* Terms :—Five Dottars a YEAR. NEW SERIES, This is true Liberty, when Free-Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free. --Kveiries. ISLAND, Suxcie Copies Two CEntTs, VOL. 18-NO, 95 The Maly Examiner is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Go-' | ; ’ From their offic Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Kdward Island, —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION~ | Six I 60 ba: eb heeds 6 wiedihe cues $2.50 TE ibn bh othe ccs ae ae 1 26 COP GU 6 ccc aecets cctenededsauas 50 Advertising st moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on application. ALMANSC FOR MARCH, i886. MOON'S CHANGES. New Moon 5th day, 5b, 51.8m, p. m. W. First Quarter 13th day, 9h, 4.7 a, m, E. Full Moon 20th day, 12h, 142m, a m, 8, | Last Quarter 27th day, 62,31 7ma,a. mS, | a ’ D' > am Sun |Sun |Moon! High! Days DAY OF W: EK! 7 8 , M| | cises|sets | rises | water|len’h. h mh mymorn jaft'n jh im! 1| Monday + 4315 41) 4 19) 8 17/10 58. 2| Tuesday | 42) 47) 4 49) 8 Solu 1, 3|Vednesday | 40) 44/524) 9 37] 4 4|/ Thursday 38 44) 5 56/10 14 8! 5| Friday 36| 47) 6 25)10 465 U1 €| Jaturday 34; 4%; 6 52/11 18 14 7| tanday 22| 50! 7 19/11 50} 18 §| Moaday | 30) 51) 7 46)morn 21} 9, Cuesday 29, 53! 8 15 0 25 24 10, Wednesday | 27) 54] 8 45) 0 5° 27 | 1! Tharsday | 25) 56) 9 22) 1 38) 31) 12|}Priday . ¥2; 57/0 4) 2 24) 35 13/ Na turday ; 2!) 59/10 51) 3 20) 38 | 14 Sunday | 196 O|iL 47) 437; 41) 15| Monday |, ae Ljaft 51 6 8 44) 16| Tuesday |} I} 2) 1 59) 7 43) = 47} 17; Veinesday | 12) 3) 3 13| 8 35) 650, 18\fhursday | 1!| 5) 4 28) 9 2) 19) Friday | 9 6] 5 43/1012) 57, 20) \atarday | 7) 7] 6 580 50/12 OF 21| Sunday 5 8} 8 LILI 32) 3) 22| Monday 2} 9! 9 Q0jaft1o| 7} 23| Cnesday 5 O 10:10 28) U 4g) i 24|\ Wednesday | 53) 12/11 39} 1 20) 14] 23; Uhursday | 66; I3imorn! 217; 17, 25 Friday | 54) 14,028) 3 5| 20! 27| saturday } 562 15) 120; 4 9 . 23 23) Innday | 50} 16,2 7/524) 26 9) Monday ' 49} 18/2 48) 6 23) 29) 30|Pucaday | 43} 21] 325,738] 83; 3!1|\ Wednesday (6 466 22° 3 57) 8 27/12 36 L. ARTHUR & CO, GHNERAL Commission Merchants, 12] ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. eae eee ee Bogs and Produce a Specialty. —_ diy wkly CAUTION. FRAOHK PLUG OF THE MYRTLE NAVY - Is & B. IN BRONZE LETTERS. None Other Genuine. Oct. 20 a @ B= BOSTON. —_———$—— SPRING ARRANGEMENT. THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. Leave St. John for Besten, via Eastpors ond Port- land, every Tuesday an nursday, at 8.00 a. m. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd class ; $9.50, Ist class. _ ; For tickets and other information apply to G. A. SHARP, F, W. HALES, P. E. 1. Ry, P. E. L Steam Nav. Co., or to your nearest Ticket Agent. Feb. 8, 1886+eod way REMOVAL. M ACMILLAN’S COAL OFFICE has been 4 Removed to foot of PRINCE STREET. A Large Assortment of HARD AND SOFT COA fo Kept Constantly on Hand, R. McMILLAN. Deo.94. 2m land d why *, corner of Water and | J. H. MYRICK & GO., | Wy Oees and retail dea'ers in CANNED GOODS, FLOUR, TEA, GROUERIES, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD UASH SALE! CHEAP SALE! IG SALE OF DRY GOODS AND CLOTHING, HATS, &., at L. E. PROWSE’S. Now is the time to buy! Big dis- counts on Dress Goods, Cashmere, Merino, Flannels, Feathers, Laces, Embroidery, Gloves, &c. es 'e HATs, HATS, Largest Stock in the City ; Lowest Figures in the Do- minion. Come and see the Cheap Goods. L. E PROWSE, Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen Street. Ch’town, Feb. 16, ’86—eod wky wee, &c. also; FORK, LARD, HAMS and FISH of all kinds, Grafton Street, Charlotte- town, P, E I. ___In our Fish Market we offer © FISH —boneless, dried, pickled; HERRING, MAC- KEREL, SHAD -pickied; DIGBY HERRING, In Canned Fish we offer SALMON, FINNAN HADDIES and LOBSTERS. to direct special atttention to our Fresh