OF ROO a ee, Bet? A ee NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. Fhe Marin ¢ eee Examine Py A |) BEST ee ‘ y « ing oy than our competi- what we are you prompt attention. : . > i) ‘ | Lune rxaminer Ful neo fT I r wm Nay is e Examiner Publ shing Go Wants to Have His Say---that is ; ; * , ’ of Water a at Geor streets, Charlottetown, 4 )U cannot vet a Suit of Clothes the same quality of material and workmanship in P. & Klward Island. Island, Cheaper than from us. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION We have & reputation for gefting up FIRST-CLASS WORK, that none of tors can attain to, There is no better quality of Cloths manufactured ween .$2.50 showing. Stock, one of the largest you ever saw In this city. Three months. ...... PF oe sidin«e, Se PW i One month 50 Having three Cutters and a large staff of Workmen, we can give a ‘ he -:e ee edeteceece eo) ow oc ” ’ Ave ing at moderate rates oO Contracts may b> «ie for monthly, quar- > ’ \ N \ U-yearly, or yeatly etvertionn sata S: 00 WORTH OF READY-MADE CI . J . ae = { apy ti \* a : , ‘of our own mannfacture, many suits of which were made to order and ALMANAC FO n JULY, 1886, ow SELLING AT COST We have Stock of | MOON'S fon 5 fn s An Immense not called for, OTHING, but are Eats, ‘This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, haviag to advise the Public, may speak free.” K. ISLAND, SATURDA JU NON Bi AWONDERFUL REMEDY : N i - im., p. m., W. selling rapidly, because buyers can save from }24 to 20 per cent. when they purchase from Adauioen's ® ie (! > duarter 8 lay, Oh., -&:Jm., a: mu, |an. . Mest Hate von ever saw for 50 cents. a amson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. \ ' d t is as pleasant as boney Conghs, Colds, and i % , . { : li ec ~ . | Asthma, which lead to Consumptio have been 56.4m., p. m., 8, ‘ ' ip his i ~ n, have been Se Ss) GENTS FURNISHINGS eee oa cane 24th day, 3h., 8: +» SE wel Nes | J 1 BEV aa®, Brocka Fie oe oe eg , cm ‘ 41 > - : a . ’ recent or chrome cougt or bronel ] affections, ca Cellars, Coffs, Dies. &e., Unsurpassed im Styhee( oe to this proat rom mdomt of ob os D Sun ‘San [Moon High Day's a jilll e apiedy-aetiet.” Db wot deias, nut Mt: at i eri rises | water : , : FOR SALE. BY ALL PRUGGISTS. oie #2 Prices were never as Low. Don't forget this when comparing with quotations from Bottled at St, Stevens, N. B., by the proprietor 5 ‘ 5 i de, proprietors, mo m,morn ; at n h m other establishment s this year. ¥., W. KINSMA CO., De ts, i say $187 49' 4 810 36 1B 31 =} 1 Ave., N. ¥ las . ha a a)" Bk es : oa ’ ig is 6 1s morn om) er Be Ps iS Lay 20 i ee PN ~ ss | 2 $ 43 = ~ 37 ee 4 x x =. | Smee s 2 QUEKN STPRERT. FOR SALE. 22 G9 59 33 ae on ; i Fea : ; an ‘Ss 1 rie -” Ch’town, June 23, 1886—eod > wy se = \ sday 22 47)11 11) 2 2) 25 3 VAE Lani and Property recently vecn piel . - 93) atiaft 99! 2 V4 > i asaithitinienisidinidiiinaaaianias ; ‘ rsday - : t 22' 3 16 =A i by the undersigned, situated ea the ‘ ’ ? ‘ ‘ fo, ee ha ay = + : so) 4 = 7 ? > oR 2 Brighton Road, ' k ‘ ‘ ‘ ; i ‘ oh . . say TAX +’ erm. DT 10 Saturday a 16] 2 27) 3 42 22 : 45 BENJAMIN HEARTZ ; . ; } S Rs mn Il Sanday } $5) 3 41) 6 56 20 \ f ‘on # 20—2aw tf * pat ) 12 loaday 26 ‘4i4 27 oo Is a i a MD ; ist wesday 7 44) 5 39) 8 49 16 a 2652 <armnineeen . ; Wednes 23' 43] 6 31) 9 33 15 a sy “3 A PSS * 15 Thursda 23; 43] 7 17/10 13 14 ‘ : ete OP ~ ee & 0. 5 ‘ Ld e : . ® Ss 16 Friday 30} 42) 7 5410 48) 12 fe ds i 17 Saturday 31, 41} 8 33)11 24) 10 ots : ~ : , ; i - : "s . . : ~ un Lay ~ : 9 4 il i :, THe following ananlyses (made by the Domin- ih Mo Av 3 391 9 SBaft 30 6 et, Sar - Ni > a 9 4 ion Analyst) of three BAhING POWDERS » Tuesday 34) 33) 9 59! 0 58 { " i sold in this market should put a step to the Ved lay 25 27116 241 1 38 9 a 2 x a - ; 2 aie efforis of the Royal to mislead the public : ne eat ee - S$ to its being the only pure Powder. These im- 2) | i sO 10 51) 2 17 ictal ied eilee ae D oadinel tesis show that other Powders are as pure ; “3 . 25111 181 3 G14 58 ‘. oe ee ; and wholesome : Saturday 3} 34111 4813 59! 56 NEW DRESS GOODS, in all the newest makes. W. SAUNDERS, Dom, Analyt, St. John, N. B. eneihae 01 B2lmorn| 5 2 53 NEV MANTLE CLOVHS. in ail the newest makes. reports ! |} Moaday 40} 31) 0 22! 