* Ne ee cea om ~ a : = Sonera eee eae a ms —- Tenus:—Frve Dottars a YEAR. * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxirives. SINGLE Copirs 17 : NEW SERIES. Che Daily Exaniner is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Go. From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— i i tad tntcctieéctiad $2.50 I cn niee whee beticnne ates 1,25 Ge ic... wh soda coene coece | te Advertising at moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on application. ALMANAC FOR MAY, 1888. MOON'S CHANGES, Last Quarter 2nd day, 7h., 34.6m., p. m., N., (below horizon. ) New Moon 10th day, 9h, 11.0m. p.m., N.W, (below horizon. ) First Quarter 18th day, 7h., 52.6., p. m., 8S. Full Moon 25th day, 6h., 27.6m., a. m., N.W. (below horizon.) D! (Sun Sur | Moon! High! Day’s - : a eS : i “a e WEEK! -ises|sets ; rises | water} len'h morniaftr’nh m ih mih m | 1 Tuesday 4507 2 6 16, 2 28/1412 2) Wednesday 4/° 41 31343) 15 3 Thursday | 48) G 147) 455; 18 4| Friday 47} 7| 2 14) 6 12) 2 5 Saturday | 40) 8 242;7 18 23 3 Sunday 4 9 3 718 9 2 7) Monday | 43, 11) 3 26) 8 51) 3s 8) Tuesday | 41) 12! 3 53) 9 27| 34 9} Wednesday | 39) 13) 417/10 1) 34 10 Thursday 38! 14) 4 42/10 34) 36 11 Friday 371 185 SLI Gi ® 12/Saturday | 33) 16! 5 41/11 40) 41 13|Sund ay | 34) £8) 6 19/morn| 44 i4 Monday | 33) M7 20158) 47 15, Tuesday 33) 21\ 7 53; 0 52) 49 16) Vednesday 4l| 21; $ 50) 1 33) 50 t7| Thu sday | 90) 22) 9 53) 219} 52 18! Friday | 29) 2411 0) 3:12) 55 19) Saturday | 28) 25\ait 10) 4 20) 57 wv Sunday | 26] 25/ 1 23} 5 39} 59 21) Monday | 25) 26) 2 37] 6 57/15 1 22) Tuesday | 24) 2713 54)8 2 3 23; Wednesday | 23| 28) 5 13) 8 56 5 24| Thursday | 22) 29) 6 32) 9 43 7 25| Friday | 21) 31) 7 49/10 28) 9 96 Saturgay 21} 32) 9 O11 13) il 27|Sunday - | 20} 33/10 4/11 59) 13 28| Monday | 20) 34/10 S7laft 42) 14 29' Tuesday } 19} 35/11 42) 1 28) 16 90 Wednesday | 18) 36)morn}| 217) 18 31 Thursday i4 18\7 37! 9 16, 3 8/1519 DR. KELLY, — Physician and Surgeon, * Orrice: UPPER QUEEN STREET, four Doors Above Apothecaries’ Hall. Ch town, March 29, 1888—d 3meod wky L. ARTHUR & CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, RECEIVERS OF Mackerel, Kutier, Cheese EGGS Poultry, Potatoes, Fruit & Vegetables. 142, 144 Commercial Street, BOSTON, MASS, ex . ee i ta - BB--8-T-O-N SUMMER ARR NGEMENT THE PALACES STEAMERS OF THE PATcAMAT ONAL S.S. CO. L ave Si. John for Porton, via Eastport and Port- land, evc:) Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at 7.23a.n. Kare from Qpariotlclown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd class ; 9.50, ist ciass. For tickets and o(ser information apply to G. ASAARP, F. W. HALES, P. 0. Yee P. BE. © Steam Nav. Co. or w your nearest Ticket Agent. May 7. '**8—e04 wkvr aus A. MoxRisow. ' GEORGE MUSGRAVE MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. yevenunous: Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Rank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; George Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown, WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS, 71 Rast Caeap ann 9 & 14 Mivcine Lave, LONDON, ENGLAND. Represented in Canada by Morrison & Musorave, Halifax. Oct. 2A, 1887— LHarlottetown Boot & Shoe E acta. :O: Vero Improved Premises, Experienced Workmen,}New Lasts, Better Leather, we now turn out NEATER, BETTER FITTING AND WEARING BOOTS than { ever. Every Pair Warranted. FOREIGN M AKE. ~We import from Canada and the United States the latest styles in Ladies and Gents’ Boots, Shoes, Slippers and Rubbers. Buying in large er for cash, it enables us to sell cheap. You do not require a heavy purse when ““SHOEMAKERS, ATTENTION ! CUSTOM SOLE LEATHER by the Side, 24 cents per 1b. Kip, Grain, French Calf, Kid and Goat. Awls, Welts, Shoe Thread, Heel Ink, Dressing, Pegs, Pincers, Hammers, Wax, Bristles, Nails, Eyelets, English Tops, &c. As we have to keep these articles for our own use, and buying them in large quantities, we can afford to sell cheaper than any in the trade, GOFF BROS., Successors to Dorsey, Goff & Co, February 28, 1888—eod & wky Hels, Tablets & H ih Pe Reduced Prices for Two Months OQaly, ay CAIRNS & McLEAN’S, Kent Street (Phillips’ Old Stand.) Having purchased the entire Stock cf MR, JAMES PHILLIPS and of the late E. G. HUNTER, we are over- stocked, and have decided to sell at a Discount of 10 to 20 Per Cent, for Two Months from date. Parties wanting anything in this line would do well t call early and have first choice. Over 200 Fine Designs to select from. CAIRNS & McLEAN. April 13, 1888—wky 2m dy ]m 2aw 1S88. ANNOUNCEMENT. 