tener sees ee ge Ra —- me This is true Liberty, when Free-Bom Men, having to advise the Public, may rermMs:—Five DoLttars A YEAR. ie speak free.—Evrirriprgs. Srnexie Copies Two CrEnts NEW SERIES. Che Daily Examiner is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Oo. From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— Six months.... Three mothe. ccc 2g LOW-PRIGE COO02S AND HIGH-PRIGE COODS. i ii i 50 TELEGAAPH ORDERS PROMPTLY SHIPPED. 0 VOFFINS and Caskets, all sizts, mounted and furnished at ) one hour’s notice. 70; Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- — or yearly advertisements, Casket, silver-plate mountings, oatside shell and use of hearse. 1G Cc ° | ——— Having made special arrangements with the manufacturers of Funeral Goods, we are able to quote the lowest prices on ‘all grades of Funeral Furnishings, MARK WRIGHT & CO. i ieetieniamnis i al si — TELEPMONE COMMUNICATION, D iar ee w ex(3@™ {Sun {Moon; High! Pays. M)" ~~ itises sets | rises | water| len’h Ch’town, April 12, *85—2aw & wky h mh mmorn faft’n jh m ALMANAG FOR APRIL, 1886. MOON'S CHANGBS. New Moon 4th day, 10th., 18.1m., s. m. 8. E. First Quarter 11th day, 4th, 31 5m, p, m, SW Full Moon "th day, 10th, 46.7, « m, N, Last Quarter 26th day, ih, 3.0m,a. m. E. 1 Thursday CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD $15.00 Funeral Outfit, consisting of Imitation Rosewood| | te men | | | | | FUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. Tt is as pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have been Ppeedily cured by the use of A DAMSON’S BALSam after all other medicines have failed Sulferers from either Fecent or chronic coughs or bronchial affections, can Tesort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining ®peedy relief. Do not delay, get it at once. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B.. by the proprietors, F, W, KINSMAN & CO., Druggists, 343 4TH AvE., N. Y. W. WHEATLEY, Produce aud Commission Merchant, PECIAL attention given to consignments. Large storage accommodation, Satisfaction guaranteed. 269 Barrington St., Halifax, N. 8S. March 24--3mos eod hHEBD HIS? g——————_-_-:— 2 2| Friday | 42) 25) 4 54/945! 42 3) Saturday 40) 26) 5 22/10 20, 45 4)Sunday 38; 27) 5 49|10 53! 49 5| Monday 37) 29; 6 17/11 27; 52 & 6| Tuesday 35} 30/6 48\morn| 55 7|Wednesday | 33) 32/ 72310 2 58 ce : o : ; 6) Thureday | 31] 3318 21040113 2 a DOLLARS REWARD 1s offered to any one proving 9| Friday 29; 34; 8 48) 1 21) = 6. : i 7 ’ sl : 10/Seturday 27| 35/9 41/2 91° 8° that any House iw the Trade is selling 11 | Sunday | 25| 37/10 40/3 6) 19 12| Monday | 23) 38/1 46} 420) 13 i3\ Tuesday | 22) 40/aft56! 549) 16 14 Wednesday 20; 4); 2 817 12 21 15, Thorsday | 18} 42) 3 21/8 16 24 3 3 16, Friday 16; 43\ 43419 7 27 3 T 17 YSatarday } 15) 45) 5 47) 9 51 20 CHEAPER THAN 18) Sunday | 13] 48] 6 57/10 32) 33 19| Monday | 1!) 47] 8.7)tl 7} > 36 ary 20| Tuesday 9 49) 9 13/11 49) 39 e ~ ~ 21, Wednesday 8 50/10 12 aft 26) 42 0. 2' Thursday 6} S52;11 12) 1 § 46 ws ailseturlay | 2 Sao vos oo THIN I$ A STANDING OFFRBR FOR THRER MONTHS. 25 Sunday | 0} 55] 0 45| 3 26; 55! cmeerennaneg) jaSscamatine 26/M 14 58) 56) 2 241 432) 58 . : ita, | laoreet a ates 4 WE have 2.232 Hard and Soft Felt Hats, bought for 24] Wednesday | 56|7 01 229/651) 4 ash. and offe ’ 2( : } ch r th he stueean: sa Weets 46| : C , and offered from 20 to 30 per cent.c eaper than t 30) Friday 4 52:7 2) $28) 8 33/4 9 majority of buyers value them. | ; | | — — We méan to Sell if you give us he chance. THROUGH TICKETS t Buy from us and we will be mutually benefitted. Charlottetown Ticket Agency. | UGH TICKETS for sale to all parts’ Canada and the Uai | very lowest possible rates. United States, at the i -——D. A BROS maps, time tables, etc. oo = 5 G. A. SHARP, 72 Queen Street. Station Master and Ticket Agent, ws ‘Ch’tuwn, April 17, ’®6—eod & wky Drop in and_C us, even if you don’t want to buy. March 19—2aw wky 3mo_ CO*P. E. LL Railway. | BRITISH WAREHOUSE, | SS QUEEN STREET. a ee ee \XTRA value for MARCH and APRIL in Table Damasks, | 1 Napkins, Sheeting, Pillow Cottons, White and Gray Cottons, SPRING ARRANGEMENT. Towelings, Tickings, White and Colored Knitting Cottons, ee CARPETS AND OILCLOTHS. OF THE INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. reste 1 CASE BMBROIDEHRY. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- direct from Switzerland, just opened. eer ee land, every Tuesday and Thursday, at 8.00 a. m. Leave St. John at 8 o’clock every Saturday aight for T BOSTON DIRECT. _ . cai nl Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd I LL. BROW!