BK ee es THE DAILY EXAMINER. rerms :—-Five DoLtuars a YEAR. NEW SERIES. * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxirives. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST Li, 1886. SINGLE ( VOL. 19.—-NO. 68. opres Two CEn’ts. arm Cie Daily E is issued every evening by he Examiner Publishing Oo. From their office, corner of Water and Great George streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— eh nw Wk ogo Gee dbdect dated $2.50 NT fo og Cubcicicc clcaeclsctuds 1.25 WE Fo'ke ici vic cvtdebsade des avcs Ol Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, | on application. ALMANAC FOR AUGUST, 1886, MOON S HANGES, First Quarter 6th day, 4h., Full Moon l4th day, 2h., (below horizon. ) (uarter Mad day, i. (below horizon). New Moon 29th day, Sh, 43.8m., p. m 11.7m., p. m., N Last £1.9m., a. m., E. } Sun 'S fig ; I ee al aes Moon! High Daj s M rises/sets | rises | water! len ‘hy h m h m morn | aft’n h 1 Sunday 4 47:7 25) 6 21)11) 51 14 38 2 Monday 48, 23) 7 30morn 35 3 Tuesday 49, 22) 8 54) 0 33 33 t) Wednesday ol 21:10 8] 1 24 30 5)Thursday 52 19/11 19; 2 O 27 6'Friday — 53] ISiaft 27/248) 25 7 | Saturday o4 1G; i 34) 3 49 22 S$ Sunday | 36 im 2256 s iv 9 Monday |; 37 14' 3 34! 6 22 17 10 Tuesday | §8) 12; 4 27} 7 30 i4 ll Wednesday 59 10} 5 15) 8 27 1] 2Thursday {5 O| 9) 5 571 9 12 9 13\ Friday — | 2} 8] 6 34) 9 52 i 14 Saturday 3 6} 7 6/10 28 3 lS Sunday } t 41 7 3611 | 0 16) Monday 5 2} 8 311 34113 57 17 Tuesday | 7 li 8 2iaft 5 54 18; Wednesday s 0} 8 S55!) O 35 52 19 Thursday ’ | 96 58| 9 311/11 9 49 20) Friday 10; 56) 9 50) 1 45 46 21|Saturday |. 12} 54/10 22) 2 28 2 22) Sunday | 13) 52/10 58) 3 19 39 23 Monday’ i 14 30! 11 41) 4 29 36 24) Tuesday | 16) 49\morn| 5 5 33 2a W ednesday | WH. 47 O:811.7 15 30 | 26) Thursday 18} 45) 1 32) 8 25 27 | Friday 19} 43} 2 40) 9 19) 28 | Saturday 20) 41| ] 29/Sunday 22) 40) 5 10/10 52) 1 30 Monday | 23 38] 6 2811 34) 15 31' Tuesday 5 24:6 36: 7 46;morn |13 12 RAN KIN HOUSE. THE undersigned will lease for a term of years the abore well known Hotel, situated on cor- ner of Water and Pownal Streets, in Charlotte- town, Prince Edward Island. Possession given on the Ist October next. Any information required will be given, either by letter or personal interview a. Hi. GR a: DAVID STIRLING, Ch’town. June 12, 1886—jan15 2aw her jour ee SUNMER ARRANGEMENT THE PALACE STEAMERS INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- land, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, ” £.00 a. m. Leave St. John at 8o0’clock every Saturday night for BOSTON DIRECT. Fare froia Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd class ; $9.50, lst class. For tickets and other ee apply to . ASSHARP, W. HALES, P & i. Bie P. eS 'L. Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. May 7, i886—eod wky L. ARTHUR & CO.,, GENERAL Hommission Merchants, 12] ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. Roos and Produce a Specialty. Jaly 15—dly wkly CAUTION. MYRTLE. NAVY IS MARKiD T & IN BRONZE LETTERS. None Other Genuine. Oot. : | | } Trustees. | | | ! Exauriner. OPENING Poe DAW, AT --— BROWN s BLOCK i Case | i Ty Ty STANLE American White Shirts, Collars and Cuills, Searfs and ‘Ties. ' a Also —New Prints, New Muslins, New Seersuckers, New- } port Wraps (all shades), ‘Merino and India Gauze, Ladies’ and Children’s STANLEY BROS. 29.3m., Pp. M., } Ch'town, June 21, 1886. Balbriggan, Hosiery. Ladies’ Vests, in Brown's Block, Qpvosite Market House. STRICT ATTENTION to Business, Honesty and Square Dealing, and paying Cash every iL. EK. to the front of all competitors, time, is what has placed PRO®WS EH in CLOTHING, HATS, Xe. He does not advertize to sell goods at cost, but he guaran- ees to sell from 10 to 25 ae to sell at cost. He does not try to deceive per cent less thaa those who he adver- the people by making a big blow and offering paltry rewards, but trys to do things right and has the goods to back him up in what he advertizes. He has now about ) 2 | * CLOTHING, which he guarantees to sell from 10 to * 3 54,10 | 21 less than any house in the trade, bought less than h: alf price, “He does not ask the HATS $4, 000 worth of 26 per cent A lot of this Clothing was and will be sold less than half price. advertisement 6,500 and people to believe his "until they see his prices; he knows then they will believe, and knows that the goods and prices back him up every time. Ch’town, May 7, 86 | oni a AC ———— — 2 | Wants OU cannot get a Suit of Clothes Island, Cheaper than from us. | tors can attain to. There is no bette , showing. | | of our own manufacture, ' now SE L LING AT Cf IST. We | selling r apidly, j GENTS Cellars, Cnffs, 4am Prices were never as Low. other establishments this year. TD. A. Ch'town, June 23, 1886-—~eod & wy Having three Cutters and a large statf of Workmen, we can Ties., 72 QUEEN All goods freely shown, or sent to any part of the town. Wa Pleasedton’t forget to wait are Ly. Es. eee Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen Street. eod wky BRU C.