ve DoLuars a YRAk. NEW SERLES. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, JULY = = rece = ~ ? 1884, SINGLE CoPIEs Two CrEnTs. VOL 15.---NO, 39. CARAS’ MARBLE HOGS. \j R. CHARLES CAIRNS, in returning aVE thanks to the public for the liberal patronage extended to him, begs leave to in- form his old customers and the public general- ly, that he has taken into partnership Mr. Malcolm McLean, and that hereafter the | business will be carried on under the title of = | CAIRNS & CO, | ® ¥ ‘ + ‘ux DAILY KXAMINER is issued every evening, by n Daal ’ sahing fhe Examiner Publishing Qc. From their office, corner of Water and Creat Ge Streets, Charlottetown, Veince Edward Island. ‘ F SUBSCRIPTION 3 $2 50 l U #- Advertising at most moderate rates. may be made for monthly, ments, ‘ppl naif-year cation. ALMANAC FOS JULY, 1864. Ful : ‘ New Mo DAY OF WEEK iuesday Wednesday Tharsday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday i uesday § Wednesday .0 Thursday Li| Friday 12' Saturday 13 Sanday 14 Mouday 15, Tuesday 16 We inesday 17, Tharsday 18| Friday 19| Saturday 20 Sunday 2i, Monday 22\ Tuesday 23) Wednesday 24' Thursday “5 Friday 2s Saturday 27 Sunday 25| Monday 29; Tuesday 30, Wednesday 31| Tharsday %S tO ws ce oF ON Ss foon, 8th day, 5h. iast Quarter loth day, 5h. 26.3m., p. m. m 22nd day, Sh, 41.6m., a. m. first Quarter, 29th day, 5h. 48.8m., p. m, ' CHANGES, 57.8m., a. m, Sun ‘San |Moon|High ! Days rises sets | rises | water | len’h, | Marble & Stone Gutters, ly or yearly advertis--| | They have on hand a fine stock of Monu- |ments, Tablets and Headstones, in Italian and | American Marble. They are of the latest de- | | signs, and at prices to suit all, ' | | | h m th m} aft’n'morn; h m 41717 43} 1 40} 4 35/15 31) is} 4s! 2 39| 5 44| 30) 19] 48| 3 36, 6 53129! 20; 43) 4 33) 7 Sl 28 90 47'5 271839 27 21} 47} 6 16| 9 22) 26 a2! 4717 210 1) 2% 23; 46) 7 33\10 38 24 23, 146; 8 20/11 14, 23 24; 46) 8 S3j11 49' 22 25} 45] 9 24laft 24) 20 26°. 4419 53' 1 Of 18 28; 44:10 22 139 16 2 43,10 3 223) 15 29} 43'11 25 3 15) 3 30, 42:11 59 427! 12 31; 4i'morn 5 49 10 32} 40043 716) 8 33! 391 133 824) 6 34, 33,231); 919 4 35) 37| 3 35/10 9, 2 36| 36! 4 44/10 53 0 37! 35) 5 56,11 28'14 58 38' 34/7 Gimorn| 56 39, 33! 8 15) 012) 54 40} 32) 9 20; 041) 52 42; 31,10 25} 1 26] 49 43} 30/11 27,2 6° 47 44; 28 aft29/ 250, 44 45| 27| 1 27| 344) 42 46} 26| 2 23| 4 48 40 THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE. (Charlottetown Time.) Gorse . Charl. ...u0wn Hunter River Kensington . a 2. A.M. 647 91% 747 ..8 42 Sesiniiiiiiie ) arrive. 1.907 1257 veer tenant... cs) 927 232 Port Hill ee 4 15 Alberton 1206 6.87 ctsceccdnticiebsceeee CO FROM WEST rm Ae, Tignish 202 647 Alberton . .-2 iG Port Hill. ~eocue ae aeee inttn | Sue apes as EG “> { depart......542 122 PIN sd. cSedoocecsis 607 209 ee ee. 7182 33 Charlottetown .........<:- 802 507 GOING EAST, | * io dak o'n sc wees e eh OF } ° K Mount Stewart, PONE cides 5 23 } depart........ 5 27 St. Peter's be cediveveweee Souris, sae Mount Stewart.... 5 32 Cardigan ee ee 6 29 IS So cus gba cae shes 6 47 FROM EAST, A. M. Souris 6 47 St. Peter s ite 7 52 Mount Stewart, | OIE oo os woes 8 42 : ; es \ depart di oe eer 8 47 Charlottetown. cha Boke pane Georgetown ..... pdcsie oe cese oe I 1s 44> ninpmet See aie 7 45 aS ai atin oe 8 42 6 57 7 30 8 47 10 07 - 7 02 8 37 9 02 10 20 Pr. Me 12 02 A. M. 9 07 10 22 10 47 — ~~] ore WaIHIOIe bo mowrwee wmItsits © Ce AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 100 Columns and 100 Engravings in each issue, 45rd YEAR. $1.56 A VEAR. Send three 2c. stamps for Sample Copy (English or German) of the Oldest and Gest Agricultural Journal in the World. ORANGE JUDD CO. DAVID W. JUDD, Pres. 751 Broadway, New York. ie ee ee ee MONCTON Sash and Door Factory. AAR. P. LEA, in returning thanks to the) 4 public for the liberal patrenageextended to him while in business in Charlottetown, begs leave to inform his old customers and the public generally, that he, in company with Mr. William Rogers, has appointed Messrs. B. Williams & Co, Lumber and Coal Dealers, Pownal Wharf, Charlottetown, our agents, who will keep coustantly on hand a full supply of Moald- ings, Window Sashes, Doors, etc., at LOWEST CASH PRICES. All orders entrusted to them will receive! . prompt attention. LEA & ROGERS, Moncton, Sept. 5, 1883.