JOLLARS A YRAR, “ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the | lauily €xami Public, may speak free,””—Evxiripgs. SINGLE Copizs Two CEXTs. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE ED alia oan -— WARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1883, VOL 13---NOQ,°13. fenws : —* ———S : NEW SERIES. —— a ‘ tgs DaiLy EXAMINER tg ISSU} VERY EVENING, ay rae BXAMLy! PUBLISHING CoMPaNY, “gol quem Orrror, Conner OF WATER aND GREAT i® STRERTS, } qarlottetows, ’ P. E. Island. Rares oF SCBSCRIPTION gis Months, #2 50 Three Mont is, i Zo gne Month, 0 50 gp Advertising at most mo lerate rates. (ystracts may be made for monthly, erly, half yearly or yearly advertise- | @ ots, application. x ea - ae mainiapanantens ALMANAC FOR JUNE, (883. . | =| | MOON ~ CHANGES, ier Moon 4th day, midnight. pt Quarter, 12th day, }0b. 29m. a, m. sit Moon, 20th day,Oh. 19m., p, m. 3 ei qearter Zjth day, 3h. 25m., a. m. a Sun |Suan Moon) High | Days) Bier OF WEEN || .os sets | rises )water len’h. | —-,- 4thmhs morn) aft'n) 2 friday 4 17\7 38; 1 43] 7 42) Siamarday 17/39) 2 18} 8 41/15 39) j§unday 16, 40:3 1! 9 32 ;Moaday 16) 41, 3 46/10 19 jTuceday 15, 42) 4 39/11 4) OPa ij Wednesday 15, 42); 5 3911 46) he y | 14) 43) 6 44) morn oe friday | 14) 44/750) 0 28) \ urday | 14) 4, 8 S511 7 15 47) ; | 14) 45110 gi i 48) Mond 13, 45j11 2] 2 30) Ineod ; 13! 46)aft 2) 3 18 | 13) 46) 1 3) 415 reday ; 23) 47] 1 58) & 20 bo re ee 13} 48) 4 2) 7 28/15 51 13, 48! 5 1} 8 20 | 13} 49(5 59 9 5 | 34) 49: 6 54] 9 47} ; 14} 49] 7 41)10 27] 14; 49 8 29]11 4 14) 50,9 911 44 | 14 50) 9 45/aft 22'15 52 1s} 5010 17| 1 0| , 15) 50,10 47! 1 43) ' 15) 5011 15! 2 28: | 16, S5O\11 46) 3 24 | 16! 50) morn| 4 36 | 17| 50) 0 23, 5 58 | 7) 50) 0 56} 7 = CHIBALD MCNEIL & FORBES SHIPPING AND MMISSION MERCHANTS, "44. SOUTH STREET, NEW YORK. advanced on consignments of Island <a Aqeey for canned goods solicited New York. Apply to (. H. MceNEILL, AGENT. th'town, April 28, 1883. SULLIVAN & MACNEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT- LAW ‘Solicitors in Chancery, WOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. UFPFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great feorge Street, Charlottetown. @ Money to Loan, #W. Scutivay, Q. C. | Cuzstza B. Maonnite. dan. 16, 83. WcLEOD & MORSON } Barristers & Attorneys-at-Law, WUICTORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, OFFICES : form Club Committee Rooms, Opposite Post Office, Charlottetown, P. E. Island, @ Wechants’ Bank of Halifax Building, Sum- merside, P. E. Island. MONEY TO LOAN, on good security, at interest. #mu MeLgop. Nov. 24, 82 —pres h | WHN MAGEAGHERN, (Late of Italian Warehouse) AGENT FOR j foyal Fire Insurance Company, of England, london & Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, ef England, lity of London Fire Insurance Co.,: of England, P2AS REMOVED His Office to his New Building, m lr, Queen and King Sts.—Up Stairs. B “Bown, Dec. 7, 82. ee _$——— ———— ‘Bank of Nova Scotia. ESTABLISHED 1832, 1,000,000 . 325,000 Ww. A. O. Morson. er Maid up Capital Resery > © Fund this Bank will be opened op 19th inst., in the buildin wa Agency of . ¥Y vext, Ply cecapied by the Bank of Prince Edwa: Saad, Under the management of the under- & its wi!l be received on interest, and p S@rreat account. ‘ granted on the various Agencies and Sudents of the Bank. Wa, and other Exchange bought and tad geaeral banking business transacted. BOSTON, L.ARTHUR & CoO., GiNERAL Commission Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, MARKET) MASS. (ROSS ES < emma Eggs and Produce a Specialty, “TNSURANGR OFFICE, (ueen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPIfAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. Lancashire Insurance Company ‘CAPITAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptly and equitably. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Agents, Office—South Side Queen Square. Ch’'town, Sept. 15, 1882. —~——— — ee ise BOSTON STEAMUNS STEAMERS: Carroll, 879 tons, Capt. Brown, Worcester, 865 tons, Capt. Blankenship NE of the above FIRST-CLASS STEAM. ERS will leave Charlottetown for Boston EVERY THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AT 5 P.M. PASSENGERS will find this the Cheapest and most pleasant trip to Boston. Accommo- dations on both steamers are splendid. CARVELL BROS., AGENTS. Ch’town, May 17, 1883.