THE DAILY EXAMINER. MARCH 11, 1887. Editorial Notes. . ' I he new Secretary tor irel wal Says that he is in favor of a tirm administration of the law and the strict preservation ot orde >. The Ottawa Independent remarks that ** The United States Senate show ’ very \ nishing indifference to Pr Edward Island's ideas about Reci proc Diplomats relations between Creat Britain and Venezuela have been suspend ed \ ) uispute respecting the fron t e between that country and ‘British ‘ys lh It is stated that the resignation of Su Michael Hicks Be it h was due to a cataract over both eyes, and that unless he rests : : from official life he will ‘be unfit to submit an operation when the time comes - The sad news of the unexpected death of Miss Lelia Mutch-——cut off in the flower will give her many friends { with of her youth We deeply sympathize mother, and other of her bereaved family. ; great shock her father and member se De- Judge Kelly’s decision in tween teacher and trustees will be interest- ng and instructive to ut the P cadecision 18 admitted a Ca teachers and trus ovince. The ji ¥ ™ "3 ead t s } , is ; : ees through in bsence of Lord Randolph Church- in severely felt by the Government party inthe House of Commons. Mr. W. H. Smith is not equal to the k of leading in the Commons, and few onthe Tory benches i render him efficient assistance. Lemeke, 4 Mr. German journalist, proposes to estabzish i German paper in Montreal for the purpose of promoting German immigration into Canada. He has already published one or two works on by Hohen- } ’ commended Prince he en the Marquis of Lorne and lohe one. Canada which have This winter is remarkable throughout Canada for the unbroken duration of the sieighing and ior the severity of the cold. In the Northern States, too, there has been an unusual snowfall, and, according to the weather bureau, the winter has-been the coldest fur many years. At the same time in nearly all the Southern States the season has been exceptionally warm. The Hawaiian Islands number twelve. Only seven are inh: They are all of voleanic origin. There earthquakes and eruptions of lava are frequent. The burn- ing mountains are immense. Mauna Kea is 13,953 feet high, Mauna Loa 13,760 feet. and Mauna Himalalai 7,822 feet. Kilanea is the largest active voleano in the world. lis crater in circumference, 1: j bited, 4} is nine miles ind lakes of fire are always boiling in some parts of its area An interesting descrip tion of the recent earthquakes will be found in another column of THe Examiver ? , Ol to-day. --A number of liquor dealers in Halifax have decided to ignore the Provincial Liqaor License Act, and to sell without license. It seems as though the liquor traftic were so demoralizing that even the kindest-hearted men and most law-abiding citizens are transformed |! it drunkard-makers and law-breakers. Nei- ther License Act nor Seott Act is respected by them ; and, for a few cents they will, in ce spite of their own better Te clings, the dictat of religion, and the mandates of the law,—give liqiaor to men whom they know cannot control their appetites The fact is lamentable. ry into aces iote that Unit ed States journals of the better class urge a common sense adjustment of the fishery difficulty and deprecate mere talk. For instance, the Springtiel i Republican expresses that the ‘* Retaliation Bill’ adds: **The whole thing illustrates the broad fact that a protectionist policy has been pursued toward Canada with such persistence and greed that our relations have gone from close commercial reciprocity to cold indifference and now to retaliatory discrimination. Canada, we may add for the benefit of some who forget tho fact, is our nearest neighbor, containing 5,000,000 of people more like our own than any other people on the face of the earth, and consequently large consumers of our products and manufactures if our intercourse were less restricted.”’ Ir 1s pleasing tol regret was passed and the Queen's Good Will to Amer- icans. A London letter to the New York Tri- bitne The American Minister has found the number of applications for pre- sentation at court increasing so largely that he has brought the subject to the attention ot the Lord Chamberlain “in order that it may be distinetly understood how far such presentations would be acceptable to the Queen.” The result of this inquiry had best be stated in the words of the official circular lately issued from the Legation of the United States ‘It has been most kindly intimated in be- half of her Majesty that all American ladies of respectable character who, if British sub- jects would be received at court, may be pre- sentel through the United States Legation.” says: In other words, the limit of numbers abolished. Americans, who have fore been presented by the score, may in cheat s ; one future be presented by hundreds. The new rule is, and is meant to be, an expression of the Queen’s goed will to Americans as such, is hereto- i ++ ee Released Crofiers. The Skye Crofters, MacMillan and Mac- donald, who were convicted of riot over the evictions and resistance to the law in that isinna, wero made the recipients of a de- monstration in Edinburgh, on the 6th ire Sin 4 . ; ey nst., to ceebrate their release from jail. M hy thousand Sevt tumen took part in the parade Che prisoners were discharged | ewly in the day and furnished with free | passes home, and-advised te lepart imme- diately, but their friends and sympathizers li © t numbers awaited them at the pri- son gates wth Highland pipers. The re- nset oe inrtyrs,’ is i@V were consi Gere’ —Were taken to a large hotel near by, the crowd swelling at every minute. Here a boo breakfast was spresd, speeckes male, * ant the poun fare (Urybtten, ‘Catholic to a Protestant, and though the | jury were told to consider only the facts and | ane a THE DAILY EXA Newfoundland Bait Bil The ‘Toronto Mail's Newfoundland cor respondent reports that .no subject, not even the Catholic-Orange riots of the past, as thoroughly agitated che people the existing trouble with as the The passage of the has ever of ft the French fishermen, Bait bill by the Legislature, regardless of the rebuff that the first bill received froin the Imperial Government, has caused such . popular clamor against the home authori ties that ever ready agitators have seized upon the opportunity to use the old cry oi n that is being caught up by the : } aah iment. he island secesshk shing e IMPERIAL POLICY CONDEMNED. Public meetings have been held within the past two days in all the towns, and the p icy vf conciliation pursued by England toward France has been loudly condemned, The Imperial Foreign Office is charged with cowardice and want ol Che latter part of the address to the Queen is what the agitators take their cve from. It says: ‘*We acknowledge authority but that of the Imperial Government, and patriot isin. ho their rights of dominion are wisely limited by our constitutional powers, which secure for us the free exercise of our instructed in- Ni in tl wement of our local the ie nce iv INSTITUTING A COMPARISON, The agitators point to the support the Dominion gives its fishermen against the Americans and also to the retaliation measures passed by the latter. They say that Newfoundi!and alone is to battle with the French and Yankees. Pamphlets have been circulated in the sections advocating annexation with the United States which is rapidly gaining popularity, regardless of the fact that the United States has no means of securing the island in of hostilities arising from such treasonable pro- Case ceedings, DISAFFECTION SPREADING. The Ministers all express the hope that the Bait Bill will receive the Imperial as- sent, the dissatfection spreading that the most disloyal sentiment everywhere prevail, and it only needs a straw to pre ruth that, while not ma- terially benefiting the people, will prove a sad jar tothe celebration of the Queen’s Jubilee when peace and quietness in the colonies is desired. ‘The way the authori- ignore the public attacks made upon the Queen and the Imperial Government is genera ly commented on, and the belief that the present generation will see another small slice of the Empire off. De- mocratism and demagogueism should be checked at once or it will be too late. oe Pacific Railway — as is 80 } cipitate an read ties is 1: ; Siiced Canada Scheme. Prominent among the questions to be discussed at the congress will be that of