IR! -Five DoLtuare a YEAR. NEW SERLES. CMS: THE WAILY KXAMIN ER. is ISSUED EVERY EVENING, By ras Examinek PusuisnHing Company, FROM THEIR OrrFice, Conner oF WaTER | AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, r. & RaTEs OF SCesUCRIPTION : Charlottetown, Island, | | j | | Six Montha, ° $2 50 | (hree Months, - . . 125 | ime Month, ° - 0 50 | ma Advertising at most moderate rates. | Contracts may be made for monthly,| quarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise-| ments, on application. ALMANAC FOR AUCUST, 1883. MOON S CHANGES, New Moon 2nd day, 9h, 13 7m., p. m. First Quarter, 10th day, 9h. 16.5m, p. m. Fail Moon, 18th day, Sh. 41.4m., a, m. Last quarter 26th day, lh. 19.4m., a. m. (Sun (Sen |Moda/Hligh | Days irises |sets | rises | water len’h. +h mh m}morn aft’n DAY OF WEEK 1| Wednesday |4 47\7 25| 3 16| 9 52 2, Tharsday 49) °23) 4 21)10 32 3) Friday 50! 22; 5 27til 8 4\ Saturday 51; 2) 6 Bill 41/14 31 5 Sunday : 32] 19 7 35| morn 6; Monday 53) 18, 8 37; 0 15; 7|Tuesday 55! 16); 9 37! 0 47) §|Wednesday | 56} 15/10 37} 1 21 9) Thursday 57| 13/11 37| 1 59| 10| Friday 58) 12\aft 36) 2 39 Ll Saturday 59 10) 1 34, 3 32) 14 13 12! Sunday 5 1) 9) 2 30) 4 35 13 Monday 2) 7! 3 24) 5 53) 14, Tucsday 3} 6414/7 9 15' Wednesday 4) 4) 4 59) 8 12) 16 Thursday 6} 215 40/9 3) 17 Friday 7} 1617: 9 is| 18\sSaturday 86 59) 6 51:10 30/13 54 19|Sunday 9} 57) 7 22/11 6 20' Monday ; Ali 56) 7 53.11 47) Qi Tuesday | 12 S4l 8 25jaft 26! 22) Wednesday 13, 52,854) 1 8 23|Thursday 14) 50! 9 38! 1 53 24' Friday 15' 48)10 22) 2 46; 25' Saturday 17) 46'L1 12) 3 46/13 33 26|Sunday | 48] 45| morn! 5 30 27| Monday | 391 431 0 8] 6 47 28| Tuesday 2h 4t) 1 8| 7 57] 29 Wednesday 22} 40; 2 10! 8 48 30) Thursday 23) 37) 3 15) 9 31 31| Friday 5 25/6 36] 4 20/10 9 ——————— ———— —————EEES= GEORGE TWEEDY, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Notary Public, &c. OFFICE—West Side of Queen Street, Char- lottetown, next door to Stevenson's Tm Shop. July 25, 1883.— dy wkly 6m McLEOD & MORSON Barristers & Attorneys-at-Law, SOLICITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, OFFICES : Reform Club Committee Rooms, Opposite Post Office, Charlottetown, P. E. Island, Merchants’ Bank of Halifax Building, Sum- merside, P. E. Island. MONEY TO LOAN, on good security, at moderate interest. Nem McLeop. Nov. 24, "82.—pres her R. O’DWYER, Commission and General Merchant DEALER IN P. E. |. PRODUCE, 289, WATER STREET, St. John’s, Newfoundland. Capt. Edward English, a member of the firm. will give the strictest attention to con- signments of Island produce, gy” P. E. Island vessels for and to charter. July 30, 1883. INSURANCE OFFICE. (user insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, Lancashire Insurance Company CAPITAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates, Losses settled promptly & equitably. aad equitably: )ESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Ageits. Office—South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Sept. 15, 1882, JOHN MAGEACHERN, (Late of Italian Warehouse) AGENT FOR Royal Fire Insurance Company, of England, London & Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, of Engiand, W. A. O. Morsoy. ** This 1s true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, AUGUST L.ARTHUR & CO., GHENERAL Commission Merchanis, 12] ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. Eggs and Produce a Specialty, April 26, 1883.—wkly tt EDWARD T. RUSSEL & CO., GENERAL Commission Merchants, NG, 284 STATE STREET, BOSTON. Particular attention given to the sale of Fish and Produce of all kinds. June 22, 1883.—ém STANDARD LIFE ASSURANCE C0. T the 57th Annual General Meeting of the Standard Life Assurance Company, he'd at Edinburgh on Tuesday, the 24th of April, 1883, the following results for the year ended 15th November, 1883, were re- ported :— 3,038 new proposals for life as- surance were received the year for $ 9,754,085 38 2,561 proposals were accepted, assuring 7,239,048 13 The total existing assurances in force at 15th November, 1882, amounted to (Of which $7,753,031.15 was reassured with other offices) The claims by death which arose during the year amount- ed, including bonus addi- tions, to The annual revenue amounted at 15th November, 1882, to The invested funds at same date amounted to Being an increase during the year of 66,936,302 91 2,462,226 59 4,267,546 00 29,503,416 00 1,062,648 35 JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown. THOMAS KERR, Inspector of Agencies, Ch’town, August 3, 1588. SULLIVAN & MACNEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &ce. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. 6a Money to Loan, W. W. Suttivan, Q. C. | Cuestsr B. Macngiut, Jan. 16, 83. Direct Steamer to London HE Halifax Steam Navigation Company (Limited) will despatch the FIRST- CLASS STEAMER “SICILY,” —FROM— Halifax to London, direct, About 10th September, THROUCH RATES FOR LOBSTERS, via P. E. 1, Steam Navigation Company, From Charlottetown and all Sta- tions onthe P. E. 1. Railway. London, Paris and Hamburg. The “Sicily” has a speed of twelve knots and is expected to make the passage in 9} days. Bille of Lading will be given from any Station on the P. E- I. Railway, or at Char- lottetown, Apply for ali particulars to Jos, Woot, Secretary Halifax Steam Navigation Company (Limited), 58 Bedford Row, Hali- tax, or to WM. AH. SHANKS, Agent, Charlottetown, P. E. I. August 13, 1883. } PINvaHeInins oy Ba PTO Tae e at STA TRY CURM Ee Bul aang STH) OH 1337) ea ag eee eee City of London Fire Lusurance Co., of England, HAS REMOVED His Office to his New Building, FAT HERRING. BARRELS, in Wholes, Halves and 100 Quarters, for sale by D, SMALL, Gor. Queen and King 8ts.—Up Stairs., Ontown, Dee. 7; GA Ch’téwn, Ati, 17, 1888-—27 -—4> PB. ISLAND Steam Navigation Coy. ee ‘STEAMERS ST, LAWRENCE A\D | PRINCESS OF WALES. SUMMER ARRANGEMEN’, Commencing Wednesday, 16th May,i883. NOVA SCOTIA. Leave Charlottetown for Pictou Landing every Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday mornings, at 7 o'clock, connecting there with the Train for Halifax. Returning to Charloftetown on Monday, Wednesday Friday and Saturday, about 2 p, m., on arrival of Train from Halifax. Leave Pictou Landing for Georgetown on Thursday, on arrival of traim at 2 p,m. Leave Georgetown for Pictou Landing every Friday morning, at 5 @,m. NEW BRUNSWICK. CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES. Leave Summerside every day (Sunday excepted) on arriva: of Train from Char- lottetown, connecting at Shediac with Trains for each of the above named places ; and at St. John, with steamers of the Interna- tional Company and Railway for Portland and Boston, Also leave Charlottetown for Sum- merside every Monday morning at 1 o'clock, Returning, leave Shediac every day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train from bt, John, tor Summerside, connecting there with Train for Charlottetown. Also leave Sum- merside for Charlottetowa every Saturday evening, about 5 o’clock, By order, F. W. HALES, Charlottetown, May 15, 1883. Secretary. Seed BOSTON STEAMEHY, STEAMERS: Carroll, 879 tons, Capt. Brown, Worcester, 885 tons, Capt. Blankenship wf NE of the above FIRST-CLASS STEAM- ERS will leave Charlottetown for Boston EVERY THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AT 5 P. M. PASSENGERS will find this the Cheapest and most pleasant trip to Boston. Accommo- dations on both steamers are splendid. CARVELL BROS., AGENTS, Ch’town, May 17, 1883.~-pat her sj aes STEAMER “HEATHER BELLE.” Summer Arrangement, 1883. N and after Tuesday, July 24th, the new steamer ‘*Heather Belle,’’ Hugh McLean, master, will run as follows:— Every Tuesday morning at four o'clock, will leave Charlottetown for Orwell Brush Wharf, leaving Orwell Brush Wharf, at seven a. m., tor Charlottetown, calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves, leave Charlottetown at 3p. m., for Halli- day’s China Point and Krush Wharves, where she will remain over night. Wednesday, will leave Brash Wharf for Charlottetown, at seven a. m., calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves, leaving Charlottetown at threo p. m., to return, remaining at Brush Wharf over nigh t. Thursday, will leave Brush Wharf for Char- lottetown, at seven a. m., calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves, leaving Charlcttetown at three p, m. to return, leaving Brush Wharf about six p. m. for Charlottetown. Friday, will leave Charlottetown for Crapaud at four a. m., leaving Crapaud at seven a. m. for Charlottetown, leaving Char- lottetown at three p, m. for Crapaud, remaining there over night. Saturday, will leave Crapaud at seven a, m. for Charlottetown, leaving Charlottetown at ove o'clock p. m. for Crapaud and re- turning to Charlottetown from Crapaud same evening. FARES—Cabin, to and irom Orwell and to aud from Crapaud, 40 cents; deck 30 cents. Excursion Return Tickets will be issued from Charlottetown te 0: well every Thursday evening at oue firet--l.ss fare. Aliso, Execur- sion Return Tickets will be issued Saturday to Crapaud