) 4 asiut a9 is Large Stock of New Hosiery, Gloves, &c. day ae 71 5 W7itl 6 20 sircceace? 45; 8 5 69/11 46; 23 et ree ursday 44) 9 6 45;morn; 25 N Y yy . N ii L fii” | uitelon x» ACW Trimmings; New Frillings, New Laces 8| sa tarday 4)} 12) 8 33; 119} 31 .. coe | 39} 13] 9 38} 1 59) 34 N i hk: NE 0| Monday 38! 14;10 46) 2 54 36 a ' iF ; i! tuesday | ai ieltrstia 3} 30 OOW DRESS GOODS wit LWTGS N 12|Wednesday | 35 IGjaft 64| 5 25 4t W th Th ri to Ub i3 Mhursday | 34 18} 2 2!) 6 47] 44 ‘a 0 ‘ . is ode | 33) 20) 3 30) 7 63) 47 New Frevch Muslins, New American Muslins, New 16| Sunday | 31) 21/5 50/9 30| 50 Laces to Match. 17| Monday ; 30; 22) 6 56/'0 12) 52 western 18} tuesday |} 29; 24) 8 1/10 50; 8&6 : 19 Wednesday | 28 25/9 ol11 28} 67, N@W Cloths, Mew Pink Cottons, New Jerseys, New Jackets. 20| Chursday 26| 25) 9 Saiaft 6] 59 ” sno vee anieal 21) Friday 25; 25/10 41, 0 43/15 1 22) Saturda; 24 27/11 2 hsF 3 zworiey | 4 viet i 3 New Carpets and Oilcloths ! 24| Monday i 2i 29; 0 3; 2 47 7 a yp ggg Orr tre 25) Tuesday |} 22) 31) 0 30) 3 46 9 26| Wednesday | 2!| 32) 0 56) 4 42 li PER 27 Chursday |} 20) 33] 196; 5 48) 13 23 Priday | 20; 34) 158/657) 14 ‘9 Sebastien 19} 35) 2 19 - 6) 16 C yh’ town, April 2 29 30 Sanday | 18! 36) 2 56) 8 431 is 3!) Monday [4 18'7 371 3.19) 9 26115 19 RITISH “WAREHOUSE, SS QUEEN STREET. ee NATRA value for MARCH and APRIL in Table Damasks, 4 Napkins, Sheeting, Pillow Cottons, White and Gray Cottons, Towelings, Tickings, White and Colored Knitting Cottons, THROUGH TICKETS ! Charlottetown Ticket Agency. HROUGH TICKETS for sale to all parts, of Canada and the United States, at the | very lowest possible rates. Write for rates maps, time tables, ete. G. A. SHARP, Station Master and Ticket Agent, March 19—2aw wky 3mo P. E. I. Railway. CARPETS AND OILCLOTHS. 1 CASE BPMBROIDFRY. direct from Switzerland, just opened. BOSTON. A. L. BROWN. Ch’town, March 18.—wkly. SOM MBED UR ANG EME NE | muses S1Q REWARD INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. ee Q== Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- land, every Monday, W edne sday and Friday, at iv YEN DOLLARS REWARD 18 offered to any one proving oom. that any House in the Trade is selling -FOR- Leave St. John at 8 o'clock every Saturday night | for Soares eons HATS, WHOLESALE OR RETAIL, Sate SE | te Ra Maal L. ARTHUR & CO, ‘THIS IS A STANDING i OFFER FOR TAREE MONTHS, GENEHRAL shri if Llane WE have 2,232 Hard and Soft Feit Hats, bought for Commission Merchants, Cash, and offered from 20 to 30 per cent. cheaper than the 12) ATLANTIC AVENUE, ‘majority of buyers value them. | We mean to Sell if you give us chance. BOSTON, MASS. Buy from us and we will be mutually benefitted. , Drop in and © us, even if you don’t want to buy. Rags and Produce a Specialty. ce D. A. BRUCE, CA U T | O N. 7a Queen Street. \Ch’ town, » ae 17, ’®6—eod & wky EACH PLUG UG OF THE For tickets and other information apply to G.A. SH ARP, F. W. HALES, CHEAPER THAN Pele be Be Sus P. E. L Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent, May 7, 1886—eod wky Ge MYRT F Ny AVY barmer Hard Luck:—* What will 1 do? My family ‘give me Re peace on account of the Boots 1 bring them. IS MARKED They say they are leaky and don’t wear.” T & RB. Farmer Good Fertune ;—“ My friend. you are right; bad Boots do bring trouble. The Boots I buy givé wife and N BRONZE LETTERS. children great satisfaction. If you want to astonish and None Other Genuine. Oct, please your family buy your next Boots at DORSEY GOrF & CO,,’ Ch’'town, Marobh 23, 1885. SATU DAY, s bee OOO. ee PROMPT. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson's Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have been speedily cured by the use of ADAMSON’S BALSAM after ali other medicines have failed. Sufferers 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 DRUGGISTS. Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, F. W. KINSMAN & ©©., Druggiste, 343 4TH AvR., N. Y. Charlottetown Waterworks Company. OTICE is hereby given by the under- signed, two of the corporate members of the above Company, ‘that the required num- ber of shares in the above Company having been subscribed, a general meeting of the members and stockholders of the above Com- pany will be held at the office of R- R. FITZ- GERALD, Solicitor, in the Cameron Block, in Charlottetown, Province of Prince Ex iward Island, at the hour of eleven o'clock of the forenoon, on TUESDAY, the eighteenth day of MAY next, A. D., 1886, for the purpose of making, ordaining and establishing euch bye- laws, ordinances and regulations for the good management of the affairs of the Corporation as they ehall deem necessary, and for the pur- pose of choosing seven directors, being share- holders and members of the Corporation, ander and in pursuance of the rules and regn- lations contained in the statute of the said Province, incorporating the ebove Company. Dated at Charlottetown this fifteenth day of April, A. D., 1886. A. MecKINNON, R R. FITZGERALD. April 16--t] 18 may pat ESTABLISHED 1873. MEMBERS CHAMBER COMMERCE. WE BUY Potatoes, Spiling, R.&. Ties, Lumber, Laths, Canned Fish, Hay, Eggs, Produce, Write us fully for Ship to And sell on commision. quotations. HATHEWAY & (0., 22 Central Wharf, Boston, Gen- eral Commission Merchants, Consign your vessels to our house. Will receive personal attention. Charters, Freights and Vessels for the United States, Newfound- land, West Indies, South America Ports. Lumber, Stone and Oil Freights. Apt 12, ’86—3mos eg ee T. & E. KENNY, Dry Geods and Shipping, HALIFAX, CANADA, T & E. KENNY, (F. © MAHON) Ship Owners and Brokers, General Commission Merchants, i61 GRESHAM HOUSE, Bishopsgate Street, LONDON, E. C., England, Scott's and Vaughans Codes. March 29, 1886, COAL! COAL! cargo ACADIAN OURLY expected, NUL COAL. I am now prepared to receive orders for Round, Nutand Authracite COAL, at prices to suit the times. All orders left at office, Water Street, will receive prompt attention, CAPT. JOHN HUGHES. = April 27, 1886—Imo eod —— a Why Pay Higher, When WOODILLS Tins Retail 7 Cents GERMAN 4oz. Tins Retail 12 Cents BAKING Soz. Tins Retail 22 Cents POW DER Quality Equal to Any. 202. This is true Liberty, when Free-Born pm having to advice the Public, may speak free.--Evxirwes. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, S M AY 15, 1886. The mama Se saktin. (Montreal Gazette, May 11.) It was inevitable that with the opening of the fishing season an incident must speedily occur through which the dispute between Canada and the United States, in respect of the fishing privileges of the latter country, will be brought to the test of legal interpretation and decision. The seizure of the American echooner, David J. Adams, at Digby, brings the dispute to a focus, and out of the proceedings sub- sequent thereon will come, it is earnestly to be hoped, a settlement of the whole question. The offence charged against the master of the vessel is of a two-fold character, that of contravention of the treaty of 1818. which is held to probibit the purchase of bait within the three-mile, and that of being forty-eight hours in a harbor without reporting to the Customs authorities. The trial of thefcase will be heard in Nova Scotia before the Vice-Admiralty court, and a decision will doubtless be pressed for as speedily as possible. We observe that the Government has been advised not to insist rigidly on the contention that the purchase of bait is pro- hibited by the treaty of 1818, but to regard such purchases as an ordinary right of trade not governed by formal treaty. That ia «» remarkable attitude on the part of thorze who profess to desire the protection of the Canadian fisheries from foreign en- croachment. The treaty of 1818, now in operation, explicitly and expressly declares that American vessels may enter the bays and harbors of Canada fer wood, water, shelter and repairs, and for no other pur- pose whatever. If we tamely surrender our rights under that instrament in respect to the prohibiticn of the purchase of bait, we will logically be required to yield to the Americans the right to purchase ice and other supplies im our ports, to ship sea- men, in a word, to exercise all the rights and privileges enjoyed by Canadian vessels save only that of fishing within the three- mile limit, The Americans do not care 4 fig, according to theirown statements, for the privilege of fishing within the three- mile limit, and if they are permitted to purchase bait, ice and other supplies in our harbors they will not give even a ** thank you” for the exclusive rights retained by Canada. It may be a debatable question whether under the treaty of 1818 we can prevent the sale of bait to Americans ; legal interpretation by competent authority alone can determine that point, but certain it is that the Government, in the event of an adverse decision, should make stringent laws