6 29 5} Né V CHIP, TAPE and STRAW "ATS, Royal—Contains Alkaline Carbonates—a mixture , ‘ a) » 43 1g NEW FLO VERS, FRATHERS. consisting mainly of Bi-Carbonate of Soda é és ; i , i ” v oe ce say &F + ‘ rms o ' t . 7 13} 93115118431 4:| NEW Hu-IRRY, NEY GLOVRs Sree aie ee ee 29'Thursda 44) 271248935) 43 NEW PRINTS, NEW CRETONNES W. F. BEST. Dom. Analyst, St. John, N. B 30! Fri ’ 5} 26, 35410 24) 4) NEW MOURNERG GOOD’, NEW TRIMMINGS. Bet aco epomtes si. aS ae i 14567 26'5 L111 7il4 4) CARPETS, in Scotch, Brassels, fapesory antl Hemp, at OLEARING-OUL PRICES | pune G@otd—Contains Cream of Tartar, Carbon- snails ate of Soda—fresh and pure. ; nn . a . wn . : m2 Noy, 14, 1882— Not adulterated ; MATS! MATS! HATS: —-Th pusands of Men and Boys’ HATS, in Felt and (ame as usd 2p A NEKIN iy OUSE Straw, from j0 cents. ati “ *| ¢eLOTHINe- —s $1.25, Men’s Suits from $¢ 50 P. E I-lan4, ¢ . : ' , : “ase tor a term ol years » . : » . ‘r , situated on ¢ \ fine stock of Hazlish \Vorsteds, Jeoteh and $7,°00 worth of Redv-Made Clothing to select f-om. Wil ousrantes th: b-st valae ia ! TH indersigned will I i a well known tiote e.ter or personai interview. ' J. H. GRAY, DAVID STIRLING, frustees, | n, Jane 12, 1885 nl5 2aw her jour QUE Ch’town, May 12, 1886.—dy & wky Roys’ Svits from Moth'ng ever offered on Canadian Tweeds, which will be made to rar Pownal Streets, in Char rdar atciose prices. i hy y Edward Island, Possession given A big stock of Genta’ Furnisnings. Mea’s Co‘ton Shirts, 24 cents up. tne Vet as Seay : . { i as ne «(: ray . la cs 2 a ¢ .ny information re - will be given, either | All oar Goods are sold at the Cheapest Prices. Please c2]] and see for yourselves. J. 8. NACGCOONALD, IN STREET. ee to Business, Honesty and Square Dealing, and ry time, is what has placed Cash eve he. | 2 e to the front of all competitors, He does not advertize to sell goods at cost, but SU WER ARRS a NGEMENT THE PALA! CE LWTERWATIONAL $.S. CO. > Leave. J »shn for Boston, via Eastport and Port- | ane every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at| m aere st. BOSTON DIRECT. ‘STEAMERS tize to sell at erst. He does not He has now about 6,500 John at 80’clock every Saturday night ‘iees than any house in * the trade, bc sught less tan half price, ard will be STRICT ATTENTION paying PitO WS HE CLOTHING, HATS, &e. he guaran- ‘tees to se!l from 10 to 25 per cent less than those who do adver- try to deczive the people by making a big | blow and offring paltry rewards, but trys to do things right and has the goods to back him up in what he advertizes. HATS and $4,000 worth of CLOTHING, which he guarantees to sell from 10 to 25 per cent A jot of this Cloithigg was sold less than half price. his advertisement ee and fr : ttetov 9 26, os d | : F an are ft oo — wn to Boston 0, Zn ie dues not ask the pe 20ple to believe eer meee cage er oe ‘until they see his prices; he knows then they will Be bya p. &. 1. Steam Nav. © | knows that the goods and prices back him up every time i or to your nearest Ticket Agent, -eod wky LRERHCDR & COs, GEN ARAL | Commission ee | <=> Please don’t forget to call. oye, dees. ROW Bue Ch’tewn, May 7, ’86—eod wky_ }2) ATLANTIS AVENUE, BOSTON, MAaASe- Bros and Pr sue a Specialty. July 1s. die wkly CAUTION. : EACH PLUG UG OF THE é D iC MYR LiL IS MARKED | & (N BRONZE LETTERS None Giher Genuine. f oet W Wewson Bleck. Oo HEAPS. of the Latest Styles, at the PRICES. FUSS, HIGHWST CASH PRICES paid for Raw Furs. Ch’town, May 4, 1886. very All goods freely shown, or sent to »ny part of the town. al April 7, 1883 “Not adulterated , Sanie as usual, June 4, is8i—Fresh and WOODILL'S \same Composition as usual, MAWNARDDUWMAN, Dom Amaiyst, Halif ax N. 8., reports : WOODILL’S | Of goed guatity: Woodill’s German Baking Powder ji a reputation for purity and whvulesomeness LOW nearly 30 years, May +. 