THE DAILY EXAMINER. - PeR Five D 1LLARS A YEAR, ¥ % NI * a whe W SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. aily Examiner st ed every evening by rT : { i F Torn Tee hh : 4 ’ uo i xan ba i X ubl h oy ( § ‘ if | Bhi . % F i > ae salng UO ahis 10 Have His Say---that is ; from thet off sorner of Water and y ‘rreat George Streets, Charlottetown, | YY" OU « ey get a Suit of Clothes the same quality of material and workmanship in P. EK. Prince Edward Island. Island, Cheaper than from us —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION We have a reputation for gefting up FIRST-CLASS WORK, that none of our competi- “ ae ak an attain to. .There is no better quality of Cloths manufactured than what we are Gr, Ws ook a bs bd ceew chen cas $2.50 | showing. Stock, one of the largest you ever saw in this city. BO i bees co | we ] 2& ‘ : nf LV : ; j OOS I sce as 5 ee See ei ves 54 | Having three Cutters and a large staff of Workmen, we can give you prompt attention. Oo $500 WORTH OF READY-MADE CLOTHING, many suits of which were made to order and not called for, but are An Immense Stock of Hats, Advertising at moderate rates, Coatracts may bs made for moothly, quar- terly. balf-yearly, or yearly aivertiseneats, on application ALMANAC FOR JULY, 1886, MOON'S CHAN: ‘of our own manufacture, | now SELLING AT COST ES, = . e . m Tet day ag i hag Im., p. m., W. | sellin, g rapidly, because buyers can save from 124 to 20 per cent. when they purchase from oS ao ooh day, Ya., o.4M., a mM., | us. best Hats yon ever saw for 50 cents. N. ] below horizon. ) | ; Full Moon 15th day, Ilh., 56.4m., p. m.. S._ | ‘ Y at | t () : 4 \ on , sm . a. m.. 5. E. qx bs NX Ee E i RN ISH ING \ Loo tI cla i 13.3 : n ” ss i . =, Bn ° ‘ ; - , Cellars, Ouffx, Pies. &e., Unsurpassed in Style. DD a St Sun |Moon! High’ Day's o \j . ‘s ie sea sata rises te =~ a . a ‘ z Ri 2 ° . i Wate! lex am az | WW never as Low. Don't forget this when comparing with quotations from 1 ‘ 2 mmorn;aft’n Jh = ether establishments this year. Phu iS; 49 4 S10 3615 iat i 19 48,| 6 18 morn 29 t Sunday 20 48; 7 31/0 6 ; S c ation . M malay at = : 45 : 4s 2; 72 Q U EK tN Ss TRE kK a » Dnesday 22 S' 9 59 33 26 Ch’'to , of oe Sie 7| Wedncaday wwe “a 186 — S| Phursday 23 47iait22! 3 16, 24 een SS ? Friday 23| 46) 1 30) 4 93 23 lv? Sat i y 24 46; 2 27' 5 42 2») 1! Sunday 25 45} 3 41) 6 56 iz) Monday 26; 44) 4 2) 7 50 8 13 Tuesd 27 44; 5 39 8 49 lt ae een OPS em £ We sdlay 28 43) 6 31; 9 33 1D ~ : sh Beets hi CREAT SHOW 16 Friday 30, 42) 7 54/10 48) 12 17 Satu 1} 41] 8 33/11 24) 0 7 | Sunday > 1) 9 $ ll SS S "7 ig M miday a 9 9 32 aft 30 G . r — * ch 5 {gL BR. MACDONALD’S 21| Wednesda 35} 37/10 24/1 38] 2 As © + “ ° 2) Lh sdav a ou lO fl 8 i7 0 eal 23 Frid 37} 35/11 181 3 0114 58 a 5 24 Saturday 38! 34/11 48/3 59, 56 MEW DRBAS GODS, ia all the newest males 23 Sun BY 39 32 morn 5 9 53 NE WV M 4 N &rLeE s CLO CHS, In all the newest makes. 25|Monday' | 40) 31/022) 629) 51| NEW CHIP, TAPE and STRAW "ATS. 27 r ue say 12 30) l 3 7 43 48 NEW FLO VERS, PRATHERS. 28 We ines lav | 43 os } 51 x 43) 45 NE W Hi )- IERY, NE Vv GLOV ES. 29 Thursday — 44; 27) 2 48) 9 35) 43 NE WV PRINTS, NE W CRETONNES fi 30\ Friday 45' 26!) 3 5410 24 41 NEW MOURNING GOOD:, NEW TRIMMINGS. 31/Satarda 4 43/7 26) 5 152) 14 40 CARPETS, in Seotch, Beussela, Tapestry and Hemp, at CLEARING-OUT PRICES “ Oo = TEATS! GATS! HATS ! —Thousaads of “traw, from 10 cents. CLOTHING —$7,°00 worth of Redv-Made Clothing to select from. Boys’ Snits from $1.25, Men’s Suits fron $1.59 Wil gasrantee the b-st value in Clothing ever offered on P, E I-land. A fiae stock of Kaglish Worsteds, Scotch rder atcl-se prices. A big stock of Gents’ Furnishings. Men’s Cotton Shirts, All our Goods are sold at the Cheapest Prices, J. &. VVACDONALD, QUEEN STREET. Men and Boys’ HATS, in Felt and RANKIN HOUSE. ee tT. indersigned will lease for a term of years | he above wel! known Hote), situated on cor- ner of Water and Pownal Streets, in Chariotte- | ywn, Prince Kadward Island. Possession given | on the Ist October next. } Any information required will be given, either by letter or personal interview. J. H. GRAY, DAVID STIRLING, | | and Canalian Tweeds, which will be made to 25 cents up. Pieage cxll and see for yourselves. frustees, . 