Ces tenes ae oe a TH Perms :—Five Dontars A YRAR NEW SERIES. Che Daly Examiner i# issued every evening by The Fxaminer Publishing Co. From their office, corner of Water and Great George streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATE3 OF SUBSCRIPTION— nag lhaemrotpape eT Ee Ce $2.50 Tiree months.....,...... eile, sania aie 1 25 one Gue ment? Ai. ded ce. alee es 50) Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. half-yearly, or yearly alverticements, on application. ALMANAC FOR JUNE, 1886, MOON'S CHANGES. N ew Moon 2 First i day 9th., 42.8m., a. m., 8, E. Quarter 9th day, 3h., 14.2m., a. m., N. E. (below horizon. ) Full Moon 16th day, 9th., 25.4., a. m.. N. W. (below horizon. ) Last Quarter 24th day, Oh., 23.5m.., Wh, Ie (below horizon). Sun 'Sun Moon! High! Day's D DAY OF WEEK|”. Fe M} rises/sets | rises jwater| len'h ; jh mh mymornjaft'n h m 1 Tuesday 4 17,7 38 3 5410 815 I9 2)\Wednesday | 17 39) 4 3610 50 20 3 Thursday 16; 39).5 2512 33 23 4 Friday 15} 40! 6 I4imorn| = 25 Saturday 1d} 41) 7 27; 0 15, 26 6/Nunday | 35, 42] 8 35,059) 27 7|Monday i4; 43) 9 46) 148, 29 8/Tuesday I4| 44/10 59) 2 38) 30 9, Wednesday I4, 45'aft ll) 341) 31 10; Thursday 14; 46; 1 21) 455) 32 1) | Friday 14) 47| 23016 15| 33 12) Saturday 14) 47) 3 38) 7 26, 33 13 Sunday 14) 47| 4 45) 8 23) 33 14 Monday 14; 48) 5 49) 910; 34 15 Tuesday 13} 48} 6 50} 9.53) 35 16, W ednesday 13} 48! 7 45110 32) 35 17 Thursday 13! 48) 8 35/11 8] 35 18! Friday 13; 48) 9 911 46) 35 19/Saturday =| 13} 48/9 Sijait2)) 35 20 Sunday 13) 48/10 31, 0 56) 35 21 Monday | 13) 48)11 1) 1 33) 85 22, Tuesday ) 14) 49/11 29) 2 12) 35 23\ Wednesday | 14) 49/11 55) 2 55 35 24 Thursday 14/ 49\morn| 3 46) 35 25! Friday 15) 49} 021) 449) 34 26/ Saturday 15] 491 048'6 1] 34 27 | Sunday 15| 48] 1 18] 7 ut 33 23 Monday | 16) 48} 145) 811) 33 29) Tuesday | 16) 48) 22819 3) 32 30/ Wednesday /4 167 48) 3 13) 9 S115 32 t | oer To , s , » x . . " ' * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men. having to advise the Pablic, may speak CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, MONDAY, JUNE 14, 1886. STRICT ATTENTION, ADAMSOW to Business, Honesty and Square Dealing, and paying | : a Cash every time, is what has placed r_@ct ANig | ‘ | ~. w ra ; 4 "Cy bt EW PROWSE CAH Ss ‘to the front of all competi'ors, in CLOTHING, HATS, &c. | cm | He does not advertize to sell goods at cost, but he guaran-| tees to sell from 10 to 25 per cent less than those who do adver- tize to sell at cost. He does not try to deceive the people by making a big (ts blow and offering paltry rewards, but trys to do things right im Uns and has the goods to back him up in what he advertizes. a, He has now about 6,500 HATS and $4,000 worth of, CLOTHING, which he guarantees to sell from 10 to 25 per cent’ less than any house in the trade, A lot of this Clothing was’ SURE. PROMPT. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Acamson's Botanic Cough Balsam, It is as pleasant as hon: y. bought less than half price, ard will be sold less than half price. | attana, Which load to Conmustion share "bene He does not ask the peopie to believe his advertisement Phe denture a N dd fie eos until they see his prices; he knows then they will believe, and) | oud sop eetapant pine neta edTvesions, can knows that the goods and prices back him up every time. Mien dteiehiraan se FOR SALE BY ALL DRI GGISTS, Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druggists, 343 4TH AVE., N. ABSOLUTE PURITY. a . ’ “s ! Sign of the BIG HA _- 74 cpueen *treet. Hs following ananiyses (made by the Domin- Ch’trwn May 7 86 ood wiley , | ion Analyst) of three BAKING POWDERS ’ ’ Tr J | All goods freely shown, or sent to my part of the town. | KKSE>_ Please don’t forget to call. | meh. PROW SE: «sold in this market should put a step to the | unjust efforts of the Royal to mislead the public | a3 to its being the only pure Powder. These im- | partial tests shew that other Powders are as pure He y ! 