a Bp S a 9 ei OIRO <a i ive DoLtARs a Yar. NEW SERLES. aving to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Evxirres. a ee fue Dairy EXAMINER , wt Fn. puttnitintamnialel: | Beautiful Summer Resort. Mi Ry TH EXAMINER PUBLISHING CoMPany, | bottle oe rm Ore , CORNER OF WATER 2 Six \ionths von "iw THE SEASIDE HOTEL, \ATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : (UNDER VICE-REGAL PATRONAGE), nths, . . $2 50 Taree Months, . . lL 23 One M mtn, - - v 50 ; . *' Advertising at most moderate rates Evustico Beach, = = Contracts may be made for. monthly, | yuarterly, half-yearly or yearly ‘advertise- | 1 application. —_——:0: — ———_ VU. mefita, “ ALMANAC FOR AUGUoT, 1882. MOON S CHANGES, till September 10th, for the accommodation of Ghests and Visitors, > . bs we - RA i ES—$1.75 per Gay ; $10 per week ; $32 per month Third Quarter bth day, 2h. Om., a. m..S. E. ; P : New Moon 13th day, sh: Mon es a oe) Lee loch,a@ m. Also, arrangements have been made with Mr Bagnall to meet train’ from First Quarter, 2ist day, Sh. 42m. p. m., 8. W. fall points at Hanter River, for passengers to Seasite, rev n mil es. Fall Moon, 23th day, 5h. 5m., vo. m., FE. | rains leave Charlottetown for Hunter River at 6 45, 9 20, *, m., and 4.20 p. m. . " Hunter River for Charlottetown, 9 a, m., 2.1! and 7 ym. D Sun 'San 'Moon!High ! Days Huater River to Summerside 7.45, 11.10 a. m., and-6.42 p. m. yy DAY OF WEEK | -ises |sets | rises |water |len’h Address, om ame _— ote 5 : * 7 hm hm ait’n/ morn i JOHN X ik VW RON & C.,. || Tuesday i4 47,7 25] 8 14/11 52) | June 24,12 HARLOTTETO WN 2) Verdnesday | 49) 25' & 44! aft 32) _ _o —- a ae ce 3, Thursday 5ui 22) 9 14) 1 13! £ Friday D1 21; 9 47} 1 58 ' 5 Saturday .| 52) 19:10 24 2 48] on a — Us ee 6 Sunday 53) is il oO » 54 14 25) _/ | } \ £ | 7| Monday 55| 16/11 54] 5 16 | kD e Li A. Be ‘:. eo . << i 9 $' Tuesday ) OO). 15) mary! 6 3 oN eloesday «+; 57; 14 0 49;-7° 49 ' : v 10) Thursda } OS; 12):) 47| Saat MijPriday | Bel 20) Pas) ae MERCHANT TAILOR, 12 Saturday DS LP “oT 3 49° Ome 13, Sanday. } |. 4.4. 52\Lor$7/14 07] 14, Momiay i 5 5s s — ‘ BO r 1h istowtey || ay abveies a | Is now offering Cash Buyers the BEST VALUE. that > yen fee % : 56, a. can be had in the market, in 7, Phuesday pitt . | IS Frida 86 59 O54 O 41 ; ° ‘ ‘ : (9 sataray |? 9 o7tvssj1 # | roadcloth, Worsted, Scotch and Canadian 20 Sunday. | 12) 50/t s6-c1 51/13 47 , ma F al 21 Monday | 42h S4.aft 56) 2 33) tweed Suits. 22\Puesday | 18/ 52| 1 521 8 Bu 23; Wednesday. | 14, 40) 2 50) 4 42 a : 24'Thursday, | 15) 48/.3 40] 611 A magnificent range of 25) Friday | 17) 46, 4 24 7 30! 2 a 26! saturday : 18; .45,.5 4) 8.34) ee ev ietaes GENTS’ FURNISHINGS 28:'Monday, |, 21, 41} 6 1110 U0 ; 29; Taeaday , 22: .40; 6 41 10 53} 20|\ Weduerday | 23} 37, 7 13 11 83) iia ¥ 31/fhuraday 6 245 24! 7 46 aft 131 : Bar.k of Nova Senta AMERICAN WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS Collars, Ties, Underclothing, English and American, Hats! ESTABLISHED 1832, raf sco-.ooo! (up Readymade Clothing is Manufactured on.the Premises, fashionably cut, well sewed, and having good trimmings, Paid Up Capital . . Resirve Fund .. — An Agency of this Bank will be opened on Monday next, 19th inst., in the building lately occupied by the Bank of Prince Edward Island, Sie the management of the under- signed. ys . : + Deposits will be received on interest, and} We invite you to inspect our Goods. D. A. BRUCE, Drafts granted on the various Agencies and Charlottetown, May 22, *82. 72 Queen Street, Will be sold as Cheap as Imported. correspondents of the Bank. Sterling and otber Exchange bought and sold, avd geueral banking business transacted. Db. C. CHALMERS, Ch’town, June 17, 18S2—tf Ageat. INSURANCE OFFICE. | (juseh larucance camsany, AREA | CLOSING UP A OF ENGLAND. 83 QUEEN STREET. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION. DOLLARS. City of London Vire Insur-| ance Company. CAPITAL, TEN MILLIUN DOLLARS, Insurance effected om all kinds of property | at current rates. Losses settled prouptly anil «quitably. GREAT BARGAINS in Dress Goods, Tweeds, Winceys, Silks, Curtains, and all kinds of Staple and Fancy DRY GOODS. Come early and secure Bargains. \\ ( | S| te | N. B.— Customers will please not’ ask . . bB he 9) credit, as sales are for cash only; hence SHETTPPRPLN GS bargains. Parties owing accounts will abies please call and settle without delay. FORWARDING AGENT, Marine Insurance Broker, —_—AND— F. KENNEDY, General Ageut. Office—South Side. Queen square. Ch'tewn, Feb. 3 182. P. O. BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. §. ‘ost eae “CTY STEAM BAKERY.” 0:0 YARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and othe: Canned : : . . : é Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks pe proprietor of this Establishment, owing to the increased thereon, ‘ . Z ; : sncie J Hulis, Cargoes, and Freights ineured in demand tor his: Goods, has added new jacilities to his first-class offices at most favorable rates. | Bakery, consisting of the latest and most improved mac hinery, solieved, 80") Ote., and is now prepared tosupply the trade with Hard Bread, Plain and Fancy Biscuits, &., prompt returns guaranteed, AT THE SHORTEST NOTICE. Currespondence solicited and promptly. Nov. 14, 1881—lyr To « hippers of Produce to Newfoundland. | 20: BOWN&WCODS, 66 ibs. CHOICE CONFECTIONERY GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ST. JOWN’S, N.E., Give particular attention to Shipments from Prince Edward Island. Consiguments Sole ted. To arrive per Steamship ‘* Miramichi,” from Monireat. Yes Orders by mail promplly executed. J QUIRK, Prisce Street, Charlottetown, P. KE. Ish REFERENCKES— a! ‘the Manager Union Bank,St. Jobn s,N. Fi, Messrs. ©. F. Bennett & Co., ” Vessrs. Ayre & Marsbail, - Joho H. Cathrae, Charlottetown, P. DB. L > April 24, 82—pat 2m eod w 2m May 4, 1882. }. E.Island, ©» |’ g HIS beautifully-siimated and well-known establishment will be opened trom July Ist as Tv Wk ACH THE HOTEL~—Coach will leave Charlottetown every Wednesday and , | Saturday evening, calling fer Guests; returning every Thuisday and Monday mornme, at TAURSDAY: AUGUST 3, 1882. ———<ecentlanenaiedeec—e — ae meee ener itt Sixnete Cortes ‘Two Cr nas, VOL. H.---NO, 62, K Beas + Ses Aoife fabs? a? ! | HED giatice, Lumbago, Ezckache, Soreness of the Che, . Cout, Qoinsy, Sore Throat, § wo/!- tags end Sprains, Burns aid | Scalds, General 3od//; Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frostcd “Feet end Ears, and aif otic Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacons On as a suse, sure, simple aud cheap Fx: j Remedy A trial entyils but the com; ; trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every one sufierin <> pain can have cheap and positive provi vl ite Cciaims, ; Egyptian War Notes. and Prime) Minister Cherif Pashaisa —_— very able and sagacious statesman.” ALEXANDRIA A BEAUTIFUL CITY. THE SOUDAN, (From*the Landon Times. ) The Soudan ‘is a general term applied to that vast and vaguely defined region The destruction of so fair a city is ter- of Ceptral Africa lying between the rible to think of in its details. It was a Equator on. the’ south and the Great town so built that destruction was a Desert on the north, and stretchiog from comparatively easy task. All the Euro- east to west nearly across the coutivent, peau houses Jay together on the eastern, The Egyptian Soudau is vederally sup- or rather south-eastern, side of the city posed to begin at As-ouwm, or the first (noi far from the sea). The great square cataract of the Nile ov the north, but was almost the beginning ot the Frank perhaps might more properly be ‘aid to quarter, ‘This square, known as Place commence at. the point-where the Nile Mehemet Ali, was in the form of a makes its great westward bend. Tt ex- parallelogram, of which the long sides tends to the great lakes on the ‘soutli, lay parallel to the sea. The hotels and and from Abyssivia on the east to and consulates were all in it, or close by it, jnelusive of