Jotices. — — ‘ Five Dottans « Year NEW SERLES, Tus Datty EXAMINER is ISSUED EVERY EVENING, By tae EXaMINeR Posiisaine Company, FROM THEIR Orrick, CORNER OF WATER aND GREAT GRORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. QUEEN SQUARE. KATES oF SUBSCRIPTION: Six Months, . : . $2 50 Three Months, - . . lL 26 em menor, Oi aetna One Moath, 0 50 ® Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, qrarteriy, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. N the month of May W. & A. BROWN & CO. opened about 148 CASES” DRY GOODS, from which they are still supplying largely to the WHOLE- SALE ‘and RETAIL: TRADE at very close prices. ALMANAC FOR SEPTEMBER, 1882. MOON 8 CHANGES, Third Quarter 4th day, 9h. l4m,, a, m.,S. W. New Moon 12th day, 8h. 46m, a. m., S. E. First Quarter, 20th day, 9h. 15m. a. m., N.E. {below horizon. ) Every Department of their Establishment is Kept Replenished e Benevolent Irish | Patrick’s Hall, on | 8 o'clock, p- m.- | if | Fal) Moon, 27th day, th. 5im., a m., S. W BY WEEKLY STEAMERS. oe : anal : * D rey Sun {Sun |Moon|High | Days 7 . * ‘ Ah Pye M BOs OF Was rises |sets | rises | water |len’h. 100 Chests of Superior ¢ OnSCu i Ci ” 1D * Fe - e abe 8 oes ey ee ae ee IN STOCK AT VERY LOW PRICES. b, i PAY j | @ a} [ 1! Friday ‘5 2616 34] 8 23) O 54! ii . * ge ) 5 26 , fy ng - euralgia, Sciatiec, Lumbago 2' Saturday 27] 32/9 511 40 5O7* 2 J YQ ¢ 4xnected. g!a, , g0, ae LS ae, 6072 -GR ATN BAGS | Dailv Expected:| gactachs” Sineness of the Chost, 4, Monday 29; 28)10 44/ 3 32] Charlottetown, July 26, 1882. Cout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swe/!- STuesday | 31) 2611 43) 4 45 | ings and Sprains, Burns and 6) W ednesday 32 >| morn} 6 10) ° Scalds, General Bodily 7' Thursday $ 33; 22) 0 43) 7 21) ef m4 19 Pain 8| Friday 34] 20' 1 44) 8 16) oe % Qjsaturday | 36, 18) 2 45) 8 59 — Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosied ean ia ; Sie tI 12 48 a Feot and Ears, and aii other Monday 38 4 47/10 10) | Pains and Aches. 12 Tuesday 49) 2,9 45} 10 41! <n Saas aoe No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacons Orn. 13, Wednesday 4t; it) 6 4711 i2 : i i zi d " a Bales aoe, simple. and cheap Externe) T aw » "7 ” 4! " . 1 . r . Ny ‘ . > Lp pes ° i i y 1 ative’ ore} a s ai a PSHE proprietor of this Establishment. owing to the increamtd Fi PEM hte tints tet cena sgl Setarhap’ | 48k Sa! Baal a 3b demand for his Goods, has added new facilities to his) with paimora have cheap and positive proot of ite . ; % . < i - ‘ . 4 a +a. ag, i s 17 Sunday | 46) 3/10 48, 0 4912 25 Bakery, consisting of the latest and most improved machinery,} _ Ditestions in Eleven Languages. 18| Monday 47| itt 46| 1 27) t i/and § . aa aréattetaiuvly the as ne ) S0LD BY ALL DEUGGISTS AND DEALLTS 19 Tuesday =| 45,5 59/aft 40. 2 12) | etc,, and 18 Now preps pps) © tre IN MEDICINE. 20; W ednesday Ww 5! 1 32).3 2} } VOGELER & COo., 21) Thursday 51 55; 2 17) 4 14; e ° , b Baltimore, Md., U. 83. As inc” | @ 83323 | Hand Bread, Plain and Fancy Biscuits, &e, | oes 93'Saturday | 63| 51| 3 3317 3! ’ : 7 %: 0 ‘ds 24/Sunday | 55| 49| 4 6 8 10,12 04 > . ae : ae s a0 Rew d . Sbssaee> A ek bel kori oul...) AT THE SHORTEST NOTICE. 1s tled spieakteliees ueaday 57 | & 7) 9 Af is 4f Vy ifl pay ove réward for any case 27; Wednesday | 59! 43' 5 41,10 32 \ of laver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick 28\Thursday {6 0} 41| 6 17/11 14) ————:0; Headaclie,. :ndigestion, Constipation or Cos- 29) F. iday 1 39; 6 58)11 | nrenge we Gannotcure with West's Vegetable 30|SaturJay (6 35 37| 7 44 aft 37 ‘1000 lbs. CHOICH CON FECTIO NERY |e Pills, when the directions are strict] To arrive per Steamship. ‘‘ Miramichi,” from Montreat. L. ARTHUR & CO, General Commission Merchants Particular attention given to the sale | of Island produce. 