--pat her sj v it, FB / ji, ab LAURANCE is at the DramoND BookSTOREs. See testimonials in advt. dorsed by the French Academy of Medi ane for Inflammation of the Urinary Organs, cansed by Indiscretion or Exposure. Hotel Dieu Hospital, Paris, Treatment. Posi- tive cure in one to three days. Local Treat- ment only required. No nauseous doses of . or Copaiba. Pe ak Hycienic,CURATIVE, PREVES- tive. Price $1,50, including Bulbe Symage. Sold by all Druggists, or sent fres by mail securely sealed, on receipt of price. Descrip- tive Treatise free on app lication. AMERICAN AGENCY “66” MEDICINE CO., Detroit, Mich., and Windsor, Ont. Sold in Charlottetown by ‘a D. C. CHALMERS, Wows, June 17, 1983—tf Agent. APOTHECARIES HALL May 16. ~~ | } | i j | MR. THEO. L. CHAPPELLE HAS ACCEPTED THE AGENCY FOR Mr. B. Laurance’s Celebrated Spectacles, and has a full stock, consisting of every © CONVEX AND CONCAVE SIGHT, _ —IN— Pebbles and Fine Lenses, omnes SPECTACLES AND EYEGLASSES, will always be found at the DIAMOND BOOKSTORE, And he refers with pleasure to the following local testimonials, as to the value and comfort experienced by the wearers of B. Laurance’s Spectacles. ir. B. Laurance will be at Mr. Chappelle's Store FOR THE ENTIRE WEEK rom Monday, the 4th, to Saturday, the 9th. sO 33 READ TESTIMONIALS: GOVERNMENT HovsgE, lst Juve 1883. _ Dear Str,—The eye-glasses and spectacles purchased from you in December last have given = comfert and satisfaction, and I never experience any strain vpon my eyes after using them. ! I remain, Dear Sir, your obedient servant, T. HEATH HAVILAND, Lieutenant Governor. Mr, B, LavRANCE. I have been wearing a pair of an@ I can remark with truth that artificial light. e-glasses purchased of Mr. Laurance four months since, see perfectly the smallest priat, with ease and comfort, DAVID STERLING. 7 I purchased, in December last, a pair of Mr. B. Laurance’s eye-glasses, and have much pleasure in stating that I have never had glasses that suited my eyes so well—in reading the smallest print without any strain on the eye, W. E, DAWSON, | This is to certify that I have purchased from Mr. B. Laurance two paira of eye-glasses, one for my wife and the other for myself, and we are both very mach pleased with our purchase. OWEN CONNOLLY. Charlottetown, May 31, 1883. June 4, 1883. ~_ a FURNITURE, FURNITURE, AT COST. Opposite Post Office, Charlottetown. B Bedroom Suits, Looking Glasses and Mirrors, Window Furniture, Picture Frames and Picture Mouldings. JOHN NEWSON, Charlottetown, Ian. 2, 1°83.—1y CHEAPEST, SAFEST. SIMPLEST LIFE INSURANCE IN THE WORLD. The Dominion Satety Fund Life Association OF ST. JOHN, N. B. o--——- $50,000 Deposit with the Dominion Government. Working under Government License. —_ 0--———_ An Assessment Company with a Safety Fund. Life Insurance : at its actual cost. oO = Good Canvassers Wanted. LEONARD MORRIS, General Agent for P. E. Island. Sumuaside, Oct, 33, 1882.—1y Grit Mendacity. ' | When it was announced that Sir Charles | Tupper was to suecoed Sir Alexander Galt | as High Commissioner, the mendacity mongers immediately trumped up a story, that Sir Charles would not sit in the same Cabinet with Mr. Chaplean, and that Mr. | Chapleau would not sit in the House of | /Commons with Sir Charles Tupper. Be ‘fore the session closed, however, Mr. Chap- l-au returned to Ottawa and occupied a seat jin the Commons close to Sir Charles. And ‘now, to add to the confusion of the fabrica- | tors of the story, Sir Charles does not pre- tend to leave the Cabinet, of which Mr. | Chapleaujis also a member. many misrepresentations. —-Mail. j | — _ -— The Alabama Award. /MR. KENNAK® STILL DESIRGUS OF VENTILAT- ING THE SUBJECT IN PARLIAMENT. Lonpon, May 31. — Wich reference to his! motion in relation to the disposition of the| surplus of the Alabama award, Mr. Ken-' nard, M. P., writes to the Times that he is still desirous of ventilating the subject. He says that his desire is fortified by a firm conviction that the American press and Government have evinced an honorable wish to have the question finally settled. The following is the resolution which Mr. Kennard intends to move in the House of Commons :— ‘*That in view of the public utterances of eminent American statesmen with refer- ence to the destination of the undistributed moneys resulting from the Geneva award, the House is of the opinion that an exchange