ji =—_- * ig issued every evening, b ‘ ’ , the Examiner Publishing Co.' From their office, corne of Water and Great George Streets, harlotietown, Prince bdward Island, RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : §ix Months, . v2 59 Three Months, . i a One Month, . ‘ ot ee Adve! Contracts may de Ihade fOr mwonthiy, wyarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, oD application ALMANAC FOR AUCUST, 1885. “ * IN = CH A *s | arter 3rd day, 5h. 43m., p. m. i To. 10th day, 10h, 2m., & m, First Quarter, I7th day, 9h. 34m., a, m, Fall Moon, 25th aay, lh. 13m., p. m. oo Sun 'S in Moon) High Day 8 | ul pay OF WES rises sets | rises ;water/len’h,. | a h mh m afi'n , aftn,;h m Setarday | # 47.7 25| 9 59 1 40)14 38 ORE a ® Nonday 2 is a a 33 4 aend Si} 2011 45 423, 30 §Wednesday , 52, 19 morn) 5 47) 97) §, Thursday 53; 18) 0 34) 3 14; 25 + Friday ; o4 10 l 3l o <9 <=) jiseturday 56° «15! 2 37; 9 20 19 | g Sunday 57; 14, 34910 9) 17) 10) Monday 5S 2} 5 4°10 53 14 1) Tuesday | 69 10 6 20, 11 39 it j2 Wednesday [5 0 9 7 nee 9 Tharsda 2 8 8 47! 0 14 6) UM Priday ° | 3 6 9 55' 0 52 3 15| Saturday 4 fii 213 0) | 5 Z2ait 4) 2 1613 57 Sahai 7) 1 5 18 Tuesday &§ O82 O44 2) 1) Wednesday | 95 58 252) 5 19 47) 90’ Tharsday 10 -* 3 40! 6 33) 46) 9] Friday |} 12) 54 424 7 33; 42) go'Saturdsy | 13' 52/5 2) 829, 39) 93/Sunday 14| 50, 5 37| 9 12) 36 | 94 Monday if; 49 6 9 956! 33 95 Tuesday 17. 47, 6 39,10 26 30 96, Wednesday 3 46'7 74k 6 giThorsday | 19, 43 7 35.11 33) 24 28 | Friday | 20} 41; 8 Zaft 6 21 29'Saturda | 22 40) 8 s0'Sunday | 23) 38,9 3i/Monday = [5 24:7 36, 9 45] 2 Oj13 12 NOTES. Duke of Edinburgh's birthday oa the 6th. Dog days end on the 11th. Landing of Julius Cesar (B.C, 55) on 27th. In this month the mornings decrease 47 minutes; the afternoons £9 minutes. THE RAILWAY Tis TABLE i ' For the convenience of the travelling public, we have carefully arranged the fol- " of arrival and departure o lowing table of ival d dep f trains on the P. E. Island Railway, accord- ing to local time :— Going West. ae, Ge Pe Bi Cittlottetown ............ 647 912 Royalty Junction.......... 702 947 North Wiltshire........... 737 1029 509 MUM occ ccc ccccce 747 1055 522 Beeeee................812 1132 567 ns ccs cscs cces 819 1143 607 re 6 22} P M. EN oa voce, cbee §42 1222 642 € j arrive.......9 07 1257 712 Summerside, . Sdonert bey tien 927 237 — ite Ss 942 3 dav wescecen 100) 329 ag MR cevcccsces 1029 420 Ee Alberton......... SC SI oscdécccccs 1242 747 From West. .” oo EM so c0ceseccees 207 647 SE Gescccccccccces 245 757 veces cess cces 329 902 Poti... ......420 1029 BE, ose. cc ce. 449 1116 Miscouche................507 11 44 arrive......5622 1207 Summerside, A. M, s depart...... 542 112 657 Kensington .............. 607 149 729 Si ecsccccceceks 622 212 749 i chedsecuad 632 227 803 Teh bs us ccvded 638 237 812 Hunter Kiver,............ 702 315 847 North Wiltshire... 712 332 901 Royalty Junction.......... 747° 432 947 Charlottetown............ 802 4652 1007 Going East. A.M. P. M. A... ieceucatle 7607 417 SEIN. 2... «+ cone ceeabnale 743 444 sci... -ccccncancaul 804 457 Mount : ‘ \ arrive.......0«837 522 ne | donast.... ci 857 527 cs... <-cncasealaiil 942 6 56; aries. <conicn canal 1015 617 Sb inncccciccccma 1107 «(6 = ES i 1157 72% Meant Stewart.................. 902 532 Tiihee + oe ebe wean 1015 625 ener Riis once oe ncnieia 1037 6 42 rom East. i .2 css s....:5 2. 2edbenean 647 212 BIE. cconabadpe 717 302 ROS 752 354 PERC eoces ceesanebenetu ee 814 427 Mount Stewart, ) 'Tive...-. 0843 & W > | depatt. .scsees 847 537 Bedfo P ¥ NS vies sens cccoeg ast 912 614 ess 2 2. 000eaee cae 926 635 Gentlottetown biedecsteuce bem 952 712 eee 732 337 rian. RS 749 400 SemeeWart...... ccccccccees $42 5612 ii i ne ii i OLedd, Morson & MeQuarrie, BARRISTERS —AXND-— ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW . arn? aad in Browu’s Block, Queen Square (UP STAIRS, Chitown, Feb 12, 1885. ‘13 3)" 5 FOOLSCAP, oii | 15/Staffinl’s Jet Black Writing aks, Stafford’s Copying Luks, Ink for office and private use. ‘>| Writing & Gopyiug Laks, Ch town, May 18, '85.