“set -Frve DottaRs A YEAR. TeRMs: = - 5 cance _ to advise the Public, may speak free.” —EuRIPIDES, SINGLE Copizs Two CrEnts ee NEW SERIES. Che Daily Examiner The Examiner Publishing Qo. ¥rom their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— Six months "ee eee eee eee ec eee eeeae es Three months............ © sales | bd. 1. Choe 66 0006 so cbdiiecbcud 608 oa Advertising at moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, balf-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on application. —_— ALMANAC FOR APRIL, 1888, MOON'S CHANGES, Last Quarter 3rd day, Sh., 28.8i,, a.m., S. W. New Moon Iith day, 5h, 52.2m., a m., E. First Quarter 19th day, 7h.; 397.; a. m., N.,; tbelow horizon. ) Full Moon 26th day, 2h., 9.6m., a.m., S.W. Di Sun ‘Sug /Moon! High'Day’s’ mjDAt OF WEEE! -isesiscts rises |water| len’h h mjh mjmornjaftr'nh m 1 Sunday 5 44.6 23; 0 30} 1 59)1239 2 Monday 25 1 30] 255} 43 3 y 26/291) 4 7) 46 4| Wednesday 27; 3 3/5 30) 49 5/ Thursday 3 37] 6 52] 52 5! Friday “4 10) 7 Sa) 55 7'Saturday 32) 4 37) 8 32) 59 8/Sunday 33! 5 1) 9 22/13 2 10} Tbesilay 35).5 48|up1 82) 8 ay 5 48)10 32) 8 11| Weduesday 37| 6 12)11 1] 12 12) Thareday 38) 6 38/11 33) 15 13) Friday 40} 7 Fjmorn| 18 14\Saturday 41} 7 41,0 4) 2) 15|Sunday 42; 8 20] 0 37) 24 16/Monday 43} 9 6) 113) 27 17| Tuesday 45, 9 59| 1 53] 30 18} Wednesday —} 13}) :46|11 0} 2 40| °33 19|Tharsday 11} ‘47%aftr'n| 3:40) 36 20) Friday 9| 48 5} 4 54) 39 21 | Saturday 8} 50; 1 16) 617) 42 22|Sunday 6; 52) 2 28] 7 32] 46 23| Monday 4) 53, 3 50 8 28 4 24|Tuesday® 2} 64) 455|'9 19] 5 25| Wednesday 0| 55) 6 23/16 3] 55 26) Thursday 4 58; 56) 7 43/10 45) 58 27| Friday 57/6 58| @ 1/1) 27/141 28) Saturday 56|7 0/10 I4jaft 10, 4 29| Sunday 54| 1/11 19] 0 56] 6 30| Monday (52/7 Bjrfforn} 1 45/14 9) EEE wa Dr, Jenkins & Dr, R, Jenking, OFFICE: GREAT GEORGE STREET, Opposite St, Dunstan's Cathedral, feb24—2m wky tf wky pat her L. ARTHUR & €0,, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, RECRIVENS OF Mackerel, Bitter, Oheese EGGS Pouliry, Potatoes, Fruit & Vegetables. 142, 144 Commercial Street, | BOSTON, MASS; ~ MEDICAL. q B-0-S-T-0-N SPRING ARK A NGBMENT, —— ees THE PALACE STEAMERS. JNTED 1 \TIQHAY S.S. CO. and Port, 8.00 a. m Leave St. John ier i Boston, via Eastport land, every Tucsiay and Thuraday at Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd © ages: & 00, iat ‘ol 1 Uickols and dther information ap y to G. A.SHARP, ; oS YF. Ve PELBYs, . FEL m Nav. Co. or to your nesrest Ticket Agent. Feb. M4, 188 -a04 v're aMss A. MORRISON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will regeive prompt @ttention.- Rerexences : Thomas Bank of Nova Sootia, Halifax; George Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia. Charlottetown, | : oa ; WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS, 71 East Cuear AND 9 & 14 Mrvorne Lang, Lonpon, ENGLAND. Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Represented in Canada by Mogrison *; ney Halifax. snecieidinsaialidilll 19 HARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. WEDNE 1888) ANOTHER LIST. —_-~-—— O cc if yUR LAST SPECIAL OFFERS brought hundreds of extra customers to our Store, and in order to still keep up the supply of ‘Bargains, we have prepared a new list, andask you to read every item. As only a few DOLMANS, REDINGOTES and SACQUES remain, we will, in order to make a clean sweep, offer them at ridiculously low prices—so now ‘is your \chance.’ In, FANCY ULSTERS and SACQUE CLOTHS; you can have your choice at large discounts, and in TWEEDS our values are of the vety*best. Our DRESS GOODS trade has been very large this season, owing to,the excellent value we have been giving; but’our néw reduced prices we expect to cause genuine rush,.. Kemember, our Stock is Fresh} and we are offering the most» Fashionable Trimmings at Large Discounts, and you only feed “see them to Mind just what will suit you: ee = t- We-are=to=the front with a Choice Stockof HAMBURG EMBROIDERIES and INSERTIONS, CASH’S FRILLINGS., EDGINGS of all kinds, and a, Stock of WHITE COTTONS — the best value we have ever offered. It Pays to buy your Dry Goods and Millinery at apo BEER BROS. WE OFFER: Better Value Than aM ie Ouse anada. IN sf OCK ; Ve BODIES ALL STYLES, A FULL AND COMPLETE STOOK OF CARRIAGE COODS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, +0: GENERAL HARDWARE and MILL SUPPLIES, NORTON & FENNELLE, City Hardware Store. : Charlettetown, March 5, 1888. a, Se DS Headquarters for Staple and Fancy Groceries, We Have Now on Hand a Very Large Stock of