of views between the English and United States Governments on the subject would be conducive to the development of the friendly relations between the two eoun- tries.” —— Whipped Boys, Whipped Men. The New York Evening Telegram says:— A very wise movement has been started in Montreal by the Rev. Cure R i If it is carried out on sound. it will be attended by glori The gentleman mentioned - thousand acres of land near the education of boys to agri¢ulttral pur- suits. Why cannot something! similar be done in the United States. The future of the Republic is in the hands of its boys. eae enone be taught to be men ought to trained and disciplined rationally. Kindness is the greatest factor in the eduea-' tion of young people. Undue severity makes them cowards and breeds deceit and treachery in their minds. ‘‘A whipped boy becomes a whipped man,” said a sage old Indian chief. He was right. Let us have farms for the training of our orphan boys, where they can be made self-sustaining, self-respecting men. At Mettray, in France, there is a famous institution of this kind. We should, however, endeavor to do better than France. We breathe the air of positive liberty. We should raise our wards in the same atmosphere. An American mode! farm and school of this kind would teach the world a lesson and/ help to reduce the criminal classes in our great cities. Take care of the boys and they will take care of the country. oe Grains of Gold. To enjoy to-day, stop worrying about to- morrow. Life is a schoul ; we are perverse scholars to the last, and require the rod. Patience is not passive ; on the contrary, it is active, it is conceutrated strength. There is poetry and there is beauty in real sympathy ; but there is more —there is action. Earn your own bread, and see how sweet it will be! Work; and see how well and cheerful you will be! There is seldom a line of glory written upon earth’s face but a line of suffering runs parallel with it. There is nothing here below, which is stable except Christianity. This alone 1s immutable, like its author. Each of us ought to strive for excellence in one thing ; but we also peed ‘‘a little knowledge” in many others. Purity, sincerity, obedience, and self- surrender—these are the marble steps that lead to the spiritual temple. The bad and vicious may be boisterously gay and vulgarly humorous, but they are seldom or never truly cheerful. Rage and frenzy will pull down more in half an hour than prudence, deliberation, and foresight can build up in a hundred years. There is no policy like politeness ; and a good manner is the best thing in the world to get a good name or to supply the want of it. Every man needs a true inward man- hood. Ali the elements that are in us are insignificant except as they stand related to that. It is the performance of every duty, and the exercise of every function in the fullest manner that constitutes a happy and valu- jat Memrameook this summer. Time corrects CURRENT NOTSS. New York has nine widows none of whom has a fortune of Jess than a million. Five square-rigged vesscels are being loaded at Pugwash, N. S., with lumber fer England. An addition is to be built to the convent It will cost about $5,000. “Carriages and other conveyances, in- cluding a first class hearse,’ are among the attractions offered at a Scotch hotel. The newest thing in weddings is reported from Louisville, Ky., where a yeang lady who isto be mrrried in June will have what is called a ‘‘rainbow wedding,” as the bridesmaids will wear prismatic colors of India silk. Another encyclical letter will shortly be issued by the Pope to the faithful im all parts of the world denouncing secret societies. It will enjoin priests to refuse the sacrament to all persons connected with seditious movements. The British Government is pushing the Agricultaral Holdings’ bill in Parliament in order to give speedy relief to English tenant farmers, as it is feared that unless this be done they may become active sympathizers with the Irish. Serious anti-Jewish riots have occurred at St. Petersburg, and it has been fonnd nevessary to employ troops from a distance to quell the disturbances. During a street engagement many of the rioters were killed by the fire of the troops. e The Vatican is saif to be preparing a special appeal to thé Roman Catholi® »° bishops all over the world urging the neces- sity of increasing *he contributions do Peter’s Pence, which have shown a great . falling off during the last. two years. The agent at Galway of the Allan line of steamships has received a letter threaten: _» ing him with death if he does net leavew the country at once. This is supposed to be in consequence of his having been en- geging factory girls to go to Massachusetts. The Leeds Mercury says :— Of our own colonies, Canada, propably, takes the lead- ing place with a display of the greatest variety and interest. In fact, it may be that our own share in the Exhibition will cantrast unfavourably with the complete- ness of this collection from Canada. According to Mr. Gladstone, the lump sums, to be granted to Lord Alcester, and Lord Wolseley, in place of the annuities of £2,000 a year for two lives, as proposed in the original bills, are respectively £25,000 and £30,000, the difference arising, of course, from the differences in age between the two Peers. The prosecution of seal fishing at New- foundiand is now completed, and the results, so far as the Dundee fleet is concerned, have been ascertained. The catch of six vessels hailing from Dundee is 95,100 seals, an increase of over 32,000 as compared with last year, and a decrease of 45,000 as com- pared with 1831. Mr. Wingfield Digby, who died at Sher- borne Castle lately,in his eighty-fourth year, was a country gentleman of the good old type. He was just sixty when his maternal uncle, the last Earl of Dighy, bequeathed him his vast unentailed property, the Dorsetshire estates, worth £40,000 a year, and some £600,000 in the funds. The Brooklyn Bridge was not the only important structure of the kind opened to public use on the Queen’s birthday. On the same day the first permanent bridge across the Indus became a thoroughfare. It spans the river at Attock, and according to the London (‘lobe, supplies the great want which has long been felt on the main road through Northern India and on the prin- cipal trade route from the Punjaub to Central Asia, and promises to be as bene- ficial from a military as from a commercial point of view. A Quaker wrote the following lines, and if we could all wear that kind of a broad brim there would be no harm in all the world becoming a Quaker:—‘‘I expect to pass through this world but once. If, therefore, there be any kindness I can show, or any gooi thing I can do, to any fellow human being, let me do itnow. Let me not defer or neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again. Let this be my epitaph :— What I spent I had; What I saved I ieft behind; What I gave away | took with me.” The contest over the will of Lewis, the Hoboken miser, who devised his fortune to the United States to aid in paying off the national debt has ended in a decision by Judge Nixcn upholding its terms, One of the last recorded acts of this eccentric millionaire was to remark, upon baying a cabbage for his table, ‘‘that will last two days.” Could he bayve observed it, how afflicted his soul must have been to see the liberal chow-chow which the lawyers and the courts made of his estate in the matter of allowance and fees. The national. maw will now devour the remainder. It will probably last two days Ne “ York Tele- gram. The Parisians are going to include among their entertainments from the Ist to the | able life. Inborn ability is a precious boon; when | it is supposed to compensate for painstaking ! industry ar studious preparation, it loses all | | prestige. The mere want of nature, ever. when} nature is refined by education, are few and | i | al i are insatiable. ! Blessings may appear under the shape) of pains, losses nd disappointments; but: let a man have ,.tience, and he will sce them in the proper figure. } ; mple; but the wanta of pride and self-love a all be on hand; and the carious who 22nd July, an insect exhibition, organized |by the Central Society of Agriculture and Insectology. Among these entomological specimens will be included both the useful and injurious The fabries which insects produce, the transformations whieh the little animals themselves undergo, and the various processes which human beings em- loy for exterminating obnozions insects maintain that the soul in lower anigials differs from the human soul only im de- gree, will have an opportunity of speculat- ing as to the place where soul ceases, and mechanical inatinct begias.