Darfur and the provinces of The Frencn Cousulate and the Hotel the Bahr El] Guazal on the west. This d'Europe were big blocks on either side, exte.sive regiou, many times larger than while the [otervational tribunals occu- Exypt itself, was not cor quered by the pied the whole eastern end. The English By, ptians all af orice, but has been an- church, with the huge pile of offices yexed piece by piece, and at bo time Gin known as ‘St. Mark’s bnildings, which jt said to have been ‘thoroughly subdued were built on the English Church pro- or fully occupied. The Egyptiaw Goy- perty and paid an aggregate rent of £4,- ernment at Cairo was continually short 000 a year, occupied nearly one-half of of funds, and the Soudan, in company the sea side. with the remainder of Egypt, was the | Farther out still to the east four miles victim of many abuses.. The Govern- along the seacoast lies the Brighton of ment assumed the monopoly of almost Alexandria, where the English all re- everything on the White Nile, even to sided—Ramleh. It is a scattered sub- the sale of seven poor parrots, one of urhb a mile long, full of pretty villas, which was blind and avother lame, Con- some of them most lordly. pleasure tracts were sublet to the farmers of taxes. houses, all eujoying a view of the sea Each agent made a bhandscme profit for and desert and in easy communication himself, so that when the taxes, which of the city by means of a small passen- covered every conceivable meaus of in- ger railway, which was managed by an dustry down to the wheel which raised Kuglish company. Three weeks ago the water from the Nile, were paid by Directions in Eleven Languages, | §0LD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DDEALELS IN MEDICINE, | A. VOGELER & CO. | BG@itimore, M45 U.S. 4. Steam Communication Between Pictou, N.'S., Georgetown and Souris, P. E. L.,.Magdalen Islands | and Gaspe. 4 es Strongly-Built Iron $8.8. BEAVER, P P. Li maistrepmester, carrying Her Maj-sty.s mails, will leeve Pictou Landing during the season of Navigation, every Mon- day afternoon, on arriyal of Expresa Train from Helifax for Gubiketown, Souris and fhe Magdalen Islands ;" and every fourth trip, mepcing Monday, 19th June, will extend her vovage to Gasppscalling (weather per- mittiog, al Perce, ' Port Hoop, C, B Will leave for Port Hood every Friday Night, from Railway Wharf, Pictou Town, on arrival of Passengers by accommodation train from Halifax. Every attention will be paid to the com- fort of passengers For freight or passage apply to A FRASER & CO, Quebec; FRED. W fRASER, Pictou, N, 8. A. A. MACDONALD BROS,, | Georgetown, P. E, I C.J HALEY, Souris, P. EI. July 14, 1882. STR. SOUTHPORT. WEST RIVER, FROM. RINCE of. WEEE, \ ILL LEAVE CHARL': *TTETOWN EVERY MONDAY, at 5.°0 +. m,, for "Shaw’s Wharf, returning at 7 a, m., calling at ‘Westville and Rocky Point (when tide per- mite); returning, wili leave Chariottetuwa again op Monday, at 3.30 p. m, and on _ kriday. at 4 p.m. * 7=> FOR EAST RIVE. . Wiil leave Charjottetown, at 4 30 a. m,, on Tuesday morning for Mount Stewart, retu..- ing at 7 a.m, calling at Cranberry aud Hickey’s Wharves, Also will leave Mt | Siewart, on Wednesday morning, at 7 a, m., calling a Cianberry and Hickey’s Wharve-, returning to Mount Siewart same cevenl ¢ ; occasionally on Tuesday momungs (when the tide wiil not olherWise peimli) the Steamer will not proceed beyond Cranbury Wharf, but will imvariably leave Mouut / Stewart for Chalottetown on Wednesday / mornings, returning same evening as above. Oa Sandays, Steamer will leave Charlotte. town for Rocky Point (tide permitting ) at 9 a.m. and 115 p. ™; returning, wii iveve » Kucky Pcint at 9 30 a, m.and 1,45 }). m. | Jr Steamer is not on roule on Sundays, sail boat will take her place. F, L, HASZARD. ' Ch’town, June 1882--pat [jy 3 “2O LE. tg: HE SHOP ai. present occupied by the New York Singer Manuiacturing Company, Queen Street, Applicati ,b to be made to M. STEVENSON, June 9, 1882—eod tf Tinsmith MACK’S MAGNETIC