1888. The Popular Standard-Bred Trotting Stallion HERNANDO, 2891, RECORD 2.37 1-2 ON A HALF-MILE TRACK, The Fastest Record ever made in a Race on Prince Edward Island, ee em B4* SYALLION, 16 hands high, weighing about 1200 lbs, bred by Gen. T. Withers, Fairlawn Kentucky. Sire, Almont, 33, sire of Fanny Witherspoon, 2.16}, and 32 others inthe 2.30 list, besides 27 sons that have sired trotters, and 10 daughters that have produced trotters. Dam, Jenny Clay, by American Clay, 34, sire of the dams of Sir Walter, Jr., 2.18}; Garnet, 2.19 ; Ambassador, 2.21}, etc.; 2nd dam by Morgan Rattler, 3rd by Manibrino Chief, 11, 4th by Gano, 5th by Potomac, etc. For full Pedigree, History and particulars get Hernando’s 1888 Circular. HERNANDO has won every competition in which he was eyer entered. His stock are famed prize-winners, and sell young for higher pricos than those of any other horse in Lower Canada. iy good judges and writers he has been pronounced in comparison with ALL Stallions in Lower Canada, ha Toe Prince of the Collection,” and ‘The Noblest Roman of them all.” HERNANDO will make the Season of 1888 as follows: SUMMERSIDE—May 7 to 12; May 23 to June2; June 11 to 16; June 25 to 30; July 9 to 14 July 23 to 2. , ; CHARLOTTETOW N—April 30 to May 5; May 21 te 26; June 4 to 9; June 1§ to 23; July 2 to 7; uly 16 to 21. } 2 : TERMS ~Twenty-Five Dallars far the Season, or Thirty-Five Dollars to insure. The dove route will be adhered to as closely as health, weather and other conditions will permit. Mares from a distance will be received and cared for at moderate prices. Send for Circular. W. A. NOONAN, in Charge. May 7, 1888—dy Im wky 3m WE OFFER Better Value alti: BUGGY TOPS Than any other House in Canada. IN STOCK: BODIES ALL STYLES. A FULL AND COMPLETE STOCK OF CARRIAGE COODS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. :0: GENERAL HARDWARE and MILL SUPPLIES. NORTON & FENNELL, City Hardware Store. Charlottetown, March 5, 1888, ~ 1888. BOSTON DIRECT, ~—BY THER— Bo ton, Halifax and Prince Edward Island Steamship Line, THE ONLY DIRECT LINE WITHOUT CHANGE. Charlottetown to Boston, Ts staunch and commodious Steamships ARROLLand WORCESTER, having been thoroughly refurnished and put into first-class condition in every particular, will, during the Season of 1888, run as follows, commencing with The Carroll, on Saturday, 5th May. One of these vessels will leave Boston for Charlottetown every SATURDAY, at noon; and Charlottetown for Boston every THURSDAY, at 6 @clock, p. m, — Passenger Accommodation! at FAKES—First-class Passage Berth in well- furnished Cabin, $3 50; Stateroom Berth, $8.50. Lowest rates for Freight, which is always care- fully handled. Low CARVELL BROTHERS, Agents, Charlottetown. HARRISON LORIXG, naging Director and Treasurer, Lewis’ Wharf, Boston, Ch'town, May 8, 1888—pat sum jour DOMINION OF CANADA, ) Province of - Prince Edward Island. ) iu the Supreme Court. In the matter of ‘“‘An Act of the Parliament of Canada, passed in the forty-fifth year of Her present Majesty's Reign, Chapter 23, intituled, * An Act respecting Insolvent Banks, Insurance Compavies, Loan Companies, Building Socie- ties and ‘Trading Corporations,’ and of the Pre- sident, Directors and Company of the Bank of Prince Edward Island, an Insolvent Banking Company :— : Nett CE is hereby given that on WEDNES- DAY, the 16th dey of May, instant, A. D, 1288, His Honor Mr, J :stice Peters will, pursuant to an order nisi, dated the 3rd day of May, inst., granted in the aboye matter, ‘order that the balance or sum of $168.45 in the hands of the Liquidators of the above named Insolvent Bank- ing Company tothe creiit of the Liquidation Account be paid intothe Hank of Nova Scotia, there to be deposited as required by law; and also that the recoguizances severally given by the three Liquidators of said Insolvent Bank vacated and delivered up, unless cause to the contrary be shown before him at the Judges’ Chambers, in the Law Courts Building, in Char- lottetown, on the said 16th day of May, instant, atthe hourof Twelve o'clock, noon, by any o the creditors, contributories, shareholders