be Baily —a To ee a - ~— ee a NEW SERIES, (He Datty EXAMINER IS ISSUED EVERY EVENING, By rae Examiner Pus.isHine COMPANY, FROM THEIR Orrice, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Terms : | MERCHANT TAILOR, Charlottetown, - : P. E. Island, Rares or Supscriprion : eg ee ee Is now offering Cash Buyers the BEST VALUE that One Meath." 13 820: 0 50 can be had in the market, in #® Advertising at most moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. | Broadcloth, Worsted, Scotch and Canadian T'weed Suits. ALMANAC FOR JULY, 1882. A magnificent range of MOONS CHANGES. Full Moon Ist day, lh. 56m. a. m., N, GENTS’ FURNISHINGS (below horizon. ) J Third Quarter 7th day, 5h. 38m., p. m., N, (helow horizon. ) Lage il New Moon 15th day, 2h. 49m, a. m., S. W., First Quarter, 23rd day, 6u. 5m. a.m, N, (below horizon.) Fall Moon, 30th day, 9h. 49m., a, m., N. W. AMERICAN WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS (below horizon.) iia ae ’ D | ay or waxx|522 |San |Moon|High | Days Collars, Ties, Underclothing, English and American Hats. M) ~~ | rises |sets | rises | water | len’h, r m jh m | aft’n morn! 1/Saturday 4187 48) 8 410 43/15 27 } 1 . : ziswoday | 19)" 49) 8 olin 20 |OUR Readymade Clothing is Manufactured on the Premises, 3 Monday | 19 49! 9 I4laft §/ 4) Teceday | 20 a 9 44/ 0 49, a ‘ell we es . ‘ 5, Wednesday | 21' 48/10 19) 1 31 ashionably cut, well sewed, and having good trimmings, 6! Thursday . a 7,10 41) 2 2s} 7| Frida ; 22) 47/11 11) 3.11 . . §/Satur y | 2 47/11 45) 4 20)15 19 Will be sold as Cheap as Imporied, 0 Sunday a 46 one 5 41 10}/Monday |[ 24! 46| 0 23/7 1 ne a Ping iM ; : Ii\Tuesday | 25) 45,1 68 8, We invite you to inspect our Goods. 12’ Wednesday | 26) 45) 1 57| 9 0 13 Thursday | 27; 44; 2 53! 9 45 14| Friday | 28) 43) 3 54/10 25| D A BRUCE Saturday { 29) 42) 4 56/11 2/15 08! | . oe ’ 16, Sunday } 3 42! 5 59/11 35 Charlottetown, May 22, ’82. 72 Queen Street. 17| Monday 31 | 41) 7 1' morn — SS ee EEN ee eerie eee 18\Tuesday | 32) 40;8 3/0 8] . 19} Wednesday | 33 0 9 3] 0 39! (¢ 9 20, Thursday { 34) 38/10 4) 1 11 21) Friday | 35] 37:10 56] 1 45! 22) Saturday 36, 36laft 4] 2 25/44 54 4 23\Sanday 37; 35) | 6, 3 10! 24 Monday 33} Hi 2 8 410) load 25|Puesday | 39 38 3 10’ 5 26! : 26/Wednesday | 40 34 9 6 46 Se ! 3 27 er mia ees © 3 7 oe ([\HE proprietor of this Establishment, owing to the increased 29|\Sacarday | 44) 29) 6 34! 9 43/14 42 demand for his Goods, has added new facilities to his 30\Sunday 45) 28] 7 10/10 29 ‘ , sisti ; ' » 2 . ae , 3iiMondy le 46 261 7 4a{ia 10 | Bakery, consisting of the latest and most improved machinery, ~—-- — ————— ete., and is now prepared to supply the trade with : Bank of Nova-Scotia. ; ‘Seu V Hard Bread, Plain and Fancy Biscuits, &., ESTABLISHED 1832, AT THE SHORTEST NOTICE, Paid Up Capital . . $1,600,000 Reserve Fund oo . 325,000) An Agency of this Bank wil! be opened on LOOO lbs. CHOICE CONFECTIONERY Monday next, 19th inst., in the building | lately occupied by the Bank of Prince Edward Island, under the management of the under. signed. , Deposits will be received on interest, and on current account Drafts granted on the various Agencies and | correspondents cf the Bank. Sterling and other Exchange bought and! sold, and general banking business transacted. Db. C. CHALMERS, Ch’town, June 17, I8SS2—tf Agent, — EDWARD T, AUSSELL & CO, | rr Tec emnat* GREAT CLOSING UP AT as 83 QUEEN STREET. Us To arrive per Steamship ‘* Miramichi,” from Montreal. Kes Orders by mail promplly executed. J. QUIRK, Prince Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Islaud May 4, 1882. ——— —— ——— = ————— May 19, 1882—6m “Le ARTHUR & CO., General Commission Merchants Particular aitention given to the sale of Isiand produce. 121 Atlantic Avenue & 20 Essex Avenue, BOSTON, MASS. May 27, 1882—wkly INSURANCE OFFICE, Queen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, City Le een atacne tere ———_—— a 1 For Scotch and English Tweeds or Worsted Suits CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, For Canadian Tweed Suits, | | | onaiediemndeat 1 | | | | ' GREAT BARGAINS in Dress Goods, Tweeds, Winceys, Silks, Curtains, and all kinds ot Staple and Fancy DRY GOODS. Come early and secure Bargains. N. B.—Customers will please not. ask credit, as sales are for cash only; hence bargains. Parties owing accounts will please call and settle without. delay. Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses tettled promptly wa se F. KENNEDY . aya 4 , General Agent. Office—South Side, Queen Square. Ch’town, Feb. 3 1832. PROFESSIONAL CARD. PALMER & MULLALLY For Overcoats of all Descriptions, -GO TO- JOHN MACLEOD & CO’S, UPPER QUEEN STREET, TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HALL CORNER ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OFFIJCE—O’Balloran’s Building, Great), eal George St-eet, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. sland, om 8. V. PALMER. JAS. W. MULLALLY, s¥aranteed, A April 10, 1882. also A complete line of Gents’ Furnishings and Felt Hats, cheap,&c. &c. SUBSORIBE for the DAIL EXAMYEs, | the address, two dots ebuve AD. thUdarivy Hall Gerner iL, onset, mm Nowe Pope | Remernber the address rg Ap, thearivs Lull Gor D. A. BRUCE, » "(1/85 There you will find the largest and best assortment of Cloths in the Prices very moderate. The best workmansulp and a perfect tit ‘* This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may Spea& fr CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1882 a gi é.. li ct iy ThA — a a = hi” Sa Be Ge POR Neuralgia, Sciatice, Lumbago, ; Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swe/!- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Teoth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacons On as a sufe, sure, onpte and cheap Extermi Remedy A trial en but the comparatively trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering = pain can have cheep and positive proof of ite ms. RAED | A. VOGELER & co., Baitimore, Md., U.S. 4. TURNIP } | cipitation of its alluvial soil the cornucopia} Pacha over the soil; where, as IN MEDICINE. Upon the slime and ooze, scatters his grain, | where, in the past—long, long ages in the SINGLE Corres Two CExrTs,. VOL. ] L.---NQ, 49, The Egypt of the Present. Arabi and the Suitan. i CT { So far from Arabi’s having any purpose) England and France have for several of throwing off the Turkish yoke, it is clear years been managing the finances of Egypt that the Sultan had sympathized with him through a joint Burean of English and throughout, aud the utmust efforts of all French officials. This course was made ab- the Great Powers have failed to induce the soiutely necessary by the wad extravagance Porte to attack Arabi. If he were really of Ismail, father of the present Khedive, an Egyptian Nationalist, the attitude of| who by his personal monopoly of all profit- Turkey would be widely different. His|able trade, and his enormeus taxation, real purpose seems to drive out the Western often enforced by the whip on the backs of Powers for the benefit of himself and the’ the peasantry, was fast ruining, and even Turks, and his real reason probably is that, depopulating the country, and making the England and France have protected the, payment of its immense foreign debt hard working fellaheen from the rapacity of largely held in France and England, an himself and others in power, | impossibility, Under French and English gs a _ condition of the country : jhas been greatly improved and its prosper- | Egypt's Debt to Europe. ity is beginning to return. - ‘the aogier ivening Post puts it, “the interference | The debt which Egypt owes to Europe— | has done tine but good. It has cleared chiefly to England and France—nomiually | the service of corruption. It has lightened amounts to $500,000,000, a very, very large’ the taxes, made their mode of collection en for such a country. On September Ist humane, their amount and the time for ast it was quoted at almost its full face! collection certain, giving the peasants a value, but two weeks ago it had dwindled sense of security, and the whole country down to about $375,000,000. Egypt, it such purity of administration, both finan- must be remembered, has surrendered her cial and judicial, as it has never seen right to repudiate this debt, she having before.” given a first mortgage for it on her treasury which mortgage the Powers have a right to re ee oe foreclose at any time. Turkish Opinions. =-- In the present crisis ia Egypt the com- ments of the Eastern press on the situation are of interest as giving us an inside g'impse of affairs. El Vakit, published in Con- staptinople, sneers at the recent emeutes as ** petty rows among the rabble of Alexan- dria,” and assures its readers that the com- manders of the Egyptian army accepted alacrity His Excellency Dervisch as their Controller-in-Chief, acting for His Majesty the Sultan. Another lead- ing Turkish journal, Jeride-i-Hawadis, de- its Antiquity. Egypt and | Egypt is the country where the rain clouds are said to hurry over the land as \if affrighted; where the