| q - ees a oe Seay Rate ee Tae ae a i Mgeti ae sa ne ‘Terms :—Five DotnArs a YRAR. NEW SERIES Cie Dory E is issu xauuuer i every evening by [he Examiner Publishing Go From their office, corner of st reeta, Edward Water and (;sreat Georve Prine: Charlottetown, Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— Six months....... $2.50 Three months....... One month .... Advertising at moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar terly. half-yearly, or yearly advertisemenis on application. - i ALMANAC FOR JULY, 1886 MOON'S CHANGES, New Moon Ist day 6h., £4.1m., Wig te | First {Quagter Sth day, 9h., 5.7m., a m., N. E. (below horiz Full Moon 15th day, Ith . 546.4m., p. m., 8. i st Q irter 24th ruby, i Rh Sim... = kK N \I mh | day, in, 13.3m., i Mi., N t W riZOn), LD S Sin |Moon! Hich' Da rAY Ww \ MM sets | rises |W len h ! rn tn nh i LI y Is7 49; 4 8110 3615 2 : 9 5 911 22 0) : 6 18 rT sv } ’ iB 7 3110 ¢ 28 ws | 48 a7 ' is I ; 2 , Ly é4 } . 2 Si] iy joe? ? >») . oo 4 “ a> th ] } . oe 23 i ; Lay 24 16) 2 27) 5 42 22 LliSuan 2 eS 6 56 ‘A 12M Ly 20 4; 4 2) 7 59 Is 31 2 44 84 if 4aeW inesaa Os is' 6 Sl Y oo 1S 15' Thursday 29 13; 7 17)10 13 14 16| Friday — } 421 7 54/10 48) 12 M7iSa lay : 5S ys 11 24 if ‘ ~ v 2 41) 5} 4 } - 10 ’ ' ; } “0 ‘Tuesday é 5, 9 5D Oo : aii} , 10 24) 1 38 2 Sui | } 3 i 23 34 yl] 5 ; 0 i OS 9 38 s4;11 48 oo ~ . Z } ; oo 6 1) 31; O 22: 6 29 ol ~ 1) , i 7 1: iS 2 Lay i Is i yt S$ 43 15 <v t4 27; 2 48: 9 3 ; 26 > 54:10 24 i] ‘ 1 46:7 26 ’ Lil i4 40 BOSTON. GKEMENT THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL $5. 00. | AREA ort and Port- | Leave St. John for Bostou, via Eastport | Friday, at jand, every Monday, Wednesday and §,00 a. m eave St. John at 8 o'clock every Saturday night for BOSTON DIRECT- Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd | class ; $J.50, 1st class. , For tickets ont other information apply to 4 SHAR F. W. HALES, K. L. it Fos P. E. I. Steam Nav. Co. t Ticket Agent. or to your neare May 7, 1886—eod wky SREHUR & CO. GENHRAL ry : Jommission {erchants, 12) | ATLANTIC AVENUE, T, MASS. » ae o an Inndur Unanial ALS and Fron 4 Speciar ! TION. AcH PL u G&G OFTHE VATLE NAW IS MARKED T & B. + IN BRONZE LETTERS. None Other Genuine. Aete W RANKIN HOUSE. Caw i, undersigned will lease for a term of years * the above wel! known Hivtel, situar ed on cur- ner of Water and Pownal Streets, in Charlotte town, Prince Kdward Island, Possession given on the Ist Oectuber nexi. Any information required will be given, either by letter or personal mterview. J. H. GRAY, ” DAVID STIRLING, ‘Trustees, Ch town, June 12, 86—junlqzaw ber jour PRE A’ usual, our stock has been personally selected in the best “a 5 Ameen rasan. 201 nearer naga ih w Pcie ans * fags ins ST, “i es LS Ras An AA ee epee i E DAILY EXAMINER. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Mea, having to pelilies the Public, may soeetk free.” CHARLOTTETOWN, P. a3 ISLAND, TUES the . following Gods: We will offer, at Reduced Prices, this month, |Straw Hats. Feathers and Flowers, Dolmans, Light Summer Prints. SUCCESSORS TO . SE “7h aes 32 ¥e2 i *~ y “ 7 f BR z ‘ « va a mw ; Ysa ehaall 7 oy | ob Be jess? Qn Ch’'town, July 6, 1886. Re A EER TN. SOE FE FE & 3 7 } + KR Now is the Fime to Secure Your Midsvmmer Goods. Dolmans, (ress Groods. Underclothing, Millinery Goods. alle i Every Department, Our Goods, ~;wee WUT irices, Seo Our Bargains ! B Summer Summer Summer Summer . '™T ny lonanid >] Hxeeptigual fe [ee axe Ch'town, July 5, 1886. NEW INS & STERNS' eneectnctinneeee (} aceecmmememen Britis sh and American markets, and comprises, in addition toa Full Range of Staple Di» Goods, all the novelties to be —— —— O——— London, Paris and New York Mult linery, FancyGoods, Hats, Hon nets and Shapes. * Farascls and Umbrellas | Large Stock of New Hosiery, Gloves, &c. ——— 0 New Trimmings, New Prillings, New Laces GO008 “with = TREMWINGS to Suit ee oO — Muslins, 7a New DRESS New French HK American ustins, ew B2ces to ene () i ianiaiaetamain ; Tho 5% tann wT Onan w Pink Gattens, New derssys, ——+-—-0 — a. 4s cq a ait 2 pests : -s SF ea ” New Gloths, Sew New Jackets. | New and Ojileloths!: NS. Se cri NS _ oe Ch’town, April 29, '86. ‘DAY, JU L AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Bolanie Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as