Peres : : Dotnaks A YEAR, NEW SERIES. Tail The ery evening, by The Examiner Publishing Go. From their office, corner of Water and ‘reat George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : ° ) Six Months, 2 50 Three Montis, ‘ 29 One Month, 0 50 ar Advertisi: 16 most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, Hall year ments, on applica SS _—_— MANAG FOR AUGUST, 1885. CHAN ‘i ri MOON S ES, Last Quarter 3rd day, 5h. 43m., p. m, New Moon 10th day, r0b, 2m., a. m. First Quarter, 17th day, vo. o4m., a. m, Full Moon, 25th day, lh. 13m., p. m. ee ______iSun 'San !Moon|High ! Days Mi paY OF WEEK _j.os\sets | rises |water |len’h, 7 . h mh m aft’n;aft’n|h m } Saturday t 47 7 25) 9 59) 1 40/14 38 2 Sunday 45 23110 a 2 23} 35 9 Monday 49; 22111 51314) 33 4 Tuesday 51} 2111 45 423) 30 5 Wednesday 52; 19 mern; 5 47; 27 g Thursday | 53 18, 0 34) 7 14 25 7| Friday |} 54, 16/131; 823) 22 3) Saturday 56° 15! 237] 9 20) 19 @ Sunday 57) 14,3 49/10 9 17 10) Monday | 538; 12; 5 440 53) 14 1’ Tuesday | 59) 10) 6 2011 39) I y2'Wednesday [5 9 9 7 33 morn | 9 i3Thursday { 2| 8 S47} 014 6 i4 Friday ; # 6 99, 0 52) 3 15 Saturday 4 4il 2) 2 32) 0 16 Sunday 5 2aft 4) 2 16.13 57 17 Monday 7; Nl 4,3 54 18 Tuesday 8 Oi 2 | 47 5&2 19, Wednesday 95 55 2 52] 5 19 47 99 Thursday 10; 56! 3 40' 6 33] 46 9] Friday | 12} 54! 424' 733; 42 92 Saturday 13! 62] 5 2) 820i 2 23 Sunday i4) 50) 5 37) 9 12| 36 24 Monday 1¢; 49 6 9, 9 56' 33 95 Tuesday 17, 47| 6 39/10 26) 39 26, Wedaesday 18 45/7 71ll O 27 27/ Thursday 19, 43) 7 35/11 33) 24 28'Friday 20} 41/8 Silaft 6 21 29'Saturday 22' 40; 8 9 040, 18 30 Sunday | 23) 38) 9 61 7) 15) 3i\Monday [5 24.7 36| 9 45| 2 O13 12 NOTES. Duke of Edinburgi’s birthday on the 6th. Dog days end on the 11th. Landing of Julius Cw sar (B.C. 53) on 27th. In this mo the mornings decrease 47 minutes; the afternoons 59 minutes. ig RAILWAY SIME TABLE. For the convenience of the travelling publie, we have carefully arranged the fol- lowing table of arrivai and departure of trains on the P. E. Island Railway, accord- ing to lecal time :— Going West. am Ae 2. Charlottetown ............ 647 9732. &oe Royalty Junction..........02 947 42? North Wiltshire,.......... 737 1039 6&909 ee 747 1055 522 a a $13 iw ta escccoccaase 819 1143 607 Ne co cc cca cues $29 1159 622 P M. a oon. coc uh 842 1222 642 ; arrive.......907 1257 712 Summerside, - { depart...... 927 237 Ee cc cc ee 942 300 ec cau 1001 329 SI. cecccoce 1029 420 EES ns 3a DR ncsccckcccocs 12°05 657 MLL. cccocecas 1242 747 From West. > so ek. weal 207 647 Alberton oie ann ecu 245 7.57 a 329 902 = Diced oceeen cuntan 420 1029 | ellington. .... covadediin 449 1116 eae 507 1144 \ arrive..... 622 1207 Summerside, A. M. ( depart...... 542 112 657 east 607 149 729 Se ce nk 622 212 74 SEEN... occ cccecves 632 257 803 icci-nswsduaibad 638 237 812 Hunter ss wane aaa 14 tH 82 North Wiltshire........... 712 332 901 Royalty Junction.......... 747 432 947 Charlottetown............ 802 462 1007 Going East. v a + - Unarlottetown.................- 10 42 SN acs 63's cal ob cate okie 743 444 Ng ee ee ae 804 4857 ce QFTIVe....-.000832 &22 Moant Stewart, depart .... 30 857 527 en... 0... oeisdeousauee 942 556 ee 1015 617 DNMNOR.. 5... 0ceccscecaste 1107 652 is osc nccccclccesd came 1157 722 Se Mirwant.....+..cvesarcdel 902 532 SE... cope 1015 625 SII, .... 00s cacctceuusdl 1037 642 From East. ii Po oe . cweeekow 647 212 NGL... . 000s poche 717 302 ee 752 354 iia eae 814 427 “ete QITEVOs occ dan 842 517 Mount Stewart, depart......0ve 847 537 Bedford epesevascesagenacl iain 912 614 Nose nics. ostac, Veneta 926 635 Siow:, ........oo.+asleral 952 712 SINS, . ... scucnncammeeu ie 732 337 a ei oa niece sd ie ..749 400 aS 842 512 Ucheod, Morson & MeQuarrie, BARRISTERS —AND— ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Ufice in Brown’s Block, Queen Square (UP STAIRS). Ob'town, Feb. 12, 18865, p Examiner! ‘Cheap. © This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.’”’—Evriripzs, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1885, j i MORE N ew Black Satins, New Colored Silk thing ver | erkins HAVE eres Wew Black Nun's Veiling, New Millinery Materials, NEW GO 3 ~ aS ODS! JUST OPENED: New Cream Laces, New White Laces, Velvets, ‘New Bustles and Panniers, | New Corsets. NEW WINDOW HOLLANDS. | Stock of Summer Goods well assorted and every- y low in price. Muslins, Prints, Parasols, Umbrellas, Hosiery, Gloves, Collars, Ties, in great variety. Ch’town, July 10, 1885 Men's and Boys’ Straw Hats selling very PERKINS & STERNS. TS G. H. HASZARD’S FOR ALL KINDS OF Blank Bosks, aa pee Ledgers, Day Books, Jouinals, &a. , SELLING VERY CHEAP. 