RE AE OS EFT LES TNE TT \ A NN A CC, ek ee NEW SER! a ” ae al * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, hayin oe ee ee CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLANI g to advise the Public, may spe ), THURSDAY, ak free.”— Evriprpes. A UGUST 25, 1887. THE DaILy EXAMINER. Sinc.Le Copirs Two Cents. VOL. 21.—NO. 79. DiMso | Tet nS ANG S AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson's Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey Coughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have been speedily cured by the use of ApAMson’s BaLsam after all other medicines have failed. Suff>rers from either or bronchial affections, can resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining speedy relief. Do not delay, get it at onee. FOR SALE BY ALL PRUGEGISTS. Bottled at St. Stevens, XN. B., by the proprietors, F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druegists, 343 4TH AvVE.. N.Y. recent or chrenic coughs« SATISFACTION EVERY TIME. | / i —RETAILS AT— Zhe Jap Sraniner NOC ue T | | at ith. i The bx i Shing Qo.| = © | From t Vater and | —AND BUY FROM—— vat ‘ tals i. Lowa, as: MMM . Ss0.~s00é baieneenea dni 50 | , Adve erato rates } Contra as wie for monthly, quar- terly, arly advortisemenis, 0 New American Muslins, New Prin‘ ed Batists, ALMANAG FOR AUGUST, 1887, New French Muslins, New Printed Cottons. N’S CHANGES. A BIG DISPLAY OF LACES. : ; : } m., N.|} > “ te ve © . a : 00K Musiin, Victoria Lawn, Bishop's Lawa, Check | > S| Muslins. Nev 20.1 ns tie x © of ‘ . . . n Embroideries, in Allovers, Flouncings, Edgings, Inser- th., 8.7 .E./ tions, &e¢, b Sun ‘Sun /Moon! High'Day’s A Big Stock of Gloves and Hosiery. M 3 wa na + ‘ ‘ . ; 2 Linen Collars and Cuffs, separate or in sets. iti i mH 4 e > | Fi 2 540 sorieas) — Corsets, direct from the makers and at the lowest 3 (9| 92/ 7 2i|10 24; 33] Price, $'] i Sill | 30} atatamoemananene €)) sititpaiinmanictantins 5 2 5 Z4ill 35 27 | e : ‘ . M4 P 38 $| 8 Sllaft 9} 25] if you want a Seaside Dress just see our stock of ls 04 a . SM / 9 114 19) Planneis - Cheapest and Best Goods for the purpose to be ha al-ehe-eel & en aan Lid } LU 44 1 314 lj ———- ee () 12 f li 4 14 9 Ll: Ss mo & 27 oi lis 6; O 12) 6 46 3] § ; ti 0 591 7 S 0| zi i 64: 8 *hi.. Gi 3 . Z : | ins a ns is. s 0} 4 91025 52 ¥ I ia } Bi 5 Z4ll 7 ‘9 | . ; G 41)1i 45 4a) June 7—dy & wky - >! 9 151 © 2A 39) ee LN FE OR SC RE 2: 30) 1 34) 36] ; i eRe 3 271s 13/2 5815 9) 24 3 5 2] ; oe THE STAR L. ARTHUR & C@., | hOMMTICQTON MUD AITANMAa | Al Aah ai fk bovossio eReAANTS, TATLORING ESTABLISHMENT af ; } } nee . | : Ma swe Uneese HUG? >} Is the right place to ~et your Clothes made. Poultry. Py Fruit & } Because we zive Good Value and a Fit that beats the world. ae Our Hstabiishment is new but our Cutters are the oldest at their! Vegetables. | business in the Province. —~—t ee We can give a style and finish to our garments that others cannot 142, i44 Conmacreial Street, | attain to. BOsto- M By iG, 4 FI ee if se S. Bostoa,, Halifax and Prince Edward) Island cleamship Live du wlod The Only Direct Line Without Change Charlottetown to Beston oe } —— MIIONS SI t cor and I ster have been iA 5 rrvrry THE S in ; jimm rou ‘ ¢ Pr PCLUrG ng 15 i887. one of these vessels e i 1€a i = W harf, Charlottetown, ;} — aa p. ™m., on rHURSDAY Boston roe? i wi eve y SATURDAY, | = Hh — \ lation! Low} T 3” a ‘ Me vv eonseun., romeo WHOLESALE AND RETAIL v' ; Z which 1 Ways care ; RVELL BROTHERS, | “ T nts, Charlottetown, | e e : . ‘ * Ha wing Owner, | Montserratt Lime Juice, in pint and quart bottles. This r July 2 — ‘Lime Juice is imported from the Island of Montserratt, and is ‘guaranteed to be the best and purest in the world. FrOR- | West India Lime Juice, in bottles and on draught. We i5-¢3-S-T-@ SUMMER ARK ARGENMENT {rom one of the best houses in the Dominion, we guarantee them THE PALACE % wee . es U: PITERHATIONAL I 27 » Te tal * : ry rriday at \ 7 ; night 7.50 every Saturday BOSTON DIAGCT fat 4 : ; ; i oe TE NSIN icC . | i : ; Class jwh to boston, G HAI mm apply to Pp, ’ . W. HALES, °& i. YZ P. K. L St ara Nay. Co. | or t your nearest Ticket Agent, April is, 1887 —o0d wky ite, ims STEAMERS + and Port. some Confectionery, We, are prepared to give extra value in —O-— WE BOO W | Because we know we are right and care not what our competitors say. We are bouna to knock them out in Fit, Style, Finish, Price, &c. Come and see us, even if you don’t buy. We want to show you; our Fine Stock of Tweeds, Worsteds, &c. O entitle 2 | M°KENZIE, Queen Street, opposite Watson’s Brug Store. lyAM ES McLEOD, late of C. Robertson & Co. ‘' J. T. McKENZIE, formerly Bruce & McKenzie, late of New York. M°LEOD | | Charlottetown, July 5, 1887—eod & wky ch BEVERAGES, } | Os | SUNN hips Car- ioroughly idition in &C. CENTS PER POUND. CENTS PER OUNCE. 