the Canada Pacific cable scheme; and _ it is thought probable that Sanford Fleming will visit London for the purpose of taking part in the deliberations. It is certainly important that the congress should have the vreat advantage of his views on the sub- ject,and we would, therefore, venture to urge upon the Dominion government his ap- pointment as a Canadiam delegate. The question of -he. cable communication —be- tween Canada and Australasia has been un- der the consideration of the Canadian gov- ernment for some time past, as it has also been deliberated upon by the various col- onial governments in- Australasia The Hawaiian government, as has been already stated im our columns, has promised a sub- sidy to the new scheme, and so far as can be gathered there seems a general feeling in the Australasian colonies in favor of the proposed line of coramunication. a Ge <Ee A Woman Burned to Denuth. A sad tragedy occurred at Halis Hafbor on Sunday last. Mrs. Henry Parker, jr., was alone in the house with her three chil- dren, the youngest an infant twelve days old. As she moved in front of the stove to lay the baby in the cradle, her dress caught tire and before the flames could be extin- guished the unfortunate woman had _be- come so badly burned that she died six hours after. Finding her clothing on fire, she rushed to the front door, and by scream- ing attracted the attention of the family living on the opposite side of the street. When first seen she appeared completely enveloped in flames. She suffered intense agony till death gave her relief. Her hus- band is engaged in fishing on the New srunswick coast and knows nothing of the terrible event.—Kentville, N. S., Star. A Ag Archbishop Croke Explains. Archbishop Croke has written to the papers in explanation of his attitude on the rent question. He says he has proposed nothing nor has he made any recommenda- tion relative to taxes. He bas simply re- expressed his opinion concerning the rela- tive value of a no-tax manifesto and a no- rent manifesto. He states that it never entered his head to récommend a general uprising against the payment of taxes. He would trust alone to constitutional agita- tion for restoration of national rights in Ireland. Under existing conditions only a knave ora fool, he declares, would trust otherwise. Itis believed that the action of Archbishop Croke in offering this expla- nation is the result of pressure froin the Pope. rT © ete 2 Siar A Peculiar Case. A peculiar case was up in the (Queen's bench, Montreal, a day or twoago. One Trenholme, alias Brown, was charged with bigamy, having married a Miss Marcotte in June, 1885, after he had been married thirty years before to one Ann Dixon. The defence took the ground that the second marriage was nuil and void because accord- ing to the treaty of 1763, which gave the Catholic Church certain rights, it was not MINER, - legal for a Protestant minister to marry a not that point of law,they found the prison- er not guilly. oe A remarkable operation was recently per- formed by Dr. Keetiey in the hospital at London, Ont. A child was brought in hav- ing a large mole covering nearly the whole , of one of its cheeks. He transplanted the | wole by exchange. That is, he removed the mole from the cheek to the arm, and planted flesh from the arm on the cheek. Kverything succeeded perfectly. Mole and ‘ chifd are bth dilag will SANDWICH ISLANDS. ae Tremendous Volcanic kruption TERRIFIG EARTHQUAKES. net We are indebted to Mr. Edward Rob who left this Province a few years ago, copies of the Hawaiian Gazette, containin deseriptions of the terrific voleanic ein tions which recently took place in th Sandwich Islands. Mr. Robins accoim- panied the writer of the following letter ¢ the of one oi the eruptions, ana vouches for the correctness of this descrip- tion : scone From 2 a, m., Sunday, the 16th, till 7 p.m., Tuesday, the Sth, we had no less than 618 earthquakes, Fortunately the shocks were not severe, and but little if any damaye was done. On Tuesday, the 18th, at 7 p. m., a voleano broke out on Kahuku, about one mile north-east of the extinct crater of Halepoo haahaa, and about the same distance south of the celebrated heiau of Umi. The crater bears