100,000 ENV BLOPES of all the leading sizes, by the 100, } or 4 thousand boxes, 100,000 a FOOLSCAP, LET & NOTE PAPER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Stoffrd’s Jet Black Writing {nxs, Stafford’s Copying Laks, (In all size bottles. ) This is now acknowledged to be the best Ink for office and private use. ALSO IN STORE : Garter’s, Stephens & Toiary’s Writing & Copying luks, Te be Sold at Great Discounts. G. H. HASZARD, BROWN’S BLOCK, e ; Queen Square, Ch town, May 18. '85.—wky ~ BUILDING STONE. stone for Falconwood Asylum foundation, McKINNON & McLEAN. July 16, 85. OR SALE—One Hundred perch Building Stone, taken from the same quarry as the | | ' | | } Self-Binding Harvester @ made. TORONTO LIGHT BINDER | Rn } Rn eo ; = Hl st S i — Re gegen 0 ~ = Lil io fa = S$ 8 gs- x o 225 fou wo - x & & mm (Y) = oe. 9 > O ~ ass H = “4 e. .ga2 owt i a OQ 3 = } 4 = LJ Bo rae 2 —_ [- 3 Sas © 5 ds oe. w . me . x le Fo gspetge a cme 63% iS: S = eh—"| 3s | 222272 cas O08 on > a) 48 Cc > 3 2 3 O | ee 2ab e * i —~ San > - © ° Z 333 HG ssc. | as Ws Recs s oe 2 SB2at.3> OO g a B mea Ff "O 2° m CHA x > s e s4#ea,° -. A apices p= 2 SS EP ghee eo =3,° On S I goss 2 8 cess) mm BEeSEEE S$ 42. Cuts Closer; ROYAL CANADIAN INSURANCE CO. FIRE. CAPITAL, o-—— HEAD OFFICE—Montreal. HALIFAX BRANCH—J. Scott Mitchell, Agent. - oo - - ~ AGENT FOCI. PRINOR KEDWARD ISLAND; F. H. ARNAUD, MEROTIANTSR RANK OF TIALIFAX Oh‘town, Jan, !886 $2,000,000 Risks Faken on Most Faverable ‘Pewsas. ce This and That. -- Notwithstanding all the efforts of a certain class cf politicians to depreciate j Canada as an agricultural country in the ‘estimation of intending emigrants, end to | boom the wheat fields of Kansas and Da- | kota, the pleasing fact must now begin to ‘dawn upon them that her exhibit of grain leads the world. Wili that fect bo a lesson to them, or will they still continuo to act as parliamentary immigration agents for the Western States } | | | —The sensation following the publication ‘of the Pall Mall Gazette exposure of vile ;crime and debauchery in London high life, \is not confined to that city alone, but is ‘world-wide, The intimate bearing the question has on s@ciety at large, rather than a mere morbid desire for the criminal details, may account for this. There are not probably in any other part of the globe five millions of people, with so complete and extensive a police system, amongst whom unmentionable crime is so prevalent, and so persistently winked at by those who should protect and save its victims. It is high time that the social oess-pools and sewers of the city should be cleansed, even if it be a loathsome and repulsive task, before the curse of an angry but long- patieat God smites it with a punishment more severe than that which befell Sodom and its kindred cities. The dank, dark, noisome pits of nameless sin should once more be gladdened by the beams of purity’s sun, when every traca of pollu- tion has been swept away by the cleansing waters of justice, let in upon them through the opened flood gates of christian- ity and civilization. If this end is accdm- plished, through the instrumeutality of the fearless journal now leading the way, then every father, who is not or has not been a libertine himself, every mother who has en- circled in her loving arms the fair child that perhaps in an evil hour yielded to the tempters’ gilded allurements, every wife, every sister or daughter, every person of whatever position in life, who has the love of justice,truth and purity at heart,through the whole length and breadth of the great empire, whose centre is a city of such un- checked and almost unheeded abomination, should feel a deep debt of gratitude to the Pall Mall Gazette, and the noble men who are acting upon its exposures of criminals in high life. They should, ou bended knees, thank God that thé sweeping plague of social leprosy is stayed at last, and the nation saved from a heavier judgement than even yet befella people. London is not the only city in Europe