—wky - | NO. 35 WATER STREET, viz. :— ee At he a ie a Se 7 ail FLAN. This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”’—Evririprs, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1885, The Daily Examiuer G, H. HASZARD’S FOR ALL KINDS OF a Books, gt us | Ledgers, Day Books, Journals, VERY &e,, CHEAP. SELLING 100,000 160,000 ENV ELOPHsS of all the leading s‘zes, by the 100, 4 or 4 thouvand boxes. mee eee LETTER, & NOTE PAPER, | WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. (in all size bottles.) This is now acknowledgei to be the best ALSO IN STORE : Carter's, Stephens & Toiary’s To be Sold at Great Discounts oe G. H. HASZARD, BROWN’S BLOCK, Qneen Square, CAUTION. EACH PLUG OF THE MYRTLE NAVY IS MAKKED T. & B. IN BRONZE LETTERS. NONE OTHER GENUINE Jane 1, 1835-1 yr COAL, GOAL. ERSONS requiring orders for Cargoes ef Coals can obtain them, on the usual terms, from the Subscriber, at his Office, On the Gid Syduey Mises, Lingan and Victoria, 6. B. | —AND ON THE— Mines, Pictou. G. W. DrBLOIS. Ch’town, June 19, g85—tf. LORNE HOTEL, Grand Tracadie Beach. ———— Albion This Favorite Watering Place will Re-Open on Dominion Day, ist July, under apie oe mer = isi ill find this p'ace agreeable during the eam tf —jane6 Steep RY ob = . <a i om *' =: . MOS Fe: Z, ¢ = s ; ae i — 4 S| = a mi -— 2 aR gee ~ : "FL Sa ot: eS MN a & 3 fy Ms + - £4. = oS: 0. wre CD ty me (Y) a 5 a & H~ © weg Ht eee 9, = 7 ce #22 of be DQ ° = ° ‘ dees (\/e? cyt =: e ~-S £8 @ H Ms Hs = G25 2 ju ~ an “4 oe a’ hu 88 3.¢< ‘ ~ P+ ps yey ae 2 5 as $3225 Gar © ca Sena 2 A ; O* op > Re“ Sa : % 3 =3 £3 O64 « foam 509 3 Ee tHE S ; Zo 233 | SELL ae = QS BS jor) o « ef mn Be =.2?> OO; a AH « =a. So @ & a os s Maa sf ¢ 3 2 _ m= Ce we = ee s43e.5. m. bow 3 04 SE E<S Ss 2 oo =A cee ELE ttl OQ sera es Oop i> team oe = “£24 Go 5S Ses 22 oe BSagas OQ = a | ~ om ed {i CITY HAT STORE. 20. | | | | E. PROWSE will, during July and August, clear oat the balance of his Summer . Goods, at prices that must sell them. A job lot of LACE CURTAINS, regular price $4.20, now $3.25 ; $5.50 for $4.25 ; $6 for $4 75, newest patterms and extra good quality. A large lot of Dress Goods, Fringes, Laces, Sunshades, Ribbons, Flowers, Feathers. Xe.. at a Big Discount. a ~_———s BLACK CASHMERES and MERINOES very cheap. Also, Men’s FELT HATS, Ready-Made CLUTHLING, &c.—Cheapest in Town. L. E. PROWSE, Sign of the Great Mig Wat, 74 Queen Street, Ch'town. July 15, 1885. Singlish and Canadian fire Insurance Companies, The Commercial Union Assurance Co., of London, Eng... CAPITAL, - ‘ . ; 0 The British America Assurance Co, of Toronto, Canada, (INCORPORATED IN 1833.) CASH CAPITAL, __- : : ; -_—__——: 0:—-- The Citizens Insurance Company of Canada, (ESTABLISHED IN 1864.) CAPITAL, - - : - “ 303 $12,500,000. $500,000. $1,188,000. I am prepared to accept Insurances in the above well- known Companies at Lowest Current Rates. A. S&S URQUHART, GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT, Brown's Block, Queen Square. Charly ttétown P, E. L, June 20—eod Che Daily Examiner AUGUST 4, 1885. “Water, Water, All Around and not a drop’—(for baths.) Ix 1846 an act was passed in England to augmeut the ‘health, comfort and welfare of populous towns and districts,” by encouraging the establishment of public baths and wash-houses, and in a few years the movement in London alone, was patronized annually by nearly a million of bathers. It is worth noting, in this connection, that the deaths ten years after (viz. 1856) were for London and its suburbs,nearly 17,000 less than two years-(viz. 1854) before ; while at the same time the births increased nearly 3000. As the advantage of establishing baths in populous cities cannot be controverted: why has Charlottetown never realized the neces- sity of utilizing her Hillsborough waters for the “health, comfort and welfare’”’ of her inhabitants? There is no lack of the best seawater for the purpose, no want of means for providing the proper facilities; and a well planned bathing scheme, suitably located for it, would become self-supporting, and soon pay good divid- ends. Nor can it be affirmed that Charlottetown