1885 7 ) 2aw her jour June Ch’'town. et a May 12, 1886.—-+ly & wky ee ene ee ne STRICT ATTENTION to Business, Honesty and Square Dealing, and paying Casi every time, is what has placed iL. E. PROWSE the front of all competitors, in CLOTHING, HATS, Kc. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT He does not advertize to sell gords at cost, but he guaran- ‘tees to sell from 10 to 25 per cent less than those who do adver- THE PALACE STEAMERS tize to ceil at cost. OF THE He does not try to decsive the people by making a big INTERHATIONAL S.S. 60, | blow and offering paltry rewards, but trys to do things right ‘and has the goods to back him up in what he advertizes. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port: | tand, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at | He has now about 6 00 HATS and $4, 000 worth of | <a aot, John at $o'elock every Saturday night CLOTHING, which he guarantees to sell from 10 to 25 per cent for less than any house in the trade, A lot of this Clothing was BOSTON DIRECT. ‘bought less t»an half price, avd will be sold less than half price. Fare fre om Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd | “He does not ask the people to believe his advertisement class. 29.50, 13t class ‘o sme aud ot ly t . et en rey aan until they see his prices; he knows then they will believe, and oe P. E. IL steam Nav. Co- | knows that the goods and prices back him up every time. or te your nearest iicket Age Mpg, 3, 1G-egeh WHE ast 3 All goods freely shown, or sent to any part of the town. Y= _ Please don’t forget to call. Ls ee = PP ROWSE. Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen “treet. Ch’tewn, May 7, ’86—eod wky' ARTHUR & C@., GEN PhnAL (ommission Merchants, (2) ATLANTIC AVENUE, or Bas aiid Produce a Specialty: AT & FUR STORE, July 15—dly wkly Wewson Block. Queenie DEPARTURE ! Oo ————- Bus CAUTION. BACH PLUG OF THE YRTLE NAVY ™ MARKED T & B. ' = ‘ piv) 41s LETTER a ‘ e . None Uther Gaouinn. Sa ee. LOWEST of the Latest Styles, at the HATS PRICES. FURS, of al! kinds, Cleaned, Dyed, altered and Repaired. Wwrn HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for Raw Furs. &, STUART. very * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” ISLAND, FRIDAY. JULY poassag e0tANig E. ue 25 AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adainson’s Botanie Cough Balsam. AF SUR It is as pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colds, agd Asthma, Which lead to Consumption, have been speedily cured by the use of ADAMSON’s BALSAM after all other medicines have failed. Sufferers from e her. recent of chromic Coughs or bronchial affect ons, can resort to’tiis great reipe t of obtaining speedy rélief. Do not déln t omee FOR SAL® BY ALLL Bottled at St. Steven Fr. W. EO: a & A WP SAR Lanl and Property recently veen pied ' by the undersigned, si'uated the srighton Road, PAE GGISTS, » N.B.,! proprietors, KINSMAN & CO: Drutviste oa BENJAMIN April 20--2aw tf % nat ABSOLUTE PURITY, TH" HEART Z. following ananlyses (made by the Domin- ion Adalyst) of three BAKING POWDERS 3oid in this market should put a stop to the satuat efforts of the Royal to mislead the public s to its being the only pure Powder. These im- parti ial tests show that other Powders are as pure and wholesome : W. SAUNDERS, Dom, Analyt, reports : Royal—Contains Alkaline Carbonates—a mixture consisting mainly of Bi-Carbonate of Soda and Cream of lartar—aduiterated with about 20 per cent, of Starch. W. F. BEST. Dom. Analyst, reports: Pure Gold—Contains Cream of Tartar, Carbon- ate of Soda— aa and pure. St. John, N. B. St. John, N. B., Nov. 1», _ Not adulterated ; Jes wie as Us ii. WOODILL'S April 7, 1883 Not adulterated , = as usual, June 4, is8t—Fresh and pure; same composition as usual. MAYNARD BOW MAN, Dom. Analyst, Halif ax N.3., reports : WOODILL’ § Sa contains nothing Woodiil’s German Baking Powder i.33 a ee for purity and whvulesomeness now nearly 30 years, May 21, 1886. ESTABLISHED 1873. MEMBERS CHAMBER C.MMERCE. WE BUY Potatoes, Spiling, i."*. Ties, Eumber, @ates, Canned Fish, Flay, Eggs, Produce, And sell on commission. Write us fully for quotations. Ship to HATHEWAY & (0. 