1336. ESTABLISHED 1873. MEMBERS CHAMBER C MMER GE. BUY RR... Ties, pure ; contains nothing PN re Sep seem Potatoes, Spiling, Eumber, tates, Cannacd Fish, Sey, Eggs, Produce, And sell on commission, Write us fully for yrotations, Ship to HATHEWAY & CO.. 22 Central Whart, Boston, Gen eral Commission Merchants. Consign your vessels to our house. Wil] receive personal attention, Charte e. Freights and Vessels fer the United States, New found land, West Indies, South America Ports Lumber, tone and Oii Freights 4 pril a.) 86 — 3mos COAL! COAL! en RDERS can be obtained, as usual, at the office of the subscriber, No. 35 Water Street, for car- goes of the following Coals, viz: Albion Mines, Pictou, Nova Scotia Large. ‘Tey CraAPrR HR Lingan Mines, large and slack, Old Sydney, large. Victoria Mines, large and siack. The Slack Coals from Lingan and Victoria Mines are ¢ lean and bright, and can be used in lace of several sorts of Pictou Smail. ‘ ee G. W. DEBLOIS. June 15, 1886—-eod tf SE, Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen Street. At & FUR STORE VF . Te NAVY. NEW DEPARTURE! LOWEST of all kinds, Cleaned, Dyed. altered and Repaired. E, STUART. LACE SOAP, MAdU FACTURED BY COLGATE & CO., for t washing fine fabrics; also a large supply of Colgate’s Superfine Toilet Soaps. Don‘t take any poor ‘imitations—get the genu ine. jhe Bestis the Cheapest. B. BALDERSTON, _July 3—3 wks 2awk - = I886, tT & HE KENNY, Dry Goods and Shipping, 8 aLiP A X, CARED Asx 7v & & KENNY, (fF €, MARON) Ship Owners and Brokers, Ganeral O mmission Merchants, i¢i GRESHAM HOUSE, Bishepsgate Street, LONDON, E. C., Fogland, Scotts and Vaughars Codes. Marek 29, 1dd5. --EURIPIDES. LY 24, 1886. {Wrirren Especiatty ror Toe Examrnen. | “thel DeWolfe -OR,-~ - SHADOWS AND SUNSHINE, BY S. M. BENT. CHAPTER XV, PRISON LIFE, * Sweet is the hour to him long wont To breathe air through prison bars, When, new baptized at freedom’s font, Above him gieam th‘ untrammeiled stars, And every wind that sweeps the land is like a soft caressing hand." There are few who have not read with horror the sickening details of life in these dismal prison pens of the South, the foulest blot that ever stained a land dedicated ages ago, by the courtly Raleigh, to the sacred name of liberty, but how many, even while their hearts burned with indignation, have realized, from the mere printed words, their utter wretchedness, surpassing all descrip- tion / It can only be realized by those brave Union soldier Tads who survived many months of neglect, starvation and barbarous ill treatment, crowded in com- fortless cells when the cold moisture dripped from the clammy walls of stone, hived in great warehouses where never spark of fire tempered the air, or warmed the half-frozen limbs of the poor sufferers, huddled in barns where the winter winds howled through the wide seams, or in vast encamp- ments where they were exposed alike to the burning heat of summer and the blasts of winter, clad inwags, shoe! hatless, thirsty and hungry, bereft of hope, and razed by suffering. We cease to wonder that poor soldiers, to whom the sounds of battle were music, when turneu like ‘‘dumb driven cattle” inte these human shambles, left hope behind, and m: aia ied by pervenaan misery and suifering, and the namcless atrocities inflicted on them by guards and officers from whose breasts ali human emotions and finer feelings seemed to have fled as the timid fly from plague, reckless of life, and crossed the to be shot down like dogs by We cease to wonder, not how so few, but how any, eseaped the bul- lets of the sentries, or the pestilential vapors of the dismal swamps and stone walled dens where merely existed, awaiting and preying for the stroke that should sever the last head of the hydra that was destroying the land and deluging it vith bload, ti Captain Chandley being among the earlier batches of prisoners rece ‘ived at Richmond, company with three other otticers, to a small, gloomy cell in Libby Prison, where for nearly two years they suffered all the tor- tures to which rebel ingenuity could subject then. and, as they were offices, to all ‘the taunts and invectives hurled at them by the guard. Worse than that, no scrap of news, no word or token, came to tell them how ess aba these became ‘* dead line” i eart ess picquets. the J was assigned, in to point out : . brighter future. They were sept im dense i gnorance as to the progre of all events of the outside world. They might or might not believe the daily stories told them of rebel successes, of northern armies beaten, northern . towns sacked, northern vessels burned or sunk, and north ern prisoners