-E to Have His Say---that is the same quality of material and workmanship in P. | We have a reputation for gefting up FIRST-CLASS WORK, that none of our competi- r quality of Cloths manufactured than what we are Stock, one of the largest you ever saw in this city. give you prompt attention. 0 $500 WORTH OF READY-MADE CLOTHING, many suits of which were made to order and not called for, but are hay e An Immense Stock of Hats, because buyers can save from 12} to 20 per cent. when they purchase from | as Best Hats yon ever saw for 50 cents. ——_—— |) FURNISHINGS, &c., oO Unsurpassed im Style. Don’t forget this when comparing with quotations from BRU C.K, STREET. HATS the Lat PRICES. FURS, Ch’town, May 4, 1886 IN “EW HAT & FUR STSRE, Wewson Block. 0 A NEW DEPARTURE I) 0 est Styles, ai the very LOWEST all kinds, Cleaned, Dyed, altered and Repaired. HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for Raw Furs. &, STUART. sal OTAN 4 SUS 2 PRG & PT. "5s AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. Tt is as pleasant as honey. Asthma, which lead to ¢ speedily cured by the use all other medicine: recent or chronic coughs or bronchial affections, can resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining speedy relief. Do not delay, get it at once. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Drunegista, M3 4TH AVE., N. Y. BUTTERS ALL Coughs, Colds, and onsumption, have been of ADAMSON’S BALSAM ¢tTter have failed. Sufferers from either {OOD BUTTER eannot be made JK without good Salt. Our Salt has take MEDALS AND DIPLOMAS at Exhibitions in different countries. Pure, White and Fine —————— Only | Cent per Pound. BEEK & GOFF. Ch'town, June 25, 1886. —2aw & wy —_——————— o-oo TRY THE _ 25 CENTS, AT THE LONDON HOUSE RICHMOND STREET GROCERY STORE N ELSON BROS.. daelers in Choice Family Groceries, Moat, Fish, &. Those favoring us with their patronage will find Goods as cheap as anyin the city, A call solicited. : ROBERT NELSON, SAMUEL NELSON. June 17, 1886--3mos law Ch'town, COAL! COAL! RDERS can be obtained, as usual, at the office of the subscriber, No. 35 Water Street, for car- oes of the follow ing Coals, viz: Albion Mines, Pictou, Nova Scotia Large. CAPE BRETORN Old Sydney, large. Lingan Mines, large and slack, Victoria Mines, large and slack, The Slack Coals from Lingan and Victoria Mines are clean and bright, and can be used in place of several sorts of Pic -” Saee. . DeEBLOIS. June 15, 1886—eod tf LACE SOAP, MANU FACTURED BY COLGATE & CO., for washing fine fabrics; also a large supply of Colgate’s Superfine Toilet Soaps. Don't take any poor imitations—get the genu ine. fhe Bestis the Cheapest. B. BALDERSTON. July 3—3 wks 2awk Is27 - = = 1886. & E. KENNY, Dry Goods and Shipping, HALIFAX, CANADA. T & E. KENNY, (fF. C. MAHON) Ship Owners and Brokers, General CO mmission Merchants, iGi GRESHAM HOUSE, Bishopsgate Street, LONDON, E. C England, Seott’s and Vaughan Codes March 29, 1886, is i What Encland Would Do. ‘‘l am .reminded,” said a United States naval officer at recently in speaking of the Cutting case, ‘“‘of an incident that happened ten years ago in Hayti which illustrates the prompt- ness with which the English remedies a wrong done to a citizen of country. An Englishman who had trouble with the Haytian for protection to the British Consulate in Port au Prince. The Haytian officers fol- lowed him closely, broke down the door, knocked down the consul, pulled down the sritish flag and trailed it in the dust. The consul chartered a vessel and went to Kingston as fast as he could go. Three British men-of-war immediately steamed out of Kingston harbor and the next morning had arrived at Port au The commander of the following demand to the Governor:—First, that the man who had been taken away from the Consulate should be returned; second, that the Governor himself should run up the British flag to its place on the Consulate; third, that the Governor in front of the Consulate should tear the epauletts from the shoulders of the officer who had s grossly insulted the British flag; fourth, that $20,000 in cash should be paid, and all this should be done within one hour, The Governor refused the terms, but the commander waited till the hour was fully up. Meanwhile he had arranged his ships in line of battle. At the expiration of sixty minutes he discharged two shells into the town. One of them struck the corner of the Governor's house and yery nearly demolished it. A flag of truce was imme- diately sent out and some officers were de- tailed to go and meet it. The