4 ee a es ‘neediest Ce en PerMs:—Five Doittars a Year “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxtrives. THE DAILY EXAMINER. OT ARATE gia anRRT Since Copies Two CEnts. NEW SERIES. Che Daily Examiner 8 Meued every evening by ' TT — Te m . . Tae Examiner Publ shing Co From their office, coruer of Water and Great George streets, Char! rttetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— ae OU od. a. ee Belli. win $2.50 Three months...... pee ee, at SS pes Vises ua dts 50 Advertising at ge om Contracts may be rade te? movthly, quar- terly. half-yearly, or yearly alvertisements, on application. . ALMANAG FOR JUNE, 1888, MOON'S CHANGES, New Moon 2nd day 9th., 42.8m., a. m., S. E. First. Quarter 9th. day, 3h., 14.2m., a. m., N. E. (helow horizon. ) Pull Moon 16th day, 9th., 25.4., a. m., N. W. (below horizon. ) Last Quarter 24th day, Oh.,23.5m., p: m., N (below horizon). Sun ‘Sun /Moon' High! Day's DD! |DAY OF WEEK j : : M| rises'sets | rises |water! len’h th mh mymorn;aftn h m ! Tuesday 4 17\7 38) 3 54110 815 19 2 Wednesday 17, 39 4 36.10 50 20 3 Thursday 16; 39) 5 25111 33 23 4 Friday 15 40 6 14:morn 25 5 Saturday 1S 411.7 271015 26 6 Sunday 15; 42) 8 35) 0 59 27 7|Monday 14, 43 9 46 1 48) ~29 8, Tuesday 14: 44/10 59) 2 38 30 9 Wednesday | 14) 45/aft 11) 3 41 3) 10 Timreday | 14 46) 1 21) 465) 32 11 Friday | if 47) 2 30:6 15) 33 12 Saturday | 14 471 3 38) 7 2 33 13’ Sunday | 14) 47] 4 45/8 Ost 33 14 Monday | 14) 48) 5 49/9 10) 34 1S luesday 13 48; 6 50, 9 53 35 16 “‘Vednesday 13} 48) 7 45/10 32) «35 17 Thursday | 13} 48/8 35/11 8 25 IS Friday | 13) 4819 911 46). °35 19 Saturday | 13) 43) OwTlaft 21} ~ 35! 20 Sunday 13| ,48)10 31| 0 56/4 35 21 Monday by «4801 1| 1 33 35 | 22 Tuesday }4; 49/11 29, 2 12). 35 23\ Wednesday | 14) 49/91 55) 2 55) 35 24 Thursday 14) 49\mern| 3 46, 35 25 Friday 15} 49' 021) 449) 34 26) Saturday |. 15 49) 0 48,6 1 34 | 27) Sunday 15; 48) 1 18! 711 33 28 Monday | 16; 48] 1 45) 8 11 33 29 Tuesday 16, 48; 228| 9 3) 3 30, Wednesday |4 167 48] 3 * 9 51\15 32 ! THROUGH TICKETS | Charlottetown Ticket Agemtey. ’ ht ROUGH TICKETS for sale to all parts of Canada and the United States, at the very lowest possible rates. Write for rates mapé, time tables, etc. G. A. SHARP, Staticn Master and Ticket Agent, March 19—2aw wky 3mo__sCWwP”~: EL. LL. Railway. <a e a — BOSTON. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT ——— THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- iand. every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at 8.0 a. m. : Leave St. John at 8 o'clock every Saturday night for BOSTON DIRECT. Mare from Charlotictown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd class; $9.50, Ist class. For tickets and other information apply to }. A SHARP, F. W. HALES, . te L R’y., P. E. L. Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent, May 7, 1886—eod wky L. ARKHUR & CO, GEN HRAL Commission Merchants, [21 ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. ~~ Roos and Produce a Specialty. —dly whkly Jaly 15 CAUTION. BACH PLUG OF THE MYRTLE NAVY S MARKED - S re i & IN BRONZE LETTERS. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 1886. A GREAT SUMMIER RESORT. 7 3 7 eB j 363 23 > oe at by Gat - fe hie | ( i five AVIvE WE ees x RUSTICO BEACH: Pi #r-Is r orp $3 hin fur a 1 2% I AS been much improved this season, and will be open for Guests and Visitors on or before JULY 10th. sa TERMS: The Proprietors will Spate no pains to make this the finest summer resort in the Provinces ; JOFIN NEWSON & CO. Ch’'town, June 15, 1886. Moderate We ask your consideration when baying Dry Geods JAS, PATON & CO., Market Square. You wil! be sefved by Courteous, Reliable and <¢bliging Clerks. hs JAS. PATON & CO., Market Square. i } | FOR THE MONTHS OF JUNE AND JULY OO”: aim will be to Clear Oif the whole of our Magnificent Stock, at astonishing prices, Every department is loaded with Exceptional Bargains, and those who really consider the spending of their money to the best advantage, should avail themselves at once in securing cheap goods. JAS, PATON & 60., Successors to W. A. WEEKS & 60. j 'S7E are offering a lotof FE Vy JAS. PATON & CO., Market Square. vellent Values in Prints, Drezs Goods, Parasols, Ginghams and Shirtings ; also a big stock of