Apple, Corn, Tomatoes, French Peas, Sardines, " CANNED GOODS, in Peaches, Pine mg t x Tongue, Cured Tongue, Pea Soup, &c.,, &c. Salmon, Lobster, Corned Beef, Dried Beef, LEA-& PERRINS’ WORCESTER SAUCE, Tomato Sauce, Harvey's Sauce, Mushroom Cataup, Yorkshire Relish, Mangoe Chutney, Capers, Ess. Anchovies, China’ Say Olives, Curry Powder, Salad Oil, French Mustard, &c., &c. CROSSE & BLACKWELL'S MIXED PICKLES, Chow Chow, Onidns, Piccalilli and Pickled Walnuts. KEILLER'S MARMALADE, JAMS and JELLIES of all kinds. POTTED HAM, Devillléd Ham, Potted Tongue, LIEBEG’S EXT, MEAT, Fluid Beef, mt All Fresh, Good Stock. BHR § GOFrF, Queen and King Squares’ Stores. Feb. 9, 1888—oaw & wky ioe a. the Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance C0. 303 » $38,046,884.56 673,375.05 unary, 1887, a,” a 6 Assets Ist J . Assets in € he wee 505 This Company offers every advantage of the most undoubted security, liberal contacts, low rates, and ‘prompt payment of} ‘losses tothe insured. Policies‘issued for three years on Dwellings, Churches: etc,, at_reduced rates. LEONARD MORRIS, Agent, 5" & ; Summerside. February 11, 1888—3m 2aw pd EFS % .- a) -. R. R. FITZGERALD, Agent, Charlottetown. vierd eath ‘‘} but the second of the kings of united Italy, and his throne is in the eternal city of ‘}idng as ‘the’ British Queen. One’ of his Russian BEER & GOFF'S. ee of age, and was proclaimed King only -EDNESDAY, ——— — Living Monarchs of Europe. (From the New York Sun.) Queen Victoria now holds a place among the oldest sovereigns of Europe. In May of next Year she will be 70 years of age. She hasbeen on the throne for half a century. “She enjoys good health, and bids fair'to liv@and reign for many years yet. If she atteims the age Of her grandfather, GeorgeTH, shewill wield the sceptre (barring accidehts)up to the yéar 1901. If at that time hér'son, the Prince of Wales, becomes king, hé‘wWill have reached the ripe age of 60 yearsfand his tendency to baldness will doubtless Have becéme more marked than it is now. #" : . The new German Emperor, Frederick, is 7 years @f age; and his Empress, the daughter of Queen Victoria, is 48, Judg- ing from photographs, he does not closely resemble fis departed father in the face, but she ¥ery much like her mother. If Frederiék should live to be as old as his tler,: pérhaps he may, he will wear) 113 Crown (barring accidents) up tc the year | 1922. - Hisgilments dim his ;rospects, but, the Seotch Dr. Mackenzie may’ banish his ailments. @ ° ? The kingof the Belgians, Leopold II., is 53 years and if he should reign till he reaches théage at which his father died he will be king up to the year 1910. He has been on the throne nearly twenty-three years. The Emperor of Austria, Francis Joseph, is By old, and he has worn the Iin- rial er for forty years. His predeces- sor was his‘uncle; who abdicated the throne in his ‘when but 55 years’ of age, because “hié “was tired of the turmoil and trouble. neis’ Joseph is a polished holar, a/ linguist, an equestrian, an dmirer of Militiary pomp, and a charmer. He is héalthy, and bids fair to reign for a long: time yet (barring accidents. ) The King of Italy, Humberto I., is 44 old, atid has worn the crown since the of hig father, ten years ago. He is Ronie.' 1B % , ' : - : The Emperor of Russia, Alexander III., is 43 years old, and mounted the throne after the magrder of his father, seven years 0 4 The King of Denmark, Christian IX, is 70 years of fige, or'a year older than Queen Victoria, is the second oldest monarch in Europe. "He has wielded the sceptre for over a quarter of a century, or just half as daughters i#the wife of the “Czar, another of them is wife of the heir apparent to the British Crown, and his second son is King of Greece. The ‘King of Sweeden and Norway, Oscar II., is in his 60th year, and has reigned for sixteen years. He has favored some reforms. The King of Portugal, Louis I., is 50 years old, and is a man of enterprise and progress. ‘He has been for twenty-seven | yearsaking. ; The power and authority of the King of Spain, Alfonso XITf., who is not yet 2 years old, is limited by the regency of. his mamma. He never saw his royal sire. The King of Greece, or King of the Hel- lenes, Georgios I., is 43 years of age, and has been kinz fur a quarter of a century, or since he was 18, at which age he was elected to the Hellenic throne. He finds it a hard job'to’rule the modern Greeks or keep their favor. The sovereign or Sultan of Turkey, Ab- dul Hamid If, is 46 years old, and suc- ceeded ‘to the throne twelve years ago, when the