Governor said he was now ready to comply terms and they were complied with to the letter within the next hour. In the same country,” said the officer, “the United States had a consul who got into a contro- versy with the Haytian authorities. He was entirely in the right, but they were ugly and threatening. Finally they came and attacked him one day and insisted that he should confess. He had nothing to confess and said so. They finally dr: him out and puta rope around his body and pulled him up toa tree several times} until his bowels protruded. Finally, thinking it was not best to quite kill they left him helpless on the ground. friend took him to a vessel and sent This Government immediately be- prominent Washington that some aw ay ° gan an investigation which has not been finished to this day. Meanwhile the poor consul has died. There difference between these two instances, and they illustrate the method of d« jing things, in England and America.” ae —————— i < + ee Seized for Sinugsling. J. D. Bonness, special Canadian customs } boats on} ofticer, seized twenty-one fishing Friday last at Deer Island, valued at to $400 each, for smuggling. The were released by the owners depositing the penalty, in each amounting to the boat’s value. There are two charges against them: the tirst for smuggling goods from} Eastport; the second for boats themselves. When the fishery treaty was abrogated Deer Island fishermen brought the boats tu Eastport, entered and paid duties on them, thus American boats, although built and owned in Canada. The Canadian government will | not permit American boats to be brought to | Canada and owned there without duty, so the boats become forfeited the same as other smuggled This will prevent New Brunswick boatmen from bringing sardines to Eastport without pay ing duties on this side. tt — —— — Ieeclanders and Canada. $200 boats case pay ink 1 goods. The Canadian Northwest promises soon to contain as many Icelanders as the lonely island from which they hail itself. The success of the pioneers who came to this: country a few years ago, reported to their friends in the old land, has served to direct the outflow steadily towards our prairie There are a few to be found in Northwest, in Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin, but it is to Man-|} itoba that most of them turn thei Their number there also promises steadily to increase. A few days ago a party of four hundred of them arrived in Winnipeg and were provided with work. Like all Scandinavian people they make good set- tlers, being peaceable, frugal and intelli gent. Unfortunately they are the representative ;s of that that seem naturally to turn to the Dominion in large| numbers. regions. the United States eyes. race a A Chinese at Vancouver City. The Chinese have already established themselves in Vancouver city and monopol-!, garden stuff. They have undertaken to clear a tract of 160 acres near the Pacific terminus in return for the use of it for ten years, and have evidently gone at the work with a will. Almost every kind of vegetable is raised, and it is from the Chinese that hotels and boarding houses obtain their supplies. They are evi dently welcome for once, though how long they will continue so is uncertain. A white man with a market garden feeling their competition would soon, no doubt, bring about a change in the public sentiment and raise a demand that they should ‘go.’ ized the trade in es Horsford’s Acid Phosphate. ,DVANTAGEO {IN DYSPEPSIA. tir y VY. Dors ey, Piqua, Ohi says: l i od it in dyspepsia with very marked nefit. If there isa deficiency of acid m ti th, nothing a or ls more reliel, W iM sess in the nervous sysvem is «ae benefic ial.’ on in A. H. B. Mac OWAN ells at his rooms, ¢ t 2 o'clock, p- ™., am assort- Friday next, a Stoves, etc. Also two ment of Furniture, first class Milch Cows. Government | authorities fled | Prince. } th flagship sent the} with the’ him, | , A other morning she said to her : him : is considerable | smuggling the, making them | only | Firemen in Alaska, in view of the attention which th five- men in Ualifax are now attractine. Ux folluwing which appears in the New York T inves may prove interesting: At Howken Indian village, in the southern most part of the tide-water strip of Alaska, the fe a white peopl who had gathered there for trading and other purposes, organized a tire brigade from the Haida, or Hydah (as it is variously spelled) men, and the spare coal oi] | Cans, as they were emptied at the trading were improvised into fire buckets for the embryo firemen. Several drills were given, and from the result much good was predicted in case of a conflagration. In the few weeks after the organization of the com- pany a few of them came tothe white men and asked permission