McbivinNk wy tie Brain 2nd pow | Isa Sure, Prompt and Efiectual Kemedy to: Ser | vousness in ALL its stayes, Weak Memory, Loss 0 | Bro in Power, Sexual Prostration, Night Sweat Supermatorrhea, Seminal Weakness, and General Loxs of Power. It repairs Nervous Waste, Rejaven- ates the Jaded Intellect, Strengthens tie Hujeolr ed Brain and Restores Surprising Tone and Vigor to the | Hxnausted Gen ratire Organs, The expericnce of , thousands proves it an InvaLUABLE Krmepy, The Medicine is pleasant to the taste, and exch box con- | tains snfficient for two week’s medication, «nd is the | cheapest aud best. £8 Fuil particulars in our pampiilet, which we desire to wail free to any address, Mack’s e@ Moedict.e is seid by Drug- gists at 50 cts. per box, or 12 boxes for $3, ur wi'l | be mailed iree of postage, on receipt of the muney, by duressing MACK’S MAGNETIC MEDICINE: O., Windsor, Uut., Copada Sold ~ a Agenia icr Prinre Edward ' verywl era peor Ramleh was as silent and lonely as a cemetery ; but every house was full of the laborer, they Were many times larger than the original. exorbitant apportion- PARI’ funiture and pictures, and all the curi- -mevt. and we even heard of cases on the osities of the Levant which English peo- White Nile where the same taxes were ple love to collect. collected two and three times over by | Such is the European quarter, whose different officials. Hence,»eonstant re- smoudering ruins. are now being tra- bel'ions and the successfal war of the versed by exploration parties from the False Prophet. fleet. Every house was left ready tor a ee ee % .Te-occupation when its refugee owner | The Modern Novel. returned Bedouin servants guarded: — the Ramleh houses, Arab, servants re-- - What does it teach of purity or virtue? mained to protect those in town. All [iu 'the novel it isthe parents and gnar- the banks were, fortunately, without any dians that‘are hafd-hearted and unreéasov- exception, persuaded to abandon their able It is heroic fur the young man to first iurention of converting ‘their esfab- ri-k all the dangers or the night’ 10 steal ‘lismeuts into small fortifications.’ The away the lovely maideti for his bride. barricades, the underground chambers, it is heavenly devotion— in the novel— ithe sund-bag concealment of strong boxes for the girl to rick all the horrers of slip- ‘were all thought foolish’ while there were ping out to meet her adored one. Atter ships of refuge in the harbor, and con- all this, what?) Ask unhappy homes to sequeutly, three weeks ago everything reveal their secrets. Look ~inio ‘the |was shipped by the banks that was of records of divorce courts, Read the jvalue All the principal merchants fol- Yis(s of suicidés. “Naturalists tell ‘us lowed this example, and the consulates that fish take on the color of the ‘water ‘a opted, as fur as possible, the same in which they swim. Certain it’ is that plan. /we ere influenced by the books we read. In any cases, the destruction of pro- Th aay political campaign you could perty must have been very great, A Usually decide in five miuutes conversa- lvust city, whose streets were lined with {00 0D politics not only to what party ‘nuble mansions, has beev reduced to Your friend belongs, but also the party lashes. The loss, immense as it is to the P"per. which he reads, Parents somes ‘owners, can have little beaefitted the times wonder where their children get ‘plunders. . Arab thieves would profit Such erroneous ideas of life, Look, very litthe by European furniture in a ten, at their reading.” See upou what place where there was no organization mental food they have been pouris! ing of rec-ivers of stolen goods. Cash they themselves, Tell me what a man reads Goods had all been “"d I will tell you what he is. As tre shipped long ago. Even the shops con- food affects the body so reading affects tained very little stock, ‘The destruction the wiod, We ought to exeiude trom would -beneiit nobody, not even the des- vu reading books that which gives views trovers, of a