5 ; and wholesome : TELEGRAPH UHDR | Sy PR ie PTL’ CHIPPED) | W. SAUNDERS, Dom, Analyt, St. John, N. B. f : : ouer & a : . | Royal—Contains Alkaline Carbonates—a mixture consisting mainly of Bi-Carbonate of Soda at and Cream of Vartar—adulierated with about 20 per cent. of Starch, omneenoennemen 20) § NOFFINS and Caskets, all sizes, mouuted and furnished one hour’s notice. |W. ¥, BEST, Dom. Analyst, St. John, N. B., ' reports: * v. % | Pure Gold—Contains Cream of Tartar, Carbon- LOW-PRIGE GOODS AND HIGH-PRICE GOODS, “Stes cj aa us §> . Ne a: Nov. 10, 1882—- Not adulterated; ets f «ame as usual, » : Sem 7 . ° ’ spril 7, 1883—Not adulterated : $15.00 Funera! Putts, consisting of Imitation Rosewoed | WOODILL Ny sane as ae ae . . °% . vune 4, 1s rresn an pure ; Casket, silver-plate mountings, o1tside shell and use of hearse. | Same composition as usual. : ; : | MAYNARD BOW MAN, Dom. Analyst. Halifax, Having made special arrangements with the manufacturers N, Sz) reports : { Of good quality; contains nothing of Funeral Goods, we are able to quote the lowest prices on WOSBILD'S § nics all grades of Funeral Furnishings. Woodill’s German Baking Powder 33 a reputation for purity and wholesomeness now Wy ME nearly 30 years, RIGHT May 21, 1885. & CO. |. MARK sis THROUGH TICKETS { TRLEPHONE COMMUNICATION. | W. WHEATLEY, Charlottetown Ticket Agency. |Oh’town, April 12.°85 2Qaw & wky j ' rg YUROUGH TICKETS for sale to all parts of Canada and the United States, at the very lowest possible rates. Write for rates, maps, time tables, etc. G. A. SHARP, Station Master and Ticket Agent, March 19—2aw wky 3mo —2OR- BOSTON. SUMMER ARR ANGEMENT, ’ THE PALACE STEAMERS INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- laoremen ‘Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at Produce and Commission Merchant. a el Sienna wi PECIAL attention given to consign uente, )) Large storage accommodation, Satisfaction yaaranteed. 269 Barrington St, Halifax, N. §. P. %. I. Railway. | i 7 March 24--3mos eod 7 | & $ is27 = = = §886, | T. & E. KENNY, Dry Geods and Shipping, HALIFAX, CANADA. eee, A NEW DEPARTURE I] & BE, KENNY. (Fr. © MAHON) Ship Owners and Brokers, General Commission Merchants, i6]| GRESHAM HOUSE, Bishopsgate Street, LONDON, E. C., England, Scott's and Vaughan s Codes. Wewson Block. HATS, of the Latest Styles, at the very LOWEST PRICES. | FURS, of all kinds, Cleaned, Dyed, altered and Repaired. HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for Raw Furs. E; . S 7 WU A Et 7_ s March 29, 1886. Ch’town, May 4, 1886 ESTABLISHED 1873. MEMBERS CHAMBER ait ee C°MMERCE. WE BUY 8.00 hy ‘elock Saturday night’! rr T a4 — re S$ ha Sas ae vin ECT CARVELL S 3 Potatoes, Spiling, R.®. Tics, BOSTO "| nd Gommission Merchants Lumber, Lathes, Canned fure from Charlottetown to Boston, %3,50, 2nd freneral Agents and Com : Fish, Klay, Egss, = feasts Sed other information apply to CH AR LOTT ETOWN Produce,’ G. A SHARE, P. ay thee ae Co. | . ’ And sell on commission. Write us fully for P. E.L RY-. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. May 7, 1886—eod wky 1. ARTHUR & CO, GEN BHRAL Commission Merchants, 12) ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. } Regs and Produce a Specialty. Jaly 15—dly wkly | CAUTION. EACH PLUG OF THE | YRTLE NAVY + & B, ~~ IN BRONZE LETTER?" None Other Genuine. — - — qeotations, Ship to HATHEWAY & (C0. 22 Central Wharf, Boston, ‘Gen- eral Commission Merchants. Prince Edward Isiand. —— +) --- AGENTS FOR: The Malifax Sugar Refining Company. The Vale Coal Company. The Guardian Assurance Company, of England. The Boston Marvine Insurance Company. The New York Board of Underwriters. The Alian Line of Occan Steamships. The Quebec Stoamehip Desnpany: ‘olaeonals — ae es pay The Boston, Halifax & P. EH, 5. Steamship Line. | nie biel ae on ae tee Se ee i tty pee eee Oe Consign your vessela to our house. Will receive personal attention. Chartes, Freights and Vessels for the United States, Newfound- land, West Indies, South America Ports. Lumber, ‘tone and Oil Freights. Aprii 12, ’86 WANTS, LOST, FOUND, &e 3mos mar?6 tf BOOK-BINDING, PAPER-RULING Upper Weymonth Street; terms easy, - BLANK-BOOK