OMe ue ae ee ER v0 ~~ ae ne e - “ This is true Liberty. when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxirives. Sincix Copres Two CEnts inex my Che Maly xa The Examiner Publishing Ce., | LONDON HOUSS,” ' QUEEN SQUARE, . Island. ' () Beree Momihe.....«csccteste 25 Cee Momh...cs.-sceabueer eee 0) 50 | 47 Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar-| half-yearly or yearly advertisements on | i ation. ALMANAC FOR JULY, 188% =| MOON S CHANGES. i Fi ut - i ‘ sitl., &, m., Vi “ riz ru \ . }2: $ i) ; ley j noriz j ! arter, 19 ; 2.4m, p.m, N.F, Ww horizo | N m, 27th day i » p.m .W,} W HO ' D a ; : Moon! High Day’a| Se : | water| len’h | h mih m mo morn h m | [= y 1187 49 NO 22115 Bt 2} uy 19 i9 8§ 12) 0 46 30 | } Wednesday iv ‘9: 9 18! 3 g 29 4! Thursday — 20' 48:10 25) 2 28 5iFriday — 2! 43/11 33) 3 47 27 | 5) Satu 22| 48/ait43) 3.42) 26] wat Se t 1 561 4 49 25 | % Mo 23 + 3 11; 6 10 24 YI 2 16; 4 25) 7 24 23 | iw . ? i} 5 44) 8 29) 22} Li: tha b = i5| 6 564: 89 Zo 20 | 2) Frida 26 14, 7 56/10 16 is Ljisat 7 14) S$ 45/11 4] 16 14) Sunday 25 i3| 9 26)11 1) 15 15| Monday 29 } 9 58iaft 82] 14 16| Tuesday } 42/10 25,1 14) 12 iv \ : Ly ol 41,10 3 }] So! 10 isi i 3 32; 40/11 13) 2 40) 8 19) Frida 89/11 36) 3 30] 6 | 20 Saturday | 3 38) 11 59) 4 32| 4 21| Sunday ; a 37 | morn | 5 42) 9 #2) Monday | 26] 36) 0 26] 6 bi a} 231 y 37} 35) 0 57] 7 50/14 58} 24 \ inesuiay ox i+ tl 231 8 3 56! 25\ thursday ae 32; 2 16] 9 23! 53 | ; . De | 2%) Friday | 40) 3113 GIO 3s 51} 27 |Saturday 42} 30) 4 O}10 39) = 48) @iSunday . 49} 281 5 Wak 16) 45) 29' Mouday 44] 2716 Silly 59! 43 30; Tuesday i “6 morn |} 41) 7| © 25)14 40) 31 Wednesday mans a FRED. W. L. MOORE, (Late of Davies & Sutherland), | Barrister, Notary Public, Commis- sioner for Affidavits, Wills, &c., OFFICE, -- LOSDON HOUSE, i Above Messrs. Harris & Stewart's, next | ut ore ceneeenen ty aces eee ARE SHOWING A BIG Newest Parasols and Umbrellas, Kid, Lisle Thread and Silk Gloves, ‘Lace Mitts, in all colors ; ‘White and Colored VMuslins. Big Bie Bargains in Straw Hats. Big hes CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISL BargainS in English Millinery. Bargains in Feathers & Flowers, BASONADLE, UnEAP, GUD inoue, He LNG & STERNS RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : vhs oko STOCK OF | BEST VALUE - TO BE FOUND IN THE CITY. |" HIS LOT . MUST BE CLEANED UCT ——_——_{x] Job Lot of Men's and Boys’ STRAW HATS, very cheap. iti --— —(x )}———— DRY GOODS of all kinds, at Prices that cannot be beaten anywhere. PERKINS & rinttetown. July 3, 1889 —dy & wky STHRNS. — FASHIONABLE G00DS---LOW PRICES. ‘Fashionable Goods | | BEER BROS. Tumense Variety | iT M6. ro voy vour | Latest Novelties | BEER BROS. BEER BROS. to EXAMINER office. | Y iii iiitaaiaaidie sinainitinnigualigttitiitnliimaionaiig aa Special attention given to urches, | AND- : Collect ons, ot uncing, and all br snches | ‘ ee | BONANZA LINES - prong Peg mortgage or approved joint Millinery a S a -Im eod w pd Child 5 inet o- Childrens’ Hats, SPECULATION. wr GEO. A. ROMER, Banker and 40 & 42 BROADWAY AND 51 NEW ST., New York City. -_——- Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Provisions and Petro- ileum Bought, Sold and Carried on Margin. P. S.—Send for explanatory pamphlet. wept20 —dy & wky ly ARVELOUS wn ed Sat ee ee -ee he Fs ee 3 © vt ta be b sb ma ] a = & ol x Hea ae (i pe = ~ ten ~ ld 3 ‘ fcraory Training: reading. } G.ly Cennin« 4 “of rour M« “=? : itn out Miud wandcring curete Every child anid udu'’t erest'y tenefited. it ludaven g to ¢ » gdence Classes. $, with onir ‘ Dr. Wem. A. Ham- 9 Wor. d-fanied Sp in Mind Drscaset, ict re ‘nleaf Thompson, t 12 great P you : . Buckiey, {}.D., editor of the ( hristian '. Y, Riehard Proctor, the Scientis,, . W. Astor, Judae Gibson, Judah P. 4. tig and others, sent post free by frcuie A LUISETTE. 257 Fifth Ave.s N. ¥: eee JaMES A. MORRISON. GZORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AN D— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX hd Consiguments of Island produce will receive prempt attention, Broker, | 5 Cents, BEER BROS. 410 Cents, 20 Cents. NEW STYLES Arriving Weekly. Charlottetown, June 14, 1889—eod Popular Prices | | ! } | | | | | Dress Goods ! Dress Goods ! Every Novelty. Silk Wraps, Jet Wraps, Every Style. Print Cottons ! Print Cottons ! Immense Variety. FLOUNCINGS, FLOUNCINGS, Wonderfully Cheap. SUNSHADES, SUNSHADES, Special Bargains. _—— —IS AT— ee Thomas Fyshe, Kaq., Cashier ” Nova Scotia, Halifax; D. C.