prohibiting the sale of bait to Ameri- can fishermen, for if we yield this point we surrender practically the whole case. The exportation of game is now prohibitory ; the exportacion of bait must be made so, if events prove the treaty of 1818 not to cover that point. Canada has sought earnestly for asettlement of this vexed question by arbitration ; ia evidence of sincerity and the friendliness of neighborhood, our Goy- ernment has remained for nine months from the enforcement of the treaty of 1818, in the hope that Congress would consent to the appointment of a joint commis- sion, and now that the United States refuse to treat, there is no course consistent with self respect and the interest of Canadian fishermen other than the strict euforcement of treaty rights, supplemented by local customs laws of a proluibitory character in regard to the purchase of bait, ice and other supplies for American fishing vessels. To yield now would be a cowardly and ignominious act; itis the duty of the Goy- ernment first of all to stand upon the literal interpretation of the treaty of 1818, and if the couris hold a contrary view, to make such laws as will shut American fish- ermen out of our waters so long as they de- cline to grant Canadian fishermen an equivalent concession in the shape of free admission of Canadian fish into the United States markets. ti nti La eo Lord Lorne on Home Rule. The following is the letter on the subject of Home Rule recently written to the Lon- don Times by Lord Lorne :— Srr,—It is possible that too much weight may be attached to the words of public bodies in the United States and Canada approving of the present Government's Irish bills. It is easy to concede anything, at a distance. Before an election it is always advisable tor both parties in Am- erica to seek the Irish vote, and it is at all times politic to do so. The approval ex- pressed will be found to be general, and hardly to embrace details, Canada very iately gave emphatic testimony that she disapproved of separation as advocated by Louis Riel. The Home Rale practically endorsed is provincial, not national. No ont American statesman ever proposed that the South should have the ‘‘justice’”’ of representation as a nation in the Southern Congress at Richmond. Canada would equally object to the Northwest being made a “national” government, and would not allow Quebec or auy other province fiscal or military autonomy. American Home Rule means a divided country, under one indivisible central Government. This cen- tral Government is the only one that is ‘‘national,” each State sharing in its glory. By this central Government, strengthened in each generation, all provincial legisla- tive injustice is checked. This is govern- ment and justice. This system is worthy of the great Empire of the United States, and is as far removed from the programme of ‘‘autonomy for my breakfast and much more for my dinner,” expressed by Mr. Davitt, as is chalk from cheese. I remain, sir, your obedient servant, LoRNE, Atheneeum Club. Horsford’s Acid Phosphate, IN CONSTIPATION Dr. J. N. Robinzon, Medina, O., says: March 1, 1856 **in cases sf indigestion, constipation and nervous prustration, its results are happy.” Stxetx Copies Two Cents VOL. 18---NO, 147 China's Great Library. In the seventh century the Imperial palace of Ciina had 80,000 volumes in it. In the fifteenth century 2,000 Royal Com- missioners condensed the vast mass of Chinese learning and literature into 23, volumes of manus¢ript, but it still remains unprinted. In 1726 ancther condensation was attempted, which was published im 5,000 volumes. A complete copy of this very comprehensive and valvable work has been. secured for. the. Brit- ish museum, whose own amexing catn- logue scarcely eclipses that of the Imperial library published at the close of the eigh- teenth century and enumerating upward of 173,000 volumes of ai] branches cf livera- tuce, without including works of fiction, drama, or any books relating to the Taouist or Buddhist religion. It is, however, neces sary to add that the majority of these books are little more than mere comments. ries by intellectual pizmies of modern days on the writings of men possessed of a far wider range of thougtit and freer imagius- tion than these their cramped descendants. ee CURRENT NOTES. ©. M. Nell, of Mississippi is the largest cotton planter in the South. He has 12 000 acres under cultivation, and is worth $8,- 