that needs purifying. — There is just now a scrambling for female suffrage, and a rush for college titles and degrees, among the fair sex. not deny that many of them would wear such honors more becomingly than the sterner sex, that the “‘sweet girl graduate” would often shine as clearly in the ethical and literary world as their brothers or future husbands, and add to the grand roll of heroines and religious whose names have come down the mystic sweep of ages—hal- lowed by the lapse of time, brightened by the light of noble thoughts and deeds, to be loved and revered “ till the last syllable of recorded time”; yet we cannot help thinking—these brilliant exceptions to the contrary, notwithstanding — that home is woman’s truest and holiest sphere, woman’s kingdom, woman's shrine. Many of the fair ones take degrees, and that is about the last we hear of them, A fintter of muslin and rosebuds on commencement day, a valedictory address, an sphemeral triumph, and then nine-tenths of them are lost to the literary world. Yet society is a great gainer by the ‘* higher education” of women. They un- doubtedly make better wives and mothers. They bring to the home circle broad ideas and exalted aspirations, which tested in the crucible of every day life, brighten and refine the social and domestic spheres. Woman's years of study and development are not lost, even though not marked by any stirin the literary world. How appl’- cable are the words of Ruskin: ‘The stars may be over her head ; the glow worm in the night-cold grass may be the only fire at their foot; but home is yet where- ever she is; and for a noble woman it stretches far around her, better than ceiled with cedar, or painted with vermilion, shedding its quiet light far for those who else were homeless. This, then, I believe to be—-will you not admit it to be—the woman’s true place and power! But do you not see to fulfil all this, she must—as far as one can use such terms of a human creature—be incapable of error! So far as she rules all must be right, or nothing is. She must be enduringly, incorraptible good, instinctively, infallibly wise—wise, not for self-development, but for self- renunciation ; wise, not that she may set herself above her husband, but that she may never fail from his side; wise, not with the narrowness of insolent and loveless pride, but with the passionate gentleness of an infinitely applicable modesty of service the changefulness of woman.” J. Pex. Se me emanate mee ec “‘An ounce of prevention worth a pound of cure” isan old adage but true. In view of pre“ictions that this country is liable to be visited by more than an ordinary amount of contagious disease this year, it behoves al! to inguire about and practice every sanitary measnre,especially cleanliness, which as a pre- ventive, offers some one means of escape at east; and in this how important the article of Soap as to quality fit for use; certainly all in- ferior grades made so by foreign substances and adulterations of a questionable charactar, should be rejected, that there may be no taint left on the person or clothes which might in any way invite the germs of these various dis- eases. A first-class article, made by known reliable manufactarers, is the only kind that can be safely used or recommended. In the use of astandard soap, like the ‘*Welcome,” made by Curtis, Davis & Co., there can be no risk, being the goods of a firm whose name on soap is a sufficient guarantee of its purity. WILL fricnds kindly remember that in this hot weather§ gifts of fruit would be very acceptable atthe P, E. 1. Hospital. [jly13 2aw We do/ SINGLE Copies Two Chen, VOL. 17.---NQ. 62. Opposition Obstruction in Parlia- ment. THE RECORD AS COMPILED BY A GOVERNMENT PAPER, (From the London Free Press.) In order that something like a compre- hensive view may be had of that senseless course of obstruction, the appended table is given. ltis absolutely reliable, and far from being exaggerated. Here are the figures :— Name of No. of No. of Speaker, speeches. Lines, EOE eS oa occ pte 17 1,°00 Riis. Seat es ce eh08e 3 144 ss. 6a ce aie bine Heweeewes 33 6,432 memes CU Be dene cences il 1,400 Ta 9 1,808 Cameron (Middlesex)...... 23 4,728 Cameron (Huron).......... 