22 Central Whari, Boston, Gen- eral Commission Merchants. Consign your vessela to our house. Will receive personal attention, Charte s, Freights and Vessels for the United States, Newfound- tand, West indies, South America Ports Lumber, ~tone and Oil Freights. April 12, ’86—-3mos COAL! COAL! Oe .DERS can be obtained, as usual, at the office of the subscriber, No. 39 Water Street, for car- goes of the following Coals, viz: Aibion Mines, Pictou, Nova scotia Large. OAPH BRETTON Old Sydney, large. L ingan Mines, large and slack, Victoria Mines, large and siac ‘k. The Slack Coais from Lingan gnd Victoria Mines are clean and bright, and cat be used in piace of several sorts of wrahon, Seal. . W. DEBLOIS., June 15, i886—eod tf LACE SOAP, MANUFACTUR ED BY COLGATE & CO., for washing fine fabrics; also a Jarge supply of Colgate’s Superfine Toilet Soaps, Don't take any poor imitations—get the genu ine. Jhe Bestis the Cheapest. B. BALDERSTON. _duly 3—3 wks 2awk is27 = = iSs6, T. & BE. KENNY, Dry Goods and Shipping, HALIFAX, CANADA. t EK. KENNY,) Ship Owners and Brokers, (Ff. C. MARON) Gaueral Commission Merchants, 1G] GRESHAM HOUSE, Bishopsgate Street, LONDON, E, C., j England, Scotts and Vaughan s Codes. Ch’town, May 4, 1886. Oct W March 29, 188v. EURIPIDES. e>*> mt De 1886. Waruirren Espectatty ror THe Examrven. } OR, SHADOWS AND SUNSHINE. BY S. M. BENT. CHAPTER XIV. A WEARY MARCH AND AN UNPLEASANT RIDE. | “Throned in the gloom of purple Southern twi- lights, . i It beckons me w vith j image likes these.? Whatisit? Oh! Whatthoughts are these that | call me Back to the days I shail see no more? To the bright waters, murmurously lapsing, By the green banks of youths’ enchanted | shore:""—M. P. Davis. } While the wintry blasts, cold and pitiless, begin to echo through the northern cities let us turn once more to the south, where the storm of war is hushed for a time, as natures tempests whistle through the cedars, and pines, and magnolias, and leaf- fought battle of Fredericksburg, he was ‘at | once conducted, with his fellow prisoners, to a ravine in the rear, where he saw up-| wards of fifty prisoners sitting in a circle | around a fast dying camp fire, eating scanty rations of coarse army fare. Here he and | | his comrades were compelled to surrender | their pistols and swords, and were gruifly told to joi the group around the fire, and | to eat if they wished, preparatory te an unmediate march. ‘‘Are we not.” asked Paul, ed’ — ‘‘Ask no questions and pass no remarks, or it will be worse for you,” said the heart- less officer of the guard,, in a tone that ad- mitted of no parley, “‘1 want you cursed Unionists to keep mighty still tongues in your heads while your are in my charge. Come, now, stir yourselves, and finish your supper, for it’s all you'll get for the next fifteen hours. And don't let me heara mother’s son of a gun of you whispering; do you hear me, now!” Paul, imitating the example of the others, helped himself to a hard cracker, and a tin of muddy coffee, and tried to eat. it was not so much the food that seemed to choke him, but out on the plains he could hear the music of the last cannon booming, and the last volley of musketry rolling, and could even distinguish the commands of the leaders as the battle ended, and the troops were withdrawn from the field, while night mercifully spread her sable wing over the scene. Sooner, far sooner, would he be ly- ing slain on the gory ground, a martyr to the sacred cause of liberty and union, than thus powerless and voiceless, ignorant of what the future held in store for him, or how soon he might sink unknown and un- cared for in a dismal! southern prison, His bitter thoughts were interrupted by the harsh commands of the captain of the guard, and the prisoners were ordered to stand up, when their hands were tied be- hind their backs, and the march began. The men now tramping off to prison had been on many a long march before, but in acause they felt bound to protect to the last, and with feelings very different from those that animated them that chill Decem- ber night as they plodded on, silent and weary, bound and guarded, over hills and ‘*to be allow- through valleys, past the wrecks of farm houses dimly outlined in the starlight, across tottering bridges and along