*YANIINLY, yae-Five Dotuans & YRAR, This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may spea& free,’”—Evriripxs, SINGLE Corres Two CrnTs. vEW SERIES CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND; FRIDAY, JULY 31, 188, VOL 17--NO. 60. rhe Examiner Publishing Go. from toeir office, corn r or Water and reat eorg: Streets, Uharlottetown, ure . > : ' Prince Edward [sland RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION - Vv hs 32 50 sit an me 220 @ Advertising af wos ‘ontracts may e@ thace ad monthly, v : . hail-yeariy ' 2 t moderate rates. jarterly, mele, res eS - ALMANAC FOR JULY, 1885. i MOON 7 CHANt ee t ast Quarter 5th day, 8h. 13m., a. m ai Qe} 3 h i ; Kew Moon 12th day, Lh, 3 n., & m. first Qaarter, 18th day, 52. /m., p. m. ful! Moon, 26th day, 10h. 10m., p. m. Sen ‘Sun |Moon|High | Days S oa WEES -ises sete | rises water | len’h = oe h mhmeattn aftnjh m | iW jay (4187 49,10 2 © 62)16 3i seg | 19, 49/10 > } 20 » Priday 19 45:10 5812 8 29 4 Saturday 20; 48.11 26 2 5 r 28 5 Sunday 21 4811 57; 3 49) °7 § Monday 22 47\mcrni 4 F9 26 * Tuesday 29| 471| 028 620' 25 $i Wednesday 23; 47! 1 Gj 7 35 ©4 g Thursday : 3. ..@. 3 o2| § 38! 23 ij Friday * 46 - 46! 9 28) 22 update | 25) 4513 90.10 22) 20 i’ Sunday | 26 4 ° | } J 8 13 Monday | 27; 43 © 16)U1 53! 16 4, Tuesday | 23) 43. 7 32,mormn{ = 15) is Wednesday | 29 43 8 46) 0 o4; !4! 16 Thursday 30 42 9 57| 1 16 12 | iT Friday 31{ 41/11 5) 2 0} 10) {5 Saturday 32} 40'aft 11) 2 46) 8 19 Sunday 33} 39 1 14) 3 43 6 | 20’ Monday 34) 38) 215! 45 4| 2) Tuesday | 35] 37'3 123; 6 7 9 | 92) Wednesday | 36) 26) 4 7) 7 15) 0 31 bursday 37 35) 4 05} N 1/14 “4 Friday 38 34 5 44 8 57 25 Saturdey 39' 32 6 20| 9 38 Jo Sunday 40, 31; 7 2110 17 51 | 27| Monday | 42, 30) 7 37,10 49 2 | 28\Tueaday } 43) 28; 8 711 24 29’ Weduesday | 44, 27; 8 34/11 57) so\Thursday | 45) 26/9 Slaft “9}15 41 | 31| Friday 4 46'7 26; 9 30, 1 3)14 40. NOTES. Dog days begin on the 3rd of this month. | Independence Day, U.S. A., on the 4th. | fhe poet Robert Burns died (1796) on Jaly, 2ist. There is no real night till after the 20th of | this month. ‘ In this month the morniogs detrease 35 | mivutes, and the afternoons 30 minutes. TH RAILWAY TIME TABLE, | i For the convenience of the travelling | public, we have carefully arranged the fol- lowing table of arrival and departure of trains on the P. E. Island Railway, accord- | ing to local time :— Going West. i= hme ee Charlottetown segsces. Gs SO ae aan Royalty Junction..........702 947 42? Hoste Wiltslire........... 737 1039 509) menses Maver ............ 747 1056 622 Bradaibane. TUCKS. oWa cae 812 1132 687 ae 819 1143 607 RSS 6 ooo Sco g 829 1159 622 Pp M. PIL Beh. ccnccccece 842 1222 642 j arrive.......9 @ 32 Fae Summerside, wm depart...... 927 237 Mscouché,...............942 300 Wellington..............1001 329 IS 6 vse e ses. 1029 420 eR 1122 542 ie 1205 6857 MUMIA... ..... 5s. 1242 747 — West. P.M. te th Ee 207 647 Alberton?......... ° james 2 45 7 37 io. |. Ses Bee Port Hail a een | a, Wellington.........0.... 449 1116 Micousie................807 1144 ative... 522 1207 Summerside, A. M, : ( depart...... 542 112 657 Kensington ........ 607 149 729 ee. 622 212 749 INS oa, vac «oe 632 227 803 i cocce Ge) 6 6a ene Hunter Kiver............. 702 315 847 North Wiltshire,.... wood he. ba. ae Royalty Junction.......... 747 432 947 Vharlottetown Desstiedae 802 462 1007 Going East. A.M Rh ie... 707 417 Pets .<+eccees ecco ee ae SU ics. cs,.. 0... tne 4 57 Mount Ss ial \ arrive... en 5 22 Se (depart... 857 527 NG oc acs nace necncien 942 5656 SEMIN 29 00ses-cesceoeees 1015 617 ae 1107 652 eee RE ETT: 1157 722 a 902 532 ee 1015 62 ee og ae 1037 642 from East, as Poh TT ccarece. te wea. 212 Bear River... sete 7 7 3 02 ie Peter's ae Gaiden. oat 752. 354 i eee $14 427 Mount Stow: arrive,........842 517 Bes omens, depart. ..cesce 847 537 a ...912 614 a... a ee ctatlottctown Tose oink ch cho 952 712 OWE. ............ 