has so -perfected her sanitary arrangements as to make wash- ing superfluous. No, every thing neces- sary to success, is ready and waiting to be thrown into proper form, with only one reluctant factor. and that drawback, is the hand that Charlottetown keeps in her (LePage) cemented pocket, with an unrelenting clutch on her fat pocket-book —the hand that is never ready for any thing that possesses more public thau private advantages and profits. The Greeks praciised frequent bathing and made much use of sea water, on account of its purifying and sirengthen- ing properties. Imperial Rome had at one time 800 Thermz; those of Nero, Titus, Domitiaa and Caracalla especially were celebrated for their great splendor. The present Church of the Carthusians at Rome, which is ove of the largest and most magnificent temples of that city, was built by Diocletian for a bath room, who, on its completion (it is said), bap- tized it with the blood of forty thousand Christian soldiers. ‘The private baths of some of the Roman villas jof the rich vied in splendor with the public Ther- me. Great basins were set round with various kinds of stone imported from the Grecian Islands; the water was con- veyed through silver pipes, to furnish beautiful cascades ; the floors were inlaid with precious gems; and statues and colonnades threw over the whole an air of completeness and grandeur that has never since been even imitated. Now, if cleanliness comes next to godliness, a Christian province (such as Prince Ed- ward Island), being so well supplied with godly teachers, ought to perceive her moral obligation to ‘‘do the one and not leave the other undone. ” She ought to supplement the sacred teachings of her pastors with the recommeudation of Sit. Paul to his Hebrew brethren, and see to it that ** their (Charlottetonian) bodies are washed with pure water;” for if the great Apostle were to pay us a visit now, he would, with good reasou, not ovly emphasize his cleansing sugges- tions, but add to it the puritying words of the prophet Isaiah, ‘“ Wash you, make you clean.” ‘The subject is vital to Charlottetown. ----——_—— - em o-—- The Doctors and Alcohol. It is not long since an appeal was sent by the National W. C. T. Union to a convention of over nine hundred physi- cians which was held in Minneapolis, asking the co-operation of the doctors in the temperauce work and that more care be exercised in prescribing alcoholic medicines. In the very courteous reply to their appeal, the ladies were assured of the hearty sympathy of the doctors in the Union’s work, and we doubt not that a large number of siguatures will be obtained from leading physicians who have already given testimony to the evil of alcholic stimulants upon the buman system. The Central W.C. T. U. of Chicago, is sending to all the physicians of that city a circular letter asking that they subscribe if they can conscientiously do 80, to the following consensus of opinion prepared by leading mea and women of the profession :— Since physicians are the administra- tors of the laws of Dietetics and Thera- peutics in all civilized countries, and alcoholic is said at the present time prescribed uaoder these laws, it seems vast and influential body of physiciaus ef America should aid the investigation of the true nature and effect of this agent by giving public expression to our opinions. We therefore state that we believe : lst That alcohol is a poison. 2nd That alcohol is not in any proper advisable that we as members of the. Srxc_e Copirrs Two Crrvs, VOL. 17.---NO. 63. sense a food and should be eliminated from our list of Dietetics. 3rd. That alcohol in any form inter- feres with the crue digestive proress. It produces a morbid alecholie condition of the blood corpuscles which prevents their full absorption of oxygen, checks the rapidity of the blood aeration, and results in an insuilicient oxygenated blood supply. The direct action of alco- holized blood is upon the nerve centres and their fibres causing dimicutieon of ‘heir activities. or paralysis, and some degree of indigestion. 