rough frozen roads, now on the broad highway, now over bare fields, and again following the railway track, meeting occasionally, as the huge engine came snorting through the gloom, : a train laden with supplies for the rebel army. Shortly after daybreak, having marched more than twenty miles during the night, they came to a small station, where they were met by another detachment of about two hundred prisoners. Orders were there received to await the first train to Rich- mond. Ere long the train arrived, and the wretched prisoners were soon packed on the open cars, their feet tied, and the train again in motion. No wonder the poor fel- lows left hope behind them as they saw the hills fade one by one in the distance. They knew too well what prison life in Richmond meant. It seemed to Paul as though the life had been concentrated by a grim fury inte one phial, and poured upon his de- voted head. But a few short hours before, he had held an enviable position in a mag- nificent army, with the brightest hopes for the future. To-day, those golden hopes shattered, the angel ideal of his life trans- formed to the commonest clay, when all the rose-tinted visions with which she had peopled his dreams were dispelled in one rude shock, himself a prisoner in the hands of a relentless foe, bound and fettered, and rapidly nearing that horror of horrors at the very name of which every soldier shud- dered, he felt that death on the battle field were far better. That would have becu a glorious ending to a life such as his had become, broken and gloomy, void and am- bitionless. But the most dreasy journey must come to an end, and in due time the spires of 3 { ili8S O1 thel DeWolfe. le rTmment SINGLE Coptes Two Cents. VOL. 19.—-NO. 52. Argylion the Question of the Day. The Du! ce of . ee gyil publishe +8 in the T'tin ri a letter concerning the United States cask reland despite the national sympathies there is a profowi.d ignorance in England and each other's own ignorancs tle says, the United St; ites respecting constitution. He at the beginning nimits his of the Ame an civil war in sympathiziug with e South. He says the sympathy of the oem ans for the Irish in their present t struggle arises from the error of thinking o {reland as an American state, and that “the English are withholding from Ireland | powers similar to those possessed by the | different States of the American Union. ‘‘Nothing,” says the Duke, ‘tcould be more erroneous than this idea.” Referring to | the rights of each of the United States to a | due share of the general powers of Con- gress, and to check its power of self-gov- each s ale > allows, he says Mir. Gladstone’s propos: violates both these grand principles he his corrupt. and im- moral bargain bani hes Treland from lin srial councils and surrenders to the’ minor ity. ‘“‘Americans,” he ‘would hardly but it is true. The 7.) adds, believe this, sacredly less oaks of Virginia, that bloodst: mines Ot ei OEY : a - 1), | pretend imitations and restraints against American Crimea, on wate fertile fields, ts - : mm | ; iocai tyranny are illusory. the Duke tue most desperate strug? les of the rebe | j ‘ ; . : . * . a 5 | then appeals to Ainericans to clearly under- lion toek place. af che ; i a0 ; , stand the Unionist intention; narvely that When Captain “Chandley fell into the | . i lrels ls baits ctl i 5 idiaa gh . € th it has been for Lreland’ssake sole > th at the iands O ne rebwls a 1€ Ciose 0 € i ¢ e hard! Upionists have given opposition tc Mr, Gladstone’s Irish scheme. The letter con- | cludes as follows: ‘It is the Unionists and not the members of the Government who are fighting for the liberties of the Lrish people. Even if Mr. Parnell were immor- tal or if his party represented a far larger numerical majority of the Lrish people than it really does, neither he nor they would have a right to dispose of the constitutional rights of Ireland. We do not desire to see lveland reduced to the condition of being but a tributary province and banished from the Imperial councils. Neither ean we see her endowed with powers over her own people which no civilized government ought to have or ask. We desire to see her continue sharing in the deliberations which the eloquence of