[KkKMS rive DoLLars a YEAR, NEW SERIES, ‘ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”-—"vriripss, _ Sg ne a —_ CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, AUGUSI 95, 1883, SINGLY Copies Two CENTS, VOL. 15,---NO. 82. fuk UVAILY KWXAMINER| iS ISSUED EVERY EVENING, By roe Examiner Poustisuine Company, ruum Ovrrics, Conner or WATER ND GREAT (FEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, y. EB. Rares oF Suesortrrion : Six Months, $2 50 three Months, 1 25 ih VLoat 0 50 m- Advertising at most moderate ratee, | Contracts may be made for monthly, | juarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- | ments, on application, eos i ALMANAC FOR AUCUST, i883. MOON 3 CHANGES, New Moon 2nd day, 9h, 13 7m., p. m. first Quarter, 10th day, 9a. 16.5m. p. m, Full Moon, 18th day, Sh. 41.4m., a. m. Last quarter 25th day, lh. 19.4m., a m. D 5 ; M ——— el —-| s WEEK Figes sot Moon) High | Days! ) aS : Dax ¢ irises |sets | rises ; water,len h, i { bh m |i ‘morn aft’n 1 Wednesday |4 47)7 25) 3 16) 9 52 2, luarsday | 49 2 + zi}10 82| 3. Friday SOL 22; 5 zlll 8 4|Saturday 51; 2L 6 Bljll 41/14 31 5 ounday 52 Ly) 7 35) us ru| 6, Monday 53} is 5 34 0 Loy 7| Tuesday 5a! 16, 9 37' O 47) $}Wednesday | 56; 15:10 37) t 21 y Thursday 67] 13)11 37) 1 69 10, Friday | 58} 12\ait 36) 2 39 11! Saturday " 10) 1 - 3 32\14 13 2) su 5 9} 2 30| 4 38 3 — Y al 73 265 53! 14 Tuesday 3; 6) 4 14) 7 9) 15 Wednesday 4) 4) 4 59, 8 12| 16 Thursday | 6 . 5 40) 9 | 17 Friday i 7 6 17; 9 s| 18\Saturday | 86 59| 6 51'10 30113 54 19/Sunday 9 57) 7 22:11 G6) 20! Monday | 1) 56! 7 53 11 47) 21 Tuesday 12, 54] 8 25 aft 26! 22/ Wed nesday 13) 52 8 54} 1 8] 23|Tharsday i4| 50| 9 38! 1 53) 24) Friday 15! 48/10 22) 2 46) 25' Saturday 17} 46°11 12] 3 Te 33 26 Sunday 18; 45) morn! 5; ae a a ; ; 6 41| 28) Tuesda 2), | 7 57) 29 Wednesday 22; 40) 2 10! 8 48 30) Thursday 23 37| 3 15, 9 31) 31| Friday [5 25/6 36|-4 20/10 9! -L. ARTHUR & CO., GENERAL Commission Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. —-—-—— Eggs and Produce a Specialty. Pe nae EOWARD T. RUSSEL & CO., GENERAL Commission Merchants, NQ, 284 STATE STREET, BOSTON. Particular attention given to the sale of Fish and Produce of all kinds, June 22, 1883. —6m GEORGE TWEEDY, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Notary Public, &c. OF FICE—West Side of Queen Street, Char- lottetown, next door to Stevenson's Tin Shop. July 25, 1883.—dy wkly 6m LNSURANCE OFFICE (ucen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. * Lancashire Insurance Company CAPITAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS lusarance effected On all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptly and equitably. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Agents. Office—South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Sept, 1h, 1882, JOHN MAGEACHERN, (Late of Italian Warchouse) AGENT FOB Royal Fire Insurance Company, of England, London & Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, of Engiand, City of London tire Insurance Co., of England, HAS REMOVED His Office to his New Building, Cor, Queen and King 88.—Up Stairs. Optown, Deo, 7, 87. Fv CV Grea. ~ Revois, R. OPOWYER, wot DEALER 18 PE, 1. PRODUGE, | 289, WATER STREET, SPRAMeRS ST. LAWRENCE AD Si. John’s, \ewfoundland. Capt. Edward English, a member of the firm. will give the strictest attention to coa- signments of Island produce, ce P. £. Island vessels for and to charter. July 30, 1883. NMicLEOD & MORSON Barristers & Attorneys-at-Law, SOLICITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, OFFICES : ceform Club Committee Rooms, Opposite Post Office, Charlottetown, P. E. Island, Merchants’ Bank of Halifax Building, Sum- merside, P, E. Ishand. MONEY TO LOAN, on good security, at moderate interest. Neri MeLeop. Nov. 24, ’82.