Public, may speak ada ) to advise the gen ee eee gaago meaty free.”— Evriribes. THE DAILY EXAMINER. SINGLE Copies Two CENT VOL. 23.—NO. 22. 7 - : aemnin eS Perms:—Five DouLars a YEAR, * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having Y 7 y YyNQY) “ce NEW SERIES. “~_ ~ ‘ - . + e Che Daily Examiner | smstoayenigty (L000. SPRING ARRIVALS. 1888. The Examinor Publishing Go. sama From their office, corner of Water and Great (leorge Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. ” s "5 —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— Cr. Six months seset aces Settee eee eeeeee . $2.50 CAMIRON BLO Thitee months............ mariage e pence. ae 0 et Ge EN. ona cocoec cove ‘ 50 . ee ma tay VAREFULLY SELECTED NOVELTIES IN SPRING GOODS are now opening up in Advertising st moderate rates, all Departments, especial attention being directed to the following :— re ge 0 — be made for monthly, quar- C terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisement j i ing my ee y s, ustom Tailoring Department. For those who want a Suit made to order, we have in stock a large and beautiful assort- ment of Foreign and Domestic Fabrics, Scotch, West of England and frish TWEEDS, ALMANAC FOR JUNE, 1888, BROADCLOT S and DOESKINS, WORSTEDS, Plain sat Fancy OVERCOATINGS. SUITS Cut, Trimmed and Finished in the height of style. MOON'S CHANGES. W ’ , ‘ . en g Last Quarter Ist day, Sh., 40.9m., a.m., S.W. 5 Ready made Clothing Department. New Moon 9th day, 0h, 21.5m. p.m., 38. PLAIN AND FANCY TWEED AND WORSTED SUITS, Fashionable First Quarter 17th day, 2h., 37.2., a. m., S.E. | Patterns and Style. Full Moon 25rd day, 5h., 55.0m., p.m., N. E. . y below horizon.) Childrens’, Boys’ and Youths’ Department. zast Quarter, 30th day, llh., 40.1m., p.m., E. : : a ts : 2 voter rie READYMADE CLOTHING, in Suits, two and three pieces, Knickerbocker, D iat, onimeeee Sun ‘Sun | Moon! High! Day’s Long and Short Pants. Mi ’ ““*' rises|sets ; rises | water} len’h Hat and Cap Department cunannieibinnantinemmmamatan seoithenesiatsilbniinansiiadeelianinetanatiedeas oh e 1 Friday 4 7 , a 0 46] 4 11 #. A Large and Varied Stock of HARD and SOFT HATS, of English and American 2|Saturday 17) 39) 1 13} 519 21 manufacture, in the Latest Spring Styles. 3 Sunday | 36; 39) 1 40) 6 25) 2& T ail 4|Monday | 16| 40] 1 59] 7 241 95 Neckwear Department. : ee 744 7 a 2 a ~ a A Large and Choice Lot of NECKWEAR TIES, Nobby Patterns and Styles, from one of = Thureda | 15 43| 3 19| . 33 29 the best New York Houses. Best brands of COLLARS, American and Canadian. Entire 8! Friday ay | v4! 4a! 3 a3lto lat -90 Stock of FURNISHINGS suitable for any trade. CALL AND SEE, 9| Saturday 14; 45) 4 18/10 45) 31 10)Sunday 14! 46] 5 OjLt 32} 32 B. S. DAVIES & CO., 11 Monday 14) 47) 5 48/11 59) 32] May 8, 1888, CAMERON BLOCK, 12) Tuesday | 14) 47] 6 44|morn| 33 13) Wednesday ! 14} 47) 7 46) 0 36) 33 14! Thus sday | 34] 48! 851/117] 34 = 15) Friday | 13} 48/10 0] 2 0} 34 i6'S sturday 13) 48\il 10; 2 47} 35 a : 17 | San lay } 13) 48laft 22) 3 48) 35 i8| Monday | 137 48) 134)5 O| 35 8) Puesday | 13) 48) 2 54) 6 20) 35 &| Wednesday | 13} 48) 4 6/7 34] 35 + 2i | Thursday |} 13) 48) 5 23) 8 34) 35 22) Friday 14} 49) 6 37| 9 27| 35 —_—_—_0-——_-—- — 23| Saturday 14, 49) 7 45/10 15) 35 ; 24 Sunday 14; 49 8 44/11 OF 34 25| Monday 15} 49) 9 33/11 45) 34 1 Ib. 28 cent Tea 26) Tues lay 15} 49/10 l3jaft 2s; 34 > 27 Wednes lay 15, 48/10 47; 1 | 33 ANP All for 40 Cents. 23; Thursday | 16) 43/11 15) 1 50; a3 a 1 ; 29' Priday } 16) 43/11 40) 2 33) 32 i 2dC. Milk Dish, 30 | Saturday 4 16} 48 morn} 3 17 1532 30; i ' | | y : ———— — AVING bought a large quantity of MILK PANS at a very DR. KELLY ‘| low figure, we want to work them off, and therefore offer JK. ; this Special Bargain to our customers and friends, aid > 4 Ss + Phy sician and Nurgeon, We also want to introduce our new 28 CENT TEA, which wei have just received from London, G. B., knowing that it is extra . . ? . ? 2 , - OFrFrice: good value, and if once tried, we will have your trade in future. UPFER QUEEN STREET, EGG*.