—2aw wly N. B. C. CAIRNS. | M. McLEAN. | Ch'town, June 30, 1884—pres ne pat s j wp LOBSTERS LUD. WURZBURGE, PQ. BOX 543, HALIFAX, WV. §. (OFFICE PICKFORD & BLACK’S WHARF) Exporter of Lobsters Samples and quotations solicited. Cash advanced on consignments, June 23—tl aug 31 pd W. WHEATLEY, Wreattky & Sons, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. JsLAnp) Commission Merchant, 269 BARRINGTON STREET, Rania. 3. 2B. s®@ Special attention given to the sale of | P, E. Island produce. April 24, 1884. ee N. J. CAMPBELL, (Successor to Campbei!l & Rayden) Anctiouser and Commission Merchant, SHIP BROKER, AND ENSURANCE AGERXT, COR. OF QUEEN AND WATER STS., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. (UF ' Importer and Jobber of Choice Groceries and Spices. General Agent for P. E. Island of the British Empire Mutnal Life Assurance Com- pany, of London, England : Special attention given to Auction Sales of Lumber, Coal, Fish, Apples and other Fruit, teal Estate, Household Furniture, Bankrupt and other Stocks, and all kinds of Merchan- dise. Correspondence and Consiguments solicited. Returns promptly made, March 28, 1854. WeLeod, Morsou & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS —AND— ATTORNEYS- AT -LAW. Gfice in Old Bank, (UP STAIRS). Ch’town, Feb. 21, 1884. SULLIVAN & MAGNEILL, ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, Ke. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. 6a Money to Loan, W. W, Suuuivay, Q. C. | Casstaa B. Maonnitn Jan. 16, 83. Prince Edward Island Hospital, Dr. Hobkirk, Consulting Physician. Dr, Taylor, Dr, Dawson, Dr, Johnson, Dr, MacKay. Dr. Beer, Dr. Warburton, —— Matron - Mrs. Hannah Robinson. Applications for admission may be made to the Visiting Pbysician or Matron, at the Hospital, daily (Sundays excepted), between ten and eleven, #, m.,or by correspondence | with any member of the medical Board, or the at ‘ wThe. friends of patients will be admitted | from two to four, p.m, every day (except! | | D. R. MACLENNAN, Sunday). tid The general visiting day for persons wish- | to see the institution is Thursday of) ing each week, from two to four o'clock, p. m, Secretary of Trustees. April 24—eod wkly MEDICAL BOARD: | TURNIP SEED! — Guest ae: —€ mane CHOICE VARIZTIES —AT— eer & Goff's soll) enenloenapccditmasteliin Garter’s Imperiai, Champion, wkirvineg’s, Hing of Swede, Sutton’s Norfolk, ' WELOLeSALE & PRBDATSB. BEER & GOFF. — Ch’town, June 14—Yaw CLETHING SALE! DURING JUNE. ommeerenter(), Tl. Bb. PROWS& Will give wonderful bargains in READYMADE CLOTHING Just look at his prices: TWEED SUITS, FROM $4,75 UP, TWEED SUITS (ALL WOOL), FROM $7.50, ALL WOOL WORSTED, $8.25. If low prices will sell the Goods, he is bound to sell. Men’s Felt Hats, in Great Variety, Very Low. L. E. PROWSE, sign of the Big Hat, 74 Queen Street. Ch’town, June 12, 1884.—eod wkly SHIPMENTS OF NEW GOODS ! W. & A. BROWN & CO. AVE just opened a further large shipment of Fashionable Summer Goods, which will be sold out with the other stock at very low prices. Do not fail to inspect these Goods if you want to save money. A lot of BALES and CASES daily expected from London. Remember the place : DesBrisay’s Building, Next Doorto Beer & Goff's, Opposite the Market House. (MRS. YOUNG’S MILLINERY ROOMS UP STAIRS.) W.& A. BROWN & CO. Ch’town, June 17, 1884.