MAKING, _ +} Apply at Tor Examiner office. ap21. - Bay | ‘ % ; Sv eN i cde ea ee OVER BOREHAMS BOOT & SHOE SPORE) oe saim on 10 Lit The Cottage at a ee , we St. Avards, St. Peter’s Road, just out- LL kinds of BOOK BINDING executed - Lowest Prices aad with Quick Dantes side sive limita, o smh, anal: i D. Ruling, Numbering and Perforating for the lrade promptly attended to. BLANK Geo. Chesnut, Esq Apply to R. McMillan, BOOKS A SPEVIALTY. coal office, foot Prince Street aw A Share of Patronage Solicited. apl2 eo? wky tf JAMES D. TAYLOR, [Fase Age,” from 1882 to 1884, complete—the QUHHN SQUARE. best literature of the age. Also, Webster's Ch town, Feb. 23, 86.) "N00 LET The Brick House, opposite Tue EXaMiner office ; posses-ion given about Ist June. Apply toJ hn Togs, may7 3i pd O LET—Farnished Rooms with use of Kitchen, or furnished House, Apply at Tue EXAMINER Office. ap27 tf Fo SALE Part of Building Lot on Dietionary (unabridged). Apply at Tur Ex- AMINER office, feb27 ee ne ee ee E DAILY EXAMINER. free.”’—Eviiripss. Political Meeting at Miscouche. A very large, respectable, orderly meet- ing of the Liberal Conservatives of Mis- couche assembled in the Hall at that village on the evening of the 10th inst., to hear the late representatives—Hon. John Le- furgy and Dr. Gillis—give an aecount of their stewardship, and to nominate a candi- ;date for the western end of the district. Dr. Gillis, on taking the platform, was enthusiastically cheered by the large audi- ence. The following isa brief synopsis of his speech :— “If you go back four years you will remember that a delegation asked me_ to accept a nomination, in the interests of the District. I did so with hesitation. I have now to thank you for the support you then gave me. Our success on that occasion was due to the unanimity with which you sup- ported us. There is no part of the Island which has been better used by the Govern- ment than Miscouche, and the Government deserves well of you.” He then referred to the roads and other local affairs of the place. Hecompared the receipts and ex- penditure of the years 1877-78 with 1884- 85 ; reviewed the actions of the two Gov- ernments, showing how worthy the present administration were of the people’s support. He dealt fully with the expenditure on edu- cation, roads, bridges, &e., in a manner that carried conviction to the minds of his listeners. ‘‘If,” said he, ‘*the present Gov- ernment have, with less revenue than the Davies’ Government, kept your roads and bridges and schools in better condicion than they were in 1878, why should you with- draw your allegiance from them! They have opened up new roads and built new bridges in this district, and you have to thank them for a school that stands at the head of its class in this Province.” Re- ferred to wharves. He showed that the country is now governed about $130,000 cheaper per year than under Davies, and at the same time more _ efficiently. He then dwelt for some time on purely local affairs, and showed that the people of the western end of the District had been very liberally dealt with in the distribu- tion of public woney, and the position in which they would stand should a govern- ment be returned which would again saddle the Province with the Assessment Act. He showed that of the 16,000 voters in this Province, Miscouche is represented by 206 voters, who, under Assessment Act, had to pay, including land and poll taxes, about $4 each, or about $800 yearly in this part of the District, or $3,200 in four years, where not one dollar is, at the present time, collected in that shape. He then fully explained the provisions of the Medi- cal Bill mtroduced into the Legisiature last session, and showed the necessity of such a law, this being the only Province of the Dominion where the people are not pro- tected by law from the dangerous practice of quacks, who come here from other Pro- vinces to compete with qualified medical men. If it is necessary there to. protect the public by such a law, it is just as neces- sary heve, for health is just as dear to