Terms :—Five Dorttars «4 Year, NEW SERIES si THE DAILy IS ISSUED EVERY EVENING, By tHe Examine! PROM THEIR Orrick, Conner oF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, Raves oF Stupscnripvion : Six Months, #2 50 Three Months, : 1 25 One Month, - - . 0 50 pe Advertisiny at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly,! , quarterly, half yearly or yearly advertise-| ments, op application. P. E. Island. ee ee — —— — om a ———— —— ~ CHARLOTETOWN, PRINCE EDWAR 2 > ee - EG to inform their customers, and the public generally, that they have completed their Spring Importations, and are now ready with an -Prinee Raward Island RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 16. Summer Arrangement fo take effect on the 23rd May, 1881. | s+ | "PRAENS m STATIONS. | EXPRESS. | MIXED. MIXED, | i | Souris ....|Dp 6.30am) Dp 2.)5pm) Bear River| ‘* 7.04 * eo St. Peter’s.| ‘* 7.44 ‘‘ j«** 3.52." Morell....| * 8.03 ‘I “4.95 « Mt. Stew’tjAr 8.40 °° a 5.25 aa - Georget’n .| Dp 7.2Jam' Dp 3. iupm) Cardigan -.| S 7s" “ae Ar 8.4) “ Ar 5.00 “| GOING WEST. | Newest and best Goods at the lowest prices. moe): NEW STRIPED AND CHECKED SILKS, NEW BUNTINGS, NEW GRENADINES, NEW PRINTED CAMBRICS, NEW PRINTED SATIN. ; :0: Ribbous, Ties, Gloves and Hosiery. CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS. pas> New Goops By EVERY STEAMER. harlottetown, May 19, 188}. ane _—— FIRE! MARINE! LIFE ne Se I) ee PERKINS & STERNS. 70; Mt. Stew’t/Ar 8.4) ° Ag 5.00 *" | | eae ater tear) HORACE HASZARD, VYorks..ss) ‘* OS1.%! **: 6.80, . al Je! * 9.45 | 645 tiers jandvo"iaei*) (General Insurance Agent, Ch’town ..|Dp 6.30am! Dp 9.20am! Dp 4.35pm | Royalty Je| “ 645 “1% 9 59 «| “ - “ — REPRESENTING — me Wiehe} “6 729-0) logs ol Bar | apt att as Bite | "G2" “iter \s-eae Commercial Union Fire Assurance Company, of London, Ing,, %? : “Ss *s fe p os * 6.52 ** | - Keusingt’n| © 8.30 | *12-25pm) «7.28 «| JAPITAL, £2,500,000 STG. Samm’ side Dp as ”" Dp ‘ ‘a Ar 800 } Portia | toes «| 325 «| ‘Western Fire Assurance Company, of Toronto, Qat,, hey.) Ld | CAPITAL, $800,000.00. 62 i Tiguish... Ag LQ “* \Ar 7.35 ' “ WRAENS GOEXG BAe’, _— o-oo ‘British America Fire Assuranes Company, of Toronto, Qnt., ' ~ “ona. | BXPP RSS. | MIXED. MIXED, CAPITAL, $500,000.00. STA. j oie <i eee eael ‘San Mutual Life & Accident Insurance Company, of Montreal, . . - * ’ ‘ on. ‘6 } ~ Tignish...[Op= "(An 7:60 ‘| CAPITAL, $500,000.00. Alberton ..| ** 2.40 ° Yin ‘| ti O'Leary...) 3.25 1] + , =“ . <a —n 10% Wellingt eed tte ss MARINE INSURANCE ALSO EFFECTED. -, |Ar 5.35 ** |Arl2. 00 ‘¢ : } oii a Summ’ side}, go «|Dp 1.05pm 'D g. ae :0: Kensingt nj ‘* 6.25 ‘*/ Prag | «7.06 ‘Risks taken on all descriptions of Preperty at LOWEST RATES. Co’ty Lane.| * 6.52 “7 ** 2.17 *1.** 7.46 * OF oS : Bradalba'e «3.58 «| 2a7 «| 8.02 «| en 3 gene ES oN hak del he Om,“ — Corner of Queen and Lower Water Streets. Ropaitg:de) SUGASLO LS SS SEUSS S| April 4, 188i—tf Ch'town ..)Ar 8.30 * Ar 4.35 “ JArl0.15 “ Charlottetown, - Ch’town ..|Dp 40 ‘pm Dp 6.45am e Royalty Je! ts ae se pos 1.08 ‘6 lea “ 25 * “é 25 «6 te Sailar ty jar © ‘VIER RESORT! Mt. Stew’t|Ar 5.10 “Ar 8.30 « SU Va a Mt. Stew’t! Dp 5.2>pm| Dp 8,55am : ces eee S (Feces Cardigan..| “* 6.25 | “10.16 © a Georgeto'ni Ar 6.4) 1) *10,46 8} . | oa Mt. Stew't Dp 5.20pm} Dp 8.50am S AS i DD ‘orell....| * 8.52 | ** 982)« - | i St. Peter's ‘6 ae ‘6 — “4 Ba, B ; aver} * 6.55 m >} i. im = aos oe RUSTICO BEACH, P. B. 1SUAND. Cemenmation amevanememnenman en j s 5 - :0 ‘ __qy, ¢ Expresa Train from Souris and’ H. oukis snnvcts at Royalty Junction} Train from Charlottetown for| morning; and the Mixed) Georgetown ¢. with the Mixed the West, in the Train from the Junction with the | lottetown for Georye eee LB p RCHIBALD, Vest connects at Royalty! “xpress Train from Char-| town and Sonris, in the Railway Office, Ch’town, M. W lishment will be open frem JULY Ist till SEPT. 10th for ‘ie BEAUTIFULLY-SITUATED and well-known . the accommodation of Guests and Visitors. ‘ Rates—$1.75 per day; $10.00 per week; $32.00 per month. é' To reach the Hotel a Coach will leave Charlottetown every a a | Wednesday and Saturday evening, calling for Guests; returning every Thursday and Monday morning, at 9 o’clock, a. m. Also, arrangements have been made with Mr. Bagnall to ‘meet Trains from all peints at Hunter River, for passengers to Address, JOHN NEWSON % CO, Soaside—seven miles. June 28, 1881. am - oi 1878." JOSEPH GILLOTT'S STEEL PENS. BY ALL DEALERS THROUGHOUT THE : WORLD. - ; —? —— _ i. Bens. F. Grarroy, Srory B. Lava Haterxet E. Pare. "res ‘Comm 28oner of Patents. SS a ne ae a FRANKLIN HOUSE. 