Salmon and Codfish, which we receive and have on sale every day. We wish — +0: Our GROCERIES will be found fresh and reliable and oar stock is complete in al! departments. Our prices will compare favorably with those of the best grocers POKK, BACON, SUGAR-CURED HAMS, LARD, FRESH BEEF, CORNED BEEF and SAUSAGES, Oar SAUSAGES are frosh made every morning, from the best material. By dealing with us house-keopers can obtaia everythiug they require in the house- keeping line without trouble or vnnecessary running around. Oxders by mail or telephone will receive prompt attention. J. H. MYRICK & CO,, Fish Market, Grafton Street. Charlottetown, Feb. 9, 1886 —1 mo eod oa i JOHN MACLEOD & CO. MERCHANT TAILOR. se E are offering the balance of our winter goods at lower prices than have ever been offered the public. A lot of Men’s and Youth’s Overcoats from $5 to $8, worth from $8 to $14 Overcoats made to order, from $12 to $18, worth from $18, to $24. Men’s Heavy Shirts, Underwear, Fur Caps, Gloves, & at the same rates. Worsted and Tweed Suits at very low, prices. Island Tweed Suits from $19 to $12. JOHN MACLEOD & CO. Ch'town, Feb. 9, 1886 —tf eod wky -—soJWBVERYONE CAN call and examine the largest stock of Household Furniture, &c., &c., ever shown in Charlottetown, and also discover that they os SAVE MONEY and get Good, Reliable Home-made Goods of andisputed value, fine finish and good honest workmanship BY BUYING Staple Furniture, Bedding, Mattresses, Fancy Goods (for Xmas), Picture Frames and Moulding, Mantle-mirrors and Mirror-plates, Bagatelle Boards, Handsome Oil Paintings, Framed Chromos, and One Thousand and One other articles, FROM THE P. E, ISLAND FURNITURE WAREROOMS, MARK WRIGHT & CO. Ch’town, Dec. 3, °85—eod wky BOOK-BINDING, PAPER-RULIN SN BLANK-BOOK MAKING, OVER BOREHAMS BOOT & SHOE STORE LL kinds of BOOK BINDING executed at Lowest Prices and with Quick Despatch* Ruling, Numbering and Perforating .for the Trade prompily attended to, BLANK BOOKS A SPECIALTY. w@ A Share of Patronage Solicited. JAMES D. TAYLOR, \ UBSCRIBE for THE WEEKLY RXAMI- bt) NER. the latest local and foraign news | can always be found therein. QUEEN SQUARE. Ch town, Feb. 23, 86. wae ltl incall lillian a Rancciiinien ADANSOITC eSTANig vi 2) si (ts, PRO MPT. = 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 all other medicines have failed. Sufferers from eithe€ recent or chrome coughs or bronchial affections, can resort to this great remedy, confident of obtalning Speedy relief. Do not delay, get it at once. FOR LE BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Bottled at Sf. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, FOWN@INSMAN & CO., Druggists, . 343 47H AvE., N. Y, ‘ Herring. Herring. 200 Bris. No. 1 FAT HERRING, 200 Half-barrels do 50 Quarters do do 50 Quintal CODFISH, cheap for cash or e. DAVID SMALL, COTTON DUCK—COTTON DUCK Notiee to Shipowners & Builders. f i Subscriber now offers to the trade, armouth Cotton Duck, at manufac- turer's prices. Hus on hand a supply of light and heavy ducks. is DAVID SMALL, Agent, Hyndman’s Buildings, Corner Water and Queen Street. Ch’'town, Feb, 16—2i wky 2 mos ‘RXHIS i here to certify that the partnership ore existing ‘between the under- signed, carrying on besiness under the style and firm of A. KENNEDY & CO, has, on this frat day of Februsry, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and eighty- six, been diesolved by expiration of time and by mutual consent. Dated this first. day of February, A. D., 1886. Signed in the presence of, by all the par- ties, Lerru E, Brecken, A. KENNEDY, WM. RUSSELL, ROBT. McLAURIN, The business formerly carriel on by the above partnership will be continued by the undersigned, under the name, style and firm of A. KENNEDY & CO., who will satisfy all the liabilities of the late firm, and who are