her sons has so often adorned, ~ nen © <@— ~ gree Attention to the Yeice. A well-known American writer says, in a recent number of Harper’s Bazar: It is altogether probable that as there is to be a new voice eveloped into America there is alsoa new temperament. It used to be thought that we could never be so strong or healthy as the English, because we were thinner; but it is now pretty well proved that we needed only to be acclimated and adapt ourselves to the new ways of living. So with the American voice ; it will pro- bably never be a chest voice, like the Eng- lish, but it will come more from the head and when well trained will be an organ capable of Dy moduation and greater expression. the yery best American manners— such manners for instance as those of the late Mr. Charles Dabney, s long our consul at Fayal—seem to me finer than the best English manners, so the very best American voices, seem to me better than the best English voices, being equally clear and mellow, with positive sweetness and far more range of expres- sion. But such voices are rarer than the corresponding class in England, mainly because there is not the same close atten- tion given to the matter on this side the Atlantic. An English mother, in the wel!- bred classes, is as solicitous about her daughter's way of speaking as about her sib clothes—perhaps more so, if we may judge by results. An American mother, under similar circumstances, is apt to attend to the clothes, and leave the voice untended. In schools, however, and especially in public schools, this matter is being more and more brought to attention. Remarking, a few years since, in a large family, how much better the youngest daughter used her voice than any of her sisters, 1 found with surprise that much of the difference was due to the pains taken in the public schools of the rural city where she lived which she alone had attended. If we can once see the public schools achieving supe- riority ina point like this, it will be strmk- ing at the very root of the evil.—R. W. HW. A = tee te Sevtt’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil, with Hypopheosphites } -schools AS A REMEDY FORK PULMONARY AFFEOTOONS AND SCROFULOUS DISEASES. Dr. Ira M. Lang—a prominent physician in New York, says;—I am greatly pleased with your Emulsion. Have found it very service- able in above diseases, and it is easily administered on account of its palatableness. a +e > ee Loss of flesh and strength, with poor appetite,and perhaps slight cough in the morn- ing or on first lying down at night, should-be looked to intime. Persons afflcted with con- sumption are proverbially unconscious oi their real state. Most cases commence with disordered liver, leading to bad digestion and imperfect assimilation of food —hence the emaciation, or wasting of the flesh. It is a form of scrofulous disease, and is « aon the use of that greatest of all blood-cleansing, anti-bilous and invigorating compo ounds known as Dr. Pierce's Golden. Medical Dis covery. sat and w ——.___ <a Richmond rose to view, and soon the pris- ohers were once more on their feet, swing- ing and stretching their numbed and tired | arn 1s to restore “the circulation, while an! iflicer took down their names an 1 those of | the regiments to whic ch they belonged, nd! told them off in squads according ' to thei il rank. (To be continued. ) i —————— ly Forest fires are raging iiercely in severa | parts of Michigan and W isconsin, destroy- ing an immense juantity of valuable tim ber and other property. Yesterday after-| noon the entire ham! et of Romeo, Wie., wus destroyed, entailing a lows of 8150, OO, | railroad mileage of the United States, selling very — Auction Room. immense the | construction of new roads continues. During Notwithstanding the already the first six months of the present year 1.758 » in ile s were jasa ant if is probable thar the total ot ft ’ will wot he ase than 3,000 or 6,000 mil would Le Zreaws than that of 1884 or 1885. The equipment of these roads inust have a bene ficial effect on various industries, and in ‘addition they open up new country and vive ae impetus i » hundreds of smal tovns and villages. Ss Grace Bay Rounp Coat on Lord’s Whari, \, MecNeill’s Apply at 2 3i—-jy22