massacred, What mattered to them the cutting wind of winter, as it whistled through the broken cell window, or the balmy breati of spring as it came to them fresh from the orange and magnolia trees and the budding flowers: what mat tered to them the sounds of the street, the vareless laugh and merry song that floated faintly to them now and again? The only music to them was the roar of northern cannon, battering down the walls of Rich- mond, and when Grant invesied the « ity in the autumn of 1864, every cannon seemed to them like the rejoic ing r shout of the angel of liberty ; but the roar becnme silent again, and in the long pause that followed they were sick with fear and anxiety and expec tation, yet no help came, and the taunting voice of the brutal guard once more left their hearts the dwelling place of despair. But they had not much longer to w: ait. in November, 1864, of a general exchange of prisoners. Never did electric wires convey news with greater rapidity than this welcome announcement spreé ad from c amp to camp, and prison, When all came forth from their noisome pens and sepulchral caverns and stony, and gathered into the open square whence the march home was to begin, what a scene presented itself. Thousands of brave men. clad in tattered remnants of the uniforms thev had honored on many a hard! fought fiel l. gathered round the piles of new clothing, shouting and heiaiian” laug ih- ing and chatting, and clasping the hands of former comrades, and tossing their old hats and coats into the air for very joy. how loosely did new garments hang about the thin, attenuated forms that had wasted by hunger and priva- tion. been and Uiseate frowning viells of Richmond to begin the journey northwards. Their forgotten in the glad thoughts of home wives, children and sweethearts, but graves that hid the forms of brave me n. | whose spirits God had mepolfu lly calle iwav from the cruelties of tae ebel horde, through gates of pearl, to golden str and fountains of living water cs Capt: In C han diey followec 1 the rebels no more in weary © mp, but remained in f Washineton to recruit his eaeagh frame f n h } Oo GaLy going on duty for an hour or two Gany, 7 ee a See ith » Cine an | wir Or twe ketchi jum * ava bis ‘ : geon permitted, and Galy- more, as the sur : ee ji « away the rest of the time in luxurious | (To Ve combimnodd,) the war was going, to whisper hope to them, | came the glad tiding rs | pris: mn to| but : That a happy army went forth from the’ miuser 1es were th » Atlantic their joy was saddened by the memory of those to start - , they left behind them in the nameless and to build it to Council Bluffs, Ja., a dis- SINGLE Cories Two CEntTs. VOL. 1! ».—N¢ ). 53. Heredity Some of Its Results. The sanitarian of the present day cannot hold himself aloof from the great agitation ) and persuasion now going on in reference to the effects of aleoholic drmks. There }are those who incline to the moral view of the question, and are so rightly and pro foundly impressed with the peril to morals and to the present and eternal life, as to regard all other views as incidental, if not trivial, There are others that have come to study it as a social, economic and national question, and as such see that whatever may be the moral or per se dis- cussion, the fact is that the record of national inquiry and wasted resources is such that the nation must cry out for a halt on grounds that closely touch the vital interests of good government. But we can never lose sight of what alco- hol is doing to the bodies of men ; what are its effects upon the physical forces of the nation, First of all, it is to be heredity is more marked attaches to the habitual In many ways it leaves its trace upon the history of families. Weneed not appeal te the evidence furnished by hospitals, alms- houses, asylums ; for the record is alreaty made up. The uniform testimony is that inguiry into the heredity of such. institu- tions reveals the prevalent fact that a large number are the children of intemperate parents, and that many who have fallen victims to the habit of alecholic excess seem to have inherited the taste. It is a case in which heredity is distinctly traced. We have not been as sure as some that the habitual