——————————————— EC i i i ge tei, ee ee ee ie mag ee ae renas Five Dounars a YEAR. NEW SERIES. ic Jain Graminer ; j “ -_ 18 very eveving by 1 ‘ daw be I Ls Y nye \ ry! Gi wr is L106 pe" Usa sulng w4U From th Water and Ure ; harlottetow rea : t town, sian, uLPLION~ eiv @0 x . 1.2 ates for monthly, qa» te arky a@) Vortisemen (a, } OR Mage Bridal Direct from Nature's Laboratory. THE UNRIVALLED POLISH FOR Gold and Silver Plated Ware, Glass, Tin, Steel, or any Material wherea Brilliant Lustre is required. —_—_—_—or Oniy 12 Cents a AT yo om ay Lf. i7 ae ren April 3 ol Ww ky Box -~BO H— BOSTON,|—— pte te w SUMMER AReANGENENT THES PALL IATESMATIONAL S.S. CO. t John ft waters land, every Mon:lay, We Aleo ave t. John at nish BOSTON DIRECT. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd Class ; Por tick: @ ASAALUP, F, i. i he OL Des Pe 2. & or ts your nearest Ticket Agent. April 8, 1 k7—eod wky 24.50, Lat class. ia and other information apply to W, HALES, GUARDIAN FIRE IVSURANCE €0. CAPITAL - - - $10,000,000 CARVELL BROs., AGENTS. i March 26~2i wky Imo pat ' | CARD. ‘EXTENSIVE THE EXAMINER PUBLISHING COM- PANY? NY ia VINE lately add sd to their stock i O type and waterial (or Joo Priating, are better “ah ever wepared to execute orders for Bill Heads, Letter Heads. Handbills of all kinds, Siting or Business Cards, &c., promptly an e Kapiy,in the best style of the art. Noue bnt first-class workmen are employed in if office; and, as they import their printing Papers direct from the manufacturers, they are ®to fill allorders on the most favorable terms. © continued patronage of the public is respectfully svlicited. 4g WwW. i on, ‘ anager Ch'town, Nov. 16, 1886. i aae~-~cteeap carerttepcmmmccaseaccss aa 6 ARTHUR & CO, GEN HRAL Uonuission Merchants, QU ATLANTI2 AYCNUE, BOsTro VT, MAS2@A. 8338 and Produce a Specialty. ileetro Sillicon| OFFS. Cash, he will consequently be in a position to offer his customers °E STEAMERS | steam Nag. Co. ; * This is true Liberty, when Free Sorn Men, having to advise the Pablic, may speak free.”— Evxirivzs. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, APRIL 80, 1887. LONDON New Printed Cottons, Unbieached Sheetings, Pillow Cottons, Tabie Linens, owels, Toweling. 0—-— Bieached Sheetings, nwniitnititiniinlly ainintimpinagiees f TLESE goods have just been opened for Spring Sale, and having been bought before the! » ‘ ’ x recent advance in Cottons, will be found | CARPHTS! j | ‘Lailorine \ lot of Spring Tweeds just opened. | HARRIS & SUCCES nee Joo. extra value. CARPEHTS! srussels, lapest ries, Hemps, Floor Cloths, Matting, Hearth Rugs, Door Mats, Lace Curtains. Lepartment. Q —-~--— STEWART, SORS TO CEO, DAVIES & CO. | Ch town, March 7, 1887.—wky j ee ee CE —<—<—<—————<———_— — SS — j ' ' | | J. B. a 7 Y ' in England. goods at the very Closest Prices J. iB. Ch’town, April 21, ’87— dy wy x HATS! /ATO MATTER what competitors may say LN general public that the 7.30 every Saturday | Robes, Collars, &c., but we invite you to call bargains are genuine, and our prices the LOW Ch’town, April 14, 1887. BRITISH I have decided -————O BACK TO THE OLD STAND. CDOGORNRALD AS removed back to his Old Stand, on QUEEN STREET, and is now opening his Spring Stock, personally selected Buying his goods for Cash, and selling only for, Oo MACDONALD. xX HATS! ree ne ee | pee in their advertisements, it is apparent to the Ctmenmn BEST BARGAINS duesday and Friday at ; ; | ean be had at our establishment. We have not the time to enumerate our bargains in Muffs, Caps, Gloves, Coats, Sacques, and examine them—satisfy yourself that our EST OF THE LOW. — STUARTS NEW FUR STORE, NEWSON BLOCK, CHARLOTTETOWN. WAREHOUSE QUEEN STREET. 0 <nmmemnnne to close out the whole of my stock of Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, commencing De- cember L5th, 1886, and continuing until the whole is disposed of, at Wy diy wiely Ch’ town, Dew. 14—why IARGE DISCOUNTS FOR CASH eo a ae BRO VV INTL USE. ifouse-Keeping Goods, New White and Gray Cotton, MASH SALE ADSESOWS ere Fe zs tee 4 Gn? ie Fy $3 i ont ae Y ‘ &2 © te st ta 2 PA re a eh ‘& na? “ve Si” g i Rago ans ae te Ts a | a a SAFE. SURE. PROMPT. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson's Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey. Cougus, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consamption, have been speedily cured Ly the use of ApAMSON’s BALSAM after all other medicines have failed. Sufferers from either recent or chronic coughs or bronclial affections, can resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining speedy relief. Do not delay, zet it at ouce FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTs, Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, ¥. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druggists, 343 4tH Ave... N. ¥. } ‘ ! f aiid : it aalaMicatias } | NOTICE ; S hereby given that an application will be }~ made to the Parliament of Canada, at the next | ensuing session thereof, for an Act to authorize and allowthe Nova Scotia Permanent Benefit Building Society and Savings Fund, a Society established and formed under an Act of the Legisiature of the Province of Nova Scotia, Chapter 42, 12 Victoria, entitled ‘‘an Act for the regulation of Benefit Building Societies,” to ‘transact business as a Building Society and Savings Fund throughout the Provinces of New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, as well jas the Province of Nova Scotia. and to loan money on real and certain kinds of personal pro- } perty, and to borrow money aud receive money | and deposits, with power to issue debentures and deposit receipts and other powers usual to Loan |; Compacies and for other purposes. Dated at Halifax, 5th March, 1887 JNO. W. PAYZANT, Solicitor of Applicant. March 22, 1887—-2mos Pes Te ii ES, ee eee; eiees SPW RON aU shes et) 8 yy) a ences | Hgereeeegh cha Rmetey SAR yess lo ewosecestig~ emer cme! (aah Al Ry INSTANT REI BE OSITIVE CURE NOTICE. THE celebrated stallion ALL RIGHT will stand on the coming season at Charlottetown, Sum- merside, Cape Traverse and New Glasgow, NEWTON LEE, Truro, March 21, 1887. j ‘CANADA AND WES? INDIES, peenneh for Steamship Lines. TPENDERS will be received at the Finance De- partment, OUllawa, up to and including the Ist | the perforimance of the ; BErvices, V1Z.° | lst. a line of mail steamers saiiing from Halifax (to Havana, thence to Kineston, thence to san- tinge ce Cuba, the ce to Canada; and (2nd) ajthe pen of a greater gthan Dickens “to do} jing line of mail steame:s between Canada and Porto Rico and edincent Islands. Trips to be made by each fii nighily, Steamers te be of a size silicic 4 2.000 tous of cargo and to able ‘ i twelve knots an hour, ave not les n eleven’knots an hour, The con- trac her case to be for a period of iive } year iers will be received for the above service ther separately or together, Tenders to be marived on the outside “Tenders for Steam- ship Service to West Indies,” ‘the Government of Canada do not bind themsecives to accept any tender, By command. J. M. COURTNEY Deputy Minister of Finance. Finance Department, Ottawa, 7th Feb., 1887—feb19 law til april 30 Be OAS -<BAKING POWDER -FLAVORING EXTRACTS: Bem Tt) eo Le Ae 5. ata COFFEE: S G BRONZE MEDAL ‘2 GOLD MEDALS » 1SIWER MEDAL | Tea tases ee | i Soe ESE Ree | Ree PS tees: |: } Wie |e Fx: F333 ee BY PURE GOLD. MAN FG.CO23 <3 BRONT STREAST TORONTOxX neds FOR SALE. \ = , i ‘Ten Shares in “The Examiner Pub- | lishing Company,” | each Share representing $100in the Capital Stock, i a“ —ee } "THE undersigned offers for Sale TEN SHARES i (all paid up) of the Capital Stock of THE ' EXAMINER PUBLISHING CoMPANY. Will be sold ‘in lots of one or more shares, to suit purchasers, For further particulars apply to J. W. MITCHELL. Ch’town, Nov. 9, [88i. | day of May aext, from persons or companies, for | following steamship took the pen of a Dickens to describe the | 2 and decimate the whole Island must