N. W. from Mr. G. W. C. Jones’ house, and is between eight and ten miles distant ; and north-west from the place the lava found vent in 1868, about six miles distant. Three streams of lava crossed the Government road two miles west of Mr. Jones’ at daybreak on the 19th, and one of which reached not far from Puuhue, at 11.40 a. m., ad Ly. The distance trom the crater to the sea is about eighteen miles. During the first twenty-four hours the crater (a long fissure) ejected thick lava (aa), and the flow, almost always the case with aa, was rather sluggish, moving perhaps at the rate of a mile and a half per hour; but on the 20th the lava (pahochoe) was more liquid and flowed at the rate of twenty-five miles an hour. This flow is far greater than that of 1858, and the nature of the lava is quite different. The lava is more dense. Inthe flow of IS68 a vast amount of volcanic ash was thrown covering the country for miles; but in this flow there is none, nor there any Pele hair. I visited the flow last Thursday, and | must say it was the most awfully grand sight lever beheld. At the crater there were tif- teen fountains of molten lava, the highest of which we estimated to be about two hundred feet. The side of the mountain for a width ot two miles was one vast sheet of liquid blood- red fire, while close in front of us was a rush- ing, roaring river of molten lava, bearing on its surface boulders weighing tons. Explo- sions of pent up gases were constant, sending up columns of smoke, at times 500 feet in the sea, the same as is i cha OUL, is s ' height. While we were there we had _ hail, vivid lightning and very heavy thunder. It looked, from our standpoint, that hell itself was rapidly changing its g@ographical posi- tion. Thursday night at 8 o’clock we could read in our house at Hilea fine print, so bright was the reflection from the flow of lava. Our Portuguese at the time were terribly frighten ed, ‘The women were crying and praying and the men calling on the Saints for protection, Chey thought the lava was close at hand so bright were the heavens. I took Mrs. Spen- cer tu interpret for me, and went among them and quieted them. It was very fortunate that the eruption took place so soon after the earthquakes began, for had it held offa few days longer we should have experienced terri- fic earthquakes and there would have been probably great loss of life. A lady thus describes the phenomonen :— ‘** Sunday night, 9 o'clock, the startling in- telligence, ‘the mountain has burst out’—came to us, and as we stepped out on the yeranda and looked up at that great column of fire and illuminating smoke bursting out from a spot a little way down the western slope we seemed struck dumb. It looked so terrible and sv uncanny, and was so bright that it seemed much nearer than thirty miles. ‘* The slope of Mauna Loa loomed up distinctly, and the smoke shot up, from near the summit it made one think of Ves vina, and we of the poor little doomed villas wondering how and when and where the ficiy demon pent up there would burst out. ‘*The air was chilly and the sky a deep in- tense blue and brilliant with stars. We heard of them a hundred times without trying them once. you will reverse the position walked about shiveriu, and that larid, glaring | smoke seemed a live thing threatening us with some awful fate. Yet it was facinating and we stood watching and wondering what next? while the earth kept up a constant trembling with every now and then a_ yicious jerk diagonally from one corner of the house to 'he other. **We kept the light burning all night, and lay awake waiting for something ; we hardly knew what. The light vanished as suddenly as it appeared about 11.30, and we had six terrific earthquake shocks between that and morning, not counting the trembling and oc- casional jerks which were constant. We felt better by the daylight though the trembling kept on and the big shocks seemed as though they meant to shake the house down. The mountain stood as calm as usual, not a sign of smoke, like a gigantic old hypocrite and, but for the awful shakes, we could hardly have believed what our eyes had seen. We girls tried to paint, while mamma read to us, but there came a shock