ee eatin en I k DoLLARS aA YEAR, OO nid a = RA an anne ARON sac te cot a A NM ta ne ee ee £xa ‘“ Dhis is true Liberty, when Free-bora Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Uvuirrwrs, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, JULY 21, 1884. enna am en SINGLE Corres Two CENTs. VOL 15.---NQ, 51. PAILY M&XAMINER RATA ARB! f rl , AS | | CURRENT NOTES. CURRENT NOTES. : 1 @\ y evening, b i : ; } yews . . 7 i ns a r A i PN The New York Hera/d declared inh cee The English government has offered Data t Sted en ata ee eee Gould is hastening to a collapse like Vil-| £150,000 for four of the pictures in the A At! BALL LUO! SUL Ue. met CRAB! oe CALRNS, in returning = lard’s. tis said he has been forced to} Blenheim collection. It offers £70,000 for ner of Water and p ivacie ae 3 “9% ‘ " - oo oe we resort to sterling loans, which are raised | the Ansedir ‘*Madonna” alone. « ‘ aba le #t “a ‘ LC UG iv } n, 408 er 2 oO i- i) att a. a . ‘ s, Uharlottetown, form his old customers and th: ablic raed Extra Prim Ch St Nice Al S lendid ouly at great sacrifice. Herr Palisa, ot ¥ ienna, didintited k'ube ard Island ly, that he has teken into pirtverstip Mr. ; €, Cap, rong, gp ehty p | «+ Judges will be delighted to learn that} minor planet on Friday last, at ten minutes 3 ‘PTION Maleolin \ cLean, and that hereafter the His Majesty Tawhaio, King of the Maories, | to ten p. n., when it was in right ascension a> ny -SIMess will be carried on under the title of ¥ “4 dees not claim to be King of New Zealand, _ 19niin, 46sec., and declination 19deg. eo iM € : - ‘ ° ; . but ‘‘unreservedly acknowledges the supre-|38min. 35sec. South. At nine p. m. on 9 .% ’ y g I oy I : 50 C ~~ | RN ss d& CO Beer & Goff S for iuc7trTa Tea, macy of Her Britannic Majesty.” Saturday it was again observed, in right “i siti aa ee i a ' The Government has been officially in- 106. aici 16h. I9min. 9sec., declination am A rtising a most masecage rates, il , } i | WHOLESALE. formed that Louis Riel, who led the Red : state 19sec, South. It is of the Contracts may be made for monthly, aul G Ole ll ers, River rebellion in 1870, is leading the|*weltt magnitude, and, therefore, visible yaarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertire. half-breed agitation in the Northwest in only in large telescopes. The total number meats, on application. ; borg otto BEER & GOFF’S FOR PRIME TBA ‘regard to the settlement of their claims of | these small bodies at present known a—«~ = eee ae a hy oe tee Monu- | : against the government. is 237. : - nents, Jabiets and Headstones, in Italian and | : . Mr. Charles Russell, who since the re ALMANAC FOR JULY, 1884. American Marble. They are of the latest de- | RETAIL | Does not the publisher who lies sbout tirement of Benjamin, has made perhaps signs, and at prices to suit all r the circulation of his paper defraud his ad- f , ee . P : ° ae 2 chil Roe: Salons ames the largest income at the English bar, re- MOON'S CHANGES, C. CAIRNS. rh N@ » ‘ ’ ‘ rp \ 6. i =e 1s it — ee - Ge K ‘the ceived last year $75,000; Sir W. Gull, who Fall Mooa, Sth day, 5h. 57.Sm., a. m. a _: M. McLEAN. BE ER & GOFF a I OR CH EAP i EA, oh . sell » frandalaat cteelntica as | LOPS the physicians, made $50,000, Mr. Last Quarter 15th day, 5h. 26.3m., p. m. Ch'town, June 30, 1834—pres ne pat s j wp, re 6 fir Ub baker 66 abe Ue Wehek e 0 Millais stained canvas to a like figure; New Moou 22ad day, 3h, 41.6m., a. m, ' : Oe eT enteaimatie WARRANTED. 8 S Archer, the jockey, made $43,000; Tenny- First Quarter, 29th day, 5h. 45.5m., p. m. DAY OF WEEK rises sets | rises | water | len’h, ako hm jhwm/ aft’n morn hm | i Sun ‘Suan Moon) High Days’ } | ' i | | j ‘|MleLeod, Morson & MoQuarrie | \\Tueeday '4 17\7 48] 1 40) 4 35/15 31 yWednesday | 18| 48! 2 39]5 44! 30 2 Thursday i io 48; 3 36 6 53 29 #/ Friday | 2 45) 4 33) 7 5) 23 | 5 Saturday | oe «7. 6 27| 8 39 27 | é|Sanday | 2hi 47) 6 16) 922) 2 jMonday | 22' 4717 210 11 25 3!Tuesday 23| 46) 7 33,10 38} 24 9, Wedoesday | 23) 46,8 201114 23) .0) Thursday ; 24 46) 8 53)11 49’ 22 Ll) Friday 25; 45) 9 al aft 24 20 12’ saturday 2° 64419 Sti OG 18 13 Sunday | 28; 4410 22 1 39 16 14| Monday | 2s} 43110 53 223! 