‘tare at at a per i k&XMS rive Dottars a YRAR. NEW SERIES, “ fais is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may spea& free,”’—Evuiripss. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1884, SINGLE Copres ‘Two Cents. VOL. 15.---NQ. 46 fuk UDaity KXAMINER is issued every evening, by fhe bxamiuer Publishing Oo. From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. ACES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, : - - $2 50 hiee M itis, ° . - l 25 ne Month, . . : v 50 # A lvertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, qrarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. one oon “ALMANAG FOR JULY, 1984. MOON S CHANGES, Fall Moon, Sth day, 5h. 57.8m., a. m. Last Gaarter 15th day, 5h. 26.3m., p. m., New Woon 22nd day, Sh, 41. 6m., a. m, First Quarter, 29th day, 5h. 48.8m., p. m. D ay oF WEEK. 2U2 |5an | Moon/High | Daye M irises sets | riges water len’h. hm jh m| aft’n morn; h m i Tuesday 4 17\7 48) 1 40) 4 35/15 31 2) Wednesday | 48° 2 39) 5 44 30 3. Thursday 19} 48) 3 36 6 531 2g 4| Friday ‘ 43) 4 33) 751' 2 5 Saturday 20| 47, 5 271839! 27 6/Suaday 21; 47; 6 16) 9 22) 26 j|Monday | 22! 47/7 210 1 25 3! Tuesday 23; 46| 7 33,10 38} 24 9| Wednesday | 23, 46, 8 20j11 14) 23 0/Tharsday | 24) 46) 8 53/11 49! 92 Ll! Friday 25} 45) 9 24)aft24 20 12'Saturday 26' 44,9 53'1 O| 18 13, Sanday 28 44 10 22 139 16 14) Monday 28) 43) 10 53 2 23 1d 15| Taesday 29} 431125 315) 13 16 Wednesday | 30, 42/1159 427! 12 17 Tharsday 31} 41i\/morn 5 49; 10 13 Friday 32) 40,043 7 16 S 19| Satarday 33! 39| 1 33) 8 24 6 20' Sanday 34; 33) 231) 919) 4 21; Monday 35) 37, 3 35,10 9 2 22|Tuesday 36) 36) 4 44/10 53| 0 23| Wednesday 37° 35) 5 56,11 28°14 58 24’ Thursday 38 | 7 Gimorn| 56 *5' Friday 39| 33/815) 012) 54 26 Saturday 40} 32) 9 20) O 41 52 27 |Sunday 42, 31)10 25] 1 26 49 25| Monday 43; 30)11 27 2 6 47 29) Tuesday 44) 28 aft29 250, 44 20| Wednesday | 45} 27} 1 27) 344) 42 $1| Thursday 46; 26| 2 23; 4 48; 40 THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE. (Charlottetown Time.) GOING West, is ak aw Baers 2. cut@W 2. ccc 8 828 457 Hunter River ...747 1055 647 ry M Kensington ........ ae 8 42 aa 7 05 . hawsive..: <3 9 07 a wes MP } depart...... 927 2 4 13) NO BI ik a... coves 1030 4 MONE Bas 6k c. cose 1205 657 Tignishh 6.4... 0. nee? 1242 747 FROM WEST. a se sw ee ee gs cho oid cae 202 647 Acie sehen ca dk all 240 757 SD HRUEEL 0 « écb ck oc 415 10%5 . i 617 1207 Summerside, | depert......542 122 657 Peitnetee .cccccsttcnsuedn «8 7 30 meee - OOS... ccceuadec 702 325 847 Charlottetown ............ 802 507 1007 GOING EAST, i. ae ae 417 ‘ = E MUBEUO cs ccnnnes § 22 Mount Stewart, § depart........ 527 902 ey ss ee caw ae eae 617 1020 P. M. MR is hee bh kbccs- eee, 722 1202 A, M. EERO ERE MEN sa $9 2 I icine ssiaine dine dak taaiede 629 10%: MIN « « war minaobehesine sansa 647 1047 FROM EAST. A.M. P.M. Souris .... sdcactsbbhesocaaee. sa. Ws MES, «oxo onue cuetenmensuee: eae ; 4 & 17 Mount Stewart, EEE on ctice ou 8 ! Rien... ee ae Do cscs hn cninie asada 727 332 eile RNASE eect 745 357 a 842 512 LOBSTERS LUD. WURZBURG, P.O. BOX 543, HALIFAX, N. 8. (OQFFICE—PICKFORD & BLACK’S WHARF) Exporter of Lobsters Samples and quotations solicited. Cash advanced on consignments, June 23—tl aug 21 pd N. J. CAMPBELL, (Successor to Campbell & Rayden) Anctioneer end Commission Merchant, SHIP BROKER, AND INSURANCE AGENT, COR, OF QUEEN AND WATER STS., Charlottetown, P. E, Island. importer and Jobber of Choice Groceries and Spices. | ATTORNEYS - AT- LAW SIMS MBE MIS. BEAUTIFUL SUMMER RESORT i \L" CHARLES CAIRNS, in returning “zc thanks te the public for the liberal | patronage extended to him, begs Jeave to in | form his old customers and the public general- ceneiiniachattnty’ (pimcmncncimmacianine ily, that he has taken inte partnership Mr. | | | Malcolm MeLean, and that hereafter the S| EL | business will be carried on under the title of | | CAIRNS & CO. Marbie & Stone Cutters, ments, Tablets and Headstones, in Italian and American Marble. They are of the latest de signs, and at prices to