47 6,728 Cartwright...... : dbee ced 29 3,06 idbicbenee vos ceed 24 6,176 Ce os STACI 56 7,892 en a al 3 480 ID ins is dias whe oh ck Beau 48 5,324 Pee ino 066 bs oases 21 1,592 PUNE Gi i'ss cdcces site 15 2,160 WOOT IGN cusdcuncceivuat 20 2,360 PENG Cia. . PAL FE HE 18 1,928 a al a 13 2,024 ey 1 456 SE cu tah ssc ba dab ee 4 640 PUOUNNEN. 5c cose we cbeetvals 1 340 SOM. <. WOE B59 Sek: oeRR 5 712 ois. 6th iehdos Qeiie oak 6 632 SSA LETT ANE 21 4,266 MN i5 2,810 WR ee raat cult hany.. <s 17 3,456 ee RBCs wee 1,344 4 bal. was’ ieee Cha 130 12,120 NN 41 5,216 oo eS ae 28 4,188 Riemer di. 6:0 sdeuss bie ans 2 568 Patterson (Brant).......... 44 7,400 Pe 7 2,220 DC Ia oss cokes scan ve 1 433 UNO cc bak’. ach hes 3 104 Sommerville (Brant)....... 4q 1,544 Sutherland (Oxford) ...... 2 32 i i a is 15 712 A co cGusek-danewensaaes ll 1,272 both, Eee ee 12 632 SNL, Bievd inv ccbenlil 18 2,424 MOkecs ints oe 21 1,741 Os is bide dk ss 1 96 Toca ote 820 112,058 In arriving at these figures it was impos- sible to tell how much longer the speeches of some hon. gentlemen really were than is allowed above. In some places in Hansard suggestive sentences l:ke this were to be found :—‘'The hon. gentleman here read at great length from an English pubii- cation.” ee cc For Impecunious FIGURES TO SHOW THAT HOUSEKEEPING Young Men. THEY CAN SET UP For $55. It will doubtless open the eyes of some young society people who have recently tried housekeeping after the most improved modern plan to learn that this can easily be done for $55; and that, too, with only a small part of the total cost in pocket, if the time-payment privilege should be taken advantage of. On this basis $75 will clothe, pay wedding expenses, barring a tour, and will start a young man in good - style, and marriage dwindles from a moun- tain to a mole-hill. Having secured two pleasant rooms in a respectable neighbor- hood, the first thing the pair will want is the furniture. If they keep their eyes in one direction they can get it, and out of a furniture shop, at little cost. They can purchase a substantial imitation walnut bed for $2, a mattrass for the same price, and a spring for $1 ; six chairs will cost $3, a wash stand $2, a dining-table $2 50, bureau $7, kitchen table $1.10, two pillows $1.20, and a centre table for sitting room $2.50, making a total of $24.20. Of course this presumes that they are beginning at this time of the year, when no preparations for cold weather will be needed, and also that the lady has beep industrious enough to provide herself with linen and covering. The next important consideration is the kitchen. A gasoline stove can be obtained for $5, or a cook stove as low as $7. At this time of the year the young woman will take a gasoline stove as far the more comfortable and convenient of the two. This, with the necessaay utensils, will cost about $8. China will be the next thing to be got. By a due attention to details, a set of china large enough fora family of ‘two or three can be obtained for $5, a set of glasses for 25 certs. A twilet set will cost $3.25. These are all good ware, not chipped or broken, but new and sound. A half-dozen each of tea and table- spoons, silver plated, will cost $1.50, and a set of knives and forks with carvers will cost $1.75. Very cheap carpets can be bought, bat as neat and comfortable a substitute as cap be found will be a tasteful ingrain rug, and the young man can spend a leisure hour painting the floor around it. This rug, large enough for a moderate sized room, can be had for $9. This will complete the list of absolutely necessary things, and it will sum up as follows : ; a, ev aakeseween $24 20 China and glassware...........-. +++: 6 25 SR eet ee 8 00 I a icici k kacns 0% 040 nbn dyna 1 50 Ms sk bai oe ah 1 75 Te cs aie ce eee on 9 00 nebo cceen 3 25 os een eee’ 1 05 ES eee $55 00 This estimate, of course, supposes that both rooms have closets large enough for clothing anc household articles and sup- plies. If such is not the case, a commo- dious wardrobe can be supplied for $6.50, and a kitchen safe can be added for $2.50. This will add a total of $9, making the total cost $64. To most young people this will be going to housekeeping on a very narrow margin, probably too narrow for the majority, but it can be done, and there can doubtless be an immense amount of solid comfort and happiness inclosed in the little house. —St. Lowis Post-Dispatch.