165 15) Tuesday | 29, 4311 25 3 15! 13 16 Wednesday 30, 42:11 59 427) 12 17 Thursday 31) 4iimorn 5 49; 10 is, Friday | 32) 40:043 7 16 8 19| Saturday 33 39; 1 33. 8 24 6 20'Sunday | 34) 33) 231; 9 19 4 21, Monday | 35) 37) 3 35/10 9 J 92\Tuesday | 36 36) 4 44/10 53] 0 23) Wednesday | 37' 35) 5 56,11 28°14 58 24 Thursday 38; 34 7 6/morn 56 ‘5'Friday | 39) 33! 8 15} 012) 54! 26 Saturday 40} 32; 9 20) 0 4) 52 27 | Suoday 42, 31,10 25| 1 26 49 25; Monday 43, 30j11 27.2 6 47 99;Tuesday | 44] 28.aft29' 250) 44 30, Wednesday | 45} 27) 127); 344 42 31) Thursday 46] 26) 2 23) 4 48 40 THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE. (Charlottetown Time.) Gol , ae ie «©. Ee. Charlottetown 647 912 27 Hunter River.. 747 1055 5647 P. M. Kensington ; oa ae 42 1222 7 05 Summerside, ( arrive......9 v7 12 = 7 37 . } depart......927 232 Port Hill ceheseeee «6ae Alberton ocd -O8er RE i nes 1242 747 FROM WEST. eae, A, Ow Tignish ; 202 647 ee on avi eesns 240 757 Port Hill. 415 10%5 Summerside { arrive 5 7 I 07 » ie * § depart......642 122 657 Nes ocncees a0 ..607 209 730 ee ee eee ews 702 32 847 Charlottetown ... 10 BO ECT 1007 GOING EAST, w, tee . Be Os ae 4 7 7 02 Mount Stewart, | epart. 0. ...827 902 SUR Oi acids cane kc aeeene 617 1020 Py. M. a ee cee 722 12@ A. Mi eh Ghetingh. ....cicecsvetss4eeee Oe Uh s bcc cube burwer 629 1022 Ds. i. diclioscdcsvsareeee wee FROM EAST. A, ME. Pp. M EE oe eR eee Fes 647 217 St. Peters ae 733 4 ” —_- D MANUS occ odes 842 517 Mount Stewart, ( depart........ $47 542 Sibeee.,. .cisiccoeeertobn tan 1a NS ooo coc ue eh ee 727 332 Cardigan isla 745 357 Mount Stewart... $42 512 LOBSTERS LUD. WURZBURG, P.O. BOX 543, HALIFAX, N. 8. ‘OFFICE PICKFORD & BLACK’S WHARF) Exporier of Lobsters Samples and quotations solicited. Cash advanced on consignments, June 23—tl aug 271 pd N. Jd. CAMPBELL, (Successor to Campbeil & 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 Groceries and Spices Agent for P. E. Island of the Sritish Empire Mutual Life Assurance Com- pany, of London, England Special attention given to Auction Sales of Lumber, Coal, Fish, Apples and other Fruit, Keal Estate, Household Furniture, Bankrupt aut other Stocks, and all kinds of Merchan- aise, Correspondence and Consignments solicited, Keturus promptly made, Mareb 25, 1984, lreneral , loaf of bread?) Why do we permit one and punish the other? These are questions we would ask some of our politicians to answer.—The Free Lance. SURETYSHIP. .... . oo —— BEER & GOFFS FOR The Guarantees Co. 3 POUND TENS. OF NORTH AMBERIVA. a eer 7 if NICE TEA, Objection is made to driving horses with breast collars, especially with heavy loads, as being apt to contract the shoulders. Breast collars are not often used for heavy BEER & GOFF’S FOR . A TEA _work. Their neater appearance gives them y the preference for single road harness, but Capital, - - One Million Dollars. —_— \ even here hame collars are better. The solid callar presses evenly against the shoul- der bones and allows less chating of the ; ks | HALF-CHESTS. The Bonds of this Company are accepted by } ! the Dominion and Provincial Goveraments, | A ‘ ‘ 'sking. aud by nearly all PUBLIC CORPORA- BEER x OFF S FOR SPLEN DI p TE \ | whe New York C sii) a) ae | TIONS in Can: io hi oRIVATE. ai @ ie New York Commercial Bulletin says SURETY SHI oT tae rl u 4 of the dry goods market: Business was ; : ANY QUANTIRY ,spasmodic and irregular during the past /week. Bleached cottons and wide sheet- WEOT ESATLHE & RETATL. ‘ings were rather more active at reduced Ch’town, July 9, 1884—2aw Agent for Prince Edward Island: R. R. FITZGERALD, ‘prices, and there was a steady movement in June 12—eod lm | cotton flannels ; but buyers are not specu- latively inclined even at the low ruling quotatious. Dark prints and ginghams are .