| Chalmers, Manag r ; ' 7s ger Bank Nova Scotiz Charlottétown. 5 vee of vva Scotia i WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS. 1 East Cukar ann 9 & 14 Mincine Lane, . Loxpox, ENeLanp. “presented in Canada b sR, ag Halifax. “5 Someta. ——(0) MR. KEITH, the popular head of this Department, and you are sure of getting the very your orders with us. February 25, 1888—eod & wky The Best Chance —TO GET THOROUGHLY RELIABLE AND— OD-FITTING GARMENT, B. 3. DAVIES & CO'S hall ‘Tali nSTIGHNE ALWAYS A LARGE STOCK TO SELECT FROM, AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE CASH PRICES. and efficient Cutter, is at the with a good staff of workmen best satislaction when leaving B. S. DAVIES & CO., CAMERON BLOCK, a a ec AND. TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1889. | Local and Other Items. —— —_ A New Wav.--Wallace, N. S., raised over $250 for sidewalk purposes at a _ recent tea meeting. a A Goop SaLtagy.—The chief of the culinary department the Alonguin hotel, St. Andrew’s, N. B, receives a salary of $250 ber month. # «= ca MeN and women prematurely gray, -and whose hair wag failing, are enthnsiastic in praising Hall's Blair Renewer for restoring the color and preventing baldness, Make a Nore or Tuis.—In case of the “absence or illnéss of any person entitled to be ,added to the voting list, another person may ‘make the necessary application in his behalf. Tue Usvan Resuut.—Some small boys were playing with a dynamite cartridge at Sussex, N. b., recently, and accidentally set lit off. Several of the boys were seriously ' burned, | Kiowep is Aa Coat Mine.—-A miner named Hugh Macdonald, employed in the Reserve Mines, Cape Breton, was recently killed whiie at work by a pile of coal falling upon him. 5 anal lel In tHe Cream.—An exchange reports that about two hundred persons were made jvery ill by poisoning at a picuic recently held near Kingston, Ont. ‘forts of the doctors who were summoned saved all who had been attacked. The poison was discovered, on analysis, to have been in the cream. Tue Care Breton Lepers.—A_ vessel arrived at Port Hastings, C. b., a few days ago, sent by the Dominion Government, for the purpose of conveying to the lazaretto at Tracadie, N B., those from the different parts of the island who are afilicted with ieprosy. Though several cases were reported by the physician sent there to investigate, only one person is said to have been shipped. MvxperR Witt Ovur.—About forty years ago Alex. Greenough, of a small New Hamp- shire town, wae suspected of killing a German peddler, but the charge could not be proved aud he finally sold out and came to Quebec. He, however, committed forgery there and left the country, settling down in Chili, South America. A few weeks since (ireen- ough took sick, and believing that his ead was near confessed killing the peddler. He did not die, however, and now the Chilian authorities have him under surveillance, while his written confession has been sent to Canada and the United States. Fisaine ww Krne’s, N..S8.—Not less than the Gaspereaux, King’s, this season, and this is the result of opening the dam some few years ago with the Rogers’ patent fish- way. At ruling prices there has been suf- ficent increase on the river already to pay the interest at six per cent. on $120,000, while the cost of the fishways were a mere trifle, probably $350. With all the dams in the country thus opened and all the na- tural falls surmounted by this invaluable invention, and the bay and harbors along the coast jfilled with young fish life asa result, what a boon we should have in our mackerel catch, as well as all other coast fish. —Hx. Herald. —- ->-—, Mourpver Mosr Fov..