gee THE DAILY EXAMINER. - eee ee nee, rerMS:-—Five DoLtarRs a YEAR. NEW SERLES The Daily Examiner is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Go From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Vrince Kdward Island, —KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION Six months o0b cate tedeeid.s +e Zaranmmeoath:.....2. 4.7 mo co ee, cn 1.25 ED tooo « 0akm bebe eke! — 50 Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on application. ALMANAC FOR AUGUST, 1998, MOON'S CHANGES. First Quarter 6th day, 4h., 43.8m., p. m., 8. Ful! Moon i4th day, 2h.; 11.7m., p. m., N. below horizon. ) Last Quarter 22nd day, 3h., 29.3m., a th below OP LZertl N ve Mi mm PUth aay, ein, i) ¥m., a Mm . K ) Suan Sun Moon’ High! Day's . \\ Vi t ° vi rises'sets | rises | water) len‘h hombh mimorniaftn h 1 Sunda 47,7 25) 6 21/11 51 38 2 Monday $8 23) 7 30 morn 35 3 Tuesday so 6 68 8 54, 0 3S 33 4 \\ e la Say 5} 21:10 Ss ] 14 3U 5) Thursd 52; 19/11 19) 2-0 27 6 Prittay i.e) lSjaft 27 2 48 25 7 | Saturday t-Gd; 16; 1 34) 3 49 22 SiSun ~ SS 15)| 2 36 i 19 9 Monday 57! 14' 3 34! 6 2 17 10, Tuesday L..$8 12, 42717 @ l4 11 Wedne lay 59 10; 5 15; 8 27 ll 12) Thursd +) > © 9| 5 57) 9 12) 9 13 Frida 2 1 & 341-9 52 14 Satur i 3 6| 7 610 28 3 15 Suaday $ 41-7 3621 1 0 16 Monday 5 2|18 3111 34:13 57 7) Tresday Dada 8 Wiaft 5 D4 18|'Wednesday | 4 0} 8 55, 0 35 52 {9 Tharsday 916 58:9 31} 1 9 20\ Friday | 30 56! 9 50) 1 45 21 Saturday | 32) 54/10 22) 2 28 22 sund Ly 3 52 10 5S 3 23 Monday 14; 50/11 41, 4 29 94 Tuesday 16 49'morn! 5 5 25! W ednesday 17; 471 0 31) 7:15 * 26 Thursday : Is id] 1 32); 8 2 27 27/| Friday 19, 43) 2 40; 9 19 24 ’S Saturday pb) 41' 3 54:10 8 2) 29 Sunday 22 40; 5 10,10 82 LS a» VI muday 2d a3} © 28 bi 34 lo 31' Tuesday 5 24'6 36) 7 46 morn /13 12 RANKIN HOUSE A 5d. THE indersigned will lease for a term of yeers the above wel! Known Hotel, situated on cur- Se — Pa } - © SEASONABLE ner oO Vv rand Pownal Streets, in Chariotte- | town. Prince Edward Island. Possession given on the I (ictuber next. Any ioformation required will be given, either rsonal interview, J.H. GRAY, i DAVID STIRLING, lrustees. her jour by letter or Ch’town. June 12, 1885—junl5 2aw —— SUMMER ARRANGEMENT THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL S.S. 60. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- land, every Monday, Wednesday and Fri lay, at 5.00 a Mm. : ‘ Leave St. John at 8 o'clock every Saturday night for BOSTON DIRECT. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd class ; 39 m, ist class. For tickets and other information apply to 4 SHARP, F. W. HALES, ry £4. Boe P. E. L. Steam Navy. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. May 7, 1886—eod wky i... % at RilUR & Od. GENERAL Commission Mershants, (2) ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. R238 and Prod 109 a Specialty. July t liy whiy eens AUTION. —— HAO PLUG OF THE MYRTLE NAVY IS MARKED T & B. IN BRONZE LETTERS. None Uther Genuine. ome W ~ —— te “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” ee CHARLOTTETOWN, $9 - eS BARGAINS FOR AUCUST —— AT THE — : ONDON HOUSE. es 1) 1 BOYS CLOTHING, \ Fifty Suits at $1.75 and $2.00. BOYS CLOTHING, j Look at Them! READY-MADE CLOTHING, Men's Suits at $4.00, READY-MADE CLOTHING, Men's Suits at $5.00, READY-WADE CLOTHING, | Men's Suits at $6.00, READY-MADE CLOTHING, ) Men’s Pants at $1.25, READY-MADE CLOTHING, | Men's Pants at #149, READY-MADE CLOTHING, | Men’s Pants at $2.00 CLOT © READY-MADE Men's Tweed Coats at $3.00, Men's Tweed Coats at $3.00, Men's PDweed Coats ai 35.08. Special Prices on these Goods. We have a Large Steck and are bound to Clear Them Out. READY-MADE READY-MADE ¢ MERINO UNDERCLOTHING, | MEKENO UNDERCLOTHING, MEKIAO UNDERCLOTHENG, | PRINTS, PRINTS, PRINTS, i) Four Cents, Six Cents, and | Upwards, ——— 10: HARRIS & STEWART, SUCCESSORS TO CEO. DAVIS August 6, 1586. & CO DRY GOvvs, V eee XL CE ees A tachi PREKING & STRAND oO --—-—_—— Balance of Ladies’ Straw Hats for almost nothing, Balance of Men's and Boys’ Straw Hats at a big discount, Balance of White and Colored Shirts very cheap. Bargains in PRINT COTTONS. Bargains in COLORED WUSLINS. Bargains in COLORED DRESS GOOBS. oO Cheap White Cottons, Cheap Gray Cottons, Cheap Linens, Cheap Carpets, — Oilclo’ hs. EVERYTHING CHHAP AT PERKINS & STERNS.: August 4th, 1886. Ch'town, Nteam Laundry, ee IN ODL C