to buy a drum and a few other melodious instruments for the members. As it was supposed to be for the purpose of whiling away their monotonous leisure when- 'ever they had a prolonged fire meeting, it was good thing, and the permigsien, with a small donation of cash, was give them. The first fire that took place was ih the smok escape-chimney (a mere hole in the roof con- tinued up on the outside as a chimney and a littie way down on the inside) of an Indian's and it was discovered by a white man white man also wherein a single Indian was found,who was at once dispatched to turn | out the frontier firemen as rapidly as possible, while the white man turned his attention to the small blaze in the chimney, aided by the very small amount of water at hand. He did not make very rapid progress, leut luckily the fire did not make any faster as he fought it. Each Indian that appeared was immediate ly sent post haste for the fire pany, that for some unac ountable | store, course ol a voted a house, who gave the alarm. The rushed to the house, com- reason did not put in an appearance. Another white man or two came to the first one’s relief, the fire was soon put out, and then the white men sallied forth to investigate the action of thei Hydah allies. At the further end of the long village stretched along the beach the company was seen coming, their band at their head, making the welkin ring with unwelcome music, and each and every man in his very best suit of savage clothes, that they had all rushed to put on when they first heard an alarm of fire, and which donned they had for me l behind the band to march in procession to the fire. ged | i el Atm a amen Wanted to be Sure. ' | i Mrs. Jones had a new hired girl, and the ‘Mary, if Mrs. Brown comes here to-day, tell her Jam not at home, but if Mrs. Smith comes invite her in. | ‘Yes, ma’am,” said Mary demurely. ‘shes 3 o’clock in the afternoon the bell rang, and Mary went to the door while he mistress waited upstairs and overheard the | follows ing : ‘Is Mrs. fat the door. } ‘*Are you Mrs. Smith?” ! No, [am Mrs. Brown.” ‘‘Well, Missis ain’t at home. She told me that if Mrs. Smith came to invite her in; but if Mrs. Brown came to say she wasn’t to home, and as you are Mrs. Brown, of course Misses ain't to home. Good even- ing, ma’am,” and she shut the door in Mrs. | B.’s face, and Mrs. B. and Mrs. J. are not on speaking terms any more. Women are very peculiar, and Mary has had to find an other pla oe. Jones at home ¢” asked the lady said Mary. — ie +S | Frozen Meat. : wrtation of frozen meat into increase, and docks Zen CAaArCcaAsses The im} Britain continues to ival Tito the East Indir 50.000 fre Great ‘the recent an of a cargo of ovel of mutton in excellent condition is the inten and as yet the most extensive contri- ib ition that has been made in the ferm of a lsingle cargo to the meat supply of this ‘country. This has been brought from the | Falkland Islands, and when one considers | that Kast Falkland was only colonized by | British subiects in land in 1861, and that there are 600.000 shee » in the Islands, deed, little short ol marvellous. and West Falk now nearly it seems, in- IRA OD, ---_-- | Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil, with Hypophosphites i FOR WASTING DISEASES OF CHILDREN, Where the digestive powers are feeble an’ the food not seem to nourish the ordinary does child, this acts both as food and medicine, giving flesh and strength at once, and is almost as palatable as milk. Take no other. — | . i} An American woman upon visit to England was complimented by a British ‘ otficer upon her English, and asked if she was not peculiar in this respect among her j . fcountrywomen. “Oh, yes, she replied, ‘but then I have had unusual advantages. There was an Eng glish missionary stationed near my tribe. The poverty ol professional] men up im Toronto is said to be something startling. Only one doctor there has an income ot $5,000 a year, and that includes the in terest on his previous Only four make $3,000 and fourteen lawyers are still worse off. SAV INg Toronto has an income tax. A little g Singing, “Johnnie, con Johnnie!” And it wa reen apple hung up ma tree, Johnnie, con ; 4 a : S AS TMOGMCSL AS ii.* ‘Johnnie, come est could be, Singing Johnnie, come Johnnie!” And Johnnie he came in his sweet childish way, And ste ‘up that fruit as his own lawful prey. His mourning companions are crying to-day, } ooW here’s Johnnie, where’s Johnnie, where's | Jo} ie The t Mr. G So v. @ ; } : i G | M LI i ul t } ti I y Mrs, ¢ ri hn} ! maadain, 1id in substance this condok It is very sad; but there ts ‘ hove who utone and make up for ali ‘*Yes, | mded the comforted vgentiewoman, “he is just coming down stairs, and “0 doesn’t feel badly about it at all.’ S? 000. The