70: SUMMER HOTEL NOW OPEN. Built on high land, it commands a splendid view of the city, and is one of the Connected with this House are PATENTS. al PAINE, GRAFTON & LADD, and soreign Patents, 412 Frere Ste set, Wasutverox, D. C. i i hes in} sti tent law in all its brane an Patent Difice, and in the sae -_ Circuit Courts oi the U nited States. _ lets sent free on receipt of stamp - postage septs } June 15, 1881. healthiest sites on the Island. pleasant grounds, well wooded. quiet surroundings, N. B.—This is a Temperance House. H. F. COOMBS, Charlottetown. If you want coo] rooms and patronize the FRANKLIN. Tie dust ‘nuisance will not trouble you when staying at the FRAN. MLIN. Guests at the FRANKLIN have the exclusive use of the Baih Atiorneys-at-Law nd Solicitors of America®’ House on ‘the private Beach near the FRANLKIN. Ty?rms very moderate. | 4stab- ae a ey ca PERKINS & STERNS Posttsuine Company, | Extensive Show of New Goods SUITABLE FOR THE SEASON’S TRADE. Our Stock is first-class in every particular, and we only ask an inspection of the sais to convince you that we are giving the NEW SCARFS, NEW LACE Goons, NEW FRILLINGS, NEW RIBBONS, NEW FRINGES. Newest Mats and Bonnets of Every Description. Latest Novelties in Dress Goods, Prints Large Display of Feathers and Flowers. ‘AN IMMENSE VARIETY OF CLOTH AND TWEEDS AT VERY LOW PAICES. ROOM PAPER. BRITISH WAREHOUSE, Queen Square. Ww: have opened and are now showing the largest and cheapest stock of BRITISH AND FOREIGN DRY GOODS Ever offered by us to the Public. ‘Complete in Every Dapartment Selected by @ne of the Firm en the Very Best Terms. We off-r them at unusually low prices to all -who may favor us with a call, a@ A superior article ef TEA always on hand, W. & A. BROWN & CO. May 30, 1881. SIGN OF THE Blue Flag, No. 53 QUEEN STREET. wT —— ore AVING REMOVED FROM STAMPER’S CORNER, we offer the Balance of our Largs Stock BOOTS AND SHOES ! AT A SACRIFICE ! The Stock must be cleared out. E. W. SMITH. Charlottetown, July 5, ’81—4i wkly BARGAINS pass! SUSTOMERS All Classes of Goods, As I am anxious to reduce my Stock. R. W. TREMAINE, June l, ’81. 83 Queen Street. W. C. BISHOP, SHIPPING —AND — ISLAND, SATURDAY, JULY 16. 1881 aaa amg —- a — ——— How to Get an Education. 1. Rasolve to have an education. ‘“Where there way.” Says Burke: wisdom will be wise.” Matthews says: ‘“ Tf 2 person doe: not obtain an educa- tion, it is a proof that he did not intend to have one.” 2. Go to school if you can. A person can learn better at school than he can at home. At school, study is business. In study, method is evefy- thing. The best teachers can show the best methods. 3. Use the spare moments of time, when not at school, in gaining information. ‘ Eliiu Burrit acquired a knowledge of eighteen languages by improving f agments of his time while working as a blacksmith,” ‘* Franklin became one of the wiest men of his age, by studying during the fragments of time, while engeged as a printer.” 4. Give undivided attention when you study. ‘* Genius,” says Helvetius, ** is nothing but continued attention.” Dickens says: ‘* The one serviceable, safe, remunera- tive, attainable quality in every study, is the quality ot attention. My own inven- is a will there is a ‘The lovers of paencntl a anahenitabn.enettheniamenenensndiegeeamenneneaamene Sive_e Corres Two CrEn7s. a ee VOL 9-—N0. 