o members of the above named insolvent Banki Cepapeny. ‘Dated 4th day of May. A. D, 1888, J. A. LONG WORTH, ’ Prothonotary. R. R. FirzGeriLp, Solicitor. may4i—dy 10i Family Residence. THE Subscriber offers for sale his well known and desirable Residence on Prince Street. The House is in good condition ; the rooms are large, airy and well ventilated. For convenience ~ ye ee it is nnsurpacees in‘the city, ‘or further particulats apply to ‘ . pars PLN HIGGINS, may4—tf Prince Street. NEW STOCK. J. BH. BELL Wisk ES ta inform his customers andthe pub- lie generally that he has received a portion of his SPRING STOCK OF UPPERS, consisting of Fine Laced, esvecially for spring and summer wear, also some nice Elastic Side, anda variety of nobby Shoe Uppers. which he will make up in the latest styles and at the lowest possible prices. Living under low rent, and importing our stock direct, enables us tc sell or make up Custom Work cheaper than any other house in the city. We always handle new stock, Our workmanship second to none. A fit Warranted or no sale. Always 1 pte time with orders. RbP: i ING neatly and promptly done. General satisfaction given. DON'T FORGET THE PLACE: Sign of the Great Big Boot, UPPER GREAT GEORGE STREET. ap2l—1m sat tu thu THE Clearauee Sal —AT THE— LONDON HOUSE Is Still Going On. Many Fine Grades of Goods, LARGE DISCOUNTS, And every effort made to meet the require- ments of CASH BUYERS. F. W. MOORE, Assignee of Harris & Stewart. Ch town, March 2, 1888. FOR SALE OR TO LET For a Term of Years. LAWN DALE, situate on the St. Peter’s Road, about one mile and a half from the city, known as the “GARDINER PROPERTY,” and recently occupied by kK. Bridges. Oa the pre- mises are a handsome Dwelling House, good Barns, &c. This place consists of about Sixteen Acres of Land, in good heart, and several pieces Farm of about fifty acres. For further information apply 6 / Ch’'town, Aprii li, 1883—3aw OHN INGS. be | Within the last decade cities have of land can he had adjoining, sufficient to make a CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, FRIDAY. MAY 11. 1888. A Lest Faculty. Have we lost the faculty of astonishment! Have we arrived at that stage of our de- velopment when we take wonders as mat- ters of course? What are the seven won- ders of the ancient world tothe seventy and seven miracles of this golden age! It is really not fair to mention them in the same sentence. Photography, for instance, and its latest development, the imstantane- ous process. Only a score of years ago one had to sit perfectly still and not even wink at the peril of a distorted picture, and now you may not only wink but run, jump or fly and the camera focuses you just the same. It catches a sunbeam, the light- ning’s flash and the tornado’s fury ; a race horse with all four feet in the air, and the base ball as it curves its way towards the batsman. It is wonderful, miraculous, and, although it is not ten years old, not even a child is surprised to have his picture taken between winks. Tho other day, while gazing idly in the | window of a print shop, I saw a photograph | of Sethi 1., and another of Rameses I1.—| think of it! Flesh and blood 4,000 years ago, forty centuries, 120 generations, and | their faces looking out at me from a bronze! ease]! No conjectures, no superstitious imagery, but the very lineaments as if they lay before you in the sarcophagus —what a stupendous miracle, and yet I noticed that | of the twenty persons who paused to look, | not one stayed to wonder. The telegraph dates back to the birthday of a middie aged man, and even the savage | Sioux regards it with indifference. The/ telephone is a. thing of yesterday, and a boy} in knee breeches picks up the ‘phone and says, ‘‘ give me 100,” and talks to the other boy, 5, 10, 50 or more miles away with as little astonishment as if he were ciding a bicycle. With the aid of a micro- phone, it is possible to hear a fly walk, and an invention is being perfected that will project the image of a distant object on a mirror at your elbow. The time is hasten- ing on, when the telephone will be in every house like water and gas, and when you may not only sit in your chair at home, and onverse with your friend in China, but look in his face and note every movement of his lips. Time has been annihilated and space is being rapidly