—pres her SULLIVAN & MACNEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OF FICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. Ga Money to Loan, W. W. Scxuivan, Q. C. | Cusstzr B. Macwaiit. Jan. 16,83. Direct Steamer to London fy\HE Aalifax Steam Navigation Company (Limited) will despatch the FIRST- CLASS STEAMER ‘“SECEILY,” —FROM— Halifax to London, direct, About 10th September. THROUCH RATES FOR LOBSTERS, via P. B, I, Steam Navigation Company, W. A. O. Morson. From Charlottetown and all Sta- tions on the P. EK. L. Railway. —TO— London, Paris and Hamburg. The “Sicily” has a speed of twelve knots and is expected to make the passage in 9} days. Bills of Lading will be given from any Station on the P. E- I. Railway, or at Char- lottetown. Apply for ali particulars to Jos, Woot, Secretary Halifax Steam Navigation Company (Limited), 58 Bedford Row, Hali- fax, or to WM. H. SHANKS, Agent, Charlottetown, P. E.I, August 13, 1883. STANDARD LIFE ASSURANCE 00. PP. i. ISLAND Commision ant Geil Merchant 5b0@mM Navigation Go'y, | PRINCESS OF WALES. SUMMER ARRANGEMEN’, NOVA SCOTIA. Leave Charlottetown for Pictou Landing ‘every Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and \Saturday mornings, at 7 o'clock, connecting | there with the Train for Halifax. Returning lo , Charlottetown on Monday, Wednesday Friday ‘and Saturday, about 2 p. m., on arrival of Train from Halifax, | Leave Pictou Landing for Georgetown on | Thursday, on arrival of train at 2 p.m. | Leave Georgetown for Pictou Landing every Friday morning, at 5 a.m. | NEW BRUNSWICK. CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES. | Leave Summerside every day (Sunday ,excepted) on arriva; of Train from Char- jlottetown, connecting at Shediac with | Treles for each of the above named places ; ‘and at St. John, with steamers of the Interna- tional Company and Railway for Portland and , Boston, Also leave Charlottetown for Sum- | maraide every Monday morning at 1 o'clock, Returning, leave Shediac every day (Sundays ‘excepted) on arrival of day train from bt, | John, tor Summerside, connecting there with | Train for Charlottetown, Also leave Sum- jmerside fur Charlottetowo every Saturday evening, about 5 o’clock, By order, F. W. HALES, Charlottetown, May 15, 1883. Secretary. Scott BOSTON. STEAMERS. STEAMERS: Carroll, 879 tons, Capt. Brown, Worcester, 865 tons, Capt, Blankenship at. NE of the above FIRST-CLASS STEAM. ERS will leave Charlottetown for Boston EVERY = tf. * THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AT 5 P.M. PASSENGERS will find this the Cheapest and most pleasant trip to Boston. Accommo- dations on both steamers are splendid. CARVELL BR0S., AGENTS. Ch’town, May 17, 1883.~-pat her sj STEAMER T the 57th Annual General Meeting of | the Standard Life Assurance Company, heid at Edinburgh on ‘Tuesday, the 24th of April, 1883, the following results for the year ended 15th November, 1883, . were re- ported :— 3,038 new proposals for life as- surance were received the year for $ 9,754,085 33 2,561 proposals were accepted, assuring 7,239,048 13 The total existing assurances in force at 15th November, 1882, amounted to (Of which $7.753,031.15 was reassured with other offices) The claims by death which arose during the year amount- ed, includmg bonus addi- tions, to The annual revenue amounted at 15th November, 1882, to 4,267,546 00 The invested funds at same date amounted to 29,503,416 00 1,062,648 35 Being an increase during the year of JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown. $6,936,302 91 2,462,226 59 THOMAS KERR, Inspector of Agencies, Ch’town, August 3, 1883. FOR SALE. ry HE Subscriber offers for sale the following properties:—. All the western moiety of those beautiful grounds adjoining the eastern boundary of the Hon. Judge Young’s property, compris- iog Town Lots ‘Nos. 26 and 7l, in 6th 100, Charlottetown, and consisting of a fine old garden and