46. countrys of the Old World depends not so much on climatic pecuiiarities or their respective degrees of culture as on the chief occupation of the inhabitants; the starved Hindoo outlives the well-fed Parsee merchant, the unkept Bulgarian enjoys au average longevity of forty-two years to the West Austrian Citizen's thirty-five.” Humorous ** Beef,” said a butcher, “ has never been so high since the cow jumped over the moon.” It was an apt answer of a young lady who, being asked where was here native place, replied: ** Ihave pone. I am the ‘daughter of a Methodist minister.” A punster was once thrust into a closet, with a threat that he would not be released unti! he madea pun. Al- most instantaneously he cried *Opun the door.” ‘* What is that dog barking at?” asked a fop, whose boots were more polished than his ideas. ‘* Why,” said a by- stander, ‘* he sees another puppy iu your boots.” ** Are dose bells ringing for fire?’ in- quired Simon of Tiberius. ‘ No, in- tion, or imagivation, would never have served me as it has but for the habit of patient, daily, toiling, drndging atten- tion.” 5. Be thorouyh. Sir Edward Sugden being asked the cause of his rapid rise in profession, re- plied that ‘* when he learned a thing once, he learned it forever. 6. Let no day pass without learning one new truth. The largest fortune is made up of cents ; the highest mountain is composed of grains; the widest ocean is formed of drops ; the greatest store of learniag con- sists in individual truths. 7. Do not get discouraged. ‘* A solid character is not the growth ofaday. The mental faculties are not developed without long and laborious cul- ture,” ‘, Ne one knows how much he cau do till he has tried.” It is not talent that men lack, but pur-. pose. 8. The three steps in gaining an educa- tien are intention, attention, retention. You must intend to get it; you must attend while getting it; you must retain as you get it. Dr. Arvold declared that ‘* the differ- ence in boys consists not so much in talent, as in energy.” Sir Thomas Foxwell Buxton says; ** The great difference between men, be- tween the great and the insignificant, is energy, invincible determination, an! honest purpose ouce fixed, and then death | or victory,” —_— — ee Out Door Exercise. Dr. Felix L. Oswald, writing to the ‘¢ Popular Science Monthly,” says that ‘» the surest of all natural prophylacties is active exercise in the open air. Air is a part of our daily food, and by far the most important part. A man cau live on seven meals a week, and survive the warmest summer day with seven draughts of fresh water, but his supply of gaseous nourishment has to be sup- plied at least fourteen thousand times in the twenty-four hours. Every breath we draw js a draught of fresh oxygen, every emission of breath is an evacuation of gaseous excrements. The purity of our blood depends chiefly on the purity of the air we breathe, for in the laboratory of the lungs the atmospheric air is brought jnto contact at each respiration with the fluids of the venuous and arterial systems which absorb it and circulate it through the whole body ; in other words, ifa man breathes the vitiated atmosphere of a factory all day, and of a close bedroom ‘uli night, his life blood is taimted twenty- « thousand times in the course of four ‘ayy hours with foul vapors. dust twenty-»~ chalations. We need not ear are ‘thac ill-ventilated dwellings , , aggravate the evils o " es that pure air should be aimost a pan . Outdoor life is both @ remedy tod'b preventative of all known disorders of the respiratory orgaus; consumption, in all but the last stages of the deliquium, can be conquered by transterring the battle-ground from the sick- FORWARDING AGENT: MARINE INSURANCE BROKER, —AND— General Commission Agent. 80 BEDFORD ROW, P. O. BOX 1 - HALIFAX, N. S. thereon. class offices at most favorabie rates. we Consignments of Produce solicited, and prompt returns teed, Correspondence solicited ‘end answered promptly, {ap 7 6m, average \ arte to the wilderness of the next deed,” answered Tibe; “dey ab got plenly of fire, and the bells are now ring- ing for water.” A servant girl broke a lamp-chimney. On being reproved, she said sulkily, “Well, I done care; everybody knows that a lamp-chimney always breaks the first time it is used!” At the complimentary dinner given by the Atalanta Boat Club of New York to Edward Hanlan, the champion seuller, the