majesty who ded him was deposed. He isthe twenty-eighth Sultan since the conquest of Constantinople by the Turks. ' The King of the Netherlands, William IL., is the oldest monarch in Europe, being now of the age of 71, and_ entered upon the fortieth year of his reign on the 17th of March last, which was St. Patrick’s Day, though he is a scion of the rayal house of Orange, Even in Holland the old monarch is merry at times. The King of Roumania, Carol I., is 49 seven )years ago, but before that time he had been ‘for fourteen years the domnul of his subjects. The King of Servia, Milan I., is 34, and was crowned only six years ago, but before that he had held the throne for fourteen years by election as Prince Obrenovic IV. He is the fourth! of his dynasty since Servia threw off the “Turkish yoke in 1829. His predecessor was assassinated. The reigning Prince of Montenegro is Nicholas I., who is’ 47 years old, and has reigned twenty-eight years. In Germany’there are three Kings and a Grand Duke, besides the Emperor of Ger- many andthe King of Prussia, who are one. These are the King of Bavaria, the King of Wurtemburg, the King of Saxony, and the reigning Grand Duke of Baden. There are in Eyrope two kingless coun- tries—France and Switzerland. Both of these republics seem to be able to get along and keep the peace without the guidance of Kings or Emperors. The President of the French Republic, M. Carnot, is 51 years ofage, and was elect- ed ‘to office in December last. He is a graduate of the Polytechnic School in Paris, and held various offices’ before his election as President. There ‘are oyer 38,000,000 pecple in the French Republic. , In the republic of Switzerland the high- st official of the Government is the Presi- ent of the Federal Coancil, who is elected by the Federal Assembly, holds office for the term of one year, and enjoys a salary of $3,000 perannum. The President for the present year is W *, Hertenstein. A Pre- sident is not « o re-election until a year after the « his term of office. i -<4b>- <a Hovse-KEEPERS atention is drawn to the advertisement of Jas. Paton & Co. They are APRIL 18 jonly on n do 'y as. likes, and that man is Prince Bismarck.}, | - Germany's New Empress. , WHAT GERMANY THINKS OF HER—AN ENG- LISHMAN’S VIEW OF IT. (From the Pali Mati Gazette.) To Englishmen, Scotchmen and Irish- men it must be especially interesting to know what canbe known regarding the siate of German feeling toward the English- woman who on Friday morning | became Empress of Germany. They know that she was by far the cleverest and one of the best of the Queen’s children, that she mar- ried an honorable and honored, man, whom it is believed she really loved aud who eraly, loved her. .Their famil has been happy and_ beautiful; h fluenee over him has been great, and it hms all-been for good. She gave her whole heart to the task she undertook; she became a German Princess in reality as well as in name. She shared to the full the sorrows and the joys, the aspirations and triumphs of the land of her adoption. She nursed the German wounded ‘herself, and taught these who tended thém the value of fresh air and of English cleanliness. The greatest hospital for the wounded who were sent back from the front during the Franco-German war was built under her direction. And when the survivors came back in triumph with laurel wreaths in their helmets and sprigs of laurel in the mouths of their rifles she came out te welcome them, and no heart beat higher than hers with pride and joy. For German art and science, for German learving and literature and music she has shown an equal interest and enthusiasm. Leopold, Von Ranke was her dear friend. All who worked disinterestedly, in what- ever sphere of- intellectual activity, were sure of her kindest recognition and woman- ly, unpatronizing sympathy. All this we knew in England as wellas they know it in Germany. ‘To-day she is their Empress. How do they feel toward her? Since I have been in Berlin I have met all sorts and conditions of Germans, near the throne and near the gutter—statesmen, otticers artists, Government offigials, So- ciulists, thinkers and poets. Some.of them are rily very reticent on this as on jall points connected with the Hohenzollern dynasty, or with politics generally. None of them would dare to express any opinion on such stibjects if he expected for one mo- ment that his name ‘would be published in such & connection. ‘The political interview- er ig at a discount in Germany, There is one man who can do and say as he The’ others, be