— We want good fresh Eggs, and to customers bring- ones S. 8 | Eggs, Fvur Doors Above Apothecaries’ Hall. ing them direct to our Store, we will allow One Cent per Dozen Ch town, March 29, 1888—d 3meod wky over the Highest Cash Price, D. A. MACKINNON, L.L.B., BEER & GOFE 9 Attoraey, Solcitar, Notary Public, & See Re } WUllv ; ’ 3! June 7, 1888—oaw & wky HAS OFENED HIS : . ena ays — ee ae ee ee Law Office in Georgetown,| ; ¥ ; where he will attend to professional work, | “ ° and loan money on Real Estate. 2 Oveniient — Hardw Carri Good 74 'Hardware, Carriage Goods, ——AND—— B5-i3-5-T-O-N SUMMER ARRt YGENMEN — ee ee THE PALACE STEAMERS oF THE INTERNAT OnAL S.S. CO. Leave St. Jo!» fer Boston, via Eastport and Port- iand, every sionday, Wednesday and Friday, at 7.25 a. ™. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd Class ; $9.50, lst ciass. For tickets aad other infermatioa apply to G. A S'tARP, F. W. HALES, P.. 8h. Bon P. & LL Steam Nav, Co. or to your nearest Vicket Agent. May 7, }-°8—eod wk) GEORGE MUSGRAVE _ AMES A. MORRISON. MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention, Rererences: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; George Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown. WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS, 71 Kas? Cuzap AND 9 & 14 Mrncrne Lane, LONDON, ENGLAND. Repres sated in Canada by. Morrison & Moeserave, Halifax, Oct. 24, 1837-- CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1888. THE race Sal —AT THE— LONDOA HOUSE - +o Is Still Going On. Many Fine ‘Grades of Goods, LARGE DISCOUNTS, And every effort made to meet the require- ments of CASH BUYERS. F. W. MOORE, Assignee of Harris & Stewart. Ch town, March 2, 1888. Livery and Exchange Stables, (Opposite St. Dunstan’s Cathedral, ) GREAT GEORGE STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. EK, L. — ee P. P. GILLIS, - - PROPRIETOR. ~— ——— Hoyses, Coaches, Buggies, Baronches and open Wagons on hire daily at ail hours. Telephone to all parts of the city. mayl0—3m MR. 8. N. EARLE, Teacher of Piano and Organ, WEST STREET, Charlottetown, - - P. E. Island. GUMMER CLASSES will commence May Ist, ? when Mr. Karle will be glad to receive a few pupils in place of some who do not remain in town during the summer. Having resigned his position in St. Paul’s Chureh, Mr. Karle is open toan engagement as 0: t or Trainer of a Choir. ‘Terms—Ten Dollars per quarter, hour lessons Five Dollars per quarter, half hour lessons. Special attention given to young ladies from the country. 2aw (mon & thur)—apt6 RARE OyPORTUNITY. ILL SUPPLIE Paints, Oils, Varnishes, &c. — —_ ON HAND AND ARRIVING—A FULL STOCK OF THE FAMOUS GOODHUE LEATHER BELTING. NORTON & FENNELL. May 29, 1888- 2aw & wky CHARLOTTETOWN. REID sells Suits of such solid good Tweed, One Suit in the year is all that you need ; Elegant patterns, with trimmings to match, ALL WOOL, Just the thing for the Man, the Youth, or the Boy at school. (SHLNCTEHD. TRYON TWh —-—0 ee There are Suits for the Blacksmith or Mason by trade ; For the men at the Waterworks no better are made ; For the Carpenter, Shoemaker or Painter as well ; For all sorts of trades those Suits we do sell. For Suits that are strong and Suits that are nice, And Suits that the poor man can reach at a price ; For Boys that are rough on their knees and the seat, We say it, maintain it, those Suits can’t be beat. Now don't think I ’m blowing when you're singing this song, But come, TRY-ON a Suit, and that before long ; They are all that we say ; twice as much and far more ; To be had of J. D. RELD ONLY at the Tryon Woolen Mills Store. Cameron Block, June 1, 1888—eod & wky AFirst-Class Family Resid ence Outbuildings, Garden, Vinery, Or- chard, Pasture Lots, &c. _— HE Subscriber offers for sale his well-known Residence, situate on Lot No. 4, in the Roy- alty of Charlottetown, containing over 7 acres. BWELLING. The Dwelling House is very commodious, with lofty rooms, and contains Dining and Drawing Rooms. Breakfast Room and Office, large Hall, eight Bedrooms, Kitchen, Pantry and Scullery. The Cellar (the full size of House and Kitchen) igs seven feet deep, dry, and plastered overhead. A Hot Water Apparatus has just been put in, which warms Hall, Kitchen and five Bedrooms, A never-failing Well of excellent water has recently been fitted with a new Force Pump. The House is substantially built, easily warmed in winter, and as good as new, OUTBUILDINGS. The Outbuildings comprise Barn and Stable, Hay Barn, Coach House, Joiner’s Shop, Tool- house, Granary, Root House, 'ce