that was worse than what we had experienced already. By night we were sick and nervous as there was no sign of smoke or fire, and still the awful shocks and we were all wondering where the force would spend itself. Monday night was literally a night of ter- ror, and we felt as though we couldn't live through any more, the heavy shocks were nearly as continuous as the trembling had been for four hours, there was no pause longer than five minutes, or often only three between the shocks, and sometimes three succeeded each other like ocean waves. We were told the natives were all deserting Punaluu and gathering in frightened groups on the hill by that little church, and all the Portuguese here were down on their knees praying, and crying outside their houses. The natives feared a tidal wave, and we ail expected it. At 11.30 a. m., Tuesday, the smoke burst out again, immediately after two very heavy shocks, just where it did at first—quite a way down on the westein slope. At first it whirled straight up in a great cloud, then seemed to spread very rapidly in the Kona direction, just along back of the Mouala range. Later, smoke came from the ’81 opening. The trembling was not so constant and the shocks less heavy after this. Then the flow broke out very near the old ’68 out- break, and I fanvy Mr. G. W. C. Jones thinks himself a marked man. A splendid view was obtained from the steamer and though the lava was then frlly 3-4 miles from the sea, they really suffered irom the smoke and heat while watching. Of ' course the reports have been numerous and often unfounded. My informant locates the flow a little above, and to the west of flow, then it takes a southwesterly course and | the old cones known as ‘‘Merchant’s Island.” It came down till within two miles of Jones’ house, then turned of towards Kona and is now seven miles beyond Jones’. steamer | will reach the sea on the Kona side of one of | | sati-factory completion of the contract. the lowest or any tender, When the | the 68 1 assed the lava was spreading out on- the flat ied was tii eae FRIDAY, length, only blackened on the edves. What with the burning woods and the tremendous lumination from the tlow, we have literally a pillar of smoke by day and fire by night, and the sight at night is magnificent. We have only two or three heavy shocks to- day nuw, though frequent tremblings, and last evening a very long shock that swayed the house back and forth making us sick and dizzy. Thursday evening the play of lightning was so constant and vivid in the Puna direction, we thought it might mean something. Mon day night when the shocks were so frightful they struck the house onthe corner by our room for some time, moving diagenally in that when all at once came a terrific jerk moving in a directly opposite line. I tell you it is depressing to have one’s true tnwardness knocked sideways in that style, especially when you have a realizing sense of the long cave running under your house, a + Terrible Railway Accident. 1: me Lilie, A St. Louis despatch says :—--The Texas bound train en the Iron Mountain Rail- road which left St. Louis on Saturday night was precipitated into the creek by the bridge giving way two and a half miles south of Victoria,Mo. The train consisted of a baggage, express and mail cars, a smoker, two passenger coaches and four sleepers, carrying about 150 passengers. A heavy rain had fallen all day and the creek was imuch swollen. At Hemitite, the first station this side of the trestle, the engineer received orders to run cautiously as the rain had been heavy and the creek was out of its banks. Engineer Kelly says he ran slowly beyond that point, and both he and his firemen, Wm. Hach, watched the track very carefully. As he approached the trestle Kelley observed that the track was entirely straight and level, showing nothing wrong and he went on, but when his engine reached about the middle of the trestle he felt the whole structure sinking beneath him. In an instant he opened the valve, operating the air brakes full width and brought the train to so quick a stop that the front end of one of the cars was crashed by the sudden shock. This saved the coaches, but the baggage, mail, express and smoking