— es ' _ noe ee tot 2 me Rem agg tno “ This is true mapertyys when Free Born on haart | to ‘pattee the Public, may pik free. eae i it Pte ‘ etait oti -- Nn epee St an — Evripypss. SE ee eee | } ‘ ‘5 ri : 452 > P 6 “a D4 : Ti : >. 3 ef Soph Peete Raeaariagd ! s . ¥ . iu >» a i ‘ From ; ce, « . ' iy e Streut _ i ’ ALWat rAlLnS U . { Ki) i hes i 0 1) Ad c A 7 t Contracts may De mace y, Quer | teriy, balf-yearly, or yeariy aivertis-ments, | on appa atio ALMANAC FOR AUG UST, 1887, MOON S CHANGES, Moon 3rd day, 4h., 27.6m., p. m, N.E., yn Las llth day, 7h., 24.0m., p-m., N. \ ivtn day, if, 20 Im , & M.. N. ‘ ni } é : 5 p.m., SE 1) i Day’s M ' ’ ) en’l , n : ‘ 5 i4 3 2 i JOS y : 2-5 i a ‘ ) Vi 1 é 2tiiQ 24 >] i 2 ] | } +} > Friday ~ ) y > Satu da 5, ft 4 ne Sunda. : I 0 41 =e SM nday ' 4 1 14 9? iuesday Bi 110 4) 1 49 7 10} Vednesday 53; 12/10 29) 22 li Tharsday : 59 10:10 59 12! Friday 5 0] 1) 33 13 3] 8 morn 14/8 3 6) 0 12 LS 4) 4' 0 5Y 16) i ) 2 I 51 vi 7 S LS) Thursday S ee 19 : 76 Sei & Zs 20 ; m 6 +1) 2 | S47 5 22 2,90 15 23) iu : ) 5U 24) Vednes 2 Vaursday ¥ ijjiaftt 52 aj riday St €8| 1°58 z. saturday 19; 43 2 55 2 Sunday 20; 41) 3 53 22 Mon lay |; 22} +0) @ 42 30, Tue | 238i SB 5 31! 8 42 10 | 31' We sday 5 246 36' 5 55!) 9 24/13 12| L, ARTHUR & Oop | COMMISSION MERCHANTS,| Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS, | 7 ‘ ' Poultry. Fruit & } Tt» 4 t Olatoes, Vegetabl Ss. a oS f42, 144 Coumniercial Street,| Ma 3 . a eiote adannaee j Bostou,; Halifax and Prince award Island steailshiD Line, The Only Direc bi ne Without Change, Charlott etown to Boston THE sta h and commodious steamships | rr ind Wor ter have been thoroughly reivraished and put into t-class condition wD} every particular. During the season of 1887, one of these vessels wil leave Pownal Stréet Wharf, C harlottetown, | for Boston, at six o’clock, p.m.,en THURSDAY } uf each week, and soston for Charlottetown every SATURDAY, at noon Excellent Passengel 7 mmodation! Low Rates | FARES Cabin, $7.50: Sta om Berth. $9.50. , Lowest Kates for freight, w h is always care fa CARVELL. BROTHERS, Agents, Charlotietown, Harrison L i, Managing Owner, Lewis Whar’, Boston, July 21 O r- B-()-%-T-@-N SUMMER ARKANGENENY = [HO Ste SME bd RS be? THE PAL ACE STE OF THE 1ATE ERNAT! ONAL S.5S. 6%. Lea ve %t. John for Boston. via Fastport and Port- — vvery Monday, Wednesday and Friday at v0 & mm. Also eave 5S hight for — FF -~ t. John at 7.30 every Saturday ——— TOWN, P. E. ISLAND. TUESDAY, | 0. es ad - AND BUY FROM—— = etenssang New American Huslins, New French Muslins, A BIG New Prin Musiins. Embr tiens, A Big Stock of Gloves & C. and Hosiery. atta | Because Linen Collars and Cuffs, separate or in sets. _ Corsets, direct from the makers and at the lowest pric cusneteiasiaide tl sie eed fi you want a Seaside Dress just |Flannels Cheapest and Best Goods for found. o-——— — » 7—dy & wky New Prin’ oideries, in Allovers, Flouncing rkins & Sterns CPARE PUR HOT WEATHER AbaMsoy } ; Sterns ied Cottons. DISPLAY OF LACES. Book Muslin, Victoria Lawn, Bishop's | ed Batists, Lawn, Check | | rs, Edgings, Inser- see our stock of; the purpose to be dM A’ ow Be TAH ODING ESTARIIC HAILORING ESTABLIS Is the right place to st your Clothes made. Because. we Zive Goo d Value and a Fit business in the Province We in to. amagoe we ~<a ee = As = - ¥ Vv indivenpill e we know we are right «nd care not what We are bouna to knock them out in Fit, Style, Come and see us, even if you don’t buy. We want to show rou our Fine Stock of Tweeds, Worsteds, &c. MCLEOD & M°KENZIE. Queen Street, opposite Watsen’s Drug Store. JAMES McLEOD, J. T. McKENZIE, Charlottetown, July 5, 1887—eod & wky Robertson & Co. formerly Bruce & McKenzie, late of New Yo late of C. ese PI ot Ry i THE Subscriber will have; between the present time and first week of October, about forty é — Pigs for saie,/of a good breed and easily that beats the world. Our Hstabiishment