a calitinediniianinenitel i CHARLOTTETOWN STEAM LAUNDRY is now in operation. Goods will be called for and delivered free of charge. Call at the office and leave orders for work. Price Lists and all information trashy | given by MR. SHAW, Manager, at the Laundry, Kent Street, King Square. TERMS Cash on delivery. [CONNECTED BY IN “Bi W HAT & FUR STERE, Wewson Block. [TELEPHONE. } Ch’town, July 28, 1886. oO A NEW DEPART URBA'! tee fe ee HATS, of the Latest Styles, at the very LOWKST), PRICES. FURS, of all kinds, Cleaned, Dyed. altered and Repaired. HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for Raw, Furs. gE STUART. Ch’ town, May 4, 1886 eee ~ te ee a — DANSON eed Ss: ay PROMPT. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Potanic Cough Balsam. Tt is;as pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have been Sspeodily cured by the use of ADAMS all other medicj reeent or chromic coughs « rt hial affections, can resort to this great remédy, confident speedy relief. Do not delay et it at once FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druggists, ot} 4TH Ave, N, Y. ONS BALSAM after Sa monm Cai ted f — * » either aye failesl. Sutferers from either ol obtaining OOD’ BUTTER cannot be made A without good Salt. Our Salt has take MEDALS AND DIPLOMAS at Exhibitions in different countries. Pure, White and Fine —— ee Only 1 Cent per Pound. eee ee BEER & GOFF. Ch’ town, June 25, 1886. 2aw & wy TRY THE 25 CENTS, AT THE LONDON HOUSE RICHMOND STREET GROCERY STORE NELSON BROS.., daelers in Choice Family Groceries, Maat, Fish, &e, Those favoring us with their patronage will find Goods as cheap as anyin the city, A call solicited. a . ROBERT NELSON, SAMUEL NELSON. Ch’'town, Jane 17, 1886—3mos law COAL! COAL! — me of the subscriber, No. 35 Water Street, for car- goes of the following Coals, viz: Albion Mines, Pictou, Nova Scotia Large. CAPR BRETTON Old Sydney, large. Lingan Mine 3, large and slack, Victoria Mines, large and siack. The Slack Coals from Lingan and Victoria Mines are clean and bright, and oy be used in lace of several sorts of —— _— * . DEBLOIS. June 15, 1886—eod tf LACE SOAP, MANUF ACTURED BY COLGATE & CO., for a washing fine fabrics; also a large supply of Colgate’s Superfine Toilet Soaps. Don't take any poor imitations—get the genu ine. Ihe Bestis the Cheapest. B. BALDERSTON. July 3—3 wks 2awk 1s27 - = = 886. T. & E KENNY, Dry Goods and Shipping, HALIFAX, CANADA. TL & BK. KENNY, Fr. ¢. MAHON) hip Dina and Brokers, General Commission Merchants, igi GRESHAM HOUSE, Bishopsgate Street, LONDON, E, C., England, Secett’s and Vaughans Codes MMareh 24, 1536, BUTTERSALT Ok 2.DERS can be obtained, as usual, at the office EURIPIDES. P. EH: ISLAND, THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1586. A Song of the Sea. The hardy mariner whose cheek has been tanned by the sultry breath of the simoon, who (like Mr. Henry Mutch) has. beheld | the great sea serpentt in his native wilds, or who perhaps has scudded for days be- ‘fore the fury of a snowstorm, is often prone to depreciate the dangers of the fresh- water sailor. The following beautiful poem shows, however, that the “lake _navi- gator is exposed to no lesser perils than his brother of the boundless ocean. While in | some respects it may be. inferior to the |More celebrated sea poems, it is second to | none in force of expression, in vivid des- cription, and the logical conelusion of its moral; while it loses nothing im dramatic ‘effect from being written in the beautiful | patois of Longfellow’s (and Rice's) heroine, the language of the Canadian French: "Twas one dark night om I, ac dt. Pierre, De wind was ‘‘biow, blow,” ‘‘blow, Vhen the erew of de ae skow. Jule La Plant (;ot scare and run below, | For de wind she’s blow like a hurricane Bimeby she 3 blow Svine more, When deskow buss up on Lac St. Pierre, One-half mile from de shore. De captain she’s walk on de front deck, She’s walk on de hind deck, too, {| he’s call de crew from up de hole, She call de cook also. } ' | De cook he’s name was Rossa, He’s come from Moreal, Was chambermaid on a lumber barge On dat big Lachind canal. » De wind she’s blow from nor, eass, wess, De sou wind she’s blow too, When Rossa say, “Oh ! captain, Whatever shall I do?” De captain she’s throw de hank, But still dat skow she drift, For de crew he can’t pass on dat shore Because he lose