hone: Colds, and Asthma msumption, have been Coughs, hich lead to © speedily cured by the use of ADAMSON's BatsaM after all éther medicines have failed. “ufferers fron) « ther receni ronic cou ( ronchial at tions, can resort to this grea lent of obtaini ne speédy relief. Po not t at once FOR SALE BY LL DPRUGGISTS, Bottled at St. Stevens, \ roprictors, F, W. KINSMA ‘ Drag ; Ave ¥. : an wer com ee ee > AND A POUND OF FRESH ROASTED | AND GROUND COFFEL 36 CENTS FOR JULY ONLY WE WILL A NICE COFFEE worth 36 SELL POT, . ‘ 1 cents, anda A Pound of 24-Cent Coffee, 2 with a Printed Receipt for making nice UCoffee, ALL FOB wo CENTS BO Cents’ Worth for 36 Cents, FOR JULY ONLY Don't Miss this Bargain cR & GOFF. Ch’town, July 6, 1886. Yaw & WY IS2z7 = = = 886, T.& KE KENNY, Dry Goods and Shipping, HALIFAX, CANADA, m ; rs sr T & EK. KENNY, (Fr. € MAHON) Ship Owners avd Brokers, eueral C:mmission Merchanis, I61 GRESHAM HOUSE, Bishopsgate Streci, LONDON, E. C., England, Scott's and YVaughans Codes. M.wvch 29, 18%6. HARD COAL, Crosby a 7 rom ye ST arrived ex Sehr. ‘‘E. e New Y ork- (371 Teas saiiatiase Coal (Egg and Chestnut Sizes.) Will be sold low while landing. This is the same quality Coal that has given) such good satisfaction for the last four years. CAPT. JOHN HUGHES, Water Ch’teuwa, July 2, 1690—laav vod EE POT) lhe shuts the cage door upon her, and she EURIPIDES. Y 13, 1886. LW RITTEN EspE CIALLY FoR THe Examinen. } Ethel De Wolfe OR, SHADOWS AND SUNSHINE. BY 8. M. BENT. CHAPTER VI. Sixcie Copres Two CEents. VOL. 19. NO. 48. nce a li, ian <i neglecting to follow up the advantages | gamed, McLellan allowed hima! to be driven from his position before Richmond ~ the James River; and early in ugust he evacuated the Peninsula aito- | Augus . and retreated towards the Potomac, {with ‘brilliant failure” written on his bsn- ners, and leaving every mile of the march ; marked by the unlettered graves of the i heroes o° the army of the Potomac. n tollowed, in September, the bloody hattle of Antictani, which, though not a | dee ISive elgas geint nt, drove the rebels out | of Maryland, and McLeilau’s name was | THE STING OF THE SERPENT. once more carried on the wings of fame ail “ Go, then—'tis vain to hover ;over the Union. But agaim he failed to Twas aweet—'Lwas falee—'tis fled 1’~Moore. | old tactics of delay and extreme caution, ifor which he had been noted all through ** Ah, love! Perjured, false, treacherous Love. Enemy Of all that mankind may not rue! Most untrue : Vo him who ke eps most faith wilh thee. Weoe is me! Spanish Student. On the eve of the battle of Fredericks- |burg Captain Chandley received | York paper, in which the following marked | paragr iph caught his eye : | **The nuptials of | Ethel DeWolfe, only child of Lemue! De | Wolfe, of this city, will take learly date—-within i The wedding, it is | quiet. ’ three rumored, wiil be ve ry soliloquized Paul, ‘* is reached Ine tor the one | adored, and forgotten my ex s thrown aside Ct a. \why no letters have | past. This is wl y believed truth itself, has |istence ; this is why she h: my love li jness is gone. Oh! the } months ; ce Aa ¢ rushed rose ;when the alluring halo of wealth before her. Love, honor, chivalry, turn the balance in which binding vows are | weighed in the hour of temptation ; and the a New| Lionel Warrer and plac eat an} weeks, it is said. | when its fresh-} ‘The j perfidy of woman. | the occupation of the city of Fredericksburg |The most devoted heart is spurned by her! gli ither* >} and giooniy. CADMOL | the campaign, lest his star fadine and des- cending, and doomed the country tu fresh disappointment. Te same over-cautious hesitation that had resulted iu the failure of the Peninsula »nd Maryland campaien. continued till General McLellan was super- command cf the Army of the Potomac by General Burnside, who imme diately inaugurated a more vigorous plan of | action. General McLellan was a skilled engineer, jorganizer and instructor, a man of great ' theoretical knowledge of the art of war; a cheerful and unostentatious jimander, and beloved by his soldiers, but i his unaccountable delinquency, when t jmoment came for dashing movements anda | grand efforts, rendered him