—A murder of a most atrocious character was committed at Somer- ville, a suburb of Boston, at an early hour on Saturday morning last. The victims were Mrs. Catherine Smith and her 14-year old son Thomas, who were shot and killed instantly. Two younger children were wounded. The murder was committed in a tenement occupied by Mrs. Smith. Mrs, Smith was shot while asleep in bed, and Thomas received a bullet in his forehead while attempting to escape from the house. The other two children were wounded while in their room in the attic.» Augustus Rosenburg, who has been living with Mrs. Smith since her husband mysteriously disappeared sume time agu, was the murderer. No motive is assigned for the deed. The generally accepted theory is that Rosenburg was insane. Alter doing the shoot- ing Rosenburg jumped from the second story window into the yard, where later on his body was found. There were no marks of violence on the body, but signs of poisoning were visible. Charlottetown Markets. very large. to 20 cents per pound, and sold well at that price. from 10 to 16 cents per quart. Below we quote prices :— t The prompt ef- | $7,000 to $8,000 worth of salmon and ale-| wives, chiefly the latter, were caught on | The attendance at the market to-day was , Butter (fresh) ranged from 18 . Fruits (wild) of all sorts ranged: Telegraphic Odds and Ends. Beteravg, July 13.—The military coun- cil has decided to arm 30,000 men of third levy. JACKSONVILLE, Oregon., July 13.—Three prisoners were suffocated by the burning of the jail yesterday. Puitaperruia, Pa., July 13.—Wm. P. Swope, a well-known attorney, has disap- peared, and he is said to be an embezzler to the extent of $10,000. Larayetre, La., July 13.—An armed body of men broke open the parish jail and took therefrom Felix Keis, colcred, who last Tuesday murdered his wife. He was taken to the scene of his crime and executed by the mob. Kineston, Ont., July 13.—Hon. G. A. Kirkpatrick, who holds a lease of the Mur- ray tower property, offers to transfer it if the city will undertake to beautify and im- prove the property asa public park. It is virtually a gift of alot worth $40,000 to the city. Swkerspurc, Que., July 13.—At the examinaticn in the case of Wm. Warren and wife, held charged with the murder of their adopted boy Thomas Westhover, ten witnesses were examined and strong evi- dence given against the prisoners. Hcw- ever, many believe the» boy really hung himself, and that the accused, finding him, were alarmed and tried to hide the matter. Paris, July 14.—Deroulode, Laguerre and other Boulangists, members of the Chamber of Deputies, assembled at Place de la Concorde to-day, intending to hold a meeting. A crowd of several thousand ‘persons gathered, and Deroulode was about to begin his speech when the police inter- fered. Deroulode led the crowd in shouts of ‘* Vive Boulanger.” The police at- tempted to arrest him but the mob rescued him. Finally the police drove away the mob, making many arrests. Dangerous | developments are feared. An African Horror. FRIGHTFUL TORTURES OF A DEAD KING‘S WIVES. A horrible story of human sacrifices comes from the east coast of Africa. A short time ago the King of Eobe, a province on the Niger, died. Some English traders from New Calabar went up the country to |pay their respects to the new sovereign. | When they reached Eobe they found what are called the “Ju Ju” rites were being performed. The old king, who had been dead about two months, was still lying in an open grave. It was large enough to accommodate nine of the departed ruler’s youngest wives, who had been murdered in ‘the cruelest manner. Each of them had her ankles and wrists broken so that she could neither walk nor crawl. In this maimed condition, and suffering the most excruciating pain, the poor creatures were placed at the bottom of the grave, seven of them lying side by side. The king’s body was then laid on them in a_ transverse direction. Then the two remaining womeu were laid by his side. There they were left without food or water to wait for their kind liberator, death, which, however, it is said, did not come to their release until after four or five days of intense suffering. In the meantime four men were stationed around the grave, armed with clubs, ready to knock backward any of the women who might manage to crawl to the side of the pit. In other parts of the town human. sacrifices were taking place. Sus- pended from various trees were the bodies of several men. They, too, were under- going agonizing deaths, holes having, in most cases, been bored through their feet, just by the ankles. Through these holes ropes were drawn and the men tied toa high tree, head downward, and left to die. These are only specimens of the fiendish cruelties practised, and which the traders were quite powerless to prevent. For the next ten months these sacrifices will be continued. cxicniakncceiiiiiasiiiaass alates Queen Victoria as a Stage- Prompter. A delicious story, for the accuracy of which we can vouch (writes one of. our correspondents), is ‘* going around,” anent Mr. Irving’s and Miss Ellen Terry's visit to Sandringham. It appears that all was going beautifully with the Merchant of ‘Venice—Her Majesty seated in front, stick in hand and all attention—until Miss Terry’s time came as Portia to deliver her great speech about Mercy. We all know how she does it, advancing towards the Beef (small) per lb. ..... ie eS $0.07 ta 0.16, é , Beef (quarter) per Ib ...,......