House, &c. LANDS. A well stocked Fruit and Kitchen Garden of half an acre, under fence; a Vinery capable of producing 300 lbs. of the choicest Grapes; an |Orchard of 1} acres, stocked with the best | varieties of Apples, Pears and Plums, and thor- ‘oughly drained with drain pipe; two Pasture Lots in a good state of cultivation, containing aver 4} acres. This desirable Property is admirably suited as a residence for a professional man, having all the advantages of pure air, freedom from dust, and not amenable to city taxes, yet within ten minutes’ walk of the business part of the city. For further particulars apply to WHILLIAM Dopp, Kse., Charlottetown, or to the owner, WM. HEARD The Cedars, April 6, 1888—2aw “ALL RICHT.” ALL RIGHT will be at Charlottetown from Monday afternoon till Wednesday morning, and fram Thursday at noon till Saturday morn- ‘ing of each week; and at Summerside from ‘Saturday noon until Monday at noon of each week. NEWTON LEE. June 1, 1888. FOR SALE, Opposite Boyles Tannery, Sprivg Park Road, A TWO-TENEMENT HOUSE, part of the Estate of the late Malcolm Livingstone, with the land belonging thereto, extending back | about 100 feet. If not sold privately before the ena of June, it will then be sold by Public Auc- ‘tion, of which due notice will be given. For further information apply to GEORGE SCANTLEBURY, CHARLES HEARTZ, Executors. Or ju4—2aw tisle PIANO, ORGAN, SINGING. Voice Culture a Specialty. —— ME: J.D. MARTIN, Organist and Choirmaster in St. Paul’s Church, is now prepared to receive Pupils in the above branches of Musical Study. Ia addition to the above, Mr. Martin in tends forming CLASS FOR LADIES. ' ter tc., ly at Residence, FITZROY ERENT. oe 6 TR. C. .P. FLETCHER, Queen ‘STREET, or to MR. Street. lyr dy eod -mayd at an early date a SINGING THE TEA TABLE. A Collection of Interesting Items for Dessert. Thirty years ago there was a tremendous contest, which was felt over almost all of Europe, over the Jewish child Mortara, whom the archbishop of Bologna claimed as the property of the Roman Catholic Church, on the ground that he had been baptized by aserving maid. The church prevailed and took the boy from his parents. He has now reappeared as an ascetic monk of extraordinary eloquence, learning and fervor, and has been preaching to great audiences hear Madrid, The queen and court have subscribed to help the convent chapel he has built in the Basque high- lands. He is called Father Mortara. He is a canon of the Order of Saint Augustin, and among other accomplishments he speaks twenty-two languages. An Albany newspaper says that there are families ig that town who have got the art of keeping up appearances reduced to a science. When they want to make their neighbors’ think that they have gone into the country they are not content with the old plan of shutting the front blinds and living inthe back of the house. They leave their,newspapers on the front piazza, apparently neglected; but they take them in at night and read them, at, the same time supplying the piazza with old papers for the next day's masquerade. A valuable archeological discovery has been lately made in the Azamgarh district in the shape of a copper plate recording in later Gupta characters the grant by King Harshavardhana, of Stanisvara, of a village to several Brahmins, for the spiritual wel- fare of his parents and elder brother. The historical value of the record is that it gives in detail the genealogy of King Harshavar- dhana, who reigned from A. D. 618 to 642 ver the greater part of Northern India, including Kashmir and Nepal, and whose court was visited at Kanauj by the Chinese Buddhist pilgrim Kiuen Kiangin, A. D., 637. The plate has been purchased by the British Government, and deposited in the provincial museum at Lucknow. They have had the jubilee fever very stron) in New Zealand. The Herald of that colony contains abundant evidence of the fact. Here is one advertisement :— ‘*Wanted—Two jubilee ladies want two jubilee husbands. Apply 25 Queen Street.” Here is another : ‘*‘ Wanted—Jubilee wives, husbands, housemaids, waitresses, house- keepers, barmaids and general servants,can be had for the asking. A. McLeod, 25 Queen Street.” Bennettsville, Ind., holds within its con- fines a remarkable freak. The wonder is Henry Luegeman. Three years ago, dur- ing