~ mostly small. Mens’ wear woollens remain BARRISTERS —ANbD— a | quiet, but flannels, repellants, cloakings . z and dress goods are rather more active. | An English experimenter planted a hyacinth bulb ia October, 18382, we are ‘ T N ~~ ff | told, and as soon as it began to sprout, re- H 0 E O° A = LA i. ‘moved it to a perfectly dark, but well —— (—_____— | ventilated space. In March, 1883, a stem : ‘of dark purple flowers was produced, the Office in Gid Bank, leaves of the plant being colorless. In 'P STAIRS October, 1883, the same bulb was again Vs 9 planted and grown in the light through Ch’town, Feb. 21, 1884. \the window. It has flowered again this men sg . el igi. ‘year, and the flowers are smaller and less SULLIVAN & MAUNEILL EUStICO Beach, Fr. Eu. is deeply colored than those which came forth i i ‘last year in the darkness. Qe ATOR alerts ORNEYS ” Al- LAW ; , , ‘ : ‘about the disagreement of the doctors as to A This : ee n WATERING PLACE will open for the *)°" Shalt to be dane the chelate. Ono on BO al — » season on July Ist. ‘school thinks there is nothing like opium Seliciiors im Chancery ! : : a "9 y; | The Proprietors will spare no pains to make this the most ** Jarge doses ; another is equally enthusi- ‘antares -_ pt’ ' i 4 : : ” é ‘ astic over the same drug in small doses, ROTARERs PUBLIC, &c. desirable summer resort in the Provinces. The House is toO and only carried to a certain point ; a third OFFICES- O’Halloran’s Building, Great Well known to need any commendation. , | eens? erate oe Se an poe George Street, Charlotte ‘RMS 2 95 - $10.5 ‘ A ae , a a harlottetown. | TERMS—$2.00 to $2.50 per day ; $10.50 per week ; $8.50 others are equally strong against it. One Car ee to lane. per week for months. | doctor injects fourteen ounces of milk into W. W. Sctuivan, Q. C. | Curstsa B. Maongiun : 7 4 a vein, another asserts that “a copious im- Jan. 16,83. Coach will leave Charlottetown every Wednesday and Saturday evening,calling for bibition of cold water will svftice for the ___| guests; retcrrning every Thursday and Monday morning, at 9 o’clock, a. m., Charlotte- cure of the most curable cases.’ Certainly _town time, . | there seems to be plenty of variety for dis- Trains leave Charlottetown for Hunter River at 6 a. m., 8 25 a. m-, and 3 40 p. m. ' ciples to choose from. | W. WHEATLEY, & Soxs, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E: IsLanp) Commission Merchant, 269 BARRINCTON STREET, BALIFTAX, W. G. s® Special attention given to the sale of | as se (Ov Wunaruns : ; lunter River for Charlottetown 8 a. m., 2.38 p. m., and 6.15 p. m. Cran. of tha wient. malashiocens..cdodien ol | alarmists, all things considered, is the busi- ‘ness alarmist. It is he who circulates all manner of disturbing reports calculated to unsettle contidence in the commercial world, and by his unthinking yarrulity or deliber- ate unscrupulousness hastens, or actually produces, the disasters he apparently de- = : = | plores. It isidle to ignore the fact that ‘in the stock market, for example, there are Hunter River for Summerside 7 a. m., 10.08 a, m., and 5p. m. Summerside for Hunter River 6.10 a. m., 12.35 p. m., and 4.55 p. m. | Trains are run on Eastern Standard Time, which is 47 minutes and 20 seconds ‘slower than Charlottetown time. | Mr. Bagnall will meet Trains from all points at Hunter River, to convey passengers to Seaside. Ch’town, June 18, 1884.—2m P, E. Island produce. plenty of speculators who deliberately cir- April 24, 1854. culate canards, destitute of the slightest 9 beeen aoa sea foundation, in order to enrich themselves i. ARTHUR & COw, | by the ruin of others. There is a iaw to | punish such iniquitous conduct as this, and imeasures should be taken to secure its vigorous enforcement. — Frank Leslie's [U/us- DURING JUNE. goon enforeon } | | ame | | complaining that the rates on the Canadian Will give wonderful bargains in GHNEHERAL Commission Merchants, Pacific Railway discriminate against that | city, and in favour of points further west, 12] ATLANTIC AVERUE, |one gentleman stating that he had heard of 'a gentleman who was going in the whole- (BOSS MARKET) = TRY jsale stove business at Calgary, simply be- 7 cause he could lay the stoves down there at BOSTON, MASS. | better advantage than