be owing "ns | to its healthful situation, and the strong dis- ‘of the human in bulk, and of all the places ee oo rnee ee LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Souris. Sir, Having lately had occasion to remain over at Souris for a few days, I beg to enclose you my impressions of the place ; and in con- nection therewith, I cannot help remarking [that ‘‘couid we see ourselves as others see us, it wad frae mony a blunder free us’ and / foolish notion. That Souris has many natural advantages, and that it might be one of the healthiest and prettiest summer resorts on P, K, Island goes without saying ; but that its people have contrived to make it the ugliest, the filthiest, and the nastiest place in North America, is equally undeniable They do not appear to have ever found out that such things as paint and whitewash are some- times used; and they seem to have no con- ception whatever of the uses for which the streets were intended. Cows in all stages of convalescence, and of all colors and kinds, roam at large on the streets or san themselves on the sidewalks, while pigs of all grades and sizes wallow in the gutterways. Incredible as it may appear, the streets are actually used as receptacles for barn-yard manure heaps andthe scrapings of back yards. In some places wooden Sone are erected in which this offal is deposited, but in other places even this precaution is not taken, and a manure heap actually extends nearly half-way across the street leading to the Presbyterian Church, while the liquid portion of the mass oozes slowly down one street and across an- other. Most of the people who live on Chapel Street empty all their slops before their front doors, ‘There is one house situated on this street, near a coopers shop, which seems to surpass all its competitors in the slop business. The street infront of this house is nearly always in a boggy condition, and it is said that the stench arising from it in warm weather is frequently intolerable to those who have not lost all sense of smell. The street leading along the shore, from what is called the Point to Morrow’s corner, would be bean- tiful and pleasant in summer as a pro- menade and carriage-way were it kept in any kind of decent repair. Not- withstanding the fact that there is a large amount of traffic on this street no at- tempt has ever been made to macadamize it, and in wet weather it is often impassable. Little wooden bridges cross it in several places, and they are generally from three to five inches higher than the roadway on either side. But worse than all, every kind of re- fuse from broken bottles, old shoes, discarded hoop skirts, to dead cats, is deposited along the shore side of this street, part of the stuff falling over the bank and being washed away by the tides, and part remaining on the street to rot and molder away in the course of time. There are already some very nice residences on this street and more are in course of erec- tion; therefore let us hope that some little at tention will be paid to this particular locality in future. In driving through the country I have noticed that the farmers frequently shift their cattle pens from one part of a field to an- other, for the purpose, I presume, of equally fertilizing all rtions of the land. Last fall the Knight estate moved one of their tenements from where it formerly stood to a clean place leaving the old cellar unfilled. In the immediate vicinity of this cellar there are several water closets and three or four old barns in which cattle have been housed during the winter; the land around it is also very low and a considerable quantity of water accumulates after every rain. 1 leave the rest to be imagined. What deadly pestilence will break out here next summer it is impossible to say. I was told HE DAILY EXAMINER. Sincie Corres Two CrEnts. British Trade Outlook. So far as the board of trade returns indi- cate, the opening of the jubilee year has been favorable and in the great