--dy wkly Se ES Attention Ye Who Are In Doubt. Let Experience be Judge,—b ymparison and Purse the Jury, 0 MARK WRIGHT S CO., Because of the excellent facilities they possess, have been able to reduce the price of all goods manufactured by them, and by buying their raw material in the best markets, for cash, are prepared to give the purchasing public THE BEST VALUE IN THE PROVINGE. They are selling from thirty to fifty per cent. below prices asked some time ago in the same establishment. Factory, Ofiice and Showroom—King Square, Kent Street. Charloteeto i, “iay 27, 1884—2aw wkly The Bank Returns. (Montreal Witness. ) troubles of the Federal Bank. tion as they stood on the 3lst May. cording to this statement the paid-up capital of the bank on that date was $2, 952,680, and the bank was besides credited with a reserve fund of $1,500,000. On Monday last an official of the bank stated that the reserve had been all lost, though he believed the capital of the bank to be almost intact. Is it possible that the bank lost the amount of its whole Rest of a mil- lion anda half inamonth? The question can only be answered in one way: The bank had no such Rest. Itis now report- ed, whether on authority or not, certainly without contradiction, that the capital of the bank is to be reduced one-half. The fact probably is that the capital of the bank has been actually so reduced, that helf the capital, if a capital of three million ever existed, which is more than doubtful, has been lost as well as the so-called Rest Had the true inwardness of the affairs of the bank been all along known to a dis- interested person who, instead of the manager, had been called upon to make the returns to the Government, how long ago would the return of the Rest have dis- appeared and the capital been reduced! If capitals and rests are mere terms which stand for no actuality, thenthey are mis- leading to the shareholders and to the public, and should be wiped out of the returns altogether. Examinations of the affairs of banks which have suspended have shown time and again that the returns as to discounts, loans, etc., and their character have been totally misleading and always, of course, misleading in the direction of an overestimate of the strength of the banks. The fact is that unless the managers and directors of banks can be relied upon to furnish lionest returns, this system of guarding against trouble is nothing but a snare, and so it has proved in case after case. The returns in no case have furnish- ed more thana hint to the most watchful and experienced men of impending troubles. The returns are not honest in the very cases where the usefulness of the whole statement depended upon their honesty. The Government, in view of the circum- stances, willin all probability consider the advisability of taking other means of in- forming itself of the true condition of affairs | oF the banks. A system of Government inspection is always the resort in such cases. This is the system which obtains in the United States. It has not proved a very great success and bankers, of course, abhor it. Nevertheless it is the best that has yet been devised. Nothing can be less useful than the present system which will have to go. The inspection system if estab- lished should be one of central officers of marked ability, not of numerous local officials who would be capable of doing much harm and little good. ~-~_-s. me Not Growing Richer this Year. Ii is very evident that our rich men are not as rich to-day as they were a short time ago. The quotation for Union Pacific, yes- terday, 31, means a shrinkage in that one stock alone of $50,000,000 in a compara- tively brief space of time. Within four months the stocks thrown on the markets as ‘‘the Vanderbilts,” have undergone a shrinkage of $50,000,000. ‘‘The Goulds’ have shrunk $60,000,000 and ‘‘the Huant- tingtons’ $20,000,000 in the same time. When through the decreased value of ee- curities, $400,000,000 is wiped out of exist- ance as it were, when New York Central depreciates $18,000,000, Western Union $20, - 000,000, Union