is new but our Cutters are the oldest at their can give a style and finish to our garments that others cannot BIO W Sixeie Corizs Two CrEnts. —— — .UGUST 16, 1887. tin ntti etn nth pipes etisntonentinnntiy ilanlan tes es gotA Nie Judging Morses at Fairs. (From Wetlaces Monthiy.) Judging at random by ‘the rule ol thumb” has had its day, and while it may do for a time in backwoods places, progres sive, thinking horsemen will be satisfied with awards for which some reason can be given. To merely leok at horses, look ~i custom which nobody seriously regards. as better than a farce. The prize is awarded, and for the life of them the judges cannot give intelligent, specific reasons for what they do. It is strange that horse breeders have so long subjected themselves to a manner oi judgment which advanced breed- ers Of cattle, or dogs, or hogs would not tolerate fora moment. And if cows, hogs, or hogs, dogs,” and poultry are judged scientiiically, is it not a positive reproach to breeders of horses to go inthe old ruts. 1gThe scale as here presented, may not be perfect, but it is thé result of much patient thoutrht and pra¢tical experience. Practical application showed where the original draft. was defective, and showed where amend- ment was required. Though we think that it is now well adjusted, further experience may indicate further desirable changes, and as soon as indicated they will be adopted. We invite criticism of the seale of points, and we will always be pleased to have reasonable suggestions, because we want it right. We think that any intelhgent horse- man who will carefully and thoughtfully read and digest this scale will come to the conclusion that it is pretty nearly right now, .- Of course it will be applied at many fairs this autumn, and we are anxious to assist progressive associations that desire to award their prizes onan intetlligent system. To ‘that end we will have printed, and will furnish gratis, blank “score cards” for: the use of judges. We cannot too forcibly en- deavor to impress upon managers of fairs the necessity of seeuring competent judges. To apply the system in a fully satisfactory manuer requires indeed the services of ex- perts, who know individual excellence, and who know the history and performances of the trotting horse. Any fairly good practi- cal horseman can apply the first part, covering points of structure and conforma- tion, satisfactorily arid well, but the second part, covering matters of history, of per- formance, of inheritance —in short of breed- ing —can only be intelligently and’ ‘satisfac- turily, applied by thoroughly _*‘posted ”’ SURE. PROMPT. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. Tt 1s as pleasant as honey, Asthma, which lead to Consumption, speedily chred by the use of ADAMSON’s BALSAM After Gis Couglis, Colds, and haye been all other medicines have failed. Sufferers from either recent or chromic coughs or bronchial affections, can resort to this graat pemedy, contident of obtaining speedy relief. Do notdelay, vet it FOR SALE BY ALL PRYGGIS’ oder Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprictors, F. W. metbitax & CO., Druzzists, : -HS-4rm Ave... N.Y SATISFACTION EVERY TIME, at onre. rd RETAILS AT— 32 CENTS. PER POUND. 2 CENTS PER OUNCE. 23 U2, 5 Uz., 10. Oz.. PACKETS. a HMENT our competitors say. Finish, Price, &c. rk. UWWVIER BEVERAG o wT ee eee WHOLESALE AND Vontser guaranteed to be the bes import this in casks and bottle it ourselves, first-class satisfaction Lemon and Raspberry Syrups.— As from one of the best houses in the eae to be equal, if not superior, to any other | Syrups in the market: Fresh Frait.—We A pples, e some Confectionery, we are prepared to gi this line. Tea Committees will find it to their advanta ge to give usa OSTON DIRECT. | ? 