/N Class ; $9.50, Ist class. ‘ J @ oo e For tickets and other information apply to | G. ASHARP, F. W. HALES, Be Ee Ey Eb Joo P. E, I.’Steam Nay. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. April 26, 1886—eod wky i. anrave «6 FLOUR! FLOUR! GHNEHRAL GOMMission Merchants, | erorEs ALE ANTIC AVENUE, | , 121 ATL . JAVING a Large and Well-assorted Stock on hand, we are BOSTON, MAS Ss. H selling CHOICE FLOUR very cheap to suit the times. a ee Ch’town, March 15 —wkly. TS — —— —— -_-——— a LL AND RETAIL. 20: . “ge ee Ryas and Produce a Specialty. We keep all the Choice Brands on hand, such as Matchless, Kent, CAUTION. Victory, Forest City, ie oe lel 2) Queen, Our Favorite, bris. and half-bris, &e. MYRTLE NAVY) "7 oP Pato IS MARKED CHOICE PASTRY, in half-barrels. T & ey Wcss=—>_ Every Barrel Witeiniid. Ks IN BRONZE LETTERS. BEER & GO FF July 15—dly wkly OUSE. BARCLAY & CO, _. GENERAL Commission & Shipping Merchants, 191 Atlantic Avenne, Boston. o.. years’ experience in this market, Over tifty thousand bushels P, E. I potatoes received by us last fall. Our patrons all satisfied. Vessels chartered for potato freights at short notice, Write for market reports. s@ Specialties— Potatoes, Mackerel, Can- ned Lobsters, Eggs. March 17, ’86—3mo eod ESTABLISHED 1873. | MEMBERS CHAMBER COMMERCE. WE BUY Potatoes, Spiling, R.®. Ties, Lumber, Laths, Canned Fish, Hay, Eggs, Produce, And sell on commission. Write us fally for quotations, Ship to HATHEWAY & (0., 22 Central Wharf, Boston, Gen- eral Commission Merchants, Consign your vessels to our house. Will receive personal attention, Charters, Freights and Vessels for the United States, Newfound- land, West Indies, South America Ports. Lumber, Stone and Oil Freights. April 12, 86 —3mos HUNDREDS +s CLOCKS to select from, ranging in price from $1.25 to $20.00. Combination locks, Barometers, and Thermometers (either for hanging or mantle, SHIPS’ CLOCKS. Every Clock tested before leaving the store. EK. W- TAYLOR CAMERON. BLOCK, Charlottetown, Aprtl 18, '86. Uity Carriage Factory. McDONALD & CO. 7s Subscribers wish to intimate to their friends and the general public that they have commenced business in the Carriage Factory of P. H, Trainor, Kent Street, where they are prepared to execute all orders entrusted to them, pertaining to the carriage building trade. Mr. McDonald, having had twenty years’ experience in some of the lead- ing establishments of the United States and the Provinces, feels confident that he can give entire satisfaction, and is prepared to furnish or build te order all the latest styles of Top Buceres, Pazrons, Roap anpD Fam- ILy CaRRIAGES, &c Ordered work a specialty. Repairing attended to promptly, at the low- est possible prices, McDONALD & CO., Kent Street, opposite Rocklin House, April 9—lmo eod wy Imo SALT! SALT! 7 arrive at Point du Chene, on opening of navigation, 8000 SACKS LIVERPOOL COARSE SALT. Orders solicited. JAS. FRIER, Give us a call before buying elsewhere. r Genuine OPPOSITE MARKET None Uther Ge "| Feb. 26, 1886 —2aw & wky Shediac, New April 2, 1886. — ISLAND, TUESDAY, APRIL 27, 1886. VOL. 18---NO. 131 A : : legislating faculties of the mind,” and Che Dailp Gxaminer Danglison, who died anno 1869, regarded — this paralysis as ‘ the abolition or great APRIL 27, 1886. diminution of voluatary motion, and oe opmetimes sensation, in aay part ef the Our Cranial Workshops. body.’’ The causes of disturbance in : , ._ the cranial workshops of the world have Mechanisms, when in need of repair, been searched out and tabulated. The may often indicate a possible resumption ‘results sbow that in every thousand male of usefulness; but no repairer, expert persons of unsound mind, more than though be be, can truthfully claim ‘oO half are from avoidable causes. At the make the fractures ‘‘as good as new’ head of these stands the fiend Drink, again. So true is this of the ordinary marshalling 110 of his ripened victims. things of our civilization,flowing from the Ambition and excessive labor reap a har- worked resources of the world, that the/ yest of 73 out of each thousand patients. truth of it reaches even to the braia Chagrin and love calls for 86 between structures of the humag family, the very |shem Religious enthusiasm, which workshops of the miod. The brain of dethrones reason, claims 29, ex. f daughters,” man, demoralized and damaged, mayiceeding unnatural practices by sometimes