Ladies’ Dolmans and Jackets. ' N Millinery, we are now at the top of the tree . The work done in this department is under the management of Miss Hobbs, who has had large experience in the United States | JAS. PATON & C0., Successors to W. A. WEEKS & 00., ? MARKET SQUARE. ,Ch’town, June 9, 1886. j aa = a9 MANURE FOR : be aetna iliac THE BAY STAT & FERTILIZER ponents DS -— E. T. W. writes :--“Used it with gratifying results. For Turnips it is, unquestionably, excellent,” (used 2000 Ibs. in 1885. ) D. H. A. writes :—‘‘Applied 250 Ibs. along with 30 loads of barnyard manure, and had, from one acre, 850 bushels,” (used 2250 lbs. in 1885.) W. M. writes :—‘“‘The past three years I have used the Fertilizer, on roots, with great satisfaction. Would not try to grow a large crop without it. Applied about 300 Tbs. per acre, with a light dressing of stable manure, and always had grand results,” (used 1600 lbs, in 1885.) A light dressing of Fertilizer for Turnips also benefits the succeeding wheat crop. 4 DON'T FAIL TO TRY IT. a. In. AGL). | Ch’town, June 17, 1886—oaw & wy BOSTON, ISLAND HALIFAX AND P. E. Steamship Line Will, on and after Ist July, 1886, make TWO TRIPS PER WEEK. ee | The Steamship ‘‘“MERRIMACK” : . . 2,200 Tons. The Steamship “CARROLL” - - - - - 1,400 Tons. The Steamship ‘‘WORCESTER” ° - : . 1,460 Tons. oO Commencing on Thursday, Ist July, one of the above Steamships will leave Charlotte- own at 6 o'clock, p. m., on MONDAY AND THURSDAY of each week, until further notice. These vessels have superior Passenger Accommodations. Freight handled carefuily- The LOWEST RATES -harged for both Passengers and Freight. For further particulars apply to CARVEL®., BROTHERS, Agents, Charlottetown. NICKERSON & CROSBY, General Agents, Nickerson’s Wharf, Boston. June 14th, 1886—dy wy pat her jour 2 mos 1; W/ a HAT & FUR STORE, Wewson Block. A NEW DEPARTURE! HATS, of the Latest Styles, at the PRICES. FURS, of all kinds, Cleaned, Dyed. altered and Kepsired. HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for Raw Furs. z, STUART. very None Uther Genuine. Oot W. Ch’town, May 4, 1886. LOWEST’. 755 AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson's Botanie Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey. Conghs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consnmption, have been speedily cured by the use of ADAMSoON’s BALsaM after all other medicines have failed. Sufferers from either recent or chronic coughs or bronchial affections, can resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining speedy relief. “Do not delay, apt it at once. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Bottled at St. Stevens, N, B., |»y the proprietors, F, W. KINSMAN & CO., Druggvista, 343 47H AVE, N.Y. ESTABLISHED 1873. MEMBERS CHAMBER | Gs MMERCE, We BUY Potatoes, Spiling, R.B. Tiers, Fumber, taths, Canned Fish, fey, Eggs, Produce, And sell on commision, Write us fully for quotations. Ship to HATHEWAY & (0., 22 Central Wharf, Boston, (Gen- eral Commission Merchants. Consign your vessels to our house, Will receive personal attention. Charte>s, Freights and Vessels for the United States, Newfound- land, West Indies, South America Ports. Lumber, ‘tone and Oi! Freights. April 12, ’86 - 3mos ABSOLUTE PURITY, THE following ananlyses (made by the Domin- ion Analyst) of three BAKING POWDERS sold in this market should put a stop to the | unjust efforts of the Royal to mislead the public ‘as to its being the only pure Powder. These im- partial tests show that other Powders are as pure }and wholesome: W. SAUNDERS, Dom. Analyt, St. John, N. B. i reports : | Royal—Contains Alkaline Carbonates—a mixture consisting mainly of Bi-Carbonate of Soda and Cream of Tartar—adulterated with about 20 per cent. of Starch. W. F. BEST. Dom. Analyst, St. John, N. B., reports: | Pure Gold—Contains Cream of Tartar, Carbon- ate of Soda—fresh and pure, Nov. 10, 1882— Not adulterated; j J a = " Aw 4 | April 7, 1883—Not adulterate ; WOODILL 5 Same as U“Nail, June 4, 1881—Fresh and pure ; same composition as usuai. | MAYNARD BOW MAN, Dom. Analyst. Halifax, | N. S., reports : | WOODILL'S oi moot analy; contains nothing Woodill's German Baking Powder hii a reputation for purity and wholesomeness now nearly 30 years, May 21, 1886. 