at one first-class fare. JOHN HUGHES, Agent. Ch’tewn, July 25, 1883. [2aw W harves, 30 cents; deck, 20 cents, Cabin, | Liverpool to Charlottetown PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, DIREGT. FALL ERIP, L883. | —_— THE CLIPPER BARQUE 599 Tons Register, Coppered and Classed | Al 9 years at Eogiish Lloyds, ANGUS BROWN. Commander, Will be on the Berth at Liverpool On or About the 25th August. dnd Sail on the 10th September. to be followed by the Clipper Barque “ CLARIBEL,” 420 Tons Regist r,Coppered and Classed A 9 years at English Lloyds. The above vessel wili receive goods for adjacent Ports. For Freight or Passtze, apply in Lordon to JOHN PITCAIRN & SONS, 16 Great W.cester Street; in Liverpool, to PITCAIRN BROTHERS, 51 South Jobn Street, or here to u. ©. OWEN, Ch'town, July 26, 15°3,—3wk 3aw tu th sa From London and Liverpool ~~ TO—- CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I, DIRECT. yo a oe pe LES Le ae FALL TRIPS 1883. The Fast-:Sailing Barkentine “ BREMA,” 9 299 tons Register, coppered and classed 9 Al in English Lloyds, R. RENDLE, Will Sail from London ON OR ABOUT THE 5TH SEPTEMBER. ALSO THE CLIPPER BRIGANTINE “ZERELDE,” 300 tons Register, o class 9 years A 1 in English Lloyds, lL. KICHKHHAM, Commander, Will Sail from Liverpool ABOUT 1st SEPTEMBER, Carrying freight at through rates to Pictou, Georgetown, Souris, Summerside and Shediac. Commander, For Freight or passage, apply in London to John Pitcairn & Sons, 16 Great Winchester Street, E. C.; in Liverpool to Pitcaira Bros., 51 South John Street, or here to the owners, PEAKE Ba0s. & C9. Ch'town, July 25—2aw tf JUST ARRIVED. 100 bels, No, 1 New Herzing, Come and see them, at ‘IMPERIAL GROCERY STORE. | Ch'town, July 21. FOR SALE. ; ' | YHAT handsome residence known as ** BEACONSFIELD.” Apply to free.’’—Evnririrs. Ds 1 ad ‘§ i The Timid Tiger. —_——- \/ 883, INDIAN CARELESSNESS IN THE MIDST MORTAL DANGERS, As a matter of fact, the tiger is not a specially ferocious animal. As the greatest authority on Indian natural history says it is a ‘‘haimless timid animal.” It feeds on animals that are prodigiously injurions to crops, and there are on record in India the complaints of villagers on the increase of | deer and wild pigs in consequence of the de- , struction of the tiger in their neighborhood. When it gets too feeble to catch wild animals it begins to eat tame ones, or, /easier victims still, the men or women who It then be- criminal are in charge of the cattle. comes, as a ‘‘man-eater,” & take it too soon. Bui it is only those who member during the Afghan war assisting to thrash some lazy fellows in order to arouse them to a proper sense of the necessity of saving their lives. They had squatted down to smoke ly the road- side in the Khyber Pass, though they knew the enemy .was jurking in the rocks above them, and in the jungle behind them; though they had with their own eyes seen the corpses of camp followers, lying where they had been niur- dered, when they sat down to smoke. In the very same way the herdsmen comes loafing home in the twilight, singing a song of the country as he goes (to let the tiger know that he is coming, probably), and suddenly out of the sugar-canes flashes the tiger, and there is an end of that herésmen. But the next man will probably d» the very same thing. He will take another road, of course, on his way home, but he wilf lag behind his cattle and sing to himself in the same ridiculous way, and out from under the bair tree springs the same old tiger. Indeed, it is one of the problems of Indian administration how to keep the natives from suicide. They prefer to have half the village down with smallpox and then carry a dead chicken round the stricken hamlet on the end of a pole than to be vaccinated, They prefer to lose a prodigious number of their acquaintance by drowning than to protect their walls, They prefer to have tens of thousands of men and women bitten by snakes in toes and thumbs, and die therefrom, than let enough light into a hut to see the difference between firewood and cobras. — Belgravia. ——-- > ae o- - Old anc New Atlantic Steamers. The wonderful performances of Atlantic steamers, comparatively new, have been so prominently kept before the public that there is some danger that the efficiency of Atlantic steamers not quite so new will be overlooked, There are not wanting certain heretical individuals who maintain that the ‘‘Alaska,” and other vessels of her type, owe their speed to the enormous power developed by their engines, and not to the inherent