be skillfuly reformed; but it!9 nq politics by 3; but insan- can uever be fully restored. Thus it is, ity from “crimes,” “remorse,” and that philantrophy recognizing the impas- “despair,” is satisfied with 9. The last, sable line that runs between curables and, though least figure is pérhaps the most incurables, has provided for the one extraordinary. It is the number of class, hospitals; for the other, asylums or those (viz. 5 in every 1,000) who adopt both in unison. I visited the hospital |insane habits avd’ dementation from and asylum here on Good Friday, and | ohoice, If we look. back on these was gladly surprised to find so much im-| establishments prior to the revealments provement inthe treatment and care of ' through William Tuke, the quaker the poor brainsick patients, since the| phijantrophist of 1792, for the torture time when on a former occasion, I had | and devilish cruelty common at that time visited the old asylum and witnessed so in Junatic houses, we shall find it hard to much misery and discomfort. I have seen | believe that the evidences he brouget to many ‘such retreats in other parts light of man’s inhumanity to man were of the world, but I can cousistently speak | ayer permitted to exist. Bat up to 1770 of this one, as a well conducted and truly| when (some of our grandfathers were benevolent institution, worthy of the living) one of the popular shows in Lon- cause of suffering it is designed to|don was a Bedlamite exhibition (that is mercifully meet, and creditable to the crazy people under torturing treatment) legislative servants of the people who] gt a penry to see it, and twopence to vote the supplies; and when the “money enjoy it sitting; bat that day of cruelty needed to build the remaining wing has and wrong (happily for the poor victims) been duly added to the usual grant for | has now passed into the night of history, supporting the establishment, there will/ while the sufferers are doubtless now be fresh reason to rejoice over the |«elothed and in their right mind.”’ You efficiency, which, thanks to the tact and! pave only to keep last century’s history wisely considerate ways of the present re-| of lunacy in your mind, when you visit spousible superintendentis now so fruitful| tne p. fF. I. Hospital for the insane, and in!good results,but the worthy superiaten- compare what it is, with what it was to dent wants more room,and ought to have see, in a new light, the difference be- the needed wing added to the building. | tween white and black. The suggestion is therefore respectfully C. B. Bagster. submitted to our present legislature, that — the earnings of the asylum be set apart for special improvement to the building and grounds of the asylum, till the} The Irish Land Purchase bill has been whole is in a complete condition, fully| issued. The bill provides that the land- meeting the requirements of the Pro-| ord who is desirous to sell his property, vince, and giving the fullest measure of ee ee, athe orate seatbortien. ag relief to the unfortunate ones in its care.| made to the land comm Bsion, which, after The favorable conditions for health- making enquiry, shall fix the price at fulness possessed by this Provinco is | which the property shall be sold uniess illustrated by comparing other statistics | the landlord and state authority have with her own on this question. If we|previousiy come to an agreement, If the take England and Wales, for example,we|!#ndiord objects to the price fixed by the ° eae commission, he may withdraw his applica- fiad the proportion of individuals whose ro paying costa, When the sale of minds are abnormal from various causes | ,),, property has been effected, the com- (which will, be noted further on) to be| mission shall pay the creditors before making 28 to every 10,000, but if wetake up|any other distribution of the purchase money the figures presented by P. E. Island,| Certain rent charges may be bought out- viz., 120,000 inhabitants, we shall dis-|Tight by the state authority or payment cover our rate to be only 10 in 10,000,} ™y be continued from tenants repayment. . ;| In cases of property whereon there is rea- or about one-third that of England and sonable cause to suppose valuable interests Wales, and : he fair inference may be exists, the commission shali add to the pur- drawn that if the same attention were chase money a fair sum therefor, and min- paid here to sanitary reform (and the|erals realized from the said property shall evil of intermarrying) that