cars went into the raging tor- rent below, carrying with them all the men on board. Engineer Kelly and fireman ©. Hach went down with the engine, and were submerged in the flood. Kelly, in his struggle to free himself found that one of his féct was held, but at the same instant and just as he realized that he must drown, the engine turned over, his foot was released and he came to the surface. Seizing a passing log he clung to it desperately, and was swept down the torrent and lodged against a tree 159 yards below. With scarcely strength enough to move, he clasped his legs and arms around a limb of the tree, became unconscious and was not restored until two or three hours after he had been taken fromthe tree. The smoker, which is said to have contain- ed some 20 persons, was swept down about 300 feet below the trestle, and all its occu- pants, it is believed, are saved. ceeded in getting outside of the car and clung to its top until rescued. A despatch from the scene of the wreck says none of FO ALL HEAUERS Very little can be done to improve the surroundings of a person who has not sense enough to sow the very best seeds. Carter's Seeds are the best in this country. Perhaps you have It and sow them once, you will praise them to others a hundred times. We have spent many hundreds of dollars in convine- ing men and women that their farms and gardens can be mate- ritlly improved by sowing our Seeds; but we have fallen short of our ambition if we have failed to convince you, Send for our Seed Catalogue. It tells how to get and grow our Seeds. Address : GEO. CARTER & CO, SEEDSMEN, CH’TOWN, P. E. March 11, 1887—law & wky I. Pubhe Mieeting. fE undersigned wil! wae the Electors of the VY ‘T Third District of Queen’s County, at Tea Mile House, St. Peter's Road, On. MONDAY, MARCH 14TH, AT &5 O'CLOCK, P. M. Other meetings will be held, of which due notice wiil be given. D. FERGUSON. March 10, 1887—1 wky 1i} pf ISLAND AULT, EKALED TENDERS, addressed to the under- signed, and endorsed 5 “Tender for Steam Coal,” will be received until THURSDAY, March 3ist, inclusive, for the supply of Six Thousand Two Hundred (6,200) Tons of the best fresh-mined. round. Steam Coal, fer locomotive use. Tenders to state the price per ton of 2,240 Ibs., delivered as follows :— Charlottetown a : 2,150 Tons. Summerside - . — $e .* Georgetown - - - — * Souris - - - - - - ae.Cl* Cape Traverse - - ed At least one-quarter of the whole quantity required, at each of the above-mentioned sta- tioas, to be delivered on or before the 39th day of UNS next, and delivery of the whole to be com- pleted on or before the first. day of OCTOBER. 827 ‘The first payment will be nade in July, and monthly thereafier, Ten (10) per cent will be retgined from each payment, until the final and The Department does not bind itself to accept JAMES COLEMAN, Superintendent, -MARCH 11, i8 They suc- | Railway Olicg ers es NX HU Best makers, and all sizes from 18 t« 38 CENTS, UP. A Large Stock EMBROIDERIES, very cheap. Sheetings, White Cottons, Dress Goods, Pillow Cottons, Grey Cottons, Cashmeres, Tickings, e Print Cottons, Merinoes. Hessians, Shirtings, Plushes, Velvets, ‘Lowelings, Ginghams, Silks, Satins, &e, :0i- A Full Line of Fancy and Staple Dry Goods---New Stock, AT PRICES AS LOW AS “" . STANLEY BROS, BROWN’S Ch’town, March 11, 1887—eod & wky Pals (ORS ET » 36 inches, ranging in price from ANY IN THE TRADE. : BLOCK. 7 NORTH BRITISH AND WERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE OF GREAT BRITAIN, (OS Total Assets, ee FRED. W HYNDMAN, Ch'town, March 1], 1887—24 mos 2aw — ~ INSURANCE CO., Thirty Million Dollars Agent for P. E. Island, Auction Sale. Valuable Freehold Farm. ae eee Henry Ferguson to , Lith, AM instructed by Mr. I Sell by Auction, MONDAY, MARCH AT 11 O'CLOCK, on the Premises, that beautifully situated Farm of 75 acres, on St, Peter’s Road. seven miles from Charlottetown, 52 acres Of which are in a high state of cultivation, the balance well covered with Hardwood, Scantling, Rails, &c. There is a l)welling House and large new Rarn en the premises, with Schools and Churches close by. Also—immediately after sale of Farm, Horses, Cattle, Farm Tin plements, &c. Part of the purchase money can remain on interest at 6 per cent. A. McNEILL, Auctioneer. Ch’town, March 3, 1887.