a storm, he was engaged in gathering tanbark when the tree from which he was taking it was struck by lightning. Luege- man received a severe shock. It trans- formed him ,into a genuine electric man. Any one who shakes hands with Luegeman now receives a severe shock. By passing the blade of a knife between his thumb and finger during the progress of a storm he charges the metal so strongly that heavy weights can be lifted. When flies light upon him they drop dead, and when he is in a dark room sparks flash from his flesh, and his eyes shine like incandescent lights. Whenever a storm approaches Luegeman becomes highly charged with electricity, and it is dangerous to touch him. He claims to feel no inconvenience, except that he will go near no moving locomotive for fear of being drawn under it and killed. According to Kahlow’s, recent experi- ments at Hamburg have proved it possible to make a gun-powder which will produce little or no smoke when fired and still be as serviceable in all other respects as the present smoke-producing?gun-powder, By deughter in jewels, laces, or whatever seems best. We have had the good sense to abjure the English wedding favors made of white satin ribbon and artificial flowers, sume for horses’ cars and servants’ coats. A writer in the British Medical Journal says:—Some years since, when on duty at recruiting stations in the north of England, I took observations on the great amount of disease and loss of teeth existing among the class of men who offered themselves. it became a cause of reflection of itself in great numbers... As far as inquiries went I was led to trace it to the working classes in the manufacturing towns, and this went on all through the day, whether with food or not. In-fact, instead of 5 o'clock tea being the invention of the upper classes, it was found to exist to an injurious extent in the working classes long before that time. Tea seems to have a peculiar tendency to cause hyperzemia in the tooth sacs, leading to in- flammation, and eventually, abscess of the fang, with, of course, dentralia at every stage. Whether this special tendency was due to theine, it is not possible for me to say. {t would be curious to know if medi- cal men, practicing in such manufacturing districts, had observed the deterioration of teeth to be coincident with tea drinking. The latest fashion in note paper is Galled the Great Scott. It folds up into a small space end looks very neat afterward. An- other style is the size and shape of business letter paper, and it is placed in long narrow envelopes. Ladies use envelopes to appear as much like a business letter as possible. The ragged edged paper is very popular, and so is paper cut into square sheets. In fact, anything out of the regular style can be used now. — + «<-> -¢ Crops in Ontario. The Monetary Times, learns from reliable sources that the prospect for the fall wheat crop is no better than last year; the grain is very uneven in sample and the quantity likely to be no greater than in 1887. In some districts the promise is very fair in- deed, but in more it is poor in the extreme, very many fields having been ploughed under. Last autumn, by reason of the drought, a less acreage was sown and it was got into the ground ‘‘in bad shape.” Still, it emerged from under the snow, looking generally well, only to be damaged by the cold winds and frosty nights of April and May last. Spring wheat is looking very fairly, but less of it has been sown this year, it ap- pears, than in other years. There is no- where serious exception to the good appear- ance of spring crops. They promise well; here and there a little backward, but no more so than can be overcome by a week's fine weather. A greater average of barley than usual has been sown this year. oo > Rribery in London. —-—— = London, it seems, is to have bribery in- vestigations as well as New York ; and they promise to even eclipse the latter's famous ** Boodle ” trials. The Metropolitan Board of Works will furnish the subject for in- vestigation. Complaints have long been made of this body, which appears to have outlived its usefulness, but no systematic action has been taken in regard to it. The charges have now, however, become direct, and Mr. John Goddard, an architect, con- nected with the beard, is charged with