suit all, C. CAIRNS. a M. McLEAN. Ch'town, June 30, 1834 — pres ne pat s j wp HeLeod, Morson & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS —AND— ATTORNEYS - AT -LAW. Office in Old Bank, (UP STAIRS). Ch’town, Feb, 21, 1884. SULLIVAN & MAGNEILL, Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OF FICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown, @4> Money to Loan. W. W. Suutivay, Q. C, | Cusstee B. Macwmiur Jan. 16, 83. W. WHEATLEY, © (Or WuearLtey & Soxs, CHARLOTTETOWN, P, E, Istanp) Commission Merchant, 269 BARRINCTON STREET, Bea, IN. 8: #@ Special attention given to the sale of P..E. Island produce. April 24, 1884, GHNERAL Commission Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. Eggs and Produce a Specialty. May 15,1884 wkly tf Prince Edward Island Hospital. MEDICAL BOARD: Dr. Hobkirk, Consulting Physician. Dr, Johnson, Dr, Taylor, Dr. Beer, Dr, Dawson, Dr. Warburton, Dr. MacKay. Matron—Mrs, Hannah Robinson. Applications for admission may be made to the Visiting Physician or Matron, at the Hospital, daily (Sundays excepted), between ten and eleven, a, m., or by correspondence with any member of the medical Board, or the Matron. The friends of patients will be admitted from two to four, p. m. every day (except Sunday). ; The general visiting day for persons wish- ing to see the institution is Thursday of each week, from two to four o’clock, p. m. D. R. MACLENNAN, Secretary of Trustees. April 24--eod wkly MONCTON Sash and Door Factory. rk. P. LEA, in returning thanks to the M public for the liberal patrcnageextended 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 constantly on hand a full supply of Mould- | General Agent for P. E. Island a, the| ings, Window Sashes, Doors, etc., at British Empire Mutual Life Assurance Com- WEST CASH PRICES. | pany, of London, England. Special attention given to Auction Sales of L . ps th Fruit . umber, Coal, Fish, oS Seidel prompt attention. and other Stocks, and all kinds of Merchan- Real Estate, Househ dise. Correspondence aud Consignments solicited. y made. "Sept, 5, 1683. ~2aw wly They have on hand a fine stock of Monu-|season on July Ist. desirable summer resort in the Provinces. well known to need any commendation. per week for months. guests; retrruing every Thursday and Monday morning, at 9 o’clock, a. m., Charlotte- town time. slower than Charlottetown time. to Seaside. doing business in the Dominion. Canada. after two years. Company in Canada. application of protits:— te ABSENCE & ©O~ Charlottetown Boot and Shoe Factory. Attention Ye Who Are In Doubt. : Let Experience be Judge—Comparison and Purse the Jury. | ASENT FOR | RINCE EDWARD ISLAND: LEA & ROGERS, | a mustico Beach, Fr. E.T. °* COo----—~ This well-known WATERING PLACE will open for the The Proprietors will spare no pains to make this the most The House is too TERMS—$2.00 to $2.50 per day ; $10.50 per week; $8.50 Coach will leave Charlottetewn every Wednesday and Saturday evening,calling for Trains leave Charlottetown for Huuter River at 6 a. m., 8 26 a. m-, 2nd 3 40 p. m. ** Hunter River for Charlottetown 8 a. m., 2.38 p. m., and 6 15 p. m. Hunter River for Summerside 7 a. m., 10.08 a. m., and 5 p. m. Summerside for Hunter River 6.10 a. m., 12.55 p. m., and 4.55 p. m Trains are run on Eastern Standard Time, which is 47 minutes and 20 seconds “ee se sé *é Mr. Baguall will meet Trains from all points at Hunter River, to convey passengers Ch’town, June 18, 1884.—?m = CONFEDERATION LIFE ASSOCIATION. ——9 HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. a) The SECURITY offered to policy-holders is UNSURPASSED by any Company Its PROGRESS HAS BEEN UNEXAMPLED in the history of Insurance in Its Policies are INDISPUTABLE after three years and NON-FORFEITABLE The CASH PROFIT results paid to policy-holders have not been equalled by any The following are examples of ACTUAL REDUC11ON OF PREMIUMS by Robert Taylor, Halifax, insured for $10,000 in 1872, premium $317.70; in 1880, $160.10, John Wilhs, Halifax, insured for $1,000 in 1871, premium $31.77; in 1882, $14.20. John 8. McLean, Halifax, insured for $4,000 in 1872, premium $137.76; in 1882, $70 06. Mayor Jones, St, Joha, insured for $5,000 in 1871, premium $172.20; in 1882, $77.20. Wee> The tullest information will be given on application. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Agents for P, E. Island. Ch’town, May 7, 1884. BOOTS AND SHOES, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. see The cheapest ana best piace to buy is at DORSEY, GOFF & CO’S Ch’town, Jone 21, 1884.—eod wkly 0 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. Factery, Office and Showroom—King Square, Kent Street. Charlottetown, May 27, 1884—2aw wkly eee —— ee ROYAL CANADIAN INSURANCE CO. 0 FIRE. CAPITAL, © . - ' - - . Om HEAD OFFICE—-Montreal. HALIFAX BRANCH — J. Scott Mitchell, Agent. ore7-:--_ $2,000,000 AU orders entrusted to them will receive Rigks Taken on Most Favorable Terms. Our Stock Farm. THE Moncton 7'imes is publishing a series | of articles on the Steck Farm of this Pro-| vince, Here is a clipping from one of them : The colony was very fortunate in the matter of the appointment of Mr. Bell as far overseer. Mr. Bell is, or was, an English agriculturist and herdsman, one of the practical sort. There is not a bit of kid-gloved gentility about him; there is no noise; there is no nonsense. One might live ten years in Charlottetown or else- where in P. E. Island and not hear or read a word about him; save incidentally. He runs the stock farm—the government farm —the tax-payers’ farm—like clock-work. Nobody seems to grumble, nobody to say, | well done, Bell! proof that all are reason- ably well satistied. This tried trusted over- seer has, during his long incumbency, been sent to England, to Ontario, to the Western (United) States to select and buy breeding steck on government account; he has exe- cuted the several commissious and brought his purchases home. The stock of his selection seemed ALWAYS TO GIVE SATISFACTION, whereas those selected and bought on same account for like purpose by other people have not always turned out well. In a word, for Mr. Bell scandal seems to have no tonffue—fame no trumpet. The writer visited the farm a few falls ago in company with a friend. Arrived, a model farm gate told us where we were. Some fine sheep took our attention; next a field of turnips. A turnip-harvester was at work. The lad held in his right hand a heavy knife—one designed and made for the purpose, I dare say—and having never seen turnips gath- ered in quautity, I watched atientively, as with consummate skill and dexterity he executed the task. Standing between two rows and raising the knife, he, with the other hand, grasped aturnip by the top and pulled. If it clung to earth one deci- sive stroke made it yield. Next moment the upturned turnip is held above and between the next two rows when one clip trims its heels and another scalps it. It drops, of course. Then the top is dropped from the hand and its next neighbor is seized and served the same. The expedi- tious, skilful, machine-like operation pleased us greatly. Seven hundred bushels of turnips to the acre is pot an uncommon yield in Prince Edward Island. It is the average yield on this farm. A five-acre field near Charlottetown has yielded 3,500 bushels, and it is no part of the Govern- ment farm. About eight acres was in the field in which THE LAD WAS AT WORK, so we were told. Computed at seventeen cents a bushel, marketed, we beheld $252 worth, if up to the average. We took leave of the lad and went to the fence to have a good look at a black-faced, black- legged, blue-blooded ram that was on the other side of it, and were gratified. We classed him A 1 and called him a fine fellow. He turned away locking sheepish. Perhaps, however, it was with the view of the better exhibiting his breadth, squareness and symmetry. We left and soon came up to two of the swine families. We halted in dumb, vocal admiration. Our complements were not for their ears, but they heard them. -They said nothing and they stuck to it—too well bred to do otherwise, but they looked