lawn. --ALSO— A Building Lot, 75 feet Square, on Orlebar Street, newr b usten Street. Also, Reyaliy Lots Nos, 385 and 429 (12 acres each) w the Eastern Royalty of Char-| lottetown. BENJ, DESBRISAY., + Judy 23,~2w 2aw “HEATHER BELLE,” Summer Arrangement, 1883. N and after Tuesday, July 24th, the new steamer ‘‘Heather Belle,’’ Hugh McLean, master, will run as follows:— Every Tuesday morning at four o’clock, will leave Charlottetown for Orwell Brush Wharf, leaving Orwell Brush Wharf, at seven a. m,, tor Charlottetown, calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves, leave Charlottetown at 3p. m., for Halli- day’s China Point and Krush Wharves, where she yu remain over night. Wednesday, will leave Brish Wharf for Charlottetown, at seven a. m., calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves, leaving Charlottetown at thr In., to return, remaining at Brushy rf over nigh t. sai 3 Thursday, will leave Brush Wharf for Char- lottetown, at seven a. m., calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves, leaving Charlottetown at three p. m. to return, leaving Brush Wharf about six p. m. for Charlottetown. Friday, will leave Charlottetown for Crapaud at four a. m., leaving Crapaud at seven a. m. for Charlottetown, leaving Char- lottetown at three p. m. for Crapand, remaining there over night. Saturday, will leave Crapaud at seven a. m. for Charlottetown, leaving Charlottetown atone o'clock p. m. for Crapaud and re- turning to Charlottetown from Crapaud same evening. FARES— Cabin, to and. from Orwell, and Wharves, 30 cents; deck, 20 cents, Cabin, to and from Crapaud, 40 cents;deck 30 cents. Exeursion Retarn Tickets will be issued from Charlottetown to Orwell every Thursday / evening at one first-c)::3 fare. Also, Excur- ‘sion turn ‘Ti..ets will te issued ‘Saturday to Craj aud at one first-class fare. JOHN HUGHES, Agent, Ch’tuin, July 25, 1883. {Raw wkly 3m pres ber pat era Union. | President—Mrs. Hensley. | Viee-President— Mrs. Kennedy. ' $Seeretary—Mrs. D. McRae. Treasurer--Mrsa. Lewis. TO LOBSTER PAEKERS. International Series Lesson; ‘‘As for me aud my house, we will serve the Lord,’ Joshua, xxiv. 15. , Joshua had taken the right road at the beginning, and now was about to reap the benefits. It was not the easiest life he ‘chose; it was a terrible incessant conflict to put the Israelites in possession of the inher- itance given them by the Lord. The only satisfaction he had was the knowledge that he was doing the right and that the end _wovld be peace. Faithful, couraegous Joshua, nobly have you done your part. , Now, you may sheathe your sword, and close your eyes to the distressing scenes - the battlefield. _ Summon once more the ia, Gallaghan, Commander, host of . Israel, give your parting counsel, due here the early part of next week, and take your ever'asting, well-earned rest. Joshua, with his predecessor, had been Will Sail for Liverpool, direct, about taught of the Lord. He saw the trouble the sith August, that was to overtake that rebellious people, forwarns them, and tells them that they AND WILL Lobsters or have already begun a conrse that wovld Canned Goo?s, end in destruction. Their idils must be Returning will sail from surrendered, for idolatry had even now Other beset them, even’ after all their sulemn Liverpool for Charlottetown about the 1st October. vows to walk in the fear of the Lord. For Freight apply to Jew - The well-known Clipper Brig -Commencing Wednesday, 16th May,1883, 74 si 55 eee TA | j 299 tops Register, classed 9 years A at Lloyds, Carry Joshua could do no more. He had donz his duty; example and precept had -been given tnem and now with his last warning he receives his reward. prayed, but our happiness at last does not depend upon that, PEAKE BROS. & CQ. Ch’town, Ang. 17, 1x83.