esi ete tt cil, RMS Five DoLtars a Year. NEW SERIES, [He Datty EXAMINER ssued eve ry evening, by (he Examiner Publishing (Qo. i n t r office, corner of Water and so (roorge Streets, Uhar'ottetown, Prince Kd ward Island. RATES * SUSSURIPTION ; uths, . - - $2 50 vhont - . - kL 20 vivuth, - : . 0 50 sing at most moderate rates. made for half-yearly or yearly advertise- n application. Contracts may be sarteriy, ments, ‘ ALMANAG FOR AUCUST, i884. MOON 8 CHANGES, Fal! Moon, 6th day, 6h. 54 2m., p. m. Last ‘Jaarter 13th day, 10a. 55.6m., p. m. N loon 20th day, 5h, 41 6m., p. m. birst Quarter, 23th day, ll. 29.4m., a. m. i ‘Sun Sun Moon High “Days! DAY UF WELK | ; M rises s6ts | rises water len’h. hm hm aft’n morn; hm l| Friday 4 47\7 25] 3 18) 6 3/14 38 2 Saturday +> 2 t yl 4 12] 35 Suuday 4 oa) 4 &7| 8 $3 $| Monday 51; 21'5 40) 856 30 5 Tuesday 52) 19619) 938 27] 6| Wednesday 53} 18) 6 5%10 17, 24) 7\Tharsday 54! 16) 7 27/10 53) 22] 3] Friday | 56) 15] 7 5911t 28| 19) 9 Saturday | 57; 14° § 28 aft 5 17 | 10 Sunday 58! 12] 8 57) 0 40} = i4} 11! Monday 5 0 Nig 20 1 29) 1L| 12' Tuesday | 1 10fio 4°2 3 9) 2 re aI 5 10 — ; 55 6 15|Friday ‘ ‘\m wal 5 a2 o| 16 Saturday ) 21 @ fiji 7 is 87! 17 Sanday | Bctre ere 86) 1s Monday 8\é 59! 2 28} 9 7) 51! 19| Tuesday | 9 57| 3 36] 9 54) 48! 20' Wednesday {| 1?| 56' 4 45/10 35| 45! 21;\Thursday | 12) 5455511 12' 42 22| Bri tay | 13! 52.7 2111 48) 39 23|Saturday 14, 50' § S|/morn 36 24) Sunday 15; 48 9 12! 0 22: 33 | 26;Tuesday | 18) 45)10 14) 1 34, 27 27| Wednesday 19) 43 aft 12) 2 14 24 2s tm fo 21) <4 ; 2 , ; 21 29° Friday 22 2 0 sl 30 Seturten | 23; 33) 2 49) 5 1Q) 1d $1|Sanday 24 36] 3 34| 6 25/13 12) i | THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE. (Charlottetown Time.) uo! ‘23z A. M, A OMG. x #2 Charlottetown Sif 427 Hunter River... ..247 1055 647 Psi MM. ORI 6 0 cin sincic ccc cnet 842 1222 705 Semaine’ ¢ Oe. .eccc ee. eee le 37 ' ee ee Port Hill : sececcnae ‘a8 Alberton «6 58 657 Tignish..... ane 2 3 @ FROM WEsT. -. foe a Tignish oc, a Alb. rton ‘coe | nee Port Hiil. eee he Jee Summerside AFFiVe... +. Si7 1207 . xe "© fh ins. see. ae. Sie Kensington ail aie 6 O07 209 7 30 mumeee River. ....... 00.2 2e SH 884i CBPIOCROROWI «6c 4c o's 0 ue 802 5607 1007 GOING EAST. P. M, A. Charlottetown. . jill. wt4t T4 eplite 0. val 522 $37 Mount Stewart, | aee seen BE BM St. Peter's i gah Bag yi 617 1002 P M. Souris. 722 1202 A. MW Mount Stewart... os cccoce Se. ...08. oe NOS. Scccdbeus telco 629 1022 Georgetown becnebueceececiwe is 647 1047 FROM EAST. % % oe Souris sa 217 a Eee: gk es 752 400 a ) egetUh .vcccissee 606 Es Mount Ste wart, ; depart ee eee 8 47 5 42 ee ET) ae 968 727 Georgetown.... 7S4 ou ates, ...«cctivikeeausildss 745 357 Seen Ghowel: oi es 842 512 LOBSTERS LUD. WURZBURG, PQ. BOX $43, HALIFAX, N. §. (OFFIC® PICKFORD & BLACK’S WHARF) Exporter of Lobsters Samples and quotations solicited, Cash advanced on consignments, June 23—tl aug 31 pd N. J. CAMPBELL, (Successor to Campbell & Rayden) Auctioneer and Commission Merchant, SHIP BROKER, AND INSURANCE AGENT, COR. OF QUEEN AND WATER STS., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. Importer and Jobber of Choice Grocerics and Spices. General Agent for P. E. Island of the British Empire Mutual Life Assurance Com- pany, of London, England : Special attention given to Auction Sales of Lumber, Coal, Fish, Apples and other Fruit, Real Estate, Household Furniture, Bankrapt _ other Stocks, and all kinds of Merchan- ise, Correspondence and Consigumente solicited, monthly, | , | ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW ‘| ly, that he has taken into partuerstip Mr. 2) Malcolm Marble & ‘Stone Cutters, Keturos promptly made. ; March 23, 1854. Wat ! Ch’town, May 15, 1884—3m tu th da ‘* This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men,. having to advise the Public, may speak /free.’’-—Evxiwipes. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1884, WEST & RENDELL, Commission Merchants, <t. John’s, Newfoundland, Constunments solicited made, Liberal advances July 25, 1884. bh. ARTHUR & CO, GHNHRAL 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROsS MARKET) | BOSTON. MASS. Eggs and Produce a Specialty. May 15,1884 whkly tf | ; | | _May 16,1 sal HeLeod, Morson & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS —AN D— | Commission Merchants, PARSO c Ns ety Ayo | . ) mt PILLS | MAKE NEW R'Or BLOOD, | | Spine ana Lame Back. Sold everywhere. a ee And will completely change the blood in the entire system in three months, son who will take 1 Pill each night from 1 to 12 weeks, may be restored to sound For curing Female Complaints these Pills have no equal. Physicians use them in their practice. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail for eight letter-stamps, Send for circular. DIPHTHERIA JORNSON’S ANODYNE LINIMENT (bere oz:. Neuralgia, Influenza, Sore Lungs, Blet ding at the Lungs, Chronic Hoarseness, Hacking Cough, Whooping Cough, Chronic Rheumatism, Chronic Diarrh@a, Chronic Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Kidney Troubles, Diseases of the health, if such a thing be possible. Any per- I. 8S. SDHNSON & CO., BOSTON, MASS, CROUP, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. JOHNSON'S ANODYNE LINIMENT will instan- taneously relieve these terrible diseases, and will positively cure nine cases out of ten. many lives sent free by wail. Prevention is better than cure. Information that will save Don't delay a moment. Send for pamphlet toi S. Jonxson & Co., Bosron, Mass. An English Veterinary Surgeon and Chemist. now traveling in this country, Says that most of the Horse and Cattle Powders sold here are worthiess trash. He says that Sheridan's Condition Powders are absolutely pure and immensely valuatle. fu wl pint food. MAKE HENS LAY . Nothing on earth will make hens lay like Sheridan's Condition Powders. Dose, 1 teasp’n- Sold everywhere, or sent by mail for 8 letier-stamps. I. 8S. Jouneon & Co., Bostos, Masa, Le etn A ‘itt BEAUTIFUL SUMMER RESORT —_—~— o-—————- ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. THE SEASIDE HOTEL, mustico Beach, FP. E. I. Office in Old Bank, (UP STAIRS), Ch’town, Feb. 21, 1884, | | W. WHEATLEY, (Or Weartry & Sows, CHARLOTTETOWN, P, E, Istanp) Commission Merchant, 269 BARRINCTON STREET, HALIFAX, Ww. | s# Special attention given to the sale of | P. E. Island produce, April 24, 1884. SULLIVAN & MAGNEILL, | Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. 64>” Money to Loan, W. W, Scttivan, Q. C, | Casstse B, Maonsity | Jan. 16, ’83 ; CARAS’ MARBLE WO.«S. M' CHARLES CAIRNS, in returning 4¥. thanks to the public for the liberal patrona se extended to him, begs leave to in- form his old custumers and the public general- MeLean, aud that hereafter the business will be carried on under the title of CAIRNS & CO. They have on hand a fine stock of Monu- ments, Tablets and Headstones, in Italian and American Marble. They are of the latest de- signs, and at prices to suit all, C. CAIRNS. M. McLEAN, Ch’town, June 30, 1854—pres n e pat s j wp - MONCEON Sash aid Door Factory. R. P. LEA, in returning thanks to the h public for the liberal patr<oage extended to him while in business in Charlottetown, begs leave to inform his old customers and the public generally, that he, in company with Mr. William Rogers, bas appointed Messrs. B. Williams & Co, Lumber and Coal Deaiers, Pownal Wharf, Charlottetown, our agents, who will keep constantly on band a full supply of Mould- ings, Window Sashes, Doors, etc., at LOWEST CASH PRICES, All orders entrusted to them will receive prompt attention. LEA & ROGERS, Moncton, N. B. Sept. 5, 1883.—2aw wly COAL. COAL. FPUE Subscriber is now prepared to receive L orders for the following Coal, which will be sold at the lowest cash price, viz: Acadia Mine, Round and Nut, ; Intercolonial Mine, Round and Nut, Vale do., do. ’ Albion do., do., Gowrie do., do., Sydney Old do., do. —AND— Anthracite (Egg and Chestnut Sizes). CAPT, JOHN HUGHES, vr Street. 0 This well-known WATERING PLACE will open for the season on July Ist. The Proprietors will spare no pains to make this the most desirable summer resort in the Provinces. The House is too well known to need any commendation. TERMS—$2.00 to $2.50 per day ; $10.50 per week; $8.50 per week for months. Coach will leave Charlottetown every Wednesday and Saturday evening,calling for guests; retcrning every Thursday and Monday morning, at 9 o'clock, a. m., Charlotte- town time. Traius leave Charlottetown for Hunter River at 6 a. m., 8 25 a. m-, and 3.40 p. m. Hunter River for Charlottetown 8 a. m., 2.38 p. m., and 6.15 p. m. Hunter River for Summerside 7 a. m., 10.08 a. m., and 5 p. m. Summerside for Hunter River 6.10 a. m., 12.35 p. m., and 4.55 p. m. Trains are run on Eastern Siandard Time, which is 47 minutes and 20 seconds slower than Charlottetown time. Mr. Baguall will meet Trains from all points at Hunter River, to convey passengers to Seaside. Ch’town, June 15, 1884. —2m Gr. Gr. TUE Js selling Waltham, Cylinder and Detached Lever WATCHES, at a small advance on cost prices. Eight-day and Thirty-hour CLOCKS, good, and very cheap. A large supply of Brooches, Ear-Rings, Chains, Lockets, Cuff Buttons, Rings, etc., cheaper han ever sold before, If you waut to get the worth of your money give him a call. To see is to believe. Repairing done to Clocks, Watches and Jewelry. North Side Queen Square, (Opposite Post Oftice Ruins). Ch’town, June 18, 1884.