re- ceiving £200 a year for six years, besides a lump sum from the Pavilion theatre alone. This money has been paid by the theatre to secure immunity from certain penalties and taxes rightly incurred under the law. The Board suspended Goddard a few days ago. There are others who are implicated, and a searching investigation will be made. cc A fp “No Time to be Tired.” —- —— substituting cork for wood charcoal, it is further stated, trouble arising from powder | absorbing moisture readily will be avoided. | If the above statements prove to be borne} out by the facts, the importance of the two discoveries, both in a military and a civil way, can hardly be overrated. A few days ago a Boston lady was in- formed by her servant girl that a box of flowers had been left at the door for her. Being occupied at the time, the lady told the servant to open the box, sprinkle the flowers with water and put them on ice, adding that she would attend to them when she went down to tea. The box really servant reported the arrival. opened. The servant followed her orders explicitly, and the flowers were so through- ly drenched that from a ** perfect love of a hat,” it became a limp and worthless mass of discolored ribbons and straw. A tailor in a poor village in the High- lands endeavored to make both ends meet by turning and renewing the old clothes of the villagers. A dyer set up business next door to the tailor, and the folks, instead of turning their coats, found it cheaper to get them dyed. The poor tailor’s occupation was nearly gone till he hit on the following expedient. He printed in large letters, and pasted it inside his window the legend: “Turn ye, oh, turn ye, for why will ye dye?” The bill was effectual, and the dyer soon after shut up his shop. Wedding so gorgeous that people of moderate means are afraid to send what they can afford. | This fashion, started among the frugal Dutch, of giving the young couple their household furniture and a sum of money to begin life with, has degenerated into a vul- zar display vf wealth. The French have a wiser plan. The relatives make up a sum of money as a wedding gift and send it to the bride’s mother, who spends it for her contained a new spring hat which had been | ordered, but was forgotten at the time the) ———— i a Only the; flowers were to be seen when the box was! other day Judge Biddle said in substance : presents have now become Nothing in the late Emperor William’s life was more characteristic of the man than his manner of taking leave of it. He died, as he had lived, like a soldier—fearless, resolute, self-possessed, heroic. When begged not to tire himself with too much talking, he replied, realizing that his end was near: ‘* I have no time to be tired.” To wait for rest was to miss the opportunity to say what was in his mind. And so the grand old man, drawing on the last grain of the splendid strength that had sustained him for more than ninety years, delivered his final messages, wrote gus signature as boldly and firmly as he had ever done in his prime, and passed away as became a man among kings and a king among men. In charging a jury in Philadelphia the ‘*The history of public morality in regard to lotteries is quite curious. 1 have a lot- tery ticket issued as far back as 1761, and in aid of building a church in Oxford. That \church was afterward presided over by a 'brother of President Buchanan. At that day lotteries were considered legitimate, ‘and were almost as frequent as apothecary shops are to-day. But experience taught us they were demoralizing, and stringent laws had to be passed against anything in ‘the semblance of a lottery. At the present ‘day lotteries are held only by two classes of people—very religious people and very bad people—and, strange to say, the most difficult thiag is to eradicate them among the good people.”--New York Post, <--> Apviczk To Motuxrs.— Mrs. 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 as “bright asa button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all relieves wind, regulates the bowels, and best known remedy for diarrhea, arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure end ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind, (April l "88 pain, ‘s the whether Lie Sones eR ee Thar SOR ARE A. SE Te wea Ee ae P ygseimmcnce =