unsuitable to lead to permanent victory the magnificent army he had built up, and the ninent at lass became dissatisfied with his vacilia- | tion and tardiness L3th of December, seded in ; qulet, col. Love : the day fvllowing army of the Potemac,dawned dreary As soon as the fog lifted, the army moved out on the plains which lie between the swiftly flowing Rappahannock ind the terraced heights a mile and a_ half by the + most sacred pledges, when tried in the cru-| ty the south of the river. The enemy, in jcit te of Womall 8 faith, crumble Ned dust and | greater force than was anticipated by the jashes and the blackness of falsehood. But | Union generals, were strongly posted in [Saas SNS, WhORS lage 1s Sugrayven on my oe se natural battlements, and the brisk j heart, she whom rt believed the embodiment i skillful attack made upon them by the jof truth, honor and love, she whom J) er hlele troops was not successful in driy adored as a queen among her sex, as me | wo! ‘thy the hom: GE every noble | that she, of all women, sh ld | ithus forget the . hours we spent | | sogéther. the promises she made, | jand ruthlessly tear asunder the silken] in spirit, goes be- All the long} ‘ords that made us on: }yond my jmonths I have been on the ide fence of her home, she has been silent. 5 | Not a line written to say that she © | was still true, not a word to prepare she was ashamed con ipre she nsion. bys ittie has she | for this bitter blow. No! jto confess that she had fallen into a she had s la her- than she Bah! | | poltroon and coward, that itself for a few paltry dollars mort jthought the mere soldier possessed. | let her go; the bars of her jewelled twill but mock he 'goul of her song will be broken when she resigns herself into the keeping of Lionel Warner, and her spirit will chafe with vain re pining rs and uncontrollable regrets when imprisoned wili find that as securely as one of iron, is not worthy of tears. face of woman is nothing to me, and fame, in arms and in art, shail be my mistress, and fickle though she oft is, she is not Ethel DeWolfe, whose name is falsehood.”’ The men under Paul’s command wonder- a golden key will lock her in Let her g »t she Henceforth the ed that night at his feverish and uncreas- ing activity, at his impatient haste and longing forthe rush and roar of battle. He volunta he pace “d Up al rily went on sentry duty, and as 1d down his beat on the out- skirts of the city the had that day entered, his thoughts were sad and bitter. | Silence settled over town, river, plain and hill, over the hostile armies waiting but the dawn of morning to begin anew their dead- work, silence broken only by the oce challenge of army lsional neighing of horses, or isentry, er sounds that come, strange and mysterious and unaccountable, from out the bosom of darkness, from off the ripples of the flowing river at midnight’s mystic hour. “'Tis now the dead of night, Is with a lonely, solemn darkness and half the world hung ; “From camp to camp — hum of either army stilly sounds, hat the fixed sentinels almost receive The secret whispers of each others watch,” Through all the long, lonely, solemn hours of night, till far past the dark, weird moment that heralds the birth of anothex day, Paul kept watch, and when finally re- lieved, threw himself upon his pajlet, and fell into a ftful slumber from which he was soon aroused by the sharp reveille. CHAPTER VII. FREDERICKSBURG. “The order came, the die was cast, McLellan was reiwoved at last-—- While far and near, o’er hill and dell, in thrilling notes the accents fell— “Come back to us, McLelian !** ” : —Jonas A. Bigelow “O God of battles ! steel my soldiers’ hearts ! Possess them uot with fear !take trom them now ihe sense of reckoning of the Cppoeced numbers !t Piuck not their hearts from them to-day, O Lord, O not to-day !" —King Henry V. The victories of Williamsburg, West Point, Hanover Court House, and Fair Oaks, half redeemed General MclLellan’s name from the imputations cast upon it by those whe had expected him, with the magnificent army under his command, to throw aside his timorous tactics, and to in- field im} 43) ’ i | Hf blood wings, th 1e | of bor e the ing them out. by ¢ re mnerals The attacking division led Meade and Gibbons