1827 = = = 1886. T. & E. KENNY, Dry Goods and Shipping, HALIFAX, CANADA. T & EK. KENNY, (F. ©. MAHON) Ship Owners aid Brokers, i 161 GRESHAM HOUSE, Bishopsgate Street, LONDON, E. C., ingland, Scott's and Vaughans Codes. March 29, 1886. FOR SALE, on north side of Douglas Street, each 52 by 108 feet ; also, one fronting on north side of Bay- field Street, of same dimensions. Terms easy. Apply to James H. Keddin, Solicitor,Charlotte- town. June 11—Imo 2aw — JANTS, LOSD, FOUNR, Se. ryxO LET—A brick Houte on Pownal Street, now occupied by Mr. Geo. J. Wright. Apply to Thos. W. Dodd. mar26 tf O LET—Fuarnished Rooms with use of Kitchen, or furnished House. Apply at THe EXAMINER office. ap27 tf OR SALE OR TO LET—The Cottage at St. Avards, St. Peter’s Road, just out- side city limits, at present occupied by D. Geo. Chesnut, Esq Apply to PR. MeMillan, eoal ofiice, foot Prince Street api2 eod wky tf Ago,” from 1882 to 1894, complete—the best literature of the age. Also, Webster's Dictionary (unabridged). Apply at Tux Ex- AMINER office, feb27 General Commission Merchants, ' Two Building Lots, eligibly situated, fronting , ; oe SALE—-Fyles of ‘‘Littell’s Living. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR, o———- Srr,—The Putriot states that the ‘‘Cus- toms, the Postal, the Railway, the Public Works, and every other Department” of the Civil Service is so packed with friends of the Government that the ‘Reformers’ have become so accustomed to it that they are beginning to regard itas a matter of course. Every intelligent elector in the town and country knows very well, that when vacancies occur in any of the Depart- ments na‘ned, they are or should be, filled by supporters of the Government for the time being, and the Liberal Conservative Government of the Dominion, having been in power for the past decade, and are like- ly to continue so for many years to come. “‘Oftitials” who are not blinded by preju- dice know full well that it is to their inter- est not to offer any violent opposition such as the Patriot suggests, to any Government in whose employ they receive their daily bread. When the P. E, Island Railway was first opened under Grit rule, it was literally packed by the most subservient tools of that party, many of whom proved to be no- toriously imcompetent to . discharge the duties assigned to them. Not only was the tailway Department thus packed but the Customs, the Postal, the Savings Bank, the Assayers, and other Departments were also tilled by hangers on of the Grit Govern- ment,—and until this day many of those barnacles cling to the ship of State protect- ed by the Civil Service Act, which, the Patriot alleges, has been used in the inter- est of ‘*Tories” only. Will the Patriot deny that there are Grit officials in the Railway, the Customs, the Postal, the Savings Bank, the Assayer's and other departments in this city to-day who are the most servile tools of the Grit party, and especially so at election times, when they are known to act the part of violent partizans, and yet they have not , been dismissed and their places handed | over to Tories, as is falsely stated by the | Patrict. ‘* With what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you again,” is a doc- trine that the Patriot hurls at defiance. : Nothing will gratify him but the total ex- ‘pulsion trom office of every man who will not bow atthe shrine of his ‘organized hypocrisy.” In fact, it is boldly stated by Grit canvassers that one of the planks in their platform is a pledge from their candi- dates to the effect that every official, with- , out exception, in the employ of the Local ,Government are to be dismissed if the , Grits carry the day next Wednesday. This, ‘like mun other cowardly threats, will be | indignantly resented by every fair-minded elector by tne free exercise of his franchise. Yours, SCRUTATOR. Orangemen in Ireland. } The Montreal Gazette obtains from the | Belfast Northern Whig some interesting par- ‘ticulars as to the sentiments, purpose and strength of the Ulster Loyalists who are , ready to oppose the establishment of Home | Rule even by force, if necessary. At the meeting of the Grand Orange Lodge, early ‘in the month, at Omagh, county Tyrone, returns were handedin from the counties, | specifying