us as to any other people. The present state ef the | question is neither fair to medical men, nor does it afford protection to the sick. He disclaimed being the author of the Bill, which was the work of the leading medical men of the Province, and put into his hands to carry through the House of As- sembly. We had a more stringent law in 1871 than the one proposed, but it had lapsed five or six years ago. The man who cannot qualify under the provisions of the Bill should not be allowed to practise. It is also needed as a defining bill in connect- tion with the Vaccination Bill. Twenty- nine members out of thirty were in favor of the Bill. In conclusion of his able address, which lasted upwards of an hour and a quarter, and which was attentively listened to and frequently applauded, the Dr. again thank- ed his constituents for their support at the last election, and assured them that who- ever they should nominate would receive his hearty support, and he hoped the peo- ple of Miscouche would unite as one man and elect their candidate by a sweeping majority, and show their approval of a Gov- ernment which had dealt so liberally and so justly with them, and which iad left as much money as possible in their pockets. The Doctor resumed his seat amid prolonged and hearty applause. After lengthy speeches from Hons. John Lefurgey and J. O. Arsenault, who were enthusiastically received and attentively heard, and who fully reviewed the political situation, Dr. Gillis was proposed by Hubert Gaudet, Esq., and seconded by D. Malone, Esy., as a candidate to run in conjunction with Hon. J. Lefurgey. The motion was carried by an overwhelming majority. The Doctor thanked the electors for the nomina- tion, and believed that they would work together; sink all little differences, if any existed, and elect himself and his colleague by sucha handsome majority as that with which they had given him the nomination. After short speeches by H. V. DesRoche, Esq., J. A. McDougall, Esq., and others, a vote of thanks was tendered the Chair- man, Felix Gaudet, Esq., and the meeting adjourned in the best of humor, and evi- dently well pleased at having had such an operates of expressing their unbounded confidence in their late representatives, and determined to unite in again returning them to Parliament. One PRESENT. Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil, with Hypophosphites Is more reliable as an agent in the cure of Consumption, Chronic Coughs and Emacia- tion, than ali) remedy known to medical science. It is so prepared that the potency of these two most valuable specific s is large- ly iucreased. It is also very palatable. en Bertha Wolf, a German girl living in Southwest Coiorado, was the first discover er of gold in the San Juan mountains. She is whirth $100,000, SinGLS Copies Two Cents. VOL. 19.—NO. 20. THE NEWS OF THE DAY. Georgia built, chartered and conducted the first female college in the world. The death rate from chloroform is, ac- cording toa recent estimate, 1 in 1,600. Halifax's imports and exports for May amounted to $277,988 and $372,487 respect- ively, ’ New Zealand has 120 newspapers, in- cluding 30 dailies, to a population of only 400,000. The man with a No. 15 neck and a No. 14 collar has a hard struggle to make both ends meet. The Sacramento Bee claims that the Chinese take $15,000,000 a year out of Cali- fornia, sending it home. ‘For a young woman to begin to pick lint off a young man’s coat” is said to be the first sympton that the young man is in peril. A Nevada prospector, led by the debris which some squirrels had dug out of their burrows, found a gold ledge which he has sold for $35,000. At a revival meeting in Hopkinsville, Ind., occurred the wedding of a colored couple who begin their married life with 32 children, the groom having 22 and the bride 10. There are nearly 150,000 owners of real estate in Philadelphia, who pay taxes upen the 225,000 separate properties assessed in the city limits. These figures show a larger proportion of taxpayers than can be found in any city in the