4th. That the popular idea that aleohol is @ waste arrestor and a food economizer is false. It retards metamorphosis of tissue and so promotes disease, causing pre-eminently paralysis, fatty degener- ation and sclarosis. oth. That the nerve centres have a certsin chemical aiiinity for alcohol facilitating its accuniulation in their centres aud producing there marked de generative processes. 6th. That the force generating theory of alcohol is untenable, having beipg so proved by the tests of athletes; by travel- lers, as Livingston, Bruce, Waterton, Smollett and Weston ; by the soldiers in long exhausting marches in other coun- tries and in America, 7th. That alcohol is equally injurions in the eXtremes of heat and cold, as through its deoxygenation of the blood it reduces the animal temperature and de- presses the vital force. 8:h. Thatthe direct relation of alco- hol to insanity is now well established through insane asylum statistics. %Xh. That the deterioration produced by aleehol in the nerve centres, has a peculiar tendency to hereditary trans- mission, causing in the descendants in- sanity, idiocy, nervous diseases,weakness of will, instability of mind and depraved appetites, 10th. That it is the duty of physicians to prescribe alcohol as they prescribe strichnine, as seldom and as sparingly as possible. ite More Hurtful than Alcohol. Sir Henry Thompson remarks in the current Nineteenth Century :—*‘* The ‘ mf&rtyr to indigestion ’ may perhaps be surprised to learn that nive out of ten persons so affected are probably not the subjects of any complaint whatever, and that the stomach at any rate is by no means necessarily faulty in its action— in short, that what is popularly termed ‘indigestion’ is rarely a disease in avy sense of the word, but merely the natural result of error in diet. For most mer it is the penalty of conformity to the eating habits of the majority; and a want of disposition or of enterprise to undertake a trial of simpler foods than those around them consume probably determines the continuance of their un- happy troubles. I have for some years past been compelled by facts which are constantly eoming before me to accept the conclusion that more mischief in the form of actual disease, of impair- ed vigour, aud of shortened life, accrues to civilized man, so far as I have observed in our own country and throughout Western and Central Europe, from érroneous habits in eating than from the habitual use of alcoholic drink, considerableas i kuow the evil of that tobe. I am not sure that a similar comparison might not be made between the respective influence of those agencies in regard of moral evil aiso,” ee The ‘‘ Globe’s” Folly. (Toronto W orld.) What sense is there in the Globe's eternally twitting National Policy men with the crime of importing goods? The Globe editors must yet have to learn what National Policy means, They must be merely on the threshold of their political education. A National Policy man does not say that portraits or uniforms cannot be got better in England than in Toronto, because an N. P. man is nota fool. Whathe saysis: Canada wants revenue, and if you choose to go abroad for what you want you must pass a tax large enough to encourage our painters and tailors to produce a better article than they do. while not so large as to prevent those who prefer the Eng- lish article from getting it. There is no inconsistency in an N. P. man paying into the national exchequer 30 per cent. on an imported uniform A contributor to the revenue is more patriotic and national than he who patronizes the home producer, if there is any truth in the Globe's charge of “protected to death.” en California raisin crop last year amounted to 150,000 boxes, and the coming crop is estimated at from 200,000 boxes to 450, ,000. At the State Viticultural Convention jlast fall, a prominent raisin grower stated {that in three years enough new vineyards would be in bearing to bring the crop of 'California raisins up to 1,000,000 boxes, |which would still be leas than one-half of |the quantity imported. ea — The thunder storms prevailing in Madrid are largely increasing the cholera mortality.