~—3aw i ee - same messsge of reconciliation and peace to . all who will accept. Liverpool tO Charlottetown blessed voice, **Well done, good and faith- ful servant, enter into the joy of your Lord.” ‘men will follow or not. ‘‘As for me and my house we will serve the Lord.” And |may the God of all mercy open the eyes of | those who are breaking His laWs day by day, to see that the way of transgressefs ends in death. ft It is not worth while to say the state i ‘right to put a tax on license on a breach of the Ten Commandments [ must stand’ an _avowed opposent of the licensing of a | business which more than any other single cause, leads man to violate the laws of God and man.—Chicago Interior. FALL TRIP, 1883. THE CLIPPER BARQUE What is the wealth of any land? If yon would add to the wealth of England what ‘WILLIAM OWEN,” Al 9 years at Eoglish Lloyds, ANGUS BROWN, Commander, Will be on the Berth at Liverpool On or About the 25th August. \in from the expenditure and loss of capital | jused to spread and consume that which! | destroys the life and intellect, and strength | ‘of the men of England. Those millions | ‘represent the impoverishment of this: country. The best capital in this country | ‘are its men and women, and drink is des-; ,troying that capital. Yesif you wish to’ : ‘make your land wealthy, and with it the and Sail Ol] the 10th September | heavenly land, save the real capital of this ’ | country. We ought to fill this Island with al —_-— mighty multitude of men and women true to be followed by the Clipper Barque | to each other in a comradeship of goodress 'and.of love; strong te work; clear headed; Women’s Christian Temperance | with our establishment in Tunisia, usurp our preponderancy in Egypt, exeite egainst ‘deavor to 'work of Suez. We have reason to @enounce and stigmatize the ill-concealed ‘jealonsy, the devouring eupidity, the bad faith of Ere we © eugs lay our armor by we would fain see ‘those /S!hcerity. ‘results for which have Jabored and : can hoe A aces ae ‘war with Eugland would be the only war Believing that the Which could provuke a semblance of en- battle has been fought that secnres our | final rest, and going forth to proclaim that, We too shall hear the! , , thoy ‘ ‘Cabivet naivraily tarns where it hopes, per- (haps, the similarity of interests at, stake Let our determination be whether | ™4Y unite two mations which are threaten- ed by the same perils, cannot destroy the liquor traffic ; until [\/" can satisfy my conscience that it is ever | * | Sim usly with the British regi . |ab Alexandria, Alexandria wouldpos have }been burned by Arabi’s cut-thfoats, and ‘ England wouldp aie jatress of the ‘valley of the ; Pee rade ai at ;same time to the wealth of Heaven—and | ‘human effort is most noble when both thege, & t e ? , 59% Tons Register, Coppered and Cnet Sash oa? Eogtied and itd y be _. - ~ lyot frightened at a message from Betiin, 4 4 , ‘ ‘millions, for example that the excise brings | When it just then pleased Bismarck that 'England should do something which might Angiophobia in France. INTENSE ANTAGONISM OF THE PEOPLE ENGLAND, TO | } | The Freuch republican press has no eon- ‘fidence in the results of that Anglo-French jalliance, which was the aim of the old \“‘opportunist. clan’s’ policy. ‘Since. we wade up our old quarrel,” says the | Beenement, *‘we have rendered incompar- lable services to Engiavd. In the Crimean ‘war we saved her from a crushing defeat .and a humiliating peace. Without our in- ‘tervention at Inkermann her soldiers, to | the last man would have been cut to pieces. /Yet what has England done for ms im re- turn? She made use of the treaty,in 1860, the fruit of the Eaperor’s credulity and ‘complaisance, to despoil our industry and ,our commerce. In Mexico she left us. shamelessly in’ the lurch, and through the d.sasters of 1870 ‘she remained stoically peutral, gloat- ‘ing, doubtless, over the mutilation of ‘Vrance. Tweive