at Winnipeg ; which | : [we take to mean that stoves can be taken Eggs and Produce a Specialty. Just look at his Pp i es: say from Montreal to Calgary at better rices : May 15, 1884 wkly tf | | WEED SUITS, FROM $4.75 UP, | TWEED SUITS (ALL WOOL), FROM $7.50, | | rates from Montreal and thence to Calgary. | This is one of those things that almost ‘every large city complains of, but which, ithe world over, seems an incident of rail- |way transport. The remedy proposed by ithe Board of Trade is to put boats on the ‘Red River, and by making special arrange- STANDARD iii i LLP ASSURANGS UU, |ments with American lines, secure better TR rates, and in that way force the C. P. R. que ges spnemet Genel. Mecting Co Men’s Felt Hats, in Great Variety, Very Low. 'to the aoption of a competitive tariff, de he Standard Life Assurante Company, The new Commander of the militia in heid at ane o acenag, the awe re] | EB. PROWSE, ‘Canada, Major General Middleton, has April, 1883, the following results 1e | . . es taken up his abode in Ottawa. From 1874 year ended 15th November, 1883, were re- | Sign of the Big Hat, a4 Queen Street. to the date of his appointment he was Com- ported :— ji -mander of the Royal Military College at 3,038 new proposals for life as- Sandhurst, England, with the rank of surance were received the = aes SSS Colonel. On receiving the position of year for |Commander in Canada he was made Major- 2,561 proposals were accepted, General. Had he remained in England he | would have been obliged to retire in Novem- | assuring =. ‘ 7, 239, 048 13 | “ ee ae oleae, Charlottetown Boot and Shoe Factor 2 ber, under the new army rules, but by his | 20: 1882, arcounted to 66,936,302 91 acceptance of office in Canada he remains “PS ty > ~ PG 2,462,226 59, Ss 5 (Of which $7, 753,031.15 was ‘ou the active list. Major Middleton has 4,267,546 00 WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. JOHN LONGWORTH, reassured with Other offices) | been forty-two years in thearmy. He saw bas” The ch Agent for Charlottetown. The claims by death which service in New Zealand in 1846, in the war | DORSEY, GOFF & CO'’S arose during the year amount- ‘against the natives, He afterwards served Ch’town, June 21, 1884.—eod wkly ALL WOOL WORSTED, $8.25, If low prices will sell the Goods, he is bound io sell. Ch'town, June 12, 1884.—eod wkly ——— (sate te eee ee $ 9,754,085 38 | —_ ed, including bonus addi- jin India during the Santhal srebellion and tions, to the Sepoy mutiny of 1857-58. For gallant The annual revenue amounted conduct at the storming of Bank's House at 15th November, 1882, to and Marfiniere he was made a brevet Major. The invested funds at same He subsequently served in nearly all the date amounted to : leading actions of the mutiny campaign. Being at increase during the He was favorably mentioned in despatches year ol io the War Office, and was honored by be- ing made a Commander of the Bath. At \the time of the ‘‘Trent” affair, he was in Canada, having been Major in the 29th Regiment at the time. 29,503, 416 00 2,648 35) 5,062,048 35 vest ana best piace to buy is at THOMAS KERR, luspector of Agencies. Ch’town, Auguat 3, 1383. London Truth is considerably exercised } son receives $25 a line; Oudia, $5.000 a novel ; but in the race for wealth Simms, the dramatises of ‘‘In the ranks,” a rank piece of stuff, can look with contempt on his baffled pursuers, kaving made last year $100,000. Cincinnati is superstitiously intereseted in the case of a woman who, falling asleep in a railroad train, dreamed vividly that her child at home had been seriously hurt, the was so deeply impressed by the vision that, on arriving in the city, she drove directly to a physician’s office and carried him hastily to her residence, where the youngster was found to have been thrown from a swing precisely the time the mother had dreamed. The story is told cireum- stantially by the persons concerned. Mr. John G. Whittier, the venerable Quaker poet, in a letter read at an Aboli- tion re-union and celebration of the semi- centennial of the pro-slavery riots in 