- 0.06 to 0.09 ‘Jew and making a marked and peculiar Beets -....; UES secon rank ee 0.03 to 0.00 pause before delivering her oration. The Butter, fresh, per lb.......... 0.17 to 0.20 kind Queen, who was all attention, and Batter, tab, per lb..... siteebos (.14 to 0.17 |had probably been carefully instructed in Cheese per Ib..........6-.0005 0.14 to 0.16 |her own youth by the Duchess of Kent or Cabbage, per doz............. 0.00 to 0.50 | her good governess in Shakespeare's oe per bush.......-+++-- a = ae | ‘*titbits” was eagerly following the gifted SOMES 5s a 6 210» ont ood at nbeipe’ . -60 | actress, but ‘mistook the pause for some Currants, Black, per quart .... — to 0.14 ' sudden failure of memory. So the Queen eee —or quart...... a “8 > = ‘began prompting her quite low, “ The KE — a me hee feet 0.13 to 0. 14 quality of mercy,” etc.; but Miss Terry did Pea al eee VS Ce 2.50 to 0.00 Bot take the cue, and Her Majesty then es Oe es eae 0.55 to 0.60 Tepeated rather more loudly and encour- NOR, cas eakbaxe pe enyanut 0.00 to 0.00 agingly, **The quality of mercy is not (jooseberries per quart ........ 0.00 to 0.10 strained.” This was almost too much for Ham, per Ib........ ipa dibs 0.15 to-0.16 Miss Terry, but, with a violent effort to Hay, per 100 Ibs. ............-- 0.35 to 0.37 suppress hey twinkling merriment, she Lamb, perlb..........-++-e+0. 0.07 to 9.10 controlled herself, and graciously accepted Lard perlb.......--+++- 0 -+0+: 0.14 to G16 her cue from our gracious sovereign. Good Lettuce per bunch ........ 0.08 to 0.00 (yueen Bess, we know, used’to shout at the eee tf Reogg tar ant shes _s - ot preachers, and correct them openly in theo- Oate (black) per bush.......... PEASE Page Bice: Geog rent oane less Boe Oatmeal, per cwt...........065 0:96 002.40 8 8, PECeey ae ee ee ee RO 15 ivsrencaueasts 4.00 to 6 00 Tess has ever been honored by having a Pork, small,..... - atk ot We 0.12 to 0.15 Queen and Empress as stage prompter.— Pork (carcass), per Ib.......-.. 0 06 to .064 Pall Mali Gazettee. ONION, | vzes coe soninnd obs 0.16 to 0.00 +o+ Raspberries per quart ......--. 0.15t0 0.16 Pye inestimable value of A yer’s Sarsaparilla Radishes, per bunch .......... 0.10 to 0.00 44 a blood purifier should be known to every Rhubarb, per bunch........-. 010 to 0.00 vite and mother. It vorrects irregularities, Straw, per load........--+++++- 1.00 to 2.00 gives tone and strength to the vital organs, Strawberries perquart......--- 0.17 to 0.20 2d cleanses the system of all impurities, The —- pelts.. + . h ceceeesee® 28 4 _ . - best family medicine. ‘urnips, per bush..........- coe O -2 : £8 a cocceese 1,65 to 1.75 Veal. per pound Sia sca ane 0.03 to 0.05 Ladies’ Sunshades, a fine range to select Wood, per load ......---ere+++ 0.00 to 0.00 from, at J. B. Macdonald's. 6i—jyl5 VOL. 25.—NO. 45. Picnic Courtship. When summer fair her charms display, And wild flowers gem the leas, And musical are woods and ways With song birds’ melodies. The gentle maid, in white arrayed, Then to the picnic hies, And he!ps to make the lemonade And «orve the custard pies. She walks with Jolin o’er mead and lea And plucks the daisies white, And hears his vows of love, and she Returns cn aged at night. _—_— om — Odds and Ends. What are the wild waves saying! They are probably telling fish stories to one another. The advertiser is like a brave general. He considers his place to be at the head of the column. If some people should speak the truth it wouldn’t shame the devil as much as it would surprise him. Humanity much reseubles the succuient and seductive strawberry. The green ones generally go to the bottom. Female barbers are not having much success, Gentlemen will not