they Princes or scavengers, must speak on political and dynastic ques- tions at least with bated breath. It is only because it is pretty well known how the wind of Bismarck’s opinions blows that- it is possible to hear what Germans think of the new Empress. Why do they not like her? Why does one heat so many’unkind things of her— things as unkind and ungenerous and un- just as a dear old German priest once com- plained to me that Luther had said of the Virgin Mary? “There are many reasons which might be given. If Bismarck -did not! say when she first arrived that, “‘ die kleine Waschfrau verdirbit die ganze Race,” others have said it. She..iz.an English Princess with a shrewd headand a brave heart. She holns her own and acts up to her ideals, Her presence is like a breath of fresh airin'the heated German atmos- phere, and Germans proverbially don’t like open ;windows: There is something of the same feeling against her among them that inspires a fire-eating Tory when he speaks evilof Mr. Gladstone. 1t is the old feeling against all those who have higher ideals, who at least. wish to breathe a purer air and live a nobler life, the feeling of those who stoned Stephen, who sawed Isaiah asinder. There isone point in,'the new Empresa’s principles and practice which is so especially obnoxious to German notions, and is so important im itself, that I shall confine myself to it, and tell what I hear and see with regard to this alone. The new Empress, then, has English ideas with re-} gard to the position of women, that is all; nothing more, than English ideas, so far as is known, nothing which, in the most con- ventional English household, would be con- sidered to savor of a woman’s rights propa- ganda. But for the Germans even this is tuo much, The German male is supreme. The woman is. not. even as the English- woman is. “They must toil and moil that the husband may take his ease in bis, inn, for there the most of his evenings are spent. She'is his slave, who must get ready his dinuer and look after his linen; She is too often a kind of lodging-house keeper to him whom he honors with the title of wife, and who is only too grateful to enjoy this dis- tinction. . Of course there are exceptions, noble and notable, and in other cases, there are happily modifications in the rigor and selfishness vf the male regime. But,the general tendency of German practice and theory is only too clearly such as 1 have described. Among the classes it takes the form of a slavery on the part of the wife to certain social duties and certain absurd rules of etiquette. She must slave to en- tertain and tobe entertained. She must not do any work with her own hands ; that would be unworthy of a grande dame. Intellectual and artistic interests are only permitted to her as subjects of social conversation. _ She must not take them too seriously. Her one great human link with her husband is ‘her children to whom he is usually passionately devoted. The new Empress has never learned to take this view of marriedlife. She remains an Englishwoman in this respect. The German men feel this, and are very appre- hensive of the force of her example when it will be given from the throne. say the German women themselves at pree- ent share in the ‘hostile feeling. But perhaps, if one considers the matter more closely aud in the light of past history, it is only in accordance with the nature of things that those who have the prospect of selling off the balance of theirlarge stock very cheap. Now is the time to purehase cheap goods in house furnishings. ap 4 4i eod deliverance should, spurn the hand which would loosen their chains, | been so since the beginning. It has often Indeed it is Strange to} VOL. 22.—-NO. 122. the women in Germany who are most un- kind and uiijust in their reflections on the Empress. Only to-night I heard one, ‘‘who ought to have known better,” say ‘If the*emperor had died at San Remo I hope-we should never, never, have allowed her to rettirn here.” The pretty daughter of a Berliner, whose public position I must not even indicate, expressed within one half-hour last afternoon two such coptra- dictory sentiments as these: 1. ‘ The Empress is far toc English in her social: ideas for me.” 2. ‘‘1 think on the whole Englishmen are much more considerate. to- wards ladies than Germans are. Germans are often very inconsiderate.” I must “end this longletter, As 1 write Germamsyare anxiously wondering how long their new Emperor will be spared to reign over them, for here there is no encouraging doubt in inen’s minds as to