was badly used by the rebels under Jackson. Howe Brooks held the bridges on the Union ht, suff ring s verely from the Confeder atos left, led by General Stuart, who made deper a "e florts to drive them from the posi- tion to which t! ley SO heroic ally cluny Gen, charged in force on the Union lines, but was pers with considerable loss. The terrible battle then grew general along and ej the front of both armies, and all day long the plain presented a grand and magnificent gilded] panorama of great bodies of troo yps, march jsnare, that she had given her hand to ny ing and countermarching , charging and re- de acdly storm of bullets Ce ed this way or that, while over the ste ined reeking field, rose the steady aur Of artillery, the shrieking and bursting fierce rush of grape and canister through the sulphurous air, the muskeiry, the rallying screams of the dying, the sighing of maddened and above the dense clouds of smoke from which broke flash upon flash floated the tattered and _ bullet | treating, as the ertier 1] z P roulig Voieys oi cries of the wounded and 7 | leaders, tine steeds, riddicd banners of the combatants. Neat sunset, Franklin’s left, with fearful loss, had gained ah mule of ground, but vain was his every attempt to dislodge the determined Confederates from the high hills, the deep gullies and shelter- ing woods which gave them so strong a position in the rear of the city. Early inthe day Generai French, sup- porte d by Ge neral Howard, had attenipted to drive ¢ encmy from these hills and woods, but w ft their detach- ments at a ion in front of the 1d treat before A second and third time was the attempt made in the face of the leaden tempest, anc as often were the That line of until just as upon the hloudy wwpse-strewn plain, a final attempt was made by the same div under the cover of a ceaseless and blinding artillery five, but a8 met DY one « tone wall ; ] 1] ’ . race, am a5 COMMpeHhoad oO T% a murderous fire. , ; brave regiments driven back, action was then abandoned, a. 9 Tivyho we i io settie ision, at the critical moment, when victory trembled in the balance, it was outflanked by a body of rebel reserves that suddeniy rose out of adesp ravine en the extreme left, and forced to retrest disorder, and the battle was over. Gallant Captain Chandley—who, in all the hard fought contests in which the army had taken part, had ever borne himself as a soldier should in the thick of the fight, amid the screaming missiles of destruction —and three of his brother officers, who had clambered up the stone wall to lead their followers over, were left prisoners in the ; Confederate lines. (To be eum) aw meastuude Ss Acid Pacsntinée. AS AN APPETIZER. Dr. Morris Gibbs, Howard City Mich., says: ‘I am greatly ploased with it as a tonic; it is an agreeable and good ornare a i mm Mavp and her George were in the parlor, and Mauad’s father was laying down his politi cal tenets to i Maud’ sGeorge. “I tell you, he exclaimed, ‘‘we don’t want any third party here.” ‘That is it precisely, papa,” replied Maud, “‘a third party isa nuisance anywhere.’ Maud’s father withdrew from the field. oe... ee | an augurate, early in the campaign of 1862, vigorous aciion against tie insurgents. The grandest army of the Union hai spent a whole scason in sanguinary conflicts and great attempts which profited the nation little. From the 25th of June to the Ist of | July was fought ana Imost uninterrupte od battle hefore the rebel works at Richmond, with a tota! loss in kiled, woum led and missing of nearly sixteen thousand; the pan! had shown bravery,endurance, devotion and eagerugss bo fight, unsurpassed by any budy of Union trouys ia the field, and yet, | kind. MoTHeERs. - s. Winslow's yuld always be used when “tting teeth. It relieves the 16 ouce; it produces natural, by relieving the child from pain: AMVICE TO Soothing Syrup sh« c ns mm are {hit uiieres quiet nlee p 4 , and the little shrub awakes as “‘bright as a button.” I+ is verv pleasant to taste. It oftens the gums, and is the hest soothes the chi allays all pain, regulates «4 In known remedy for diarrhea, wheiner a:sing from teething or other causes. I wenty-irve cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for Mrs. — : Syrup, and ne 5 ea while.