732 337 i... kee 749 400 Oung we tte eeteeeeees on ewart bevssvéebanieslal 842 512 WARBURTON & CONROY, BARRISTERS & ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Notarics Pablic, Ac. Office in Cameron’s Block, up stairs ; entrance hext door to Taylor's Jewelry Store. Oe eee"“MORE NEW G ee ee OODS! Perkins & Sterns HAVE JUST OPENED: New Black Satins, ee" New Black Nun's Veiling, New Cream Laces, New White Laces, New Colored Silk Velvets, ‘New Bustles and Panniers, New Millinery Materials, | New Corsets. NEW WINDOW HOLLANDS. ~ we er Stock of Summer Goods well assorted and every- : : Miushns, Prints, Parasols, Umbrellas, Hosiery, Gloves, Collars, Ties, in) great 2 ifyou' were to stand up?” thing very low in. price. variety. is Cheap, Ch’town, July 10, 1885 PERKINS & STERNS. Mien’s and Boys Straw Hats selling very CASH CAPITAL, - —— 9 :— The Cifizens Insurance Company of Canada, 70. ~ 48 | | = Phe Commercial Union Assurance | Co., of London, Eng.. Blank CAPITAL, : ; . $12,500,000. ‘The British America Assurance Co, of ‘Toronto, Canada, (INCORPORATED IN 1833.) (ESTABLISHED CAPITAL, - - - A. 5S. Charlottetown P. E. L., June 20—eod I am prepared to accept Insurances in the above well- known Companies at Lowest Current Rates. URQUHART, GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT, Brown's Block, Queen Square. Hnglish aud Canadian Fire Insurance Companies, H. HASZARD'S $500,000. | Ledgers, | $1,188,000. 100,000 June 20—2m eod CAPITA b., e ° = ” Marsh 22, 18R5- wkytm Oh town, Jan, 1886 GLASGOW AND LONDON Insurance Uompan OF GREAT BRITAIN. 10; Capital - - Five Million Dollars The above Company insures every class of business at current rates, and on Farm Property and Stock insures against damage by Lightning, whether fire ensues or not. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, GENERAL AGENT FOR P. E. ISLAND. ROVAL GANADIAN INSURANCE CO. AT FRB. oO HEAD OFFICE—Montreal. HALIFAX BRANCH—4J. Scott Mitchell, Agent. ———-() Risks Laken on Most Favorabic Terms. AGENT FOR PRUNCK EDWARD ISLAND: F. H. ARNAUD. MEN VAN TH RANK OF HAITPAX SO FOOLSCAP, $2,000,000 =. FORK ALL KINDS OF keep the shoulders in position; and! when you use the artificial, these natural CB S ones become weak for want of exercise. t | The best way to cure stooping shoulders pl gk Day Books, Journals, &c., SELLING VERY CHEAP. 100,000 ENV BOOP ES of all the leading s‘zes, by the 100, 3 or 4 thousand boxes, | LETTER & | NOTE PAPER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Stafford’s Jet Black Writing Laks. Stafford’s Copying Iuks, {In all size botties. ) This is now acknowledged to be the best Ink for office and private use. ALSO IN STORE : Carter’s, Stephens & Toiary’s Writing & Copying Laks, To be Sold at Great Discounts. G. H. HASZARD, BROWN’S BLOCK, Queen Square, Ch town, May 18, '85.—wky July 16, ’85. BUILDING STORE. OR SALE— One Hundred perch Building Stone, taken from the same quarry as the | stone for Falcouwood Asylum foundation. McKINNON & McLEAN, Dio Lewis’ Nuggets. A pamphlet entitled ‘‘Dio Lewis’ ' | Nuggets,” has been received. The follow- ; ing are a few samples of the nuggets : | Jt makes one dizzy to try and imagine what would be the result of the study and care devoted to the development of a better breed of men which is vestowed ‘upon horses. Within a hundred years this world would be redeemed, and the ministering spirits might turo their alteution (o ome other planet. “ Alfred is so delicate,” writes an anxious mother, to which I reply : ‘‘Your son should be taken out ef school and put at work. His nervous system will not bear the strain of college. At some , Work in the open air he would do well. ' You must choose between a useful, vigor- ous mauhood in some healthful occupa- tion, and having him buried with the | proud consciousness that he is full ot | Latin aod Greek,” ' ‘Johnny, my dear, can’t you eat some ‘more ?”’ | “No, mother; I am so full, I can’t | ‘swallow another mouthful.” , “Johnny, couldu’t you eat a little | Not oaly do mothers stuff their chil- dren into fevers and bowel diseases, and | | bumberless other troubles, but they lay | | the foundation for that craving appetite | which in all their future life leads to so’ | much mischief. Nothing so expands the mind, gives! ‘clearness to the ideas, elasticity the | | form, and health to the system, as early | ‘rising and a walk before breakfast. If 'your sluggard be nota dolt already, he! ‘isin a fair way to become one. Women! |would gain rosy cheeks by getting up \before or about daybreak, and men! secure health of body and miod. There are many of both sexes, however, who never see the suu rise ualess it be when returning from a ball. j | I don’t believe in shoulder-braces. 'Nature furnishes the needed braces to! is to carry a weight on the head half an hour morning and evening. Make the weight large. There is uo other single exercise so valuable as carrying a weight ,on the head. A bag of sand weighing from 20 to 80 pounds is a good weight. This “high civilization” is curious. Its avowed aim is a nobler manhood and womanhood. But while we are so proud of our telegraphs and railroads and grand inventions and magnificent improvements and large corn crops, that we run our printing presses all night to proclaim our glory to the rising sun, our doctors, standing in the midst of a nation of men sucking tobacco, caution a nation of corseted women to go slow and lie flat on their backs three months every year. Don’t you see a good many pale girls in your stores, girls with a bloodless, halfbaked sort of face, whose walk, whose voice, whose whole expression is void of spirit and force? Those girls are in the green state, Look at their lips and cheeks ; they are not half ripe. Send them out in the country; let them throw. away their parasols and live out in the sunshine three months, and [| would give more for one of them ia any work requiring spirit than for a dozen of the pale things that live in the shade. The only girls with red cheeks and sweet breaths, the only girls who become fully ripe and sweet, are those who baptize themselves freely in the sunshine. We put adrop of alcohol into a man’s eye. It poisons it. We try it upon the lining of a lining stomach. Again it poisons it. We study, after death, the stomachs of living men, and find alcohol produces in regular stages redness, in- tense congestion, morbid secretions, deeper hurt, destruction of parts, utter ruin. Westudy its influence upon the health and strength of sailors and soldiers, and find it helps to freeze them in the Arctic regions, and exhaust them in the tropics. We watch two regiments on a long march in India, one with and the other without grog, and are driven to the conclusion that even moderate quantities of alcohol weaken the muscles and break the endurance. We visit the training grounds of oarsmen, pedestrians, and prize-fighters, aud learn everywhere the same lesson—alcohol is a poison to muscle ard brain. coer —etitiiadtiaatiiietnntinne Private news from the village of Montagudo, in the province of Soria, 100 miles north of Madrid, states that in eight days there have 210 deaths from cholera and 300 remain ill, out of a population of 800 persons. The greatest consternation has been caused by this extraordinary death rate, which is more severe than in any previous case during the present epidemic. Even the highest village officials are forced to bury their Sherman’s Estimate of Grant. The following are extracts from the reply of Sherman (then a major-general in rauk), written “ near Memphis” on March 10, 1864, upon the receipt of news from Grant that the latter had been nominated by the President to the rauk of lieutenant-general :-— You are now Washington’s legitimate successor and occupy a position of almost dangerous elevation; but if you can con- tinue, as heretofore, to be yourseif—simple, honest and unpretending—you will enj>y through life the respect and love of friends, and the homage of millions of human beings who will award to you a large ehare for securing to them and their descendants a government of law and stability. I believe you are as brave, patriotic #nd just as the great prototype Washington; as unselfish, kind hearted and honest as a man should be; but the chief characteristic in your nature is the simple faith in success you have always manifested, which I can liken to nothing else than the faith a Chris- tian has ia his Savior. This faith gave you victory at Shiloh and Vicksburg. Also, when you have com- pleted your best preparations, you go into battle without hesitation, as at Chattanooga —no doubts, no reserve; and I tell you that iit was this that made us act with con- fidence. 