black, I assure you—they were Berkshires. They looked at us? Not they. Their aristocratic néses were turned up in mute, high-born arrogance and cun- tempt, or as if to snuff our rank, titles, or lineage, and they all the while pretending to be looking for the Colorado, I read an expression; it was in large print. It said ; ‘*Expect us to look at you, do you? Who are you? And who were your g. g. g. grandfathers? Tell us if you know. As for ourselves our lineage is traceable through gs innumerable to that grand old forest boar at whom the arrow was shot that pierced the heart of Rufus, and who supped the blood of the Kink; any Royal blood in you, eh?” We marvelled at dis- covering so much of human nature of the hog. What then? We left of course; who would stop after that ? ———.- -<B « Po - + ~- Australasia. RECENT OCCURRENCES IN THE COLONIES, A paragraph recently appeared in the Launceston Hraminer stating that since the recent earth tremors and subterranean rublings the height of the tide at Flinders Island, and the general contour of the bed of Banks’ Straits was altered. Mr. Wilson, the Engineer of Ports and Harbors, has re- ported on the subject, and he has recom- mended that as Flinders Island is under the jurisdiction of the Tasmanian Govern- ment, the colony should be asked to take steps to rectify the charts relating to Flin- ders Island, Banks’ Straits and the Eddy- stone rocks, This suggestion has been acted upon. Mr. Service has written a letter to the Tasmanian premier on the subject. The annual return of the agent of immi- gration at Sydney shows that in the year 1883 there were 21 immigrant ships arrived at Port Jackson. The average length of passage was 90 days. The total number of persons landed there was 8,369. The steamship Derunda left Brisbane, Queensland, on the 20th ult., taking the first shipment of frozen meat from that col- ony to England, consisting of 3,504 car- cases of mutton and 100 quarters of beef. _ -- The Newfoundland Fisheries. The steamer Plover arrived at St. John’s (N fic) from the Northward on Monday evening last. She (states the Telegram) brings anything but reassuring intelligence respecting fishery prospects in that direc- tion. Green Bay was still suffering severely from the ice-blockade, and large numbers of vessels bound ‘to Labrador from South ern ports were at Siag Harbor, Cat Harbor and other places, waiting for a favorable time to proceed North. The Plover steam- ed through an imiaense guamtity ef ice, and found a “‘heavy jam” all along the coast from -Leading Tickles to Tilt Cove. At Fogo there was a good sign of fish, but nothing could be done with traps o> seines owing to the ice: Further south caplin had made its appearance and prospects looted a little brighter.” -— + ee Reading and Thinkitg. ‘Itis not the amount of reading that does one good, but the amount of informa- tion or the incitement te thought and im- agination that is de:ived from it. The pro- fessor was quite right when, his pupils boasting that he read ten hours a day, he said, *‘when do yon think ’?” Bacon said that some books were to be tasted, some to be swallowed and some few to be digested. There is on reason against the tasting or the swallowing, but to be tasting or swal- lowing everything and digesting nothing leaves the mind in the same state that the body would be under the same circumstan- ces. If we consider the amount of independence it creates, the en- tertainments it affords, the ease with which it may be obtained and the time when it may be pursued, there is no occu- pation can be compared with reading. It is a faculty of the highest value to man- kind, and should be cherished accordingly ; for, no matter in what mood a man may be, he can always find a book that will bea friend and a companion. In justice to thoss who, by their great industry and talents, have produced works of great value, we ought to cultivate something like a dis- ciplive in our reading, to enable us to dis- criminate between the valuable and the worthless, and to give to those who have been the