use by the parent transmits a dis- tinct taste for liquor to the ofispring. But tw o things are more evident ; when there is the over-i iduly rence there is inherited a and self-contro] which ives type. The balance o power is not well-preserved and the children are either noticed that no than that which users of alcohol. loss of will power inclined to excess or easily swayed ipte rror. @§ til] <nore are we able to trace inherited diseases. The vital organs which had become jinpaired in the parent are not perfect in the offspring, and the heredity shows itself in early or middie life chiefiy in errors of the circulation and in the heart, liver, or kidiiey s. It can no longer be claimed that these are the assertions of temperance reformers. These have te have large consideration in clinical medicine. There is in>erited an iapaired \itality of organs which is just as declara- ive, and just as transmissable as types of character. We have kuown seven brothers to die after middie life, from apoplexy. Diseases of the liver or of the urinary orgens are as frequent causes of death in families as gout and rheumatism are in others. The nervous system, is, perhaps, the most transmissable part of the paren- tage. It is this that is especially attacked by alcoholic stimulants. In its failure to assunilate it becomes an irritant and plw ‘strings and fac wo come some mischief amid the most delicate fibres of our existence. Next to this are to be placed ail organs 28 carry on the most important changes in the system, such as the liver, the kidneys and the heart. The stomach will bear irritation, and sume thickening of the membranes much better than those organs will changes in their vital structure. Dr. Larned, of «| Philadelphia, in 250 post mortem examina- tions of persons who died from alcoholic excess, has recentiy reported that he found 200 dise: sed kidneys, and that not asingle one had this important organ in sound con- dition. One hundred and twenty-six had abnormal livers aud 90 hype rtrophy of the heart. All this means notonly disaster to the individual, but entailed tendiencies which tell feariully upon offspring and the welfare of the population. Indeed, the entailments of alcohol are among its most fearful consequences. If only the evil could stop with a generation, that would be some niitigation. But it travels on as the very genius of degeneration and comes to be the sad inheritance of family life. It has sometimes seemed to us that if those who indulge in aleoholic liqgers could see what misery is thus often handed down, those who have no compassion on themselves j would at least have compassion on their helpless offspring. We be ieve the time has | ce me when this whole matter of race deteri- destin needs a more thorough realization, since it has already been studied so care- fully as to leave no doubt as to the general tendency. It will not do thus to sap vital- ity, and in addition thereto, entail that weakening of courage, of will power, and that want of fiber which makes it almost an inborn necessity to seek some stinulant to imake up for that vigor which was forfeited ' ; ,; in the indulgence of the sires. Let us plead fora well begotten race and that socia! and jnatural vitality shall not thus be sacrificed. bear a > - en Scott’s Emulsion of Pure | Cod Liver Oil, with Hypophosphites PULMONARY AFFECTIONS DISEASES, | AS A REMEDY FOR AND SCROFULOCS a promincut physician in -J am greatly pleased with na it very set vice- easily 1," . dC TEDS. Dr. Ira M. Lang New York, says: your BinUsion Have fou ; . . ;+ above diseases, and i . < its paiata adie im | administered on account vo! wi ee trunk line—the eighth—from ard is te be built ? rospectus Anothe1 i seabord westw in the United States, and tix has been issued in London It is proposed county, ra, the line in Jefferson foll wing y the fo rty- tance of 1,14] miles, frat wralle: of Jatitr de. bonds re iu be “a “1 in Europe to the amonnt of $47... nn? n ordei : ui und for the prosecution of the ent: _¢ => — storsferd’s Acid Phosphatce COMPA mR iF CK HEAD TE, ] Kred Hor Tr. Salem Va., nySs ‘ iges i | 380 a heada whe , and mental depression incident to certain stages of rkcumatism, it is incompar- ails,” a eS on Pinan wie re ne ee aaa