1 know, wherever I was, that you thought of me, and if I got into a tight place you would come—if alive. a + ae 6 Re Naval Manceuvres. The splendid performance of the steam ram Polyphemes during the recent naval manceuvres in Bantry Bay, have iaduced the Admiralty to order the construction of several new vessels of the same general design. The demonstrated fit- ness of this class of war vessel for har- bor defence or attack is a proof of the wisdom of a recommendation made during the war of the rebellion by the late President Lincoln. At that time he wrote :— **T havea single idea of my own about harbor defence. It is asteam ram, built so as to sacrifice nearly all capacity for carry- ing to those of speed and strength, so as to be able to split any vessel, having hollow enough in her to carry supplies for a voyage of any distance. Such a ram, of course, could not herself carry supplies for a voy- age of considerable distance, and her busi- ness would be to guard a particular harbor as a bulldog guards his master’s door.”’ The strong practical common sense of the ex-president now fizds endorsation among the best naval engineers of the time, though the American Secretaries of war and the navy did not then agree with him, and hence his views were not carried out into effect. ashe sentinel Nana ee Enoch Arden Again. An Enoch Arden case is reported at Oitawa. About 18 years ago a married man left that city for California, leaving a wife and two small children behind. After his departure his wife never heard from him, and having mourned for him as dead for some years she was prevailed upon to take a second husband. The first husband meantime had never settl- ed in California at all, but had located in British Columbia, where he had amassed a fortune. On his return he found his wife comfortably remated, and not only does he not blame her, but is quite willing to let his successor continue undisturbed in peaceful enjoyment of his home. One drawback exists, however, he is most anxious that his son and daughter, whom he left babies, should cast in their lot withhim. The son,who is earning bis owa living, is not at all tempted by his father’s wealth, and de- clipes ; the daughter also prefers to stay wih her mother. The discussion at- tendicg this matter has for the present spoiled the peacefulness of the home life, por does there appear any immediate likelihood of a settlement beiog arranged. + ap A Disastrous Cloud-Burst. A despatch from Colorado Springs, Col., of the 26th July, says: One of the most disastrous clond-bursts ever known in this section of the State struck a oint afew miles north of this city at twelve o'clock last night, Several rail- road and wagon bridges in the vicinity were carried away, and a_ large amount of track swept off. The house *of Mr. Eaion, Superintendent of schools, was lifted from its foundation and carried down the stream with great velocity. Mr. Eaton escaped, but bis wife clung to the house which struck a railroad bridge one hundred yards below, and was dashed to pieces. In one slope of Shook’s run were a number of summer campers. Many of their tents have been seen floating in the stream and as the flood came down in the dead of night it is feared that many of tiem have per- ished. ee Parnell’s programme is: Firstly, to prevent the Liberals from having an overwhelming majority; secondly, to secure an equilibrum between the Liberals and Tories which will make the Parnellites dictators; and thirdly to prevent impeding the coming settlement of the Home Rule question by a storm of prejudice, such as a disturbed condition own dead, as no sextous remain. of Ireland always creates in England.