dat skiif. De night was dark, like one black cat, De waves run high and fass, When de captain take poor Rossa And lash her to the mass. When de captain put on the life preserve And he jump into de Lac, And he say ‘“Good-by, my Rosa, dear, I go down for your sake.” Next morning, very hearly, About half-past two, three, four, De captan, cook and wood skow Lay corpses on dat shore. For de wind he’s blow like hurricane, Pretty soon she blow some more, For dat skow buss up on Lae St. Pierre, One-half mile from de shore. MORAL, Now, all good weod skow sailor mens, Take warning by dat storm, And go and marry one nice French gir, And live on one good farm. Den de wind she may blow like hurricane, And ’spose she blow some more, You shan’t be drowned on Lae St. Pierre, So long you stop on shore. —_o- — ++ He Defied the Deity. BEREAVEMENT. (Middlet OW) pee A gentleman residing in Middletown, who was visiting in Sullivan County last | week, was attracted by eight headstones in a little grass-grown cemetery near Falls burgh, all of which stood in a row and were exactly alike look at,them, and found that they wore all children of a well-known physician, and | that all were grown when stricken down, and that the dates on the headstones showed that the first one died Noy. 28, 1861, and the other seven between that, date and Dec. 15 foilowing, or that the} entire family of eight children haa died within eight weeks. that day, he was told the histe ry Or the case, which is regarded in that n¢ re hood as a visitation of Providenc« ishment for defiance of the Deity. The story as told is that in 1861 there was a scourge of diphtheria in that neigh- borhood, and the physician was kept busy treating patients suffering from that dis- ease. He was very successful, and gained such contidence in his skill that he bevan to boast that he could cure any case, and went so far that he ‘* defied God Aimighty to produce a case of diphtheria he could not eure.” Inless than a week his youngest child was seized with the disease, and al- though he exercised his skill to the utmost, having not only professional pride but a father’s love to urge him to do his best, lis boy grew worse anddied. One after an other his children sickened and died, until all were gone, and laid side by side in the little graveyard near Fallsburgh. But one child was left, a married daughter, but in a few weeks she, too, was stricken down and became a victim to the dread disease. a © + Be + Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil. with Hypophosphites FOR WASTING DISEASES OF CHILDREN, Where the digestive powers are feeble and the ordinary food does not seem te nourish the child. this acts both as food and medicine, giving flesh —, _aerengt at once, and is 1s milk. Take no other. ~<a -> almost as palata An Ottawa despatch says that French: | Canadian explorers im sear h of mineral di | posits on the French itiver, found humiaii bones last representing over two ‘hundred bodies. They are the remams of 'a tribe of Lroquois Indians who | hundred years ago, went up Lake Ontario jon a hunting expedition and were met at \the head of French River and massacred in ia midnight attack by a tribe of Huron In- dians, ] wees } : i. about two A BOASTFUL PHYSICIAN 8 HUMILIATIONS AND), He got out of his wagon to! When speaking of tiv matter to friends | SINGLE Corres Two CENTs. VOL. 19.- NO. 7 ‘5. Thunderbolt on the Rampage. On the 13th inst., the State Grain In- spector’s branch office at Central avenue and Sixteenth street, narrowly escaped being destroyed by a thunderbolt during a rain storm. The bolt. struck a telegraph pole which stood against the wall of th building, ran in on the switch board of the telegraph instruments and went out of the window on the other side of the office taking the glass, sash and all with it. A messenger boy, who was sitting on a table, was thrown ten or twelve feet through the open door and knocked - insensible. : th telegraph operator, whose hand was key at the time, had his right na ihe arin paraly- 7ed and was partialiy stunned The tel graph abpsratns was melted, the table LrTOWR &acTUSS “a oom and all oO ha LS throw ss the room at ll of t] ; pants I the “upartinent were partially ‘deafened by the shock. The bolt looked hike a round ball of fire about as large as a man’s head. It shot as far as the tabl and disappeared with a