metal trades,which are to some extent the pulse of the body in- dustrial, there is a healthy revival. But Game, Harrison & Larner’s London export Price Current of the 14th inst., notes among the most siguificent features of the day, the very decided agitation that has set in amon certain sections of the community for a veliel form of protection. This movement has taken strong hold of the millers, the National As. sociation of British and Irish millers going so far as to appoint a committee to fully investi- gate the existing state of things. Behind the British millers, lies the great body of agricul- turists, who are just now suffering severe de- pression. In some quarters it has been hinted that to prevent agriculture proper quite dying out, a system of bounties might be inaugurat- ed by the government as a compromise be- tween free trade and protection. Even a general revival of trade cannot, however, re- store prosperity to the wheat and cattle raisers of the United Kingdom, as against the com- petition of the United States and Canada, — Rev. Father Dow4. Tue Montreal Star reports: ‘The con- gregation of St. Patrick's Church have ar- ranged for the celebration of the jubilee of their beloved pastor, Rev. Father Dowd, the celebration embracing a musical festi- val, a religious ceremonial and a banquet. What are the Protestants going to do on this occasion? Rev. Father Dowd has been a respected resident of the city for forty years. His moderate course on more than one occasion has prevented religious strife. His sound advice has always been in favor of law and order. He has endear- ed himself, not only to the members of his congregation and Roman Catholics general- ly, but to his fellow citizens of different persuasions for his sterling qualities as a man. Such being the case, we think that the Protestants of the city should join their Roman Catholic fellow citizens in doing honor to the much-respected pastor of St. Patrick’s on the occasion of his jubi- lee. Protestants, too, should join in the banquet, even as Roman Catholics joined in the testimonial to Rev. Dr. Stevenson.” _— oP -<- <a Astonishing Success. It is the duty of every person who has used Boschee’s German Syrup to let its wonderfu qualities be known to their friends in curing Consumption, severe Coughs, Croup, Asthma, Pneumonia, and in fact all throat and lung diseases. No person can use it without im- mediate relief. Three doses will relieve any case, and we consider it the duty of all drug- gists to recommend it to the poor, dying con- sumptive, at least to try one bottle, as 50,000 dozen bottles were sold last year, and no one case where it failed was reported. Such a medicine as the German Syrup cannot be too widely known, Ask your druggist about it. Samples bottles to try, sold at 10 cents. Regular size, 75 cents Solid by all Draggists and Dealers, in the United States and Canada. _ —_ « - Apvice to Morners.— Mra. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain; and the little cherub awakes ar “bright asa butten.” It is very pleasant w taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all there was a board of health in Souris aud that all the members thereof were still alive. It! horrors of the Eden to which young Martin Chuzziewit was allued; but it would take justice to the Eden called Souris, That some trightful epidemic does not bieak out there infecting sea breezes that continually biow over it. It is a sad commentary on our humanity that we cannot stand the nastiness I have ever seen to which this saying might be applied, Souris takes the lead. Yours truly, TRAVELLER. Ch'town, April 27th, 1887. — —— i> i> > - a _——- The “Pioneer's” Story—False. Str,-In looking over Wednesday's Ex- AMINER, I observe that you have copied from the last Pioneer a paragraph headed ‘*Whiskey changed into Bricks,” wherein a story is told of aresident of Lot 7 who purchased a case of whiskey from Dr. Saunders of Summerside, but who, upon its arrival