authorized to collect all debts and amounts due the late firm, A. KENNEDY, ROBT. McLAURIN, Feb. 24—dly 3wks law Why Pay Higher When WOODILLS Tins Retail 7 Cents GERMAN, Retail 12 202. Aoz. Tins Cents BAKING Sez. Tins Retail 22 Cents POWDER Quality Equal to Any. March 1, 1836. TENDERS. Crry oy CHARLOTTETOWN, P. &, I. EALED LENDERS will be received at the Mayor's Office, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, until noon of WEDNES- DAY, the 3lst day of Mareh next, for the placing and inaintaining of Sixty Frost-Proof Hvdrants, having a pressure of not less thin sixty pounds to the square inch, for fire and civic purposes, séoctiing to plans and specifica- tions to he seen at the City Clerk’s cffice. The Council do not bind themselves to aocept the lowest er any tender. By order, A. H. MACPHERSON, City Clerk. Feb. 23 —3w sod Fish Sale. 50 qnuintals CHOICE CODFISH, 20 de do HAKE, 50 barrels LARRADOR HERRING, 10 cases CANNED SALMON, 1 do do LOBSTERS, 10 4 =6do =§ do MACKEREL, FOR SALE BY HORACE HASZARD, Ch’town, March 6—Imo eod 3 MONDAY, MARCIL 15, 1886. .%* ied) Hie . CheVatip Cram MAROH 15, 1886 Charlotte Parish. What appearance Charlottetown _pre- sented in the year 1791 the oldest inhabit- ant fails to tells us; but we know that there were a few houses. some stores, and a hotel or coff*e house, kept by Alex. Richardson, which, besides its ordinary use, served as a piace for holding public meetings and for religious worship, The first Church, which afterwards stood on Queen Square, was not bnilt until the year 1801. The rector at this time was the Rev. . Theophilus DesBrisay. who, though appointed by King George II1., in the year 1774, ! 6, does not appear to have entered upon his duties until the year 1777. Inthe year 1781 ‘‘an Act appointing vestries” was passed by the Legislature, but confined in its operation to the Parish of Charlotte. . This parish comprises Townships Nos. 24, 32, 53, 34 and Charlottetown and Royalty, and in-| cludes Rustico, Brackley Point and Cove- head on the north, and from Cornwall to Suffolk Road Settlement on the south and the intermediate districts. The first minutes of this vestry, now forthcoming, are dated May 23rd, 1791, and matters seem to have been conducied generally according to English law and custom. Just before this, in the year 1799, ‘fan Act for quieting the minds of His Majesty’s dissenting Protestant subjects in the Island of Saint John (P. E. I.) whereby all dissenters were exemptod from the pay- ment of any rates levied for the support of the Established Church of England, in this Island,” was passed, but did not receive His Majesty George the Third’s allowance until July 31st, 1793 At this meeting of May 23, 1791, there were prasent : the Rev. Theoph. DesBrisay, Rector; Thomas Wright, Exq., ©. W.; Daniel Grandin, C. W.; Alex. Richardson, Synodman. As part of the business, it was “ or- dered that the Vestry Clerk do draft a let- ter to Capt. Lowden for the inspection of the Vestry on Sunday next, for the reliev- ing the Parish of Robert Biair and daugh- ror.” Qo the Sth of June the Veatry approved.of the letter to Capt. Lowden, of Pictou, but he apparently did not send a favorable answer, as Robert Blair and daughter appear on the mioutes on several eceasions after. » :, The Vestry als agreed to tho Bishops’ re- commendation of fees to be taken by each ts | THE NEWS OF THE DAY. Carefully. Collated by: “The Ex- aminers” Reporters. A Fairburn, Ga., a lady, 70 years old, has never eaten a mouthful of meat of any kind. Listea to your wife, says a medical ad- vertisement. What terrible remedies they do get nowadays. Six hundred ‘coal miners in Huntingdon district, Pa., have struck for ten cents per ton advance im wages. Oddfellows in Chicago are about forming a company for the erection of a temple in that city at