Pacific, $27,000,000, Centeral Pacific, $17,000,000 and Lake Shore, $12,000,000 in a few months, we may well say ‘‘the rich men are not as rich as they were.” Vander- bilt’s fortune alone is $40,000,000 less than it was afew months ago. Will any tears be shed over the collapse of the fat money- bags! Will many sincere mourners follow the shrunken millionaires to the grave ? Not when it is remembered that the greed and unscrupulousness of the money kings have brought about the shrinkage. Not when it is remembered that stock watering, blind pools, gambling, corners and the un- scrupulous use of dishonestly accumulated capital lie at the bottom of the disasters of the present dead and rotten market. Of course there will be pity for the innocent victims who are swollowed up in the shrink- age. But no one will weep for the money | bags. Indeed there will be a feeling of thankfulness if the power of the million- aire monopolists and gamblegs to purchase elections, corrupt administrations, courts and congresses and tread on the necks of the people should be effectually and per- manently destroyed.—N. Y. World. -_——-——_—_—. >> eo-__- -——- Farm Notes. Sheep droppings, compressed into solid cakes about two inches thick, are now pre- pared for florists’ use. It is claimed that while it promotes growth in an extracrdin- ary degree it will not injure plants, even if used immoderately, and that the liquid from it does not form crusts and shelter for insects on the surface of the pots. A bag of 100 pounds is $3, and the same in powder $3.50. According to the best evidence obtainable on the subject there is more profit to the !dairyman in medium and small cattle than) Boards of Agriculture, Those who are now advo-| and in larger ones. The ugly fact that the monthly returns | furnished the Government cannot be relied England, showed that an acre of rich pes- upon has once more been forced upon the | ture in Leicestershire produced 500 pounds attention of the public and of the Govern-/| of increase in the weight of fatting oxen in ment by the circumstances attending the|six months’ grazing. Only two pounds of clover hay, 1,600 pounds of corn or three weeks ago the late manager of the! or oil cake, and 10,000 pounds of Swedes to bank prepared a statement purporting to produce the same increase. give the financial features of the institu-| was considered equal in value to three and Ac-|ahalf tons of English hay. i Cuts from the careass of large animals cost no more in market than cuta from small ones. An experiment made by Dr. Laws, cf lt required 3,500 This fodder ) Neither soil nor climate in this country is favorable for the maintenance of such pastures here. A New York farmer, who was in the habit of rejecting the grains of corn that grow on the tip of the cobs, planted a con- siderable quantity of them in a field devoted to beets for the purpose of marking the rows. It was his intention to pull up the corn-stalks when the beets required the ground. The corn came up, but the beets did not. The stalks of corn being abcut two feet apart were therefore allowed to grow. They produced a much larger mount of grain than the stalks grown from kernels taken from the middle of the ear. The death of Ira S. Todd, a farmer in Tolland, Conn., from glanders, was recent- jly reported. Todd purchased a horse from a travelling trader, and essayed treatment of the animal for glanders by blowing smoke into his nostrils, and other ways, by which he came in close contact with the beast. A short time after he had symp- toms resembling those of pneumonia, and finatly had blotches and gatherings on his body and an excessive nasal discharge Physicians pronounced it glanders, and their treatment was ineffectual, as the dis- ease was considerably advanced before they were called. A local veterinary surgeon says several such cases have occurred in Connecticut. Angra Pequena. To a South African