24 Oz., 5 Oz., 10 Oz. PACKETS. July 29, 1887—1mo eod wo 9 i 2 perros SOOTHING, | BNEW A) CLEANSING, HEALING. It Cures STOPS Droppings frem Nasal passages im to the throat and EASY TO USE. excessive expectoration caused by Catarrh. Kent pre-paid en receipt of price, 50e, and $1. . Address FULFORD & CO., Brockville, Ont, ‘Cleanliness Next to Godliness” Cleanse Your Beds and Guard Against Sickness. NOW is the time to get your Feather Beds and Pillows renovated by Dufort’s Patent Feather Zenovator, which will remain in Charlottetown a few weeks for the purpose of Cleaning F eather Beds and Pillows, and making them Soft, Clean and Healthy. ; Thousands of our Canadian Housekeepers can testify to the beautifui work done by this splen- did invention. . . Mediesi men’ and scientists acknowledge its excellence. Satisfaction guaranteed—Charges moderate. place—Terlizzick’s Corner, the Remember Queen Street. July 27, 1887—1 mo eod tu th sat I) : re en? a ae > penis Pe eea eS at te aE. ee SARE THE-BEST- MADE. A Weg asian *9 — ts Shades See =F THE-LEADING LINES Peace Tey hy AS LAVORING EXTRACTS eet CTH eat tc a ee : _|import this in casks and bottle it ourselves, and it has givep = |¥ ‘first-class satisfaction. | Lemon and Raspberry Syrups.—As we import these ‘to be equal, if not superior, to any other Syrups in the market. Fresh Fruit.—We are receiving Oranges, Lemons and ‘Apples, every Boston steamer, and will have Pears, Grapes, Strawberries, Watermelons, &c., in their season. G0. | Confectionery.—-Having a veny large stock of good, whole- this line. Tea Committees will find it to their advantage to give usa ‘call before buying elsewhere. BHR + GorF, em Be 96,50, 2nd : STOVE POLISH a / , COFFEE em 2teaS =) Le] A+ BORAX / CURRY POWDER CELERY SALT y MUSTARD 15 p88 Bas Sac ee ALL GOODS as emma) tt 3 RG LL ee Y” PURE-GOLD MANFGCO 5 aw tt i be th 1827 = - = IS87, T. & E. KENNY, Dry Goods and Shipping, AALIFAX, CANADA: ryy ) TN T & EB. KENNY, (F. ©. NGAHON) Ship Owners and Brokers, General fommission Merchants, i656] GRESHAM HOUSE, Bishopsgute Street, LONDON, &. C., Kugland, Scoit’s and Vaughang Codes 7 << — Qo - o = oS ii = > &* = Me Travelling a Thousand Miles an Hour. PROJECT FOR CROSSING PNEUMATIC —_ — THE OCEAN IN TUBES. Colonel John H. Pierce, of Plantsville, Conn., said to a reporter that as yet little was known outside his room of his plan for con- necting this continent with the Old World by, means of pneumatic tubes. Some statement of a brief nature has been made to a_ local paper. Only withina day, almost, has it been developed to its present stage. In re- sponse to a request te give the facts the inven- tor was full of enthusiasm, but spoke with care and precision and with the air of a man who knew whereof he affirmed. ‘*Yes, I believe my plan is a practical one. This country can be connected with Europe by means of pneumatic tubes of large propor- tions. When the theories are reduced to practice they may be modified to some ex- tent.” ‘“‘How would they be laid and operated ?” ‘‘After the manner of the cables, as I will hereafter explain. We will be obliged to have them laid exactly straight, or as near straight as the surface of the globe will per- mit. They will be operated by currents of air, but on principles quite different in some respects from those governing the small lines now in use; the general principles remain the same. Of course the tubes will always be in couples, with currents of air driven through them, the current in one tube always moving in an opposite direction from the other.” ** Will it not be difficult to force currents of air the distance you contemplate ?” ““Oh, no. The speed of this current can be made as great as desired, and with scarcely any limit, by simply using a great number of steam fans on the principle of those used in blast furnaces,” ‘* The tubes must be large enough to admit of passengers, of course, yet small as possible. I would have individuals sit tandem, one ahead of the other, you see. Friction? That would be prevented by ball bearings—neces- sary appliances. The motion would hardly be perceptible to the passenger. It is hard to speculate upon the speed attainable. One hundred miles an hour would be the easiest thing in the world ; 1,000 miles an hour is not impossible with polished steel surface for tube lining and exterior friction we could pro- vide for. The speed, owing to the curvature of the earth’s surface will tend to overcome all weight and make the pressure greatest on the upper portion of the tube, when run- ning at the maximum speed. Think of going to London in such a way and in such time as that !” Colonel Pierce said that it would not cost a very large