a cost of $500,000. An earthquake at Cosenza, Southern Italy, killed one person and injured several others, besides throwing down many houses, The Brunswick cotton mill at Worsley, Eng., has been destroyed by fire. Loss, £60,000, and 300 hands thrown out of em- ployment. In Texas there is a man named Damrich, but the commercial bulletins indicate that he is not so financially sound as his name would indicate. Harvard College now has $4,922,363 of whith $2,993,772 is in real estate, $1,770, 854 in railroad bonds, and $840,987 in notes and mortgages. Sam Jones says: Live so your children may put their feet in your tracks and be honorable. That is, don’t walk all over the road on the way home at nights, They catch wild geese in Oregon by soak- ing corn in whiskey and scattering it broadcast in the fields where the birds feed. It is only geese that are ensnared by whiskey. A Tennessee court has closed a term in which six murderers escaped conviction, by sending a hungry woman to prison for two years for stealing a quart of butter- milk, The Mormonsare still picking up prose- lytes among the poor whites of the South. Elder Morgan has just taken 3) pretty tough-looking converts from Tennessee and Alabama, Gallott, the insane anarchist, who at- tempted to blow up the Paris Bourse, says that he had long intended to do so, bat regrets that he failed to mix the explosives properly. The estimate that ali the peonle living in clergyman or incumbent to wit : For solemniziong matrimony...... .. Saag 100 For each funeral whenjservice is réead...... 76 For registering Baptisms, each.,... ...... 10 On 3rd July, 1791, it was ‘‘ordered that the clerk do open three registers, one for | births, one for marriages, and one for} burials in this parish in futuro, and that the clerk do open one register of cach for the whole Island.” Ata vestry held Ist August, 1791, the approved list of inhabitants with the rents as agreed on was read. ‘Mr. Donald Mc-| Farlane in person proposed to provide fit | and sufficient meat, drink, washing, mend- the world, about 1,400,000,000, could be ‘comfortably seated in a field twenty miles ‘square, suggests fascinating possibilities of big audiences, In his speech denouncing the hereditary principle, Mr. Labouchre said:—‘‘I should no more think of refusing a thistle to a hungry donkey than of refusing a baronetey to anybody who wanted it.” Near Port Towasend, W. T., two men recently attacked an iuoffensive Chinamen. after fearfully maltveatiug him they tore his qaeve out by the roots, and left him for dead. The citizens are greatly incensed’, ing, and lodging for Robt. Blair aad John Burns, in consideration that Elizabeth, | the daughter of said Robt. Slair, | is by the Parish indented to him as} an apprentice, until sho attains the age of} eighteen years, at the rate of furiy pounds! per annum, the payment t» be in good orders on the respective stores at Charlot- | ton (so written). The removal of the! poor to be at the expense of the Parish.” Me. Grandin, on motion, submitted: to | Agreed to, nem con.” The rato for the ‘* that their names (to wit) the French set tlers should be added to the rate and their rents considered.” At this meoting there were present: the Rector, Mr. Thomas Wright and Mr. James Curtis, Church- wardeus ; Mr. Daniel Grandin and Mr. Alex. Rea, Vestrymen ; also Mr. McMillan, Capt. James Campbell, Mr. John Webster, Jr., Mr. John McCallum, Mr. Donald Mc- Farlane, Mr. John Webster, Sr., Mr. Hig- Brown, Mr. Burke, Mr. Perry, Mr. D. Shaw, Mr. William Miller. On the following day Governor Fanning, having recommended ‘‘ the Parish officers to reconsider the resolve of sending Biair and Barns out of Charlotton,” a Vestry was held. Mr. McFarlane gave up his agreement, and Mr. John Chambers having offered to take Barns and Blair at £49 per annuum, ‘ payment to be made in merchant- able grain orders on the stores in Charlotte- town,” it was agreed ‘‘ that the said Barns and Blair do go to the said John Chambers immediately.” Apprenticed to Mr. Donald McFarlane, Elizabeth Biair until the age of eighteen. Apprenticed to Mr. Alexander Rea, James Fisher until he is twenty-one years of age. Adjourned sine die. At the last meeting, along with others, there were present Mr. Jas. Robinson, Mr. Gardiner, Mr. Chambers, Mr. Douglas, Mr. John Clark. a a A Galveston school teacher had a great deal of trouble making a boy iearn his Ies- son. Finally, howaver, he succeeded, and drawing a long breath remarked: ‘‘ If it wasn’t for me you would be the biggest donkey on Galveston Island !” He—What,, qnother new dress! That is a great waste. «Great waist, indeed! Lia's only eighteen. And she wouldn’t believe he didn’t mean it. i said lands never Laving as yet been rated. | gins, Mr. Peter Gregor, Mr. Auld, Mr, L. | You may hide your thoughts, conceal your mind and disguise your actions, but the smell ef a raw onion will rise in ite might and inform a sneering world how you have gathered it to your inner man, An order for a farm in Washington county Indiapa, was received by a local real estate agent there from an Ohio man, who wanted also, if possible, ‘‘a wife between the ages of 20 and 45 years,” to go with the farm. the Vestry ‘‘ whether proprictors of | j . uncultivated lauds of the Towvships|, 4 Maine, man Kept an average of 85 within this Parish should be rated| fowls for ayear. He got aoe anon ee towards the maintenance of the poor | S&S%> otianree be. soe Pr yomg or and other necessary reliefs in and | $174 01, and $54 08 worth of poultry. He about the same, the same being .ratable by ene cost him 25 ceuis a day to feed the the laws of Kagiand, the proprietors of flock. The fire losses of February, as estimated by the New York Daily Comme;cial Bulle- maintenance of the poor was amended, | ¢jn were $6,400,000 in the United States ‘and Canada. ‘This is about the average February loss for the past eleven or twelve | years. | M. Pasteur has at present thirty patients | under his care. He has treated up to date | 290 dog-bitten patients and, with the ex- ‘ception of one particular case, undertaken |too late, all have been preserved from | hydrophobia A grandfather, coming to read his paper found that he had mislaid his spectacles, and thereupon declared : ‘‘ I have lost my | glasses somewhere, and can’t read the |paper.” A little three-and-a-half year old igirl, desiring to assist him, answered : \**G’an’pa, you go outside and look froo ze window, and [’ll hold ze paper up so you | can read it.” | Jumbo has been successfully skinned, iand his hide tanned. The skin weighed | 1,548 pounds when first taken off. It was lecraped and cleaned to an uniform thick- | ness of half an inch, and soaked in arsenic ‘for two months; the bones have jyeen ‘bleached and all the flesh removed, and the | skeleton will be set up scientifically, so that , Jumbo will start on his new career in good Boston girl (boasting)—‘*Ob! | should | Say 80. Why, we can trace our ancestry back 250 ysare, to the time whenja Coverly was hanged for witchcraft.” Denver girl— “Our family goes back a good many years, ‘too. My great-grandfather was lynched for horse-stealing fifty years ago. Isn’t it terrible how they used to persecute people in olden times?” | A lengthy article in a journal specially devoted to the youth of tho lend, is en- titled ‘* Learn to Let Go.” In some cases | this art is not difficult to learn. It sort of comes to ® person by iastinct. One of these times is when a man takes hold of the wrong end of a poker with which he has been coaxing a clinker out of the fire. He lets go without waiting for instructions, * eg es # ae cs aR eer, PS si Asis ig