years have elapsed since jthen, and during that time what has she ‘done for ns, who had done so much for ther? Nothing, save it be to speculate’ on the difficalties of our situation, interfere us the Government of .Madag-scar, en- undermine or ruin our great those who have never béen for us‘other than da: gerous neighbors ov alles without This is the opmicn of nine- tenths of the French people, for whem thusiasm, but so does not think the French Government, Isolated as her rulers feel france is, dreading the monarchical coal- ition of the Continental powens, the present and to this must be ‘ascribed the concessions which the Ministry mo matter who presides, is also disposed to ‘make, whenever the Chamber will consent. i It is thought-not quite fair to lay on: \ ty ists truckling to England the blam of ce’s dimivished prestige in Egypt, Mf M. Gambetta had been Jistened to, if .M. had been allowed his way, a ision would have been } . opportunists who were responsible for that blunder, and if it depended upon them, [aly iwould be protéctress of Tunisia, Cochin China would be abandoned to the Annzmi- ‘should you do? Hf yon should add at the | ®* pevding its eccrpatien hy sume other nationality, and Madagascar wou! | be given over to the English. No! the lrenechdid not go to Egypt because M. de Freyoinet embroil the two western nitions, but’ not because such was the policy of the oppor- tunists, Sull M. Gambetta was, and M. Ferry is, a firm believer in an Anglo- French alliance, and it is to this persuasion that must be attribed M. Waddington’s appointmen! to the Embassy to the Court of St. James, where, as the Hrenement above quoted observes, ‘‘he will not be on a bed of roses,’’— Paris Letter in New York Times. — 2 em | Experiments in Raising Oata. 66 N 99 powerful handed; reverencing one another;/ A correspondent of the Indiana Farmer, A | with all their powers developed; ardent and | writing on the above subject, says:—“This > | gentle alike in the use of their powers; year we tried three plans with this crop. : . ‘courageous, with other courage than that of |[n one lot the ground was broken up with 420 Tops iesiet =, Gopnered sme r. Jageed | the brute, with the courage of moral self-'a good Seedling plough. The ois were 2 27 7 | testrgint; ready to work at any moment, ! sown broadcast at the rate of two bushels with joy in their labor ready, as ready to per acre, and then well harrowed. On an- play, for noble play is the crown and glory | other lot the oats were sown on corn stubble jof noble work... And what material! No ground, and then the ground was broken race is finer, more capable, more ardent in’ up by runnisg a walking cultivator through For Freight or Passage, apply in London the midst of difficulties than the English; the land, breaking up the sage ine The above vessel will receive goods for adjacent Ports. to JOHN PITCAIRN & SONS, 16 Great 'no race will give back so much fruit to’ after which che ground was well harro W cester Street; in Liverpool, to those who save it, nor do so much for man! Op the third ony a common shovel plot PITCAIRN BROTHERS, 51 South John and for God. This is the wealth of this!was used in breaking up. Then the oats Ch'town, July 26, 18£3,—3wk 3aw tu tb sa JUMPED INTO THE Haxson.—A deserter (from a ship at St John was, about two |o’cluck on the afternvon of the 220d inst., | being conveyed back to his vessel in a beat | when he jumped overboard, but was quickly ‘caught hold of by his captors, who pnt a | rope round his waist and hauled him along for some distance. He was. soon quite willing to be released from his unenviable _position and taken on board the boat again ERSONS indebted to the undersigned will when he was conveyed t. his veesel, please note that it is necessary for a) —— : settlement of secounis in full, | TH Worst cases of weakness, exhuastion, Those