go to them, because they dislike to be cut by a lady. A boy recently hung himself because somebody found fault with him. That boy was not born to be a country editor. There isa man who is said to have a profitable pull in every court im Europe, and yet he doesn’t meddle in politics. He is a dentist. Timid Youth—I have a poem, and I want to see the editor. Office Boy—The editor is busy. I'll do just as well. ('m on my way to the waste basket now. : He—I wonder which of these two young ladies is his sister. She—Why, the bran- ette, of course. Did’nt you notice that she put on her wrap herself. It is estimated that some women carry forty or fifty miles of hair about their heads. Forty or fifty miles without a switch is a good long distance for an ‘air line. It is easy enough to bring up a child in the right way. All you have to do is to watch the way in which most people bring up their children, and then do something else. They are going to make another effort this summer ta find the treasure ship sunk off Long Branch, in 1815. The reason they didn’t find it last year was because it wasn’t there. A Baltimore woman dreamed of finding a pot of gold in the cellar, and next day she went down and nosed around and found a jug of rum which her old man was keeping shy. The American system of checking bag- gage is admitted to be exceiient. Now, if some genius would invent a method of checking the American baggage-smasher our system would be perfect. It is said that the land is so rich in many parts of Missouri that melons cannot be raised on it. The melons grow all right, but the vines grow so fast that they wear the melons out dragging them around the prairie after them. A New Hampshire crank, who has im ported a Cashmere goat, intending to raise his own cotton to make camel’s-hair shawls with, writes to know if there is any differ- ence between Southdown mutton and mut- ton down South. Some people are born lucky, others ac- quire luck, and few have luck thrust upon them. A St. Louis man has just been sen- tenced to ninety-nine years in the peniten- tiary. How much worse it would have been if he had received a life sentence. A Connecticut woman is suing her neighbor for damages by puiting up fly screens. She claims that the flies which cannot get into the neighbor's house on this account will come tu hers, and she will thereby have double the usual number. Mosquitoes are so plentiful in Chicago that a couple of lovers sitting on the back steps of a residence on Wabash avenue were bitten 350 times in 30 minutes. They didn’t mind it, however--in fact, they didn’t know they had received a bite until an hour after. ** Talking ob law,” said Brother Gardin- er, ** makes me think ob what de’ mortal Cato, who lib’ ’most a thousan’ years ago, once said : ‘ De law am like a groun’ glass window, dat gibs light ‘nuff to light us poor folks in de dark passages of dis life; but it would puzzle de debble hisself to see through it !” ** Be your own ductor,” advises a patent- medicine adyertiser. It is pretty guood advice, too. The man who is his own doc- tor can visit himself half a dozen times a week, charge $1 a visit, collect $25 at thi end of the month, and be just that much in pocket. We don’t suppose he ever looked at it in that light. If you drop your collar button there is one sure method of finding it. After you have hauled the bureau across the room to look under it, then replace the heavy furm- ture and put on a heavy pair of shoes, start to walk across the room, and before you have taken three steps you will step ou the collar button and smash it all to pieces. nell lp An Op Reic —The Annapolis Spectator says: Yesterday we were shown a piece of & cannon’s mouth weighing some 19 or 20 ibs , which was dug out of a railway cut a mile or two below Annapolis. The original was evidently a tenpounder used by the French or English in defending the colony. The lock of a musket with the flint still in it was found in Mr. John Ga- vaza’s lot in the railway cutting. The bolts were in 4 position as if the wooden stock had crumbled away. CoLp, cough, coffin is jwhat philosophers term “ta logical sequence.” One is very liable to follow the other; but by curing the cold with a dose of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, the cough will be stopped and the coffin not needed. aa ova,