sum to build an experimental line for a short distance, say a few miles. His plan has been submitted in its details to several experts, and has met with approval. The great question with the inventor at the present time is to get the necessary funds to carry forward the work, for he is a man _ of comparative little capital. He feels confident that in the end he will receive the recognition and encouragement which bis work deserves. — Boston Globe. — A Victim of Cigarettes. THEY ARE LARGELY TO BLAME FOR THE DEATH OF A MEDICAL STUDENT. When Russell H. Knevals, a New York medical student was found dead in bed recently, groundless rumors of suicide and opium poisoning were circulated. He was more the victim of tobacco in the shape of cigarettes than anything else. The coroner has given the results of it as follows to a reporter: ‘‘I found the heart flabby and fatty | and a decided enlargement of the liver and spleen—both the results of the tobacco habit,” he said. ‘‘You see it is not every man who can smoke with impunity, and although Mr. Knevals was 28 years old and a stout man, it resulted in his death. There is nicotine in tobacco, whether manufactured into cigars, cigarettes, chewing or smoking tobacco, and the result is always the same—poison. To- bacco contains two deadly poisons, nicotine and empyreumatic oil. One drop of nicotine in a state of concentrated solution would im- mediately destroy a dog, and birds perish at the approach of a tube containing the fluid, the mere smell killing them. Tobacco taken in any form quiets restlessness, calms mental and corporal inquietude, and produces a gen- eral languor or repose. A liberal] use of the narcotic gives rise to confusion of the head, vertigo, stupor, faintness, nausea, vomiting and a general depression of the nervous and circulatory functions which, if increased. eventuates in alarming and even fatal prostra- tion, as was the case with young Knevals. The symptoms of its excessive use and action are severe retching, distressing and continued nausea, a feeble pulse, coolness of the skin, fainting and convulsions. The symptoms of tobacco heart are a coated tongue, a sluggish pulse and heart, an anxious, haggard expres- sion, and heavy, bleared eyes, with the whites discolored to saffron, and worst of all, inter- mittent heart pulsations. ‘* Manufactured tobacco contains more nic- otine than the raw material, and combustion while smoking always increases the quantity. I believe that a pipe which allows the partial evaporation or absorption of nicotine the best —or rather, the least harmless—to smoke. The cigar, which allows some evaporation by its wrapper, is far less injurious than the paper-wrapped cigarette, as the paper neither absorbs no permits the evaporation of nico- tine. 1 smoke perhaps 10 cigars a day with- out harm, but I should never think of smok- ing 10 cigarettes. Grant smoked vast quanti. ties of strong cigars, which only affected his throat and not his heart, but few men could have done it. Young Kuevals is said to have smoked 60 cigarettes a day. That’s a fearful dose.” —_——————aP—- <> - ae The Dead to Life. An old man at Levis, Que., fell into a fit of epilepsy on Friday last, and remained in this state until Monday, when all his friends gave him up asdead. They had all prepa- rations made for a funeral and were ** wak- ing” him when the old man sat erect in the cotiin and commenced rubbing his eyes, much to the terror of many present. A boy was thought to have heen burned to death in a house near Quebec, but after being coftined,to the surprise of his friends, he sat up in the narrow house where he lay His friends, after recovering from their surprise, were greatly overjoyed. ——-_ $2 > - The Volapuk Language. INTENDED AS A MEANS OF COMMUNICATION BETWEEN DIFFERENT NATIONS Seven years ago, says the San Francisco Call, a Catholic priest named Schleyer, a linguist of some celebrity in Germany, gave tothe world, as the result of a lifetime of study what he termed a universal lan- guage,and named it Volapuk language. Volapuk is defined world’s speech, from vol, meaning world, and puk, speech. The most is taken from the English language, the others being represented Zaccording to their importance. The pronunciation is arranged to be easy for all nations; the letter ‘‘ R,” therefore, is seldom used. If that letter is contained in English words when brought into Volapuk, it is changed toL. All the letters are English. The consonants are pronounced as in English and the vowels like Spanish. Every word is spelt phonetically, there being no silent letters. The rules of the Volapuk gram- mar have no exception. It even goes so far that plurals from the pronoun I (ob) are formed regularly by adding an s (obs), the