—we sa lm wkly. CAPITAL, - - Ch’town, Feb. 27, 1884. doing business in the Dominion. Canada. after two years. Company in Canada. application of protits:— Cb’t. Why May 7, 1884, ——_— ROYAL GANADIAN INSURANCE CO. 0 BAYT RB. 0 $2,000,000 on---— HEAD OFFICE—Montreal. HALIFAX BRANCH — J. Scott Mitchell, Agent. o> Risks Taken on Most Favorable Terms. AGYNT FOR PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND: F. H. ARNAUD, Merchants Bank of Halifax. — a CUMEEDERATION LIFE ASSOCLATION HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. o— The SECURITY offered to policy-holders is UNSURPASSED by any Company Its PROGRESS HAS BEEN UNEXAMPLED in the history of Insurance in Its Policies are INDISPUTABLE after three years and NON-FORFEITABLE The CASH PROFIT results paid to policy-bolders have uot been equalled by any The following are examples of ACTUAL REDUC.1ON OF PREMIUMS by Robert Taylor, Halifax, insured for $10,000 in 1872, premium $317.70; in 1880, $160.10, John Wills, Halifax, insured for $1,000 in 1871, premium $31.77; in 1882, $14.20. John 8. McLean, Halifax, insured for 34.000 in 1872, premium $137.76; in 1882, $70.06. Mayor Jones, St. John, insured for $5,000 in 1571, premium $172.20; in 1882, $77.20. Yeas The ‘uiiest information will be given on application. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Agents for P, E. Island. The Cow, Her Care and Manage. ment, and her Products. REY. MR. PAPER. Take this tine County of Queen's, and estimate the number of cows at 5,000 (these figures may not be entirely accurate as it is with the greatest difficulty we obtain reliable figures in connection with this in- dustry.) We will suppose that the 5,000 cows are worth $30 each, giving us a total lvalue of $150,000. Let each cow yield | 1500 quarts during the milking season, the average yield of which should not be less ‘than 2000 quarts (some eminent authorities ‘contend that a cow does not pay unless she |yields 2,500). The Grst figures aggregate | 7,500,000 quarts, the second 2,500,000 ad- ditional. The latter product should re- ‘present, in cheese at 10 cents per pound, ithe sum of $65,000. If ayain the like y eld ‘is obtained from the herds of the Province. | ‘Lhe aggregate is simply astonishing. Many of you will remember the celebrated Jersoy |cow ‘‘Eurotas,” whose one milk record is 'given at 7526 pounds of milk in 341 days, producing 778 pounds of granulated and golden colored butter. Dairymen must icarefully examine all matters that are hkely toe cause any loss in his operations, and stop leaks at once. How often, instead of ascertaining, as wise men do, how the bal- ance stands on the ledger, are young men, and men of maturer years, too, found abandoning the business of farming because something has gone wrong, and the climate or what not, gets the blame, while the real secret of failure is to be found in their negligence or stupidity, and they go west to become hewers of word and drawers of water in a new, if not a foreign country. I am aware that it is not fair to place the entire fault at the door of the young man. Perhaps the home is not what it should be. t would be sarcasm to say of it : CONTINUATION OF MACDONALD'S ‘*A thing of beauty is a joy forever, its loveliness increases ; it will never Pass into nothingness.” You may find about it the antiquated sey- the and the flail of a by-gone generation. The Dasher Churn or the old fashioned grindstone may have helped to banish the young man from the farm, Let the guard- lan of that psuedo home (after replacing the old implements by the modern unes) make it what it should be, a place where! character is formed, and where education | goes on. and where its inmates are impress- ed for time and eternity. Before leaving the subject, let me quote from the facetious yet truthful words of Robert J. Burdette, in his address to young men. ‘Be some- body on your own account, young man, and don’t try to get along on the reputation of your ancestors. No body knows, and no body cares, and there is not a man liy- Ing who can tell the name of Brigham Young’s mother-in-law. Hard work was never known to kill men, it was the fun men had in the intervals that killed them. The theory that the world owed every man a living was false. The world owes a man nothing. There isa living for every man in the world, however, providing the man is willing to work for it. If he did not work some body else would earn it and the THE LAZY MAN “‘GETS LEFT.”’ Men who went out West to grow up with the country must do their own growing. There was no browsing allowed in the vigorous West. An energetic man might go to the far West, and in two or three years possess himself of a bigger house, a bigger yard, a bigger barn and a bigger mortgage than he could obtain by ten years’ work in the East. * * The world wants good shovelers, teamsters and labor- ers; but it does not want poor lawyers,poor preachers or poor editors! To resume: I am not going to trouble you in describing the ‘‘general purpose cow’ for I do not think she has been discovered. I wish to repeat, let the beast be selected, their prog cept to the front, and we shall find that aBove all the other branches of hus- bandry. Dairying pays the handsomest profits. The main thing is to secure a cow possessing goud digestive organs. The pro- fits of dairying being so dependent on the supply of the miik it is of the utmost im- portance to study these points of a good milker, that they may become so familiar to us 28 to be able to tell one almost at first sight. This leads us by a natural sequence to speak of the management and care of the cow. Let it be distinctly remembered that no matter how deep the milking strain of the cow is, if she is not properly kept and fed she will not return any profit. The character of our stables is at the root of most of our losses. The cow must be quartered in a warm stable, with a tem- perature not lower than that of her own body, provided with sufficient ventilatign, and kept scrupulousiy clean. How can we expect our herd of milkers to do well, when they stand for some six or seven months in cold, open stables, with the temperature at times down to 50 or 60 degrees below that of their bodies. Such treatment of them, is not only positively cruel, but entails upon the keepers loss of feed an¢ many other evil effects. Indeed, it naturally leads to chilling the whole surface of the body, closing the millions of pores in the same, preventing the escape of the insensi- ble perspiration, leading to the retention of the wastes of the system, producing in- digestion, and ending in weakness, decay, and death. Hence we find farmers going about the neighborhood, after the winter months are past, seeking remedies for the ‘thorn ail,” the ‘‘tail ail’ and other ‘‘ails” when the whole ail can be traced to their own blifndness in not providing good and sufficient food and warm and comfortable housing for their stock. Not only in the winter months, but during fall and spring, in fact at all seasons in which cattle stand in SINGLE Copizs Two CENTS. ~ + VOL. ] ”», ---N(), 68. our homes. How beautiful, most beautiful of earth’s ornaments are trees! waving out in the hi'ls and down in the valleys, in wild wood or orchard, or singly by the wayside. God's blessing ever seems present in the trees. For their shade and shelter to man and beast; for the music the wind makes among their leaves and the birds among their branches; for their fruit and flowers, which delight the palate and the eye, and the fragrance that goes up and outward from them forever we should be always grateful for the trees, Well may the Arab worship in the date palma God given source of sustenance; dear to the Spaniard is the olive; and to the Hindoo his banyan. Above allother things in the landscape we should deal gently with the trees, and encourage the brotherhood whose aim is to increase their number, and protect their growth. If heis a benefactor who causes two blades of grass to grow where one grew before, how much greater his beneficence who places a tree in some waste place for shadow and shade. Our next consideration must be the food of one cow, Now, we cannot improve on the June pasture (it is the standard of food) but we can lengthen its season, and we are able, througb recent experiments and dis- covéles, to