virtues of their model. The opinion is strengthened by some recent Atlantic performances. The ‘Alaska’ and ‘Britannic’ left Liverpool at 5 and 6 p. m. respectively on Saturday June 2, and both left Queenstown at 9.30 on Sanday morn- ing. The ‘‘Alaska” arrived at New York at 10 a. m., and the ‘‘Britannic” at 8 p. m, on the following Sunday, the mean time being about—‘'Alaska,” seven days, five hours, and the ‘‘Britannic”’ seven days, fifteen hours. Considering that the Alaska is a two-year-old ship of 6,950 tons, indicating 10,500 horse-power, and that the Britannic is nine years old 5,- 004 tons, and about 4,500 horse-power only, this trial of speed is more creditable to the Brittanic than to the Alaske. Ifthe Brit- tanic had the same horse-power in propor- tion to power as the Alaska, she would have 7,500, or 3,000 more than she has. These passages given the Alaska speed of 16.1 knots, and forthe Britannic 15.2 knots. According to Mr. Froude, increasing the Britannic’s power by two-thirds would in- crease her speed by 3.4 knots, raising it to 18.6 knots, equal to a _ passage of six days five hours, or one day shorter than the Alaska. As a matter of fact there is very small doubt that she would go little shorter of that speed. By increasing her power one-third, cr to 6,000 horses— the same es the Arizona, her probable speed would be 17 knots—six days twenty hours. In fact, when the boilers of the Britannic and Germanic require revewing two or three years hence, they could be made more than a match in speed for any steamer now running by giving them the moderate power of 6,000 horses, which their strength of construction would certainly well stand, as in the matter of model these vessels are apparently un- equalled by those of any other line.—The Lugimeer. oe _ =e oe The New York Herald says Eariy Gran- ger, of Springfield, Jamaica, died at his residence last Sunday, at the age of ninety- four. He was born atShelhanger, Norfoik, England. In 1811 he enlisted in the Fitty- fourth regiment, British infantry, served at the battle of Waterloo. He was at the capitulation of the French army after the fival struggle before Paris, and remain- ed with the army until the elevation of Louis Philippe to the French throne. He then returned to England with his regiment. He came to America in 1820. In 1835 he took part in the organization of the first brass band in Brooklyn. Ex-Mayor Booth, of Brooklyn, was second fifer in the band. —_—--~ _~——-_ + — The London Sportsman has the follow-. ing:—‘‘A telegram from Bury, Lancashire, states that a quarryman named Beotman has been drowned in a reservoir there whilst acting Capt. Webb.” Up to last advices his body has not been recovered. This is the third death chronicled in Eng- H. J, CUNDALL. |land under similar circumstances within the whty 8m pres lier put era Ch’town, May 20—law tu past few caye oF | a oa and that he will have arich wife. See PP er RE He ee SINGLE Corres Two ( VOL ENTS, 13,---NG, &4 “a Africa. Africa is evidently to be a wonderfully }wide and rich field for commerce. graphical expeditions into that continent will be closely followed by commercial ex- peditions, and the world will soon have more markets for its trade. Europeans fully appreciate the importance that Africa promises to hold in the commercial world, ‘and already they are begioning to increase their trading factories in that country. The latest one is the enterprise of a business firm of Bremen, which has purchased Angra | Pequena, on the Western coast of Africa. Traffic will be carried on between that place and Cape Town. A strip of land ‘stretching twelve miles inland is to be | bought, and the colony of the German com- (,a0- against humavity—and death cannot over- mercial houses will cover about 1,350 square |miles in extent. Most people believe that know the Hindoo thoroughly who can| beyond the Cape Colony and the countries ‘credit the amazing apathy of these men, |along the shores of the Mediterranean, é I even when in imminent dange. So long Africa has little to offer but some desert and 5 | as it is not actually visible they refuse to | 4m lynmense terrliory of foreat and jungle, ‘take precautions egainst peril, and I're- productive of nothing but wid beasts and jfever. A few years hence it will be seen | that a great country of marvellous richness awaits only civilization to give support to mulions of industrious peop'e. Present appearances indicate that our cousins across the water intend to reap this field. There is no good reason why they should do so