2nd | r f Fars mm ¢ “Ve te ees: 00 50 wn to Boston, $6,540, For tic! G, ASH A P. | 1. BY.. av? ©i bi ‘formation apply to F, W. HALES, y P, HK. I. Steam VAY, Co, or to your nearest Ticket Agent, Apr’ 13, isj—eol wky eall before buying elsewhere, J3-HiA QUEEN SQUARE AND KING SQUARE Ch’tuwn, July 9, 1887—eod wky te ‘att Lime Juice, in pint and guart bottles, | Lime Juice is imported from the Island of Montserratt, and is and purest in the world. West India Lime Juice, in bottles and on draught. are receiving Orangés, every Boston steamer, and wall have Pears, Strawberries, Watermelons, ke., i in their season. Confectionery.— Having a very large stock of good, whole- ZR. GoOorr, TT > Taare tS, &b.9 ners T his Ch’town, Aug. 13, 1886.— men. Without obiigatiog ourselves, we will ‘say that if applications are made in time We will take pleasure in assisting managers of shows to secure the services of experts*con® . & smabs petent to apply the scale intelligently and BENS. E, WRIGHT. justly. We need not repeat the well-worn 2i law wky 2i truth that awards at fairs are _ mene PON ee cer cee cael bee we : P 3 -C ; , y ? unu- wii? gnce cu guetep of feeling, and whx ® are therefore above suspicion of par- It Cares tiality. CATARRH We would suggest to managers of fairs, 7 Cold in Head, the wisdom of a plan much in vogue in HAY FEVER, FOR SALE. local the esu) vogue in England. This is in having a Veterinary Surgeon within call who may be consulted by the judges when they think it advisable. In..judging feet for instance, STOPS 1 } > ; . fers the ordinary horsemanican judge of their none sdiline, of ee conditian of the ome. and of 4 Nasal passages im- the frog, etc., but the foot is sabject to in: ternal troubles, which in incipient stages might not be Ge detected by a nen-profes- sional man. We hope to see.all the respectable fairs EASY TO USE. to the throat and excessive expectoration caused by Catarrh. Sent pre-paid en receipt of price, 50e, and $1. Address FULFORD & CO., Brockville, Ont. a 2 a en ht : : jy| conducted, under .progressive. . methods. ‘Moan liness Next tO Godliness **May the best horse win.” To find out which is the best horse there is only one way, and that is toanalyze him. . All his Cleanse Your Beds and Guard Against Sickness. Now is the time to get your Feather Beds.and Pillows renovated by Dufort’s Patent Feather Renovats.r. which will remain in Charlotietown a few weeks for the purpose of Cleaning Feather Beds and Pillows, and making them Soft, Clean and Healthy. Thousands of our Canadian Housekeepers can testify to the beautiful work done by this splen- did invention. Medical men and _ scientists acknowledge its excellence. Satisfaction guaranteed—Charges moderate. Remember the place—Terlizzick’s Corner, points must be considered and valued, and the aggregate value is the just measure of each horse in competition. This valuation calls for a scale determining what the value of each point in a perfect horse woul lL be. A man may as well say that by g!ancing at the pages he can strike a balance on his books, or by looking at a cow he can de- termine her weight as accurately as if weighed on a scale, as that he can ‘‘size up” a horse in a general way and say just how he ranks in comparison with a field of other Queen Street. horses, The thing'is an absurdity. Let July 27, 1887—1 mo eod tu th sat the horses be judged systematically, giving Sree 77> sy... ] the reason for every step from the first look to the award of the’ premium. This can only be done, by a scale, and we don’t care if it is this scale or somebody else’s scale—provided it‘is a rational one. We uppeal to progressive horse-breeders, and tu journals interested in the advancement of the breeding interest, to longer, tolerate the old blind way of making awards if there isa better scale than this by all means use it, or if any association or indi- vidual formulate a better one, let it be formulated. It is no matter by what scale, or what method it is done if the desired end is reached—nameiy, that eas