provide a good substitute for it the yearround. Our permanent pastures should be carefully improved, although in this country that necessity is not so great asin the West. The plan of sowing, in liberal quantities, different grasses finds much favor. Professor Brown gives the following as a recipe for an acre, including grasses and clover : Timothy 6 lbs Lucern 5 lbs Orchard grass 3 ** White Clover 3 ‘* Red Top cy? Jae fa Meadow Fescue 1 * Red Bags Kentuky Blue 1 “ Trefoil . Yellow Oate a Bent Grass ,.o A smaller proportion than this would have a most beneficial effect, but these pro- portions and their iberal supply is found better. As to partial soiling, which is all we need strive for, as long as our land re- mains 8o cheap, the following plan, having been tried by myself, will be found to work well anywhere. An early sowing, say in May, of oats and peas, 24 and 14 bushels to the acre, respectively, will provide a rich and succulent feed for milch cows, as early as July, when the heat is oppressive and the flies are a plague, Hungarian grass, which is said to be fit for foed in six or seven weeks after growing, is also recommended. Later in the season we can fall back on the successive crops of sweet corn, which with leaves of roots and cabbage, will bring us along to winter. The real difficulty now arises. How shall we supply aration for the herd, as near as possible, in nourishing properties, to the June grass} Weil the first thing we must do is to utterly undo our present system of drying hay. If you leave your grass until it ripens (which Providence employs as a means for perpetuating the pliant) it is of course no longer graas, and cut it im either case, to be burnt by sunbeams, your loss in weight is nearly eighty-five per cent., while the most nourishing properties are dissipated in thin air. The aroma will fll the atmosphere, but it will be at the expense of the convents of your milk pails. The grass should: be cured and that without sunshine. ‘Make hay while the sun is obscured,” mubkt be ene motto, This cured grass with rations from the root cellar, and concentrated food, xiven in sufficient quantities and at regular intervals, will return good profits directly, and wili place one on the direct road to high cultivation. I have some hesitation, gentle- men, in the present state of experimenting to place a decided opinion upon record with regard to the food value, for milch cows, of ensilaye. 1 must say, however, that as far as preserving al/ the elements of a pert full of juices is concerned, the soil has made this disposition of it without mistake. (To be continued.) -—- 302 —— Literary Notes. The leading article in the September Manhattan will be a poem, “The Chalice Bearers,” by Mrs. E. 8. McChesney; illus- trated from drawings by Jessie Curtis Shepherd. ‘‘Nance,” by Hope Ledyard, is the title of a short story in the September Manhat- tan, and turns upon the devotion of a wife to an unworthy husband. An amusing short serial— running through three or four numbers entitled, **Colonel Judson, of Alabama,’’ will be be- gun in the September Manhattan. An illustrated paper on ‘tA Corner of the Gulf of Mexico,” by a New Orleans Mer- chant, in the September Manhatten, will treat of a portion of the United States al- most wholly unknown to Northerners. The September Manhattan will have, from the pen of a Russian lady residing in Florence, an illustrated, historical and descriptive account of the Company of the Misericordia in that city, an institution which has jasted for more than six cen- turies, and in which are enrolled all the men of the Tuscau capital. The second end last part of Kate Field's ‘‘Diary ia London” will appear in the Sep- tember Mav jhattan. Mrs. J. W. Davis, whose paper on ‘‘Fair Verona” in a late number of the Manhattan was found so entertaining, has written for Seana “ . a pest, which will be pri Ulustrated. Ernest i, in the ber Man- huttan, “under the title of “A Osliforvia Acadia,” will narrate the romantic story of the Russian occupation of a part of the coast uf California. _—_—-. The Ist of August was the anniversary of one of the greatest and brightest days in the history of civilization—the day when the open air, do they require shelter and | shade. Wind breaks, clumps of trees, use- ful and ornamental, should pe provided for England paid twenty million pounds to emancipate the slaves in her possessions. wiry, eae Were felt in a