pale moon's beams are so powerful as to injure the eyesight; ‘where the sacred river annually overflows its banks, and god-like, implies in the pre-! with ** The higher Nilus swells, Directions in Eleven Languages. “~~ more it promises—as it ebbs the seeds-/clares that if Europe bad seen fit to second SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALEES men, the mission of Ali Nizam Pesha it would not have been so now, reduced. to act as a And shortly comes to harvest; ” mere, spectator. ‘Let England. recall its ships and leave the whole work of pacifi- insists that the past—a nation suddenly sprang through C@on to Turkey. It fleets before the veil of ubscurity, fully armed, into the ®Ppe@rance of European |arena of existence, like Minerva from the|Alexandria has doubled the influence of civilization was cocked by the children PopUlace. The Osmanli takes a theoretic of the desert; where many of the arts and *"4 philosophic view of the situation ; pro- i brain of Jove; a country.in which the cradle Of Arabi Pasha over the army and the | SEED! —~- AT-— | BEER & GOFF’S. Carter’s Imperial, Skirving’s Improved, King of the Swede, ‘Champion, Green Top, Laing’s Purple Top, We have for the past seven years sold most of the above varieties, and can con- fidently recommend them. ' | ; Highest Cash Price Paid for Eggs, | The winds were lovesick with them ; the oars i June 22, 1882, i & Goff. For Sale or to be Let. AVENWOOD, lately the residence of the Hon. J. UC. Pope, just outside of eity limits, containing 31} acres, and beauti- fully situated, For further particulars apply to either of the under ignued Trustees. H. J, CUNDALL, L. H. DAVIES. Charlottetown, June 27, 1882—law pat tf - BAGNALL & ROBINS, SURGEON DENTISTS, NEWSON’S BUILDING, Orr. Post Orrice, CHaRLoiTeTown, P. E. I. June 5, 1882—law Ask Your Grocer -—FOR — Mount Royal Mills Rice, AND YOU NEED No Longer Use Old Rice, TWO CR THREE YEARS OLD, But Will Secure a@ Delicious Riee, Fresh, Pure White, Wholesome and Fine Fiavored. reel, Tynh 7; PHS, ‘in the centre of Alexandria, where Mare ter. i e¢ did sit alone iu sciences (especially astronomy) were con- testing that these occurrences only forerun ceived; where many of the fundamental the unification of Mahometanism and principles of the world’s theologies are said Cristianity. ‘‘ The progress of civiliza- to have had their origin in secular obsery-| #0" @dvances as a cloud on the wings of ances. A country which was decayed and the wind, and these two peoples (the tottering with age when Greece was in its Mahometans and the Christians) will urge infancy; the spectre of whose glory had it on together.” By which is meant, we passed away when Rome and Carthage | SUPP08®, that they are as much of one of which seem to us-as the fleeting shadows ind regarding the proper treatment of of a dream, the full significance of which we Fypt as the lion and the bear were in the vainly endeavor to comprehend. j fable concerning the kid that lay between Weare there! We wander along the | them. banks of the Majestic Nile. Its sparkling waters, hurrying so rapidly by, have per. chance rushed in the mighty cataracts down Abyssinia’s mountains, been transformed into foam at their bases, or struggled though the burning sands of some desert far in the interior of Africa’s unknown —_———_ ~~ Has America any Ships? The Washington correspondent of the New York World, while writing on the Alexandvian bombardment, asks, ‘* Haye in ; ” ai : bounds. View, away there on the horizon, ' a — nee (attains brightest among heavens countless hosts, waters the eyes of all men are turning, for Sirius the Dog Star, which rising—barks—- squadron of the greatest of modern navies or warns the agriculture s the eppronoh is bombarding from these historic cities. ae me 8. ‘te e enter on a -—” om glide The world is looking at the greatest along the silvery stream until we gain that triumphs of naval architecture cf the portes of the gery wien which Cleopatra, martial effectiveness of war ships. An the ‘‘ Serpent of old Nile, sailed to meet important naval appropriation bill, baving Mare Anthony. The imagery of Shakes- passed the House, is pending in the United peare declares that ‘States Senate. Mr. Robeson and his “The barge she sat in like a burnished friends have boasted of the efticiency of the throne, moniters he has built-or is about to buiid, — the water; the poop was banten They have asserted that these American ’ : ; ‘ships are to become the equals of any sea Purple the sails, and so perfumed, that | be