—tl sal & wky WANTED, A SITUATION as Book-keeper with a good responsibie marchans, Have had four years’ experieyce, and can givé best of references, Apply to “H,” care of P. O. Box 353, city. March 8, 1887—3i eod pd ST, JAMES’ CHURCH SOCIAL, TH KE Ladies of the Congregation intend having a Tea, Refreshment and Fancy Tables in ST. JAMES’ HALL, On THURSDAY, 24th March, COMMITTEE: Mas, JAMES CARRUTHERS, Mrs. D. MeNeill, Miss McGill, Mrs. Rankin, Miss Gray, Mrs, A. Lord, Miss G. Brown, vrs. W. R. Frame, Miss K. Hyndman, Mrs. M. McLeod, Miss E. McKinnon, Mrs. A. L. Brown, Miss G. Mason, Mrs. C. MeGregor, Miss I. Murray, Mrs. R. Angus, Miss Henderson, Mrs. D. Montgomery- The ladies have made up an excellent assort- ment of Pinafores, Aprons, &c., &c. The public are invited to favor them with their patronage. TicKErs--Admission, 10 cents ; Tea and admis- sicn, 35 cents, Doors open at 2 o'clock, p. m. B. MAacNEILL, Secretary, Ch'town, Marth 4—3i aw tl 17 then daily ti date - VALUABLE © NUpIOS Stoek. AM instracted, by Owen Connolly, Esq., to Sell by Auction, at his farm, Royalty East, I On Wednesday, March sand, 16 Excellent = Mileh Cows, — ¢ sco vith Caleee be thee side, others in! be y the thoroughbred Snort-h “PRINCE OF WALES. ort-horn ull --ALSO - 4 Farm Horses. ee ee ee i ‘ i TERMs—Seven Months on approved Joint Notes, A. MeNEILL, | AUCTIONEER. | March 1—7i tu fri & wy 33 _— NOTICE a e 7 hereby vive Notice that we have appoi : reby vive ! ve tha, ppointed | \ ALEXANDER HORNE our Agent for. Charlottetown and vieiniry, for the sale of our | Extras and Impiemenis, and that Robert A. | Strong, Msq., is mo longer our Agent. All debts due us, by Note or otherwise, are to he paid either directiy to us, or at the Agencies . the Merchants’ Bank of Halifax at Charilotte- | own, FROST & WOOD, Smith’s Falls, On March +—why phat » jour gi j | Colored Spectacles or ; County. commencing at a poi SAVE. YOUR EYESIGHT, BY using a pair of our > OTHER KINDS OF Spectacles & Eyegl in stock, for both Near and Far Sight, FROH cts. TO Spectacles Repaired Lenses E. W. TAYL CAMERON BLOCK. March 5d, 1887—2aw & wky + = Ww: LL hold their Sixty-second Annual Celebra- tion, in Charlottetown, On Thursday, March 17th, when they will march in procession from their . Hall, at 9.45a, m.. to St. Danstan’s Cath : The day’s proceedings will conclade with @ Grand Lastramedtal and Voou Consett IN THE PRINCE STREET. Some of the best talent in the e:ty have kiadiy consented to take part. ‘ An Address, suitable to the occasion will be delivered by A. b. WARBURTON, Es@Q. The Garrison Artillery Band will be in atéend- aace. Return Tickets at one first-cla3s fare will be issued from all stations to Charlvi tetowa on 16ch and I7th, good to return on 17th, 19th, to tehse aitending Celebration, : Tickets for Entertainment for sale at Drug and Book Stores, and at all Railway Siauens. Prices: Gallery, 25cts: Parquette, 350t9; Re- served Seats, 5icts. Doors open at 7 o'clock; performance to cour menceat 8 sharp. Members of Branch Societies are invited @ attend (in regalia). : A, J. DOUGAN, Secretary Committee Ch’town, March 9, 1&87—eod pat Siac lena iia etait ee J ND. ro be Sold at Public Auctions, on the promises At St. Mary's, Lot 2% —ON— Saturday, the 26th March, 188) AT 12 O'CLOCK, NOON, all that tract, piece or parcel of land, ; lying and being on Lot Twenty ay . non i of St! Vatrick’s Road and in the soutbwert@e of land now or formerly .n the possession Of eve Doirant, thence running east elong the boundary line of the said Joa Doirant’® fifty-two chains and seventy links, until it Sc. Mary’s Road, or the division ine Ss Townships Twenty-two and Twenty as thence south along said Livad or ¢ live a distance cf nineteen chains. thence’ along the Mili Vae Road to St. Patricks By 3 aforesaid, thence north alony suid last-me Road nineteen chains to the place of cor ment, containing one hundred acres of litile more or less, ‘6 And also, at the same time and place, Stock, Farming Implements, &c. . 5 For farther particniars apply to Bridget PORES on the premises, or to George Smith, \ew = GEOKGE 5M March 6, 1887 —vod wky & her (0 sale J