s be je LoaeeaG aR eee ao rate fr: TTS ARE BAKING POWDER’ aw: db mm intelligent system stead of PUNT Sen Coptey |prsced ce elton tem ston seers iets - We and it has given we import these we guarantee them Lemons and Grapes, | | ve extra value in STORES. bbe) bed at Augustine Cove Notes. —_— . . oa Our popular young teacher, doing excellent work in the school. Although this is his fourth year here, his patience not seem to tire, nor his energy to were. We bespeak for him a successful career all through d CS RONZE MERA’ wise, and pin on a ribbon is a time-honored | John Hood, is4 VOL. 21LeNG@. (i: the Oldest Living. i\Probabi y Man New James James, a negro. and citizen of the United States, who resides at § Mexico, is probably the earth. He was born near Dorchester, Ss. ¥,, in 1752, and while an infant was removed to Medway River, Ga., in the same year that Franklin brought down electricity from the thunder clouds. In 1772 4here was quite an immigration into South Carolina, and his master, James James, (from whom he takes his name), moved near Charleston, 8. C., in com any with a number of his neighbors. On June 4, 1776. when twenty-four years of age, a large British fleet, under Sir Peter Parker, arrived off Charleston. The citizens had erected a palmetto wood fort on Sullivan’s Island, with twenty-six guns, manned by ™ inta 08a, oldest man on 500. men under Colonel Moultrie, and on June 28 the British made an attack by land and water, and were com] elled to withdraw aftera ten hours’ conflict. It was during this fight that Sergeant Jasper distinguished himself by replacing the flag, which had been shot away upon the bas- tion, on anew staff. His master, James James manned one of the guns in this fight, and Jim, the subject of this sketch, and four other slaves were employed around the fort as general laborors. Jim followed his master throughout the war, as was with General Moultrie, at Port Royal, 8. C. February 3, 1779, when Moultrie defeated the ¢ mbined British forces of Provost and Campbell. Hs master was surrendered by Lincoln at Charleston, S. C., on February 12, i780, tothe British forces, and this ends Jim’s military career. He remembers of the rejoicing in througbout the country in Washington s election to the Presidency, he then being forty years of age. Jn this year his first master died, aged about sixty years. Jim then beeame the property oi ‘Marse Henry (Henry James), owning large estates and about thirty near C Chi arléston. On account of having raised ‘ Marsé Henry,” Jim was a special favor- ite with his master and was allowed to do as he chose. His second master, Heury, lied mm 1815, about fifty-five years of and Jim, now sixty- -three years of age, be- came the property of James James, Henry's second son. In 1833 the railroad from Charleston to Savannah was completed, then the longest railread in the world, and Jim, with his master, tood trip over the road, and was shown special favors on ac- count of his age, now eighty-one. James James was ten years of age at his father’s General L7S2 consequence of ’ SiaVves, s r age, death, and when he became of age inherited large estates, slaves, etc., an.ong whom were “Sold Uncle Jim” and his family James James lived in South Carolina until 1855, when he moved to Texas wi th all his , l. : Fo ween a ome tert h } claves siaves. James desired that javes should be free at his death, ind in 1858 moved into Mexico, free before his death. 