conquered. The phonograph was not even a nine days’ wonder. We have seen cable cars and electric motors, and it is a green countryman who gives them a second Jook. been heated with steam, and no one wondered. Natural gas burst fromthe bowels of the earth, and no one journeyed to see it except capitalists eager to invest. No astonishment was mixed with love of gain, and had it been ice cream or Tokay, the result would have been the same. We were not always so. We shouted in wonder at the Atlantic Cable, and flocked to see the Great Eastern. Now we might lay a cable to the moon or build a Great Western a mile long, and the only question would be, ‘‘ Will it pay?” Is there any- thing that could or would astonish us / Ten years from date when we shoot the mails to Queenstown through a pneumatic tube in five minutes, will anyone pause to won- der? Would a flying machine astonish us ! Tasmania. While some of us have been uttering words of warning lest the immigrants now arriying by thousands at our shores should prove something more than a God-send, the people of Tasmania have been crying out in envious indignation at our monopoly of all the mother country’s surplus labor. Our fellow-colonists in that distant portion of the Queen’s dominions cannot understand why a perfect garden, as they consider Tasmania, should be unoccupied to a great extent while hundreds of families are being sent out to settle in Canada. They contend that Tasmania thus requires to be known to be appreciated, that there is no more fertile colony in the Empire, and that no industrious man need be at a loss for a living while he his Tasmania to go to. The press of the country has called upon the Government to take the necessary steps to induce the immigration of British VOL. 22.—NO. 142. Kate Fox, the Original Spirit Rapper, SEEKING SPIRITUAL OTHER CONSOLATION. A New York despatch reports that Mrs. : Kate Fox Jenckin, aged 59, of No. 158 East 84th street, was arraigned in the Harlem Police Court on the 4th inst., charged by an agent of the society fur the prevention of crueity to children, with fail- ing totake proper care of her two sons, aged 13 and Lz. Mrs. Jenckin is one of the Fox sisters, the original spirit rappers who commenced their career in Rochester 30 years ago, and who afterwards travelled over the world astonishing all who attended their seances. Mrs. who has been dead for soine years, was an eminent English barrister. Of late Mrs. Jenckin is said to have been given to in- temperate habits, and her chidren have suffered. She was held in $300 bail to Jenckin’s 1 usband, janswer, and the children were committed to the Juvenile Asylum. Mrs. Jeackin said to a reporter that she has not lost her powers, although her poverty and misfor- tunes had interfered with their She said Luther B. Marsh had called upon her frequently for consolation since Mrs. Diss DeBar’s incarceration in the Tombs, but by tne advice of her counsel she had refused to see him. The once vivacious and successful spirit rapper is now a total wreck. ai - li Romance and Mystery. exercise, Laiente a Mrs. Lawrence Corcoran,of South Orange, New Jersey. is shortly going to London to endeavor to establish her claim to some £300,000 left asthe residuary estate of a Mrs. Blake. are very romantic. The circumstances of the case In the town of Ballow, County Longford, Ireland, lived Nellie Sheridan. Her beauty captivated General Robert Dudiey Blake, of the English army and member of a great and prominent family. Leaving the army, he took Nellie to Scotland and married her. The Blakes disowned him; and thereupon the General, wealthy in his own right, took his bride to America, and established a large millinery business in Mansfield, ZOhio. any years agu he died while in England, leaving all his possessions to his wite. Mrs. Blake was shunned by the General's family, and some years ago she died child- less at South Kensington. Mr. Robert Gun, of 6, Prince of Weles Road, Kentish Town, an agent concerned concerned in the case, informs us that she also died in- testate. Her wealth would therefore go to her nearest relatives. But the difficulty occurred as to whom her relatives were, for although she lived at Ballow it was by no means certain that she was born there. The registration books all over the United Kingdom have been searched in vain for any record of her