toast of the evening was——** Edward Hanulan, the noblest Rowman of them all,” An old man who had been badly hurt in arailroad collision, being advised to sue the company for damages, said, ‘“ Wal. no, not for damages; I've had enough of them ; but I'll just sue’em for repairs.” Rector’s wife, severely :—* Tommy Robinson, how is it you don’t take off your het when you meet me?” Zommy : ‘< Well, marm, if I take off my hat to you, what be I todo when I meet the parson himself,” P. T. Baroum once exhibited an al- leged gorilla, which a visitor declared not to be a gorilla, for the reason that it had a tail. *Thst,’ rejoined the emi- nent showman, ‘his nothing te do with it. The tail is sewed on* The builder of a church in a London suburb recently, on returning thanks for the toast of his health which had been proposed, remarked with much candour, ‘I fancy I am more fitted for the seafold than for public speaking.’ George Eliot did not care a great deal for jokes, but she always relished one that referred to one of her own volumes. It is the well-known atury about an ignorant English bookseller who put up the notice : {Mill on the Fioss; Ditto on Political Economy.” Dr. Thomas Chalmers was a very bad writer. He used to write home to his parents, but whon his letterg arrived thera hey could not be read. His mother ased to say, ‘‘ Never mind, just let them lie tae oor Tam comes hame, and he'll read them to us himself. ~~ Practical Farming. SKASONABLE HINTS. On every farm there is more or leas of ‘* swamp muck,” the value of whieh only a few farmers properly estimate. Now is the time in the Province of Quebec, particular- ly—between spring’s work and haying— and alsv in ‘‘ dull weather” during hayin —for every farmer to haul such muck an put it into the hog yard, say about 8 or 10 loads for every hog that he keeps therein, and the porkers, young and old will work it over and over pretty thoroughly during the summer. By this means the farmer may cheaply have more than quadrupled his quantity of manure of the very best kind for raising Indian corn the next season. Let each farmer also put several loads of the same muck on the floor of the shed where his hen’s &o., roost, and where his geese and ducks are housed over night, and he will thus have several loads of manure for his next seasen’s crops—nearly equal to guano, , Let each farmer also stow under cover several barrels of thoroughly sun-dried soil, and throw a few shovelfuls of it, daily into the “‘water-closet,” end he will thus have a considerably large quantity of com~- pletely deoderi manure of the highest yalue, of which nearly all is now Jost thronghout the country. mountain range, asthma, catarrh, and | tubercular phthisis are unknown among the nomads of the intertropical deserts, as well as among the homeless hunters of ' our northwestern territories. Hunters and ‘herders who breathe the pure air of the ‘South American pampas, subsist for ears on a diet that would endanger the ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the jire of a city dweller in a single month, P Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks! It has been repeatedly observed that iu- dividuals who attained to an extreme old Hulls, Cargoes and Freights irsured in first-| age were geverally poor peasants whose -avocations required daily labor in the open air, though their habits differed in almost every other respect ; also that the duration of life in the various Soils must be fed if they are expected to continue producing good crops,—and we have indicated above how every farmer may, at a very trifling cost of labor, very greatly increase his available quantity of soil nourishment and plant-food. -—-__—_~<4o— A Good Account. “To sum it up, six long years of bed-rid- den sickness ana suffering, costing $200 per year, total $1,200—all which was stopped by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by my wife, who has done her own house- work for a year since, without the loss of a day, and I want everybody to know it their benefit.” “Joun Wes, Butler, N, Y.’ OE! 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