United States. The skeleton of a man in a sitting posture has been unearthed at Nevada, Col., by workinen engaged in grading. The oldest inhabitant was unable to account for the presence of the remains in the locality, being more than half a mile from the near- est cemetery. A Cincinnati tobacconist asserts that many of the women of that city smoke cigarettes and even cigars. They do it secretly, and often meet and enjoy a regular smoke, just as men do at a club room. Many servant girls come to love the weed from seeing their mistresses indulge. A colored child had a fall froma two story building the other day, and his mother, in relating the accident at the gro- cery store, said: ‘‘ Dere dat chjlg, was 4 comin’ down feet fust, wid ebery chance ,6’ bein’ killed, when de Lawd he turned him ober, de chile struck on his head, an’ dere wasn’t so much as a button off.” Clark North, a blind man. carries the mail from Claryville, Sullivan County, to Big Indian, Ulster County, N. ¥., a dis- tance of 21 miles, three times a week. The road is so rough as io be impassable for vehicles, and the route is accomplisLed on foot. tie has been the mail carrier on this route for 30 years, and has 1ever missed a trip either in summer or winter. Prince George, the second son of the Prince of Wales, paid marked court to Princess Helene, daughter of the Comte de Paris, during the marriage fetes in honor of the union of the Duke of Braganza and Princess Amelie. The opinion is prevalent in court circles that the prince is madly in love with Princess Helene, and many pre- dict that an effort will be made to accom- plish their marriage. Worcester, Mass., has equipped its central police station with a lightning beer tester, which gives speedy proof of whether the liquor is over or under the three per cent. standard. A policeman who gets hold of a sample of beer sold at any saloon, dashes to the station, where it is tested in less than no time, and if above three per cent. the manacles are on the unlucky saloon keeper ere he has time to hide himself. A story with just a suggestion of Romu- lus and Remus in it comes from Toulouse, where a working woman was in the habit of leaving her baby under a tree guarded by a faithful dog. As days passed she thought the baby’s appetite failed, but still it thrived. One day she found the dog standing over the infant and calmly suckling it. The mother thought the arrangement a good one, and it has gone on, the baby doing weli under the treatment. The Rev. Arthur Gray-Hone, of Tankes- ton Towers, Kent, England, who recently died, has left his two sons the comfortable sum of £400,000, This is a good deal of wealth for a clergyman to possess, and some of the brethren on this side of the water would doubtless like to know how he saved it out of his salary. The cable does not say anything about it, but it is pretty certain that he never allowed his parishion- ers to give him a donation party. The wedding of a young lady of Port- land, Me., was fixed for Wednesday of last week and she was making preparations for the occasion. The other day she left the dinner table and proceeded to the sewing room, where, all at once, a shriek was heard, and the family rushed to the room te hear her cry most piteously: ‘I cannot see.” A leading surgeon was sent for who said she was suffering from paralysis of the optic nerve and never would recover her sight. A great political question is agitating the United States,--upheaving the country from end to end. It is all about the fees paid to Rev. Mr. Sunderland for perform- ing the marriage ceremony for President Cleveland. The Democrats maintain that the fee was $500, and produce evidence, The Republicans claim it was enly $100, and produce evidence The President, who knows, is mum; tho preacher, w’io knows, is silent; Dan Lamont, who may know, is discreetly dumb, and the war goes on. We are afraid it will be long before the Ameri- can nation will have time to attend to that little fishing matter of ours, "ee Uc aera mi ae cE RR a aati Mae ean BN ih NE ene * wade" rem iy