world’s greatest teachers the greatest share of honor.” _/_o- + Serious Results of a Practical Joke. A very sad case of practical joking has occurred in Philadeiphia. Joseph Lan- dess, asailor on buard the Italian barque Martini, in that port, was arrested for some slight act of insubordination on Thursday. The prisoner was taken to Point Breeze, where the Martini is lying, but as the cap- tain was not on board the chief mate refus- ed to take him back to Messins in chains. He was brought back to the police head- quarters and lecked up. He spoke no English, thongh he understood some words. That night he was visited in his cell, the turnkey alleged, by a clerk at the Italian consulate. ‘You are to be hanged,’ szid the clerk jokingly,significantly closing his hands about his throat and protrading his tongue. The Italian was overwhelmed with terror. ‘You canna meana that,’ he gasped. Then he fell in a fit, and has been delirious ever since. He crouches in the corner of his cell and presents & pitiable object of terror. He sits and mutters by the hour. ‘*Whata for they taka me life? Several specialists in mental diseases visited the poor fellow, and all pronounced him hopelessly deranged. All efforts to disabuse his mind have failed. Several Italians spoke to him in his native tongue, but he heard them not, and only wailed piteously, ‘Whata for they take me life ? *. =: o + ~ English Items about Canada. eee oe (From the Canadian Gazette, June 26.) The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel have, it appears, expended an ag- gregate of £1,627,601 in Church work in British North America. It is said that a well-known Provincial stock-broker has made as much as £150,000 by ‘“‘bearing” Grand Trunk stocks, and an equally well-known speculator in London must have madea very large sum. The former is said to be retiring altogether from business, and the latter would, perhaps, be wise todo so. What these gentlemen and others have made, another set have, of course, lost. Their respective fortune and misfortune are alike in this respect—that they excite no feeling from onlookers, neither congratulation nor sympathy, An interesting discussion which has been going on in the Dominion has arisen from some statements which have been put for- ward in regard to the value to the country of a good settler—a question obviously of some importance to the country where the immigrants for the last year or two have numbered 100,000 annually. Many of the best statistical autorities estimate the value of an able-bcdied immigrant, male or female, at £200. In the United States the value some years ago was put down at $830, but im accordance with more recent investigations, the figures have been increased to $2,000, Dr. Farr placed the value at $1,200 while Mr. Hayter, Government statistician of Vic- toria, satisfied himself that in the Aus- tralian colonies each immigrant is worth some £250 to £260. In regard to Canada, perhaps the fairest method is to take the standard value enforced in the United States, and a very simple arithmetical pro- cess will then convince anyone of the direct benetit which has been conferred on the The demand, first voiced we believe by Genevieve Ward, the actress, for special ae. in sleeping cars, is be- coming stre . The state-room car would no doubt soon create custom for it- self on Canadian through roads. _—-—~--—_+- - <— eo ae F. A. SRA ‘fhe sagacious Hamilton ‘‘Times” con- siders a large weekly paper at a dollar a ‘Tiny eaubot ve constitertt a dew Dominion by the influx of settlers during the last few years. * _><+o + Horsford’s Acid Phosphate FOR SICK HEADACHE, Dr. N. 8. Read, Chicago, says: “I think it is a remedy of the highest value in many forms of mental and nervous exhaustion, at- teuded by sick beadavhe, dyspepsia and dimin- ished Vitality.” a RE FS ar WF RPE ek Pe opt Se ama ee ee La Lt i nev sieves Tee ey fs i PTE i SE NT CRS NCR SERN oop caer arse Se _ — oo ARRAY omeeeeeneeeee | tol DS SE LT II Ew ana ae Pye RE ROE eae NN cesateniieiccetlateinate eee dtn cence: meee niin edte