the nature of his disease. If public opinion is right as to this, by fear the Empress will be able to do, but little . by example and precept in behalf of her German sisteys. If their fears are idle (which God grant |!) she may yetdive to do wnoble werkd the cause ef women .in the fatherland, a work which will, perhaps, do moré..for.the well-being and for the permanence of the German nation than did ever Koniggratz or Sedan. CARRIAGES, &&. hdr T HAVE NOW(IN STOCK a nice lot of New and Second-Hand Single and Double-Seat Car- riages. Top Buggies in all the leading styles, Road and Track Sulkeys, Buggy he to suit any Carriage /Rubber Aprons, &c., which I will sell cheap for cash or good. Pea REPATRING, PAINTING and TRIMMING of eee attended to, and satisfaction guaranteed. Factory and Showrooms, UPPER PRINCE STREET, opposite New Baptist Church, J. J. SEAMAN. apli—dy 2aw: wky 3m House, Sign and Carriage Painting. SIGN BOARDS MADE AND LETTERED. —ALSO— PAPERING, WHITEWASHING AND COLORING. Good satisfaction given for little money. me acall at Cor. Grafton and Rochford Streets, : ROBERT STEELE, Ch’town, March 26, 1888, Pure, Reliable. NO\az=e ALUM, LIME, But Purest and Best Materials used in the manufacture of Woodill’s German Baking Powder. Give MORTGAGE SALE. To be soldat Public Auction, on FRIDAY, the Twentieth day of April, A. D. 1888, at Twelve o'clock, noon, at the Court House in Charlotte- town, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contéined in an Indenture of Mortgage, bearing date the Fourteenth day ef March, A. D. 1884. and made between Alexander Lenion, of Men- tague Bridge, of the one part, and Archibald Kennedy, Francis bogherty and Kiiza Dewar, of the other part: Al that tract, piece or parcel of Land situate, lying and being at Montague, on Township Number Fifty-two, in King’s County, bounded as follows, that is to say: UOcemmenciag on the west side of Main Street, at the north-east angle of Jand in possession of Archibald MeLaren, and running thence west along Archibald McLaren's boundary line for a distance of one hundred and ten feet, or until it meets iand in possession of John Annear; thence north along said John Annear’s east boundary line fora distance of fifty-five feet, or until it meets land in possession of John Dalziel Bell; thence east for a distance of one hundred and ten feet to Main Street ; thence south along said stwweet for a distance of fitty- three feet to the place of commencement. Also— Aibthat tract, piece or parcel of land situate ot Montague Bridge aforesaid, and bounded as fol- lows, that is to say: Commencing at the north- east anyle of a plot of land in possession of Char- lee). Poole, and ruvning from thence in a north- wardly ditection (along the west side of the street leading from Main Street to the new Gov ernment Wharf) for a distance of fifty feet ; thence at right angles westwardly one hundred feet ; thence south Pparalicl with the aforesaid street fifty feet, or until it meets the north boun- dary of land in possession of Charles D. Poole ; thence east along said poundary to the place of commencement, containing one-eighth of an acre, a little more-or less, Also—Ali that other tract, piece or parcel of land situate at Montague, Township Number Fifty-nine, and bounded as foliows:. Commencing on the south-western side of the rcad leading from the Ferry Road to Mon- tague Bridge, nthe western boundary of fifty acres how or formerly in possession of Augustine ©. McDonald ; thence south three degrees east along said boundary tw the rear boundary of farms fronting on that section of the Montague River; thence following said dine westwardly ten chains; thence north three degrees west to the Ferry Road; thence east along the same to a continuation of the east boundary of three and three-quarter acres sold to Hugh McPherson, and in the possession of Char- les D, Poole; tLence northwardly along the same to the Montague River Road, and thence south- eastwardly along the same tothe place of com- mencement, containing eighty acres and one quarter, a littie more or less, together with all houses, buildings, rights, members and appur- tenances thereuaco belonging.orin apywise ap- pertaining. Dated this Twentieth day of March, A. D. 1888 ARCHIBALD KENNEDY, FRANCIS DOGHERTY, ELIZA DEW AR, Mortgagee3. mch21—law tl sle (wed) “NOTICE. : A LL AMOUNTS due the estate of HA RRIS & |4\” STEWART must be paid at once to the | undersigned, at the seer of tae Londor House, | or they will be sued for. 4 wer F. W. MOORE, Assignee, Ch’town, March 29, 1838,