121 Atlantic Avenue & 20 Essex Avenues’... soso BOSTON, MASS. ——— — May 27, 1882—wkly oe Wee Orders by mail promptly exegutedy nn en J QUIRK, Prince Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Islaud ee —- wae Beautiful Summer Resort. —-—-— 0:0 | i } complied with. They are purely Vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Sugar Coated. Large boxes, containing 30 Pills, 25 cents. For sale by all Mruggists.. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. -C. WEST & receipt of a 3 cent-stamp. Sold by FRaSER & RE! DIN, and all Druggists, augl4—dy & wky ly. Tickets to all Points WEST AND NORTH WEST, Q@ver the Intercolonial and Bank of Nova Scotia. srusieowe THE SEASIDE HOTEL, Paid Up Capital . . $1,000,000 Reserve Fund .. . See) (UNDER ViCE-RBEGAL PATRONAGE), | An Agency of this Bank will be opened o : ‘ Moulay nxt Idk iat, ie the ality SwUStLGO Beach, - = P. B. Island. lately occupied by the Bank of Prince Kuward Island, under the management of the under. | aenptnennymaceemettit stitiaiettiban signed. : : ’ . Deposits will be received on interest, and Fy HIS beautifully-situated and well-known establistgnent will be opened trom July Ist on current account. till September 10th, for the accommodation of Guests and Visitors. e Drafts granted on the varieus Agencies and tA i ES—$1.75 per day ; $10 per week ; $32 per month. correspondents of the Bank. ! TO BEACU THE HOTEL—Coach will leave Charlottetown every Wednesday and Sterling and other Exchange bought and Saturday evening, calling fer Guests; returning every Thursday and Munday morning, at sold, aad yeneral banking business transacted. 9 o’cloch,a m. Also, arrangements bave been made with Mr. Bagnall to meet trains from D. C. CHALMERS, alt points at Hunter River, tor passengers to Seaside, seven miles. Ch’towa, June 17, 1S52—tf Agent, | Trains leave Charlotietown for Hupter River at 6.45, 9.20, 4. m., and 4.20 p. m. ninditintietanttnnmenines wie ssi ts « — Runter River fer Charlottetown, 9 #. m., 2.1) and 7 p m., i ‘ * nur I “ “ Hunter Ri vet to Summerside 7.45, 11.10 @, m., and 5.42 p. m. INSURANCE OFFICE, JOHN NEWSON & CO., | Addr egs, June 24, 12 UHABLOTTETOWN Queen Insurance Company, ———_ —___-___ OF ENGLAND. BO a a a ’ ‘ fs CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. RD e Fre eB rR Ww Ck, City of Lendon Fire Insur- MERCHANT TAILOR, ance Company. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. Is now offering Cash Buyers the BEST VALUE that can be had in the market, in Broadcloth, Worsted, Scotch and Canadian Tweed Suits. — i | Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses tettled promptly and equitably. F, KENNEDY, General Agent. Office—South Side, Queen Square, Ch’town, Feb. 3 1892. W. C. BISHOP, SE IPE LING FORWARDING AGENT, Marine Insurance Broker, —AND— : ’ ' A magnificent range of GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, = AM ERICAN WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS Collars, Ties, Underclothing, English and American Hats. | General Commission Agent, i BEDFORD ROW, BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. 8. | Gur Readymade Clothing is Manufactured on the Premises, fashionably cut, well sewed, and having good trimmings, Pr. 0. PARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Gooda, aud collection of Custom Lrawtacks thereon. Hulia, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first-class offices at most favorable rates, Consignments of Produce soliciied, and prompt returns guaranteed, Correspondence solicited and answered promptly, Nov, 14, 1881—iyr Will be sold as Cheap as Imported, We invite you"to inspect our Goods. Charlottetown, May 22,’82 0 ae 72 Quéen Street. | $10 Grand Trunk Railways, For sale at Post Office at Pictou Landing by May 2, 1882, GOLD ; b Axis, MEDAL, 1878. a , F —_ + , - ys x Siler ae reste ja ft war ha: eke t] JOSEPH GILLOTT’S STEEL PENS. BY ALL DEALERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD. For Sale or to be Let. pgered by, JO Gre al ie Coa SS. . . w > . 5 “This is true Liberty, when Freeborn Men having to advise the Public, may spea& free.” —Evxirwrs. The . genuine ; mept surve TMNT. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 2, 1882 BRITISH: WAREHOUSE. Bank Notes ‘vs. Gold Coins. | { The bankers of England have lately investigated the relative cost in the wear and tear of gold coins:as compared with that of bank notes, and have found that it is largely in favour of the coin. The ‘manufacture of ove million sovereigns, , will cost about a cent apiece or $10,000, and in fifteen years they will lose 4 per ‘cent. or about $25,000, and become too Hight for further use, thas making a total expense of $35,000 in fifteen years. It ‘is estimated that the cost of the paper ,and printing ot one million pound notes jwill be 4c. apiece or $40,000 to com- ‘mence with, and during fifteen years they will have to be replaced at least three times, or with constant use six times, thus an outlay of $160,000 or per haps $280,000 for the same period of time that one milliou sovereigns would jremain in circulation. Particulars of a Noted Bank Robbery Case. °*° A detective in Chicago who has been working the Kewanee Bank robbery case ‘says Cashier Pratt made a full confes- sion, and took him to a spot ia his father’s barn yard where he had buried $6 000 ,jn gold, taken by him the day before the ‘robbery. Prat: lays the blame upon |Dr. Scott, who led him astray and {taught him to play cards. Pratt is a son of the Kewanee postmaster, and is a teacher ina Sanday School. It seems now that forged checks to the amount of $1,500 have been paid by him. The ‘allegation is that Scott procured the ‘checks, Pratt forged the signatures, and Welch turned them in, taking certificates of deposit in order not to excite suspi- ciou. In addition to the $600 received from Pratt, $300 have been recovered. Dr. Scott has also made a_ confession, He put the blame on Pratt. Our Great Lakes. The following measurements of the great lakes have been taken by Govern s. The greatest length of ‘Lake Soperior is 335 miles; its greatest nthe Ate mpiicsammes depth, feet : evation, 827 feet; area, ei set: square miles. The greatest length of Lake Michigan is 300 miles; its greatest breadth, 108; mean depth, 690 feet elevation, 506 feet, area, 23,000 square miles. The greatest length of Lake Huron is 300 miles; its greatest breath is 60 miles ; mean depth 600 feet ; cleva- tion, 274 feet ; area, 20.000 square miles. | The greatest length of Lake Erie is 250 imiles; its greatest breadth is 80 miles; ; i its mean depth is 84 feet ; elevation, 261 The ‘greatest length of Luke Ontario is 180 mi'es; its greatest breadth is 65 miles ; its mean depth is 500 feet; elevation, 261 feet ; area, 6,000 square miles. The total of all five is 1,265 miles, coveriag ‘an area of upwards of 135,000 square niles. ee Utilizing Crows. A Penusylvania farmer has turned the crows to good account. He makes them allies in bis work. Writing to the ‘American Agriculturist he says :—‘‘For the past five seasons ] have, just before I AVENWOOD, lately the residence of expected my corn up, sowed on the field the Hoa. J. C. Pope, just outside of about a quart of corn te each acre, city limita, containing 31} acres, and beauti- fully situated, to either of the under-igned Trustees. H, J. CUNDALL, L. H. DAVIES. Charlot/etown, Tune 27, 1882—law pat tf Thos - desiring ‘o make money on s:vallang medium investments in. grain, provisions and stoc $20 speculations, can do so by oper- ating on our plan. From May Ist, 1881, to the present date, on in- Srofite ete boon realleen’ Gna ‘ 3 e > WHEAT Paid to investors amounting to several times tie original invest- 0 inent, -till leaviug the original in- vestment making money or pay- able on demand. Explanatory cir- oalere and etemone of cont . want esponsible STOCKS agetits who will report oD crops and introduce the plan. Liberai OGD erie see Rta com rn Merchunts, pioen, Chicago, LL A CURE.GUARANTEED. = Magnetic Medicine! pooy dA10N - MAF Pine For Old and Yonng, Male and Female. Pesitively cures Nervousness in ALL its stages, eak Memory, Loss of Brain Power, Sexual Pros- tration, Night Sweats Supermatorrhaa, Leucorrhea, Barrenness, Seminal Weakness, and General Lose of Power. Tt irs Nervous Waste, Rejuven- ates the Jaded Intellect, Strengthens the Enjeebled Brain and Restores Surprising Tone and Vigor to the Exhausted Generative Organs in either sex. £2 With each order for TWELYE packages, accompanied with five dollars, we wil send our Written Guarantee to refund the money if the treatment does not effecta cure. It is the Cheapest avd Best Medicine in the Market. 