30 that they could be James returned to the United States and died in Texas, and in 1865 after there were no longer slaves in the United States, Uncle Jim’s children and grandchildren returned to the United States. Five years age, at the age of 130, Jim could do hght chores, but sted mostly by contributions from the citizens; but tor the past two years, not being al le to walk, he 4 nains for She ms) part in his wants being supplied by generous neighbors. The rheumatism in 1is legs prevents him from walking, but yet he has sufficient strength in his arms to drag himself a short distance—tifty yards or more—and readily took a position en the outside of his cabin to enable the Globe- Democrat correspondent to make his photo Sk ibs his little jac al graph. —Laredo, T'ex., letter to the St. Lowis Glohe- De mocrat. a - People Demand Protection—Pa- tent Medicines. What are they! As a gere are prescriptions having great success by old and sicians. Thousands of invalids have been unexpectedly cured by their use, they are the wonder and dread of physici: ins and inedical colleges the in U. 8S., so much sv, that physicians graduating at medical colleges are required to discountenance proprietary medicines, as through them the country doctor most profitable practice. Asa manufacturer of proprietary medicines, Dr. G. G. Woodbury, ral thing they used with well-read phy- been and loses his (sreen of N. ace advi CaLES Nivst cordially, in order to prevent the risk that the sick and afflict ed sre liable to, almost daily by the use of rienced and the patent medicires put out by inexpe persons for aggrandizement only y; employing of inexperienced and incompe- tent doctors by which almost every village and town is cursed ; claiming to be doctors who had better be undertakers, experimenting with their patents and rob- bing them of their money and heaith,—for the good of the afflicted that our goverr- ment protect its people by making laws to regulate tie practice of medicine by better € xperie need and more thoroughly educated physicians, and thereby ke sep Up the honor jand credit of the profession, also form laws for the recording of receipts of pr Brie tary medicines, under examination and decision of expemenced chemists and physicians ap- and men life. uch a large number of buggies as is seen in } this settlement, speaks well for the success of | the farmers. rk \ PLY s4 ee € ee el Mr. John Howatt intends to spend the ~ ee | the autumn gunning, and we hope ‘that his’ F mene 30) aT ae we te luck in ghoothig foxes may he as good : @ it! “PURE 32) mi vee ee seks x Was a yea!’ ago an eter tee ee TORONE Benjamin Webster, Esq., sold his valuable draft horse ‘‘Bill,” the other day for the hand- | WANTED. our some sum of $145. A LIVE. CANVASSER ,Fo®. go" There are;several of our young horses show- ing great signs of speed, and we would advi and Land,” just now ready, with 300 illustrations l inte mding pry ymaears m ~ ‘Gvers, not to pa of the wonders of the deep and jangle. Four| DY this section of the country. beautiful Chromo Pilates, over 800 paves : print and paper excellent; low priced, Nothing like it 1d. in the wor w. BE EARLE. Rio z S. ROBE SV. Publishe is a es Tea eee Pe Every Sunday morning a number of peopi in this place:may be seen stationed on posts, fences, etc.. endeavoring to catch a glimpse of a certaiu. couple wending their way to their rs. | potato patch arm in arm, For«x Hanpir, duly 25, 137. pointed for that purpose by the Govern- sent, before they general use... ite would most freely place the recipe | of Bosch ees German Syrup and Green’s | August Flower under such laws, had he the | Prope r protection, and thereby save the are L:censed for and avoid the com- ‘ejudice of the re ple, [ etition and imitation of worthless medi- ‘eines. —Chieago Mall, Aug. 3, 1887. ———=_ 2 ae | Messrs. F. W. Kinsman & Co.—Gents : ‘“*T have psp Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam over my counter for nine years, and | must say that during an experienc Gt twen 3;x years in the retail drug business, I ha never sold anything for coughs, coids, e that has given such universal satisfaction as your Adamson’s Botanic Balsam. I recon mend it above all others. Yours truly, 5. Chichester, 357 Myrtle Avenue, Brovkiyn, N. Y.” Trial bottles 10 cents, dy wy lw oe 7 oo es ~ roan me ae ee aan ee ee eS i » ee ya : i m ee ae er rey 3