who bave not the cash at hand cap ere » and all moana. and os : ss the generative organs can cured by Mack’s farwsed negotiable paper at ninety Gays. Sas Medicine. Sold in Charlottetown J D. McLBOD, this, it willtake away that which at every [point blocks the way, which prevents all F AT HERR N G effort of themselves or others having any’ ® result. It will clear the way. Therefore I ' ; intellivent, who are moderate, who are BARRELS, in Wholes, Halves and yourselves. wealth to this cauntry, who’ Quarters) for ele By (desire to be the wealth which God will! Ch'town, Aug, 17, 1883.—2w |yourselves together for this work, We’ ———~ | might conceive a time when men might ST PETERS SCHOOLS 2" moderation as their right, but not a / a : diseased with intemperance to the very marrow of its bones. Now there is bat one ithing to do to save the lost when Gud ‘calls on us, for the sake of saving the wel- On Monday, - September 10th: fire of the country, for the sake of bring- eee ‘up your will; it is to abstain tetally from > HIMES VFR Ss ‘the evil thing. In the name of God, clear Subjects taught—English, Classics, Mathe- | ¢},. way.— Extraet of Sermon by Re. 8. Applications for Boys’ School should be — 4)’, . muda W. B. King, St. Peter's Clergy preached in Ce econ, House; for Girls’ School to Miss Harnis, | Aug. 7.—tu th sa pat mo we fr tl Sept 10, ‘(NOTIGE. gastos vt woh To Whom it may Concern. \willdo all this for it; but it will do! ‘say unto you who have the means, who are) 100 D. SMALL. | gather into His garner at the close, band’ now not when the land is defiled and ‘WILL RE-OPEN | ing wealth to God’s kingdom: It is to give maties French, German, etc. | Brooke, M. A.*A., Rloomsbury, Engiand, Pownal Street. (at Apotbecaries Hall, Sew a vertisement in Chitown, Aug 2, 1888—2W wily lip ‘wadther Whumn, foug 20 lw whly Street, or here to country. Let it no longer be! were sown broadcast and well harrowed. : . cast to the dogs, I do not say/Of the three pieces, the first, which was Lie c, OW EN, | that temperance or total abstinence broken by the breaking plough, was the lightest considerably se. Those that were put in with the shovel plough and then harrowed in were next best, while those that were first sown on corn land and then cultivated in and harrowed down were ton- siderably the best. I have been trying for three years to determine which was the best way of putting in this crop, and have concluded that I can get the best results by sowing the oats broadcast, at the rate of iwo bushels per acre, and then cultivating them in with a good walking cultivator, and then harrowing down will aud rolling I had always been vsed to thoroughly break- ing the sci! with a turning plough, and then sowing broadcast, and harrowing and rolling, and am convinced now, after three yeers’ eXperimenting. that cultivating them isin tuuch ibe best plan, besides being the quickest apd most economical.” ma. . Capt. Rhodes was at Niagara Falls all day Mouday, but did nothing «xcept talk. He did not snd bis eand bag armour through, but wall send a 65 pound dog through, be sil apparatus, and wiil thereupon be ar d tor cruelty to animals The pohee were cOking for him but as he is registered at several hotels, aud bas been hovering between the Falls and Suspension Bridge, they did not catch him. An old scow 30 ft, x 12 ft. is being converted into a 66 X 16 ft. bout, to be built nearly like the ‘‘Maid of the mist.” It will be sent through the rapids with no one abourd as soon 28 completed. Capt. Kh des wants t» go, but av a weeting on Mouday the pre- jectors refused to have anything te do with him. Rhodes teld « Toronto Glebe cortes- pondent that he would make the attempt next Sunday, He teils coptradictory stories, and little reliance can be phived uyon what he says, ‘ eae tall ae Siege , ge a Sr. ee | seit aig MMSE BGI bsp stab