birth, while inquires on a large scale have also been made in foreign parts. Some of her acquaintances allege that she was born at sea, but her maiden name of Sheridan seems to indicate that she was of Irish birth. It was only about half a century ago that the compul- sory registration law came int eration, and this may account for the apparent non- registration. Mrs. Lawrence Corcoran, however, al- leges that she was a first cousin of Mrs. Blake, and that she can prove it. She says her maiden name was Feeney, and that her native place was Adgerton, County Longford. Two years ago she and her hus- band were informed that she was heiress to alargesum. The Corcorans were in very poor circumstances, and their friends re- garded the matter as a huge joke, but the husband converted much Ol iis ineagre possessions into cash, and accompanied his wife to Matawan, where detailed rima- tion was obtained which the Corcorans think will establise their claim. ~<a o—-- Mares Defense Against Woives. When in the Asturias, says a correspon- dent in Nature, in 1885, I was told ofa very curious case of ani nal instinct, which Woly are by way be worth recording. no means :nfrequent in the Asturias, and sent farmers and laborers. The Scotch crofters are especially invited. Not many years ago we made a similar complaint when the tide of immigration was passing our own doors. It took many years to convince the people of the Uuited Kingdom that Canada offered advantages tothe settler quite equal to those of the Uuitec States. —__»__ -§- —> oo Your Destiny. According to almost all the charts gotten up by the astrologists, what may be expect- ed of girls born in different months is about as follows : If in January, a prudent housewife, given to melancholy, but good tempered. If in February, a human and affectionate wife and tender mother. If in March, a frivolous chatter-box, some- what given to quarrelling. If in April, inconstant, not very intelligent but likely to be good-looking. If in May, handsome, amiable and be likely to be happy... If in June, impetuous, will marry early and be frivolous. If in July, passably handsome, but with a sulky temper. If in August, amiable and practical and likely to marry rich. If in September, discreet, affable and much liked. It in October, pretty and eoquettish, and i to be unhappy. wt Sippenher “Therel, kind and of a wild disposition. novelty and extravagant. —— i Mim Wiuinpow SHADES, American window shades and shade cloth now oe, If in December, well proportioned, fond of &c.—Our new stock .of open, and is, without doubt, the finest lot ever shown im the city ; Hartshorn spring Pint rollers 20 cents each, — Mark Wright «& maQ 3i oftenattack the young foals which are up to past fe with the mares in the mountains, ‘The danger experienced seems to have begotten a precautionary instinct of a very intelligent kind. It is said that, the mares and foals on analarm of wolves, congregate for mutu i] protec tion and com- mon defense. The mares form themselves into a sort of cordon, heads outwards, sur- rounding a space inclosing the young foals, and are ready for attacking with their fore- feet the wolves on their approach. My informant gave mea graph unt of such an attack, of which he was an eye- | witness for nearly an hour, and described lto me how the wolves circled round and iround the defenders, first at some distance, Ithen gradually approaching neare: ind inearer, seeking an opening into the in- | closure, till at last they came wit! — | ing distance, and he saw vue woil role lover dead by a blow trom tl efoot of lone of the mares. | The forefoot is not commonly used for | defense by an equine Species ; but it is | obvious that the more powerful hind leg 'blow would ‘be of little service against the spring ofa wolf irom behind, with sul the dirceting eye to guide the stroke. What a ‘long experience niust this mutual protec- tion have been the result of! We can scarcely understand it, withcut councils of war having been held, the danger dis- cussed, and signals for concerted action ar- ranged; but now all this instinct may merely be the inheritance of the experience of former generations. er CurILpRren’s CARRIA! } to-day (wea Boston boat a se ; ili- dren’s carriages; spien \ M wk W right & Co a 9 3i ,PPLLE, Rhubarb, Oranges, and Lemons, by poat to-day at WV. i. Carters.