false life. Books even that may be : ' good in themselves ought not to be read unjess they give us iustruction. There Oue result is certain to come Out of is no objection to. reading novels, pro- this: awful disaster. A long serious»et vid.d you read the right kind of novels. claims wil be made agaiust Evypt for But one souad book read for instruction the loss of property. Eveu before their is better than a whole library read for departure, in all the hurry of, their «musement. We are icading too much exodus, all European owuers of either ot what Carlyle calls ** soap bubble” lit- ‘house or furniture made a statement of eratare. This not only wastes time but ‘whet he owned and lodged it at his #lso destroys our appetite for that which Consulate. Many even who had uot is better. When youvg people find they iusured before went so far as to in-ure have no appecte for solid reading, it is ‘their goods and chattels, not because they time for them to cease reading the light thought the companies would indemnify literature. We do vot taboo all them from loss at the hands of a mob, works of fiction. Novels such as Scott's hut because they would have au addi- and Cooper’s and Thackeray’s aud Haw- tional proof of what they held to be the thorue’s are almost as valuable for value of their property. Poor Egypt instruction as,histories, It has been said has a melancholy fature before her in that there is more history iu Scott s *lvan- mavy ways. |hoe” than in Hume's * History of Eng- leud.” Against such books we need no iwarning. ‘These authors are unforta- Arabi seeks to make the Khedive un- wately not so popular as they ought to popular with the Egyptians because he be. We are to overcome a taste for bad has bad much intercourse with Evrepe- realing by providing that which is better. ans. If Tewfik has any marked partial- Parents do uot do justice to their child- ity for European society, he is scarcely yen unless they carefully direct their to be blamed for the tacit, as his father, reading: Unless they d> so. we e»muot Ismail, the deposed Khedive, not only wenuder that courts of law find so many had lim educated by French and Eng- boyish criminals. lish masters, but also insisted that he, ‘should assiduously cultivate the company | (at foreigners. 7 _ ar mer at Brighton, tripped om aroll of tar me epecinfly remarked won by Mr. . Daulin of the -gangway plank, aud was tt. Seward, when that st tesman was erjously injured. Suit for damages was mkiog his tour around the world. The srenght in a Londen court. It was shewn \distinguished Americad, in recording hy ‘he defence that the lady had on a pair ‘his impressions of it, remarks :—**Priuce of tigh heeled boots, which, the presiding | Thuphik is about tweoty, handsome, J" s"ice remarked, seemed to be built on ‘inteligent, and carefully educated by PUTPOBe to. cause peer e. Hig inte _- te Reieend sok td ‘ewmarked that were be adoctor the first Europeau masters, , : question he would ask, if a lady was sagacious father, votwithstanding reli- |; ught to tim suffering from a fall, would givas prejudices, insists upon Tauphiks oe, ‘‘What were her 900ts like?’ The mi igliog freely with Eurepean society.’ jory, after a brief consultation, found that, The Kbedive’s penchant for that society wnacever the negligence of the steamboat lhas been noted by other travellers. Of official anght have oven Mrs. Biend, by ch aes j - her oich-heeled boots, hod wantonly and rl } é ¢ i. oe ; , a jChe f Pasha, auother Egyptian who is. ir contributed to cause the injury of DOw taklog Up @ promipelt postion. 19 yin che co aplained, and therefore ab- would pot fiud. SOURCE OF FUTURE LITIGATION, i PROMINENT MEN IN EGYPT. In England, a ledy embarking on a stea- aes by al Drnggie D2e¥tan atfars, Mr. Seward makes the soived the proprietors of the boat. There We 1'89 wk Observation :—*' President of tue Couueil jg a good deal of justive in this decision, - an ‘dade a Aaa 4 a a ll alae de meg as —_— eS sae asa - oe porent 9 Se cond ca oe |