43 Full particuiars..iu our pempblet, which we desire to mail free.to any address Mack’s Magnetic Medieice ix sold by D For further particulars apply | aud repeated the operation as often as /pecessary, until the coin was so large that the crows could not pull it up. If ‘the corn is soaked until tender, they ‘prefer picking what they want to eat from the surface rather than to pull the young plants to get it. The cost of the cora thus sown is but a trifle; as a result I] have a great number ot crows almost constantly on my corn-field, and after they have been satisfied with corn, they will still pick up all the insects, grubs ‘and cut-worms they can find, as a degsert. ‘in raising fifty acres of corn since adopt- ‘ing this plau, I have not lost a hun- ‘dred stalks by crows and cut-worms combined.” ep An Indian Sun Dance. At the Science Congress, at Montreal, | Miss Fletcher read a very interesting paper, descriptive of the Indian Sun Dance. In the description occurs the following:—The sacred tree was cut ‘down by women, not touched by the haods, and carried to its destination, ac- ‘companied with great merriment and ceremony. The most remarkable part ‘of the progress is the terrific charge of 4,000 warriors across the plain to purify it. The tree is tow dressed for its functions, properly anointed and set in ists place. The women carpet the ground near the pole with calico, a female child in the midst. A crier proclaims the gifis aud they are distributed, first being thrown over the child. A circle is now ‘@rawu and a brush arbor coustrucied. } gists at BO ets. per box, or G boxes for #8650. orwii The children’s ears are pierced with maited free of postage, ou receipt of the money, by great ceremony, aud vearly 1,000 borses , addressing MACK’S MAGNETIC MEDICINE <Q.,, giveuaway. On the sixth day at noon Windsor, Out.,Cauada the sut-dencers commenced their impos- Sold { ’ Fiell Co., ; i ; Sold pe Pree ede Weld naa ee es’ Jiell Co. ing procession, complete silence being , and " au 18 joforced. The hallowed symbols are ee SINGLE Copies Two CEN’s, rs ¥ VOL 1L---NO. 88, erected by the priests and the sacred tobacco and sweet grass disposed of. Men and women begin to sing, The dancers blow their. whistles aud stemp upon the ground at the same time, con- torting their bodies and scarifying their flesh. The danee continues all night. Oo the» seventh day further cousecra- tious take place, and then the dance con- clades. - ne Foreign Intercourse with Corea. The history of European intercourse with the inhabitants of the little penin- sula in Northeastern China is brief and melancholy. The touching story of the crew of the Dutch vessel wrecked on the Island of Quelpaert in the middle of the sevepteenth century, who were detained among the Coreans for more than thirty years, as told by their *‘ secretary,” will be found in the pages of Pinkerton, and need not be further referred to here, It was not until ‘he treaty of ‘Tien-tsin aad epe ed North Chiva and Manchuria to the zeal of Roman Catholic missionaries that Corea was again visited by Euro- peans. The Jesuit fathers seem to bave made their way there abont 1862-3. We have now only their own accounts of what took place. Their efforts to make converts were, they say, crowned with success for a few years; but in 1865 commenced a persecution unparalleled even in the frightful danals of religious persecution in the East. It is said that 150,000 