000,000, There are 28,953 Baptist churches in the United States, an increase of 354 over lest year. The number of baptisms reported was. 135,840, The town of Grand Forks, Dak., prohibits the sale of meats, milk, and newspapers on Sanday, but permits military parades, pic nics, and baseball games. The Belfast papers have published en agivertisemeut inviting tenders for 20,000 Snider rifles, and the same number of bayonets, to be delivered at Antrim on ec: before June Ist. At a church fair, a lady offered the plat: to a wealthy man, well known for hts stinginess. ‘‘ I have nothing to give,” was his surly reply. ‘‘ Then take something, she replied ; ‘ lam begging for the poor.”’ A dense fog, only a few yards ia breadth | settled dowu upon one of the wharves of New Haven at noon one day lately, and re- mained in that isolated position for two hours or more while the sun shone brilliantly elsewhere in the vicinily. According to the census of 1880 the number of workers in the United States at that time was about 17,000,000. Of these nearly 6,000,000 were engaged . in agricul- ture, while about half that number were professional mgn and individual workers The totalmumber of artisans and laboring men, therefore, is estimated at about 4,000,009. In Canada chanzes of vovernment have been comparatively few as compared with those of the Australian Colonies. In South Australia there were twenty-nine successive adwinistrations in twenty years; in New Zealand seventeen ministries during the period; in Victoria eighteen administrations in twelve years; in Tasmania twelve admin- istrations in eleven years; and in New South Wales seveuteen ministries in twenty years. The Pall Mall Gazette says Gladstone's speech made bad worse and sealed the fate of the Home Rule Biull. It quotes Cham- berlain as having declared that he would now oppose the Bill tooth and nail, The St. James Gazette says there is no longer any doubt that the Biil has collapsed. The Globe aaserts that there is lees chance now then ever of the Bill passing the second reading. Echo declares the Bili is now practically doomed. The budget speech of Hon. Mr. Robert- son, Provincial Treasuror of Quebec, shows that last year the province had a surplus. The ordinary receipts were $2,962,806, and the ordinary expenditure amounted to 2,937 ,856, thus leaving a surplus of $24,950 The liabilities of the province are given at $20,590,075, and the gross assets at $11,- 774,645. The debt of the provinces, there- fore, is $8,815,430. A surplus of $145,000 is estimated for next year. The Independent of New York remarks « ** It is only a diplomatic war that is threat- ened by the seizure by the Canadiau autho rities of the Gloucester fishing schooner, D. J. Adams, for the alleged offence of pur- chasing bait, which is illegal under the present strained condition of things since the lapse of,the treaty. At present Canadian fishermen cannot sell fish in the States, and our fishermen cannot enter the Cana- dian ports except under stress of weather. Whether it is a Christian condition of things for each party to make itself as dis- agreeable as possible, we need not say. For our part we believe in reciprocity and brotherly kindness inter-church and inter- state. Of course our Government will do its best to prove rhat our fisherman was illegally seized; but it looks like a difficult task,” A cyclone struck Williamsport, Ind., on the evening of the 12th, destroying every- thing in its track. Several houses and barns inthe north end of the town were carried away. It seemed to have formed about two miles northwest of the town and took a southwesterly direction, travelling abeut thirty miles an hour, striking the extreme north end of the place. Reports come from Att ica, about two miles east of there, that it strack that place about the centre of the town and destroyed several of the business buildings, including a new mill, the Revere House, and the Chicago and Great Southern Railway offices, and a wagon bridge over the Wabash River was {torn down. Severa! inmates of the Revere House were severely injured. The wires are all down and it is, as yet, mpc ssible to | get auy definite information from outside. | At Williamsport two brick houses belonging ito Henry Butt were torn down and Mre Butt was badly injured. Aside from her, | the pecple escaped injury, : “SSR ae pes cee ak cues See alin matali een aM Le Ss ae Ps, lebaeet ee ec ence gp nant senses aes 0%