prevails in|be vested in the state authority or such England, even our low rate might be} local body as the Irish legislature may pro- considerably diminished. But there is one} ide. The Irish receiver-general and . : deputies, who are to execute the financial fact on record in the annual report of part of the act, shall be appointed to hold the P. E. Island Hospital for the Insane} office as permanent civil servants subject to (anno 1885) which, considering the] the authority of the treasury. They shall greater likelihood for rugged health in| be paid from the imperial exhequer, but the agricultural pursuits not supposed to be| Irish government shall appoint the actual over-exacting to the mental powers, is collectors, If the receiver general or any hard to account for. In the statistical} °f his deputies shall be guilty of malfea- . sance, the calprit shall forfeit the sums so section of the report (table 12, p. 30), on lost and also shall be subjected to a fine of occupations of male patients, of which | ¢500. The measure empowers the treasury ll are enumerated, 7 of the industries/i, create three classes of permanent an- have only one patient each, 2 have two|nulties bearing interest respectively at 3, each, and I viz., laboring 3. The least 2? and 24 per cent, and which shall be likely, it is said, always happens, and it|charged to the imperial consolidated fund. is so here, for there are 10 farmers pastes ase ar stephan Ae. ye ee . orbid 8u ividing or ie ing 0 olding 60 under treatment, as against only 14 long as it is subject to any state charge, from all other employments; 3 and but the state authority is empowered to it appears by the Herald’s little immi- relax these rules where it may think it ad- gration pamphlet, just issued, that the | visable. “owners and occupiers”’ of land in P. ee E. L, number only 30,292 of the 120,- Telephony Between Moving Trains. 000 persons supposed to be living in the ae Province. The “ occupations” of fe- Cornelius Spillman, a Chicago engineer, males who became patients in the Asylum| has invented a device for telephoning be- in 1885, are still more startling. Tak- tween moving trains and railway stations. RG Er « f “fF, : d The invention is to all appearances an ing the items o acme Wives se extremely simple affair, consisting of a cir- we find eight, and adding cuit wire resting on an insulated slab “‘laborer’s wife” and “servants” we! between the railway track. On the wire have to add 4 more,which deducted from | rests a circuit rod made of a strip of metal, 13, the whole number of female patients|having attached to it a moveable roller received in 1885, leaves but one for al]; making # continuous connection to all ; stations and all trains on the line. The Other employments, That is to aye return circuit is gained by means of the farming and other hard work occupa- rail-wheel and axle and up through the tions, furnish twelve thirteenths of the! ¢-. ework of the engineer's cab to the tele- gross number of brain paralyzed females phone. Awire runs through the train, received in 1885. connecting all the cars, so that conversa- What is the matter? Are the country|tion can be kept up from all parts of the people becoming unable to cope with|train to all stations on the road and their burdens? or, is our proverbial | between all other trains on the line. Mr. . . Spillman thinks the adoption of his device health—fullness on the deline? Either | vould render needless the employment of or both may give a true answer; but if telegraph operators at railway stations, 80, is it not the duty of those who repre- and, would afford direct means of commu- sent the people in our legislature | nication between anyone train and all to enquire by commission into) points, so that in the event of an accident the true facts of the case,|the intelligence would be promptly and if possible find the remedy that will] | *#ounced and relief rhe E It —_— prevent further decadence, It may be also, he says, prove @ check on train ro new to some to kaow that the term | ovsveniilaaasiitilndimaiiil te “insanity” simply means unsound- Horsford’s Acid Phosphate, ness, but is only applied to the th Fan a BS mental phenomena arising from IN NIGHT SWEATS AND PRO STRATION. unsoundness. This Sir William Them | Dr. R, Studhalter, St. Louie, Mo., says: ‘I have used it in dyspepsia, nervous pros- ilton, who died anno 1856, defined tration, and in night sweats, with very good as “ths paralysis of the regulating or results.’ — ae’ aa