exclusively, and there is still less reason why this country should not participate in the trade. Our merchants and manvfac- turers should keep Africa constantly before them, for it will offer advantages to them which the stronger rivalry of older nations has kept from them in other fields. —Mayri- time Register. __oe « A Portable Breakwater. A most ingenious invention cailed the Greenway Breakwater has come before our notice, and is one which, if we can judge from the successful experiments made, will in a very short time be brought prominently before the public The object of (this breakwater, which is simply a line of buoys is not to resist the force of the waves, but to turn them against one another, The buoys are moored in a straight line, in- dependent of one another, and are of a triangular shape, with asharp point, which is direeted toward the sea when the buoy is in position. They are held by two anchors to each buoy, fore and aft, so as to keep them in position with the space of a buay between each. The draft of each buoy is 10 feet, Whena wave strikes the sharp prow of a buoy it is divided into two parts; the divided wave then rushes towards the buoys on either sides, and in the space between it meets that portion of another weve which has had similar treatinent from the neighboring buoy, with the result that the diversion and collision rednee or entirely break the force of the wave, and the water is carried harmlessly inside of the breakwater. Such a breakweter could be constructed in a very short space of time, while the cost compared with thot of a concrete or stone breakwater, would be trifling. — Line rpool Journal of Commerce. A Bolivian Monster. The Brazilian Minister at LaP:z, Bolivia, has remitted to the Minister of Foreign Affairs in Rio Janeiro photographs of drawings of an extraordinary saurian killed on the Beni after receiving thirty-six balls. By order of the President of Bolivia the dried body, which had been preserved at Asuncion, was sent to La Paz. It is twelve metres (nearly forty feet) long from snout to point of the tail, which Jatter is flattened. Besides the anterior head, it has four metres behind, two small but com- pletely formed heads rixing from the back. All three have much recemblance to the head of adog. The legs are short and end in formidable claws. ‘The legs, belly and lower part of the throat appear defended by a kind of scale armour, and all the back is protected by a still thicker and double curiass, starting from behind the ears or the anterior head and continuing to the tail. The neck is long, and the belly large and almost dragging on the ground. Professor Given, who examined the beast, thinks it is not a monster, but a member of a rare or almost lost species, as the Indians in some parts of Bolivia use sinall earthen vessels of identical shape, and probably copied from nature— Panama Star. Facts. A mole spot on the arm pit really prom- ises, 80 they say, wealth and honor. On the ankle it bespeaks modesty in men, but courage in women. When a molegspot is found on the right breast ita a sure sign of honesty, if on the left it forbodes poverty; on the chin it promises wealth, on the r pht var respect, on the left ear dishonor. fit is seen on the centre of the forehead it bespeaks treachery, sullenness, and untidi- ness If it is on the night tem] le it fore- shadows that you will enjoy the friendship cf the great; on the left temple it forebodes distress; on the right foot it bespeaks wis- dow, on the left rashness. When it is on the rght side of the heart it denotes virtue; ; When on the left side wickedness When it is on the knee of a man it denotes When it is on the left knee of a woman she may ex- |pect a large family. A mole on the lp isa jsign of gluttony and talkativeness; on tho \neck it promises wealth. A moleon the | nose indicates that a man will bea great traveller; on the thigh it forbodes poverty and sorrow, and on the wrist ingenuity. — _— —_—e= + | The new Byron letters, fourtneen columns lof which have just been printed by the London Atheneum, prove beyond question the falsity of the disgraceful scandal pub- lished by Mrs Harriet Beecher Stowe a few years ago, That scandal was never believed by many, but it is a satisfaction to know that, immoral as Lord Byron’s life was, be was nut unspeakably degraded as Mrs. Stowe would make him out to be. It is to the credit of humanity that theee later betters have been allowed w ace the hgh, os secu Pte = i a eg fs a: 2 mk, OE! ee ee eT |. we ene ae SS ACN BNE RE 5 am eee onan