the number of volunteers pre- pared to take the field in defence of their irights and liberties. The figures from | Antrim, Down, Armagh, Monaghan, Fer- managh and Tyrone, showed that more than the number expected had been enroll- ed and that when the list was complete the ‘volunteers would have a total strength of over 100,000 men. Tyrone, it isanticipated, , will contribute 15,000 men, one rural dis- | trict, Killyman, promising 1,500. Antrim ‘and Down will be able to send 20,000; } Armagh, 15,000; Monaghan, 8,000; Fer- 'managh, 2,000; Londonderry, 10,000, and ,other parts of Ireland, 1,500. The cor- respondent of the Whig said that he had been furnished with this statement, but it is worthy of note that the proceedings at the Omagh meeting, at which the returns | were said to have been rendered, were i strictly private; and though he claimed to have received the foregoing enumeration \irom a trustworthy source, it is possible jthat his informant was mistaken. The Whig, indeef, does not answer for his ;accuracy. Irishmen, north and south, are, it is true, less often lacking in courage than in judgment. They have always been ready to fight on more or less provocation, but that men who profess to be so loyal should be openly organizing resistance to authority in the way described is hard to believe. Ifthe report is true, itis to be regretted that the crisis was not met in a different spirit. Moderation would be more likely to meet with sympathy in the actual state of affairs than wild defiance. And if the North proposes to break the peace, what may be looked for in the South, where, we may be sure, agitators will not be wanting to inflame the popular passions ! ’ ! — > ae No Railways for China. The Vossische Zitung says that the dele- | gates sent to China to work up railway de- | velopment, in the interest of German capi- —— | talists and manufacturers, have reported, in ‘effect, that there is no chance for railway ‘construction in China on a scale which | could be made profitable to European en- |terprise until the Emperor attains his ‘majority, which will not be until the closo of 1887. The paper says that the report of | the delegates have been read to a meeting |of German capitalists and manufacturers ‘interested in the investigations of the déle- gates, who further state that the viceroy ‘assured them that China would build rail- | ways when she was able to manufactutethe ‘materials needed in their construction ' within her own dominious. no encieanagitincettil ttl aspen OPENED at the London House, by Boston ‘Boat, new Prints, Print Remnants, Ginghams, Muslins, Seersuckers, Hosiery, anker- chiefs, &c., &e. 3i—jl7 % VOL. 19.—NO. 31. Mexican Gold Bugs. There seems to be every prospect of a glut in the market for Mexican gold bugs. The late Miss Folsom brought over one of the insects from Europe. which has ren- dered them fashionable as articles of per- sonal adornment; but they are very scarce even in Mexico, and consequently are quite expensive. Fortunately, however, an ingenious naturalist has devised a method of producing these valuable beetles by wholesale, and gold-bugs will soon be pur- chasable at prices which will bring them within easy reach of every one. The afore- said naturalist recently inserted an adver- tisement in several rural newspapers offer- ing 5 cents piece tor 10,000,000 large-sized and well-formed June bugs. He did uot get that many, although large consignments were sent to him from: various parts of the country; but the number he received, some 50,000 in all, was sufficient to begin work upon. So fer as mere shape is concerned, the plain and unattractive June bug bears a singular resemblance to his dandy cousin of Mexieo, and the process of transforming the one into the other is exceedingly simple. There are two styles—the animate and the inanimate. The former is made by dipping the wings and back of the June bug in thin shellac and sprinkling them with gold dust, while the latter is vemepayrmney be yar ing the specimen upon a stee in, anc SSasainie ib into the varnish, which kills it at once. A quantity of gold dust is then dashed over it, andlo' the beetle is clad from head to foot with the bright metal, even to its antene. With two such coats he is practically