same way as with every noun, Adjec- tives and verbs can be formed from every noun by adding the syllables ‘‘ik” or *‘on.” Certain syllables are used to save memor- izing a large vocabulary; an instance is the syllable “‘le” which, when prefixed to any word, expresses the same general idea in a larger degree. House in Volapuk is ‘‘dom.” The prefix gives the word ‘“‘ledom” mean- ing palace, The syllable ‘‘lu” prefixed to a word denotes the same idea ina smaller sense. Using the same example, ‘‘ludom” is cottage. These two syllables alone save the memorizing of 100 words. Out of a classification of 900 words it is necessary to memorize but 302 syllables. Volapuk is so arranged that in translatioa all peculiari- ties of style are retained. To one unaccus- tomed to the sound of the language it seems strange, but its harmony grows upon the ear. The whole grammar is con- tained in four small pages. Such gram- mars are printed yearly in twenty-five different languages. When the language was first given to the world its advocates were mostly Germans. It subsequently came in great favor with the Dutch. Now, in every large city throughout the world there are clubs, some very strong, devoted to the study of the language. The thought of inventing a universal language was prompted by the difficulties experienced by German immigrants in America. The language is not designed to supersede any of the living ones, but to be a means of intercommunication between people having no common tongue. Volapuk literature has assumed larger proportions, most of the cl in the principal ancient and modern languages having already been translated into it. A new dictionary of the language has just been issued in two books of 175 pages each. At present there are eight journals printed wholly or partly in the language, all of which are well supported by the adherents of Schleyer’s novel tongue. ——— - <P + ee The Domestic Monthly for Septem- ber, ISS7. ASS1CS The fall fashions are here even if the ther- mometer still refuses to indicate autumn weather. This isthe time when the ladies begin to think about their fall and winter outfits, and there is no better help and aid than the Domestic Monthly, one of the oldest and most reliable of the ladies’ magazines. Its September number contains full information in regard to the fall fashions and the usual carefully selected variety of readable stories, poems, etc. Its illustrations are first-class, and the whole tone of the Domestic makes it one of the best household and family maga- zines published. Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher conducts a department and other women of note contribute to its pages. The Domestic Monthly is published at 853 Broadway, New York, at $1.50 a year, post- paid, with $1 worth of patterns to every subscriber. i> <> aa Give Them a Chance! That is to say, your lungs. Also all your breathing machinery. Very wonderful machinery it is. Not only the larger air- passages, but the thousands of little tubes and cavities leading from them. When these are clogged and choked with matter which ought not to be there, your lungs cannot half do their work. And what they do, they cannot do well. Call it cold, cough, croup, pneumonia, catarrh, consumption or any of the family of throat and nose and head and lung ob- structions, all are bad. All ought to be got rid of. There is just one sure way to get rid of them. That is to take Boschee’s German Syrup, which any druggist will sell you at 75 cents a bottle. Even if everything else has failed you, depend upon this for certain. — 8 Getting Even. you may She was one of these lofty, approach-me-not sort of girls. bk rn with a silver spoon in her mouth, and indignant to this day because it wasn't pure gold. Billy Bliven had just been introduced to her ata lawn fete, and was doing his best, in his plain, matter-of-fact way, to make himself agreeable. After they had chatted a few minutes on the veranda, Billy concluded that he would like to know her better, so he came at the subject thus wise : -—- ‘<I should greatly--I—I should like very much to call on you some evening. Suppose I drop around and wego out and take a litte waik.”’ ‘“‘Thanks,” she said stiffly ; trian.” Billy pondered a little while and then re- marked ina quiet way peculiar to himself, *« I'd have asked you to go out riding only I knew you were no jockey. —_—_--—_--—_ <> o-———_—— Tam no pede Mrs. Charlotte Smith, of Washington, has championed the cause of Dr. McGlynn, by sending the Pope a petition signed by The population of Great Britian is in- QUEEN SQUARE AND KING SQUARE STORES. Ch’town, July 9, 1887—eod wky Marob 29, 1887._ creasing at the rate of 10,000 a day.; 3000 women, asking for the reverend gentleman’s restoration. -