delegation that waited upon him some weeks ago with regard to the German inquiries as to Angra Pequena, Lord Derby said he had not the smallest apprehension of the question between the two Governments leading to any unpleas- antness, The place had never been claimed as British territory, but there was an understanding that the British had a right to exclude foreign powers from the coast up to the Portuguese territory. The Ger- man Government, as he understood, had merely made inquiries as to the nature of England’s claims, but had not disputed them. The former was anxious to provide security for German merchants trading at that point, and thought that if England would not undertake the responsibility, the German government might be permitted to do so. Some months ago jt had been pro- posed to Cape Colony by the Colonial Office to take over Angra Pequenaand assume the maintenance of it. But no decision had been arrived at, as he had lately telegraph- ed to Cape Colony himself on the subject. It happened just then that there was a ministerial crisis and the authorities had asked for a little time to make up their minds. Lord Derby laid stress on the notion that Germany was not a colonizing power and had no intention to occupy new possessions in distant parts of the world. - _- How to Become an Idiot. The New York Herald in a recent article on the tobacco curse says that if we’would encourage idiocy in the United States, all we have to do is to continue the present consumption of tobacco, It adds: ‘*What sight is more common than half a dozen boys, lads and young men smoking cigar- ettes an the platform of a bob-tail car! And what more trying to one’s nerves than the filthy odors they puff into the car and over the other passengers! Ten years of this almost universal habit have left their mark in the sunken eyes, the pallid face, the weak nerves and the flabby muscles of these so-called men. That many of them find no real enjoyment in the practice is shown by their habit of spitting. Aside from the vulgarity and nastiness of this muscular exercise is the detriment it does the general system. No man—certainly no growing boy—-can expectorate constantly without injuring himself. Bootblacks, messenger boys, school children, clerks, smoke and spit, smoke and spit, as together in a great and multitudinous army they move aiong toward idiocy and imbelicity. What a cheerful prospect it is, to be sure '”’ -<[—>P- Horsford’s Acid Phosphate BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, imitations and counterfeits have again ap- peared. Be sure that the word ‘‘Horsford’s”’ is on the wrapper. None are genuine without it. A bill has been introduced into the Eng- lish Parliament, providing that some 20 years to come any one found grubbing up a fern, primrose, violet, or in fact, any of the indigenous blossoming plants, shall be subject to fine and imprisonment. There is danger that greed may exterminate cohice wild flowers. MipDLE aged men often lack vigor, this can be restored by that great brain and nerve food known as Mack’s Magnetic Medicine. Sold in Charlottetown at Apothecaries Hall. Read the advertisement in another column of to- day’s paper. [july7 lw wkly ee The estimates of the wheat crop in the United States for the current year have just been published. Reports from the Secretaries of State, Statistical agents put down the proba- cating the genera] purpose cow, claim that | ble yield of spring wheat at 141,000,000 she must be large in order to paying beef. For our part we cannot see why a large steer is any more profitable than a small one. make good) bushels, that of fall 375,000,000 bushels. Lord Granville has received a despatch Each animal sells ses, PBs General Gordon, in which the latter the pound anit eats atcording to his size, | says hie is safe. = 5 BE BRR TOE a da Rad Pn ieee’ coe camel EE ee inate tee en en eres ~ - y= re 4 = ee 4) ; i