flash, Jeaving t! crowd standing bolt upright with their | limbs mgid and their ears riaging painfully. |The office took lite, but the flame 5 were | speedily extinguished. ; -- es A Curicus Blunder. | Writing about Canada’s products at the indian Exhibition, a writer | for the We stminster PR ew falls into a | curious blunder in this statement: ‘*There 1] graud trophy of turs and the wild (animals from which the hunters and trap , pers of the Northwest have so long sup | plied the European markets, and which still | form the largest item in the exports of the Colonial and 5S a i Dominion. alnounting to upwards ul | £5,000,000." The reviewer has assumed , that the item “animals and their produce,” | which appears in the classification of the ' exports of Canada, refers exclusively to the wild animals of the Northwest. an erro | betraying very crude knowledge of the | character of our trade. Fully nine-tenths of the exports of animals and their produce consist of cattle, sheep, swine, horses, meats, dairy produce, etc., and a very insignificant portion of the furs and wild animals with which the reviewer imagines the Northwest yet to abound. ee Revolt in San Domingo. A letter published at Boston from San j; Domingo gives the first details of a revolu- | tion that broke out there attending the late ' presidential elections. The letter is dated iSan Domingo City, 8th, and reads as fol- | lows: The presidential election took place | here on the 26th of June, | Hereaux being electcd by a large majority. |General Mayer, the defeated candidate, left for Savager two days aiter the election and raised an army of 2,000 men and attacked Santiago and was defeated by the Govern- ment forces. General Hereaux, the presi- dent-elect, left here to-day, leading 5,000 men to reinforce General Duperon at San- tiago. Gen. Scaraman left Port-au-Plat on the north side with 5,000 men and will join Hereaux, making an army of 10,000 men. This is the strongest insurrection that has started in San Domingo for some years, but | the pres wil! beof short Jife, as Hereaux lis a bra man and understands how best oO nisl Ww ith such difficulties. idles | A Love-sick Youth (?) | An Ottawa despatch says : James Arm strong, aged 83, who had been crossed in love and whose attentions had been rejected by a spinster seventy-six years of age, com mitted suicide on the 15th, at Loure, ten miles from Ottawa, by hanging himself to a bear in the barn of a neighbor where lhe was found twenty minutes after life had extinet He was a well to do | farmer, and before committing the rash act ow sa will beg ueat! ig to his fair end 1 all his property, real estate and personal. He had been at ling Salvation Army neetings during his visit ili Jtiawa, and ft lis belic | that owing to his weak mind being casily influenced he ligious fanatic, which, with his love eseca pede, led him to take his own life. about | become became a ‘ | of ——2— & ff ~ A Bullet in the Temple. ck Saturday morning patrolman Lester heard the report of a pistol near the corner of Sandwich Shurch streets, Windsor, Ont. He started in that directiou and met a man whom h« arrested on suspicion, after a hard struggle, and found revolver with one chamber empty) and a wk in his pocket. About Saturday morning Albert John, an old citizen, was found iying in the gutte1 at the corn vl Pell and Church streets dead, with a bullet hole in his tempk Abou ole o’el Pea SIX O ciu a — A Double Elopement. A d vubli elon ment, vhich occur: d on Thursday evening, caused considerable ex citement at Concord, N. H. The were Ge L. Masai 1, @ live ely stable keep er; Geo. \\ ‘ Blake, iré ight con a tol Mrs. Alma Dickerman end Mrs. H. ’ Dicker Maxain is married and aa a son lj years old; Blak e@ 18 marrica na the women married brothers. The wife of A. Dicker young children, and the - child eight years old leaving their pi Tries man. man leaves three other woman one Both men took. all the money, families destitute mmm Horsford’s Acid Phosphate. ‘ E OF THE f I f ! sil 5 rot, al i And Dex t ege { Surgeon na Phy us, Baltimore, Md., saye: ‘“‘it makes a pleasant drink, and is one of our best tonics in the shape of phorphutes in solun oor ce looking i loyvment,” said a young man entering a mer hanis vince “You are, hey? Well, you'll find it m the dictionary over there—er—among the E's.” { reneral Ulysses i t : | ' a ante ee