1834, in New York, said:—‘‘I thank God for the great deliverance of our beloved country from the curse and shame of slavery, and for the wonderful progress of the emanci- pated race. They are not yet in the full enjoyment of their civil rights in many sections, and they need still the care and labor of love which should be our blessed privilege to give. The time has not come to place our Government in the hands of those who have persistently denied them the rights and privileges of citizenship. Yet it gives me pleasure to note the rapidly improving state of public opinion and feeling in the South, and I trust that long before the centennial of emancipation is reached the colored people, educated and self-respecting, will have no reason to com- plain of uncivil treatment and political dis- abilities, God hasten the stay.” General Gordon is indeed,as the Premier says, a distinguished personality. His life is as great a mystery as his character. His physical endurance in the desert would be difficult to understand in a strong man; but in a man with angina pectoris, and with a horror of meals, it is sitsply a kind of miracle. As far back as November 15, 1878, and in that very Khartoum on which the eyes of all Christian nations are turn- ed, he writes:—‘‘There are nine Europeans in the Soudan, and they vegetate and do not live. Can you conceive what it is never to have any desire to cat? That is my case. I hate the operaticn. is My angina pectoris has not wwoubl- ed me lately. -According to medi- cal books it is not known what occasions this. Itis heart disease, and makes you think you are on the brink of death. A. rush ef blood takes place to the heart, and you think all is over. I may say I have died suddenly over a hundred times.” We can only find encouragement in such facts to go on hoping that against all human and medical probabilities Gordon will again emerge from the Soudan, and long continue to show the world what can be done by men with grave disease, but with faith in their own mission and in God's providence. John Theurer, the gymnast, is said to possess wonderful pewer. His rial feats were shown at the Boyleston Theatre a few weeks ago, but it seems that the half has not been seen. A Chicago paper publishes an account of some of his feats, which approach the marvellous and include the following : Balaucing a plow weighing 100 lbs. on his chin; placing the back of his head on one chair and his heels on another, forming a bridge, and holding on his breast in this position. 200 lbs; holding at arm’s length 79 lbs. in each hand,and while stand. ing on his head hold out a 50 lb. weight in the same manner. A 160-pound dumb- bell is by him easily elevated above his head at arm’s length eight times in succes- sion. Theurer’s greatest feat in lifting wag done when but 19 years old at the Cincin- nati Gymnasium, where he lifted by main strength, an actual grip without straps or harness, 1,300 lbs., much to the astonish- ment of those who witnessed it. This “lift” has never been equalled by any one of that age. A few vears ago, at the Front Street Garden, in Hamilton, he lifted a horse weighing 995 lbs., a platform on which the horse stood, weighing 100 lbs., and a man sitting on the animal weighing 140, making a total weight of 1,235 Ibs. Theurer now claims that he can lift 1,500 lbs., ang stands ready to test his strength against any man of his weight or under. At the third anniversary of the Young Men’s Gymnasium, Cincinnati, he accom- plished the difficult feat of balancing two plows and a table on his chin at the same time, and bendiog iron across his naked arm. Two men wore them- selves out trying to break a huge boulder on his breast with sledge hammers. He has placed stones weighing from fifty to one hundred pounds on his head to be broken in the same manner, neither cushion nor pad being used. He can give no solu- tion of the mystery of this remarkable feat of strength, and only knows that he is able to do so. He has also held a table in his teeth while large stones placed upon it were broken with hammers. if