embalmed, and, with care, . will last a lifetime. The American gold- bug is ap erss ged superior to the effete Mexican variety. Pe léoks precisely like a superb piece of jewelry work, and al- though his weight, or want of it,.gives him away, this difficulty may be overeéme by loading him with a buckshot to bring liim up to the standard. Just now he selis at $5 each in the shops. a An Ottawa Fireman Pensioned. Fireman Manners, of Ottawa, served in the Union Army during the American rebellion, and hearing that under an Act passed by the American Corgress, offering discharges to all United States soldiers who had deserted after the close of the war,the, was entitled to a bounty and pension, he made a final application in February last through a Washington attorney for his regular discharge from the Umited States Army. In reply he was informed that in order to get it, he would have to make a personal surrender to the commander of Pittsburg Barracks,JNew York. On the 3rd of the month he accordingly left Ottawa for the purpose of doing se, and next day formally surrendered to the colonel there in charge. It being necessary for the col- onel to get an order from the Secretary of the War Department, and that dignitary being then absent from the Capital, no recourse was left to the colone! but to incarcerate Manners, which he accordingly did, and the Ottawa fireman had to lang- uish in durance vile in the Pittsburg Guard House until the 10th inst., an imprison- ment for twelve days, when an honourable discharge was granted. He returned on Saturday afternoon in possession of his dis- charge, which entitles him to $350 bounty, due at the time of deserting. Fickle Lord Gumboil. The fickleness of little Lord Cairns, whom you know as Lord Garmoyle, and was cele- brated in Londonas Lord Guraboil, constitutes him the leading male flirt of the period. The breaking off his engagement with pretty Miss Grant, of New York, is now said to be entirely his doing. The story runs that he coolly laid his financial position before Miss Grant's mother and stated the exact sum——about $40,000; it is said—necessary to make him easy. This produced a_ pro- longed stare, and the little man bowed him- self out. The marriage had been arranged for early inthe Autumn, and Miss Grant and her mother are still staying in London mueh chagrii ed, but not sorry Oh the whole to be rid of a bad lot. Rumor says that without being formally engaged this sprig of an Earl has played truant to the affections of half a dozen other ladies at home and abroad. No breach of promise action is expected on this occasion, ——— _- A few years ago a society of eminent Frenchmen discussed the Guestion :— ‘‘What language would a child naturally speak if never taught?” Twenty different results were predicted. To test the matter two infants were procured and isolated with a deaf and dumb woman, who lived alone in the Alps, surrounded with her sheep and chickens. After six years the children and the nurse were brought before the savants, who were un tip-toe of expec- tation as to the result. When, lo! nota word could either of the children utter, but most perfectly could they imitate the crow- ing of the cock, the cackling of a hen, and the bleating of sheep. Journalism is taking a spurt in Italy. In Naples there is a regular newspaper read- ing craze, and even the beggars gather round some fortunate possessor of a daily newspaper as he reads aloud in the street. But the people soon get tired of any one paper and clamor for a new one. Thecon- sequence is that almost every day some paper dies and another takes it placo. One of the most certain ways of killing a news- paper in Italy, by the way, is to fill it with news. What they want is good local lies and blood-curdling sensations. The marriage certificates of Grover Cleveland and Frances Folsom shows that the former is 49 years old and the latter 21. As we all know “figures do not lie,” and, as we have learned from the alchemists, the figure 7 is particularly lucky. Now, if one reflects that \o bride’s age is 3 times 7 and and that the groom’s age is 7 times YT, and that the difference between them is 4 times 7, he will see how lucky they sught to be. eae ES AL ct: 5 nagar ng roma wma SPUR GET tA HOR oe eee