Coreans, men, women and chil- dreu, lost their lives on this occasion. Of the Frevch priests four alone escaped in disguise, assisted by some of the faithful of their flock. An attempt was made by the French fleet in the China seas totuke vengeaxce for this slaughter, bot it was unsuccessful. Until the his- tory of modern Chiva is studied by our scholars in the native works themselves we cannot correctly ascertain the cause of this persecution. Meanwhile. the student of the history of other Oriental nations who finds analogous events will probably look for analazous canses. The Subsequent “attempts of the Jesuits to eross the Corean frontier, and the suecers that attended them, will be found re- corded iv the annals of the ‘Missions 4 ” Mer. Ridel, who evaded the frontier guards and ebtered the coun- try has left us an account of his adven- tures. He pevetrated Corea, he tells us, in the hope of obtaining the crown of martyrdom, In this he was diseppoint- ed, for he was prompily discovered aud imprisoned, to be released a few months afterwards at the intercession of the goveruments Sof Chiza and Japan. An American naval expedition sent to pun- ish an outrage on a ship which sailed up ove of the Corean river~ met with little more success than its French predecessor. In 1858, a steamer, manned by Ameri- cau aud European filibusters, set out from Shanghai to rob the tombs of the Corean kings, either for the sake of the gold coffius in which Mendez Pinto says they were iaclosed, or because the Jesuits reported that the body of a dead king © coulu be held for almost any ransom. In 1860 Ignatieff, then Russian repre- sentative at Pekin. taking advantage of the Chivese difficulties with Eugland and France, obtained the cession of a vasi tract of Corean territory lying in the Amour region. ee Cor Orr tHe Back Leos or Your Cuairs. —I will tell you a secret worth knowing. A thousand, not worth half as much, have been patented and elevated into a business. It is this: If you cut off the back legs of your chairs, so that the back part of the seat shall be two inches lower than the f ont part, it will greatly relieve the fatigue of sitting and keep your spine in much better shape. The principal fatigue in sitting comes from your sliding forward, and thus straining the ligaments and mus- cle- in the small of the back. The expedi- ent | have advised will obviate this tend- ency, and, as] have suggested, add greatly to the comfort and healthfalness of the sitting posture. The front edge of a chair thould not be more than fifteen inches high for the average man, nor more than four- teen for the average woman, The average chair is now seventeen inches high, for all which no amount of slanting in the seat car. make comfortable. Hor Mixx as a Resrorative.— Milk that is heated to much about 100 degrees Fahr- enheit loses for the time a degree of its sweetness and its densitv; but no one fatigued by over exertion of body and mind, who has ever experienced the reviving in- finence of a hot tumbler of this beverage, heated as hot as it can be sipped, will will- ingly forego a resort to it becanse of its having been rendered somewhat less accept- able to the palate. The promptoess with which its cordial influence is felt is some- what surprising. Some portions of it seem to be digested and appropriated almost immediately; and many who think they need alcoholic stimulants when exhausted by labor of brain or body will find in this simple draught an equivalent that shall he abundantly satisfy ing and more enduring in ite effects. —Phrenol: gical Journal, Hazsev, the cham) ion walker of the world saii to a New York reporter. in the course of conversation : ‘* St. Jacobs Vil ie a wonderful medicine ;I do not know what pedestrians would do without it, for it is their best friends. Arub of St. Jacobs after nering she track Sarr” See she onl se again for rpg ea Pe garage ea a er ss ii as AS al Aa eS i ly MAB 5 Aah & s PE Pe eet B06 0 crm ene a ig AB, ; -y ™ '