found that the whiskey had been “deftly manipulated into bricks by an ardent temperance woman who had intercepted it en route. There is very little point in the story, and the joke is not against me, bat it is nevertheless intended as a thrust at me, and is designed to convey the impression that my Vendor's License is but a veil to cover an extensive whelesales and retail trade. Of nothing that appears in the Pioneer do I take any notice ; it is beneath the contempt of all fair- minded men. But when [ find the Pioneer quoted by a journal of standing like Tne EXAMINER, the affair assumes a different aspect. The whole story as originated by the miserable sheet is false. I never in my life sold a case of whiskey, nor yet of bricke, to a resident of Lot 7, and I shall pay the sum of one huudred dollars te the party who will produce evidence of the name or names of the parties who purchased such from me. I do a legitimate business, in which I am pro- tected by the law ; and did I exceed the law's reatrictions, would be amenable to its penal- ties. Iam very sure, sir, that you could not have been aware of the reputation of the Pioneer for seurrility and falsehood, else you would have paused before quoting anything frown its columns. Yours respectfully, Cuares B, SAUNDERS. Apamson’s Botanic BatsaM has gained a reputation which places it in the front rank of curative agents. It has been in the market about twenty years. It is now recommended by the best physicians because it cures coughs and colds every time. Price 35 cents, Trial bottles 40 cents. dy wy Custom CLorHinc.—Men’s and boy’s cloth- ing made to grder in good style and at low price’ at J: B wtldouald’s. apl27 dy wy tt pain, regulates the bowels, and is the best known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-tive cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for Mra, Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup. and take no other marl? eod & wky i ekctccaclcncaleai : BEAUTIFUL women are made pallid and unattractive by functional irregularities which Dr. Pierce's *‘ Favorite Prescription ” will infallibly cure. Thousands of testimo- nials, Ky drugyists. saw ~-- Special Notices. WaRNER’'s SaFe Curt and Burdock Blood Bitters at the Apothecaries Hall. apl29 2i Moruer Srice.’s Syrer.—A fresh supply at the Apothecaries Hall. apl2y 2i Larcest stock and nobbiest styles of hats ever presented to Charlottetown public at E. Stuart's new hat store, Newson’s Block. apl29 THREE cases men’s and boy's clothing just received ; selling very low at J. B. Macdon- ald’s. apl27 dy wy tf ALL the newest styles in Ladies Hats, Flowers and Feathers just opened at J. B. Macdonald's. ap2l dy wy Linen tablings—-special value at Beer Bros. apl28 2i sprays at Beer apl27 2 New sunshades and umberellas at Beer Bros. ap|28 2i Bry your felt hats at J. 3. Macdonald's, apl27 dy wy tf Hat and bonnet shapes opened ~— at Beer Bros. apl27 2i Seep wheat, Timothy and Clover seed. A good article at W. P. Colwill’s. march28 dy wy 5w ANoTHUER lot of new boots just received at J. B. Macdonald’s Boot Store. apl 27 dy wy tf Five cases Gents Hard and Soft Felt Hats just opened at J. B. Macdonald's. ap2idy wy i;00p codiish will be sold cheap at W. P, Colwill's. march28 dy wy Sw Hyactntu GLasses of many colors, and other fine goods for sale by J. B. Pollard, Kent Street. mar?6 2 a w tf New Prints at J. B. Macdonald's. apl2 daw Cuxtsty’s London Hats, spring stork just opening at the London House. apl5 3i New Felt Hats just received at J. B. Mac- WINGs, Bros. tips and tinsel donald’s. apl2 daw Get a pair at once~ladies rubbers at Dor sey, Gotf & Co's. march 2] tf Ove stock of American boots will be here about last of April. —Dorsey, Goff & Co, march 15, tf Cuearest boots in the city at Dorsey, Goff & Co's. march 14 tf SELLING off 25,000 pairs of boots before re- moving to new premises. Dorwey, Goff & Co. mi&rch 15, tf : 7 ! 2 SMI het INES AE SNM TO A AE eg FEM Ss. Si la a <i ee ee —— ——