Soloneinn to any een Mr. ewite wene silver, and Mr. Whitthorne and others tho- Which to the tune of flutes kept stroke and roughly exposed the falsity of their state- made ments. They demonstrated that our The water, which they beat, to follow faster, alleged war ships, while they have cost far As amorous of their strokes.” ‘more than the English battle ships, are of We hasten on and see the market place, Sail account in comparison with the lat- This Alexandrian bombardment calls | the attention of the American Congress to | the costliness and worthlessness of the ' Whistling to the air, which, but for vacaney, American navy. One of these English Had gone to gaze en Cleopataa too, lronelads in front of Alexsndria is the And made a gap in nature. ’ ,Inflexible. Without comparing Robeson’s ‘inonitors with the Inflexible, take some second-class English ironelads, as Mr. Hewitt did, like the Ajax and Agamemnon. Mr. Hewitt shows that the guns of the Ajax will throw a broadside of 3,374 pounds with a force capable of penetrating 173 inches of solid iron at 1,000 yards; or,while the guns of one of Robeson’s iavorite ships, the Miantonomah, would not be able to penetrate the Ajax armor at any poiut, the Ajax’s guns could send her volleys quite through the Mianonomah’s armor, in one side and out at the other, and easily pene- trate her turret. This is only one and not the most effective of the comparisons that have been drawn in the debate on the Navy Bill between Mr. Robeson’s navy—for he assumes the manufacture ot it all—and the battle ships of Enyland with which he brazenly invites compari- sons. The speeches of Mr. Hewitt, Mr. Witthorne, and some others should be read with the account of the bombardment of Alexaudria. ‘ur naval inferiority is Antony | How little we know of this great and re- 'markable country; once peopled with a _race who built the Suez Canal in the reigt. lof Rameses II., about 1,350 years B. C.. (at a cost of 120,000 lives and millions of ltreasure ; who circumnavigated Africa in ithe reign of Necho, the son of Psammeti- eus, and re-cpened the Suez Canal in the sixth century before the birth of Christ. ‘The Southern Cross, which was once with- in their geze, has “now passed from their horizon, and the Pole Staris a new comer. Some people doubt the antiquity of Egypt, but there is sufticient evidence, if pruperly studied, to remove that douit. | The annual overflow of the Nile leaves on the fields in a hundred years six mches of soil. This has been ascertained by numer- ous experiments, and the Colossus of Rameses the Seeond, who reigned 3,215 years ago, is surrounded by a sediment nine feet four inches deep, which gives 34 jinches per century. Beneath this depth the layers are found to the depth of 30 not due to parsimony or ever to economy. oat, which at the nme vate, would wt te We have expended for the navy, since the 13,500 years to A. D., 1854, when the tormation of the Government, $1,000,900,- onanpatetions were made, 1p me.9aap were! and the expenditures on account of the any of these borings made through rock, | navy Site 1865, since the war. have bein and even at the lowest layer a fragment of $500,000,000. Tt only costs England, with pottery was found, which demonstrat * the best navy in the world, including more that the layers had formed since the first) than 240 vessels employing 60,000 seamen, eppearance of man. | $50,000,000 a year for her naval establish. om |ment, or about three times as much as the Mrs. Lixcoiy, widow of the late Presi-) 4 morican navy costs the United States, dent Lincoln, and mother of the Secretary | while the United States have no navy. The of War in the present U. 8. Cabinet, died English naval attack in Egyptian waters in Springfield, Lil., on Saturday night. She, jas conspicuously forced these topics into had been ill a long time. | public consideration.”’ A Navat Hero.—It is said thata lighted | Mr Gro. L. Cuatmers, ef Bangor, Me., shell having fallen upon the main deck O' | gays : **T suftered s«verely with acute rheu- the.** Alexandria’ a gupper picked it up and | matism of the knee, and was unable to bear |imersed the burning fuse ina bucket of water, imy weight on my foot. Having heard of the Thigis described as more gallant than any-| wonderful influence of St. Jacobs Oil, I used thing of the gort-ever hefpre chroaicled. Tne jt, and a few applications of the «il com- ine¢r will be retorted for the Vievoris pet ¥ removed all soreness and pains, end , Cros} eyabled we to uve my kneg a well ab ever,” ee | i i uy