se THE DAILY EXAMINER. Texms:—Five Doucars a YEAR. or . , + 2 This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evaierpes. SrincLe Corres Two Cents. VOL..21.—NO.:74. [EW SERIES “ N A ‘ 4 ’ 4\Je } rivy ar % y ig > N ‘ 7] TN 2 y — ‘ ~— ‘rn CHARLO rTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND; FRIDAY, AUGUST 19.1887. ~~ a oe . | . . : . “3 - cr ovEvnn ‘ rey , n" i Che Yaly Examiner - sin ARREARS [LECTERS TO THE EDITOR, 170. vous she, soar, her mations 0 é ; : Po PAGr v iy Mohammedan subjects in India more than 1 weaed every ay es Beis Mis fm Clee saree God Chris ? sti i aed every evening by ; PI 5gs. i: eo ee tod or Christ. The statement received : | : Bi oe ae Ss A Protest. endorsation from the platform, and the D a . = — - ¥ , “d » The bxamiper t ublishing Do. : oe <j , | — audience manifested approval by applause. aii . “El BAP pe RE Sim,—By secret petitions or communica- The Canadians present rose and left the From ; rm 0 re ene ater and ——AND BUY FROM—— we eee? | Cc tions from Morell Station, Lot 40, in the in- building. Grea seorge reets, \-t ariottetown ee 4 Yr 2 erest3 . ; ‘ . ivi als é ace : vw » Prinse Edward island. F { C A at +a PO. OT aie 17 Ore paests Mr. Barclay has refused £20,000 for his iene lhe F ee x“ §. 4 ~- of Morell P. O Lot 39 ty Lot 40 P.O. We famous horse Bendigo. From time to time —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— ‘ te ; Gee edhe nial during the last century there have bee ‘ 4 “4 would ask what right have the people of 5 ee Fe: Fee: pees | ere ee $2.50 KE) Sey de Morell Station, Lot 40, to meddle with the p, rumors.of magnificent offers wade for fa- veeserceses — ad Ce O. affkirs of Johboring district’ Isa it not mous thoroughbreds, but no horse,either in ee eee bacedevieee ves 1.26 ai kD > i . affairs of 4 neighboring district! Ia it not > Se . cnc scectuwne are oad 50 i . ay f : 36 quite enough for them to attend to their own this or any other country, has ever been ont ‘ i affairs? We give theni all credit, ’ for st 80 0 large’: as 15,000 guineas Advertising at moderate r ; Pr a | ug 5 ulfairs? We give them all credit, for honest 8 ld for so large’ a sum as 15, _ guineas. ng te rates ¥ . ie eos POX endeavors to improve and enlarge their little The biggest prices actually given for hroses Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- et” os: ces tom Village, but when they resort tozmean, under- were about £14,300 paid by Lord Dupplin terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, _—_—_—— O——__—_ _ FS ct ns hand dodges to that end, we object. Let to Mr. Gosden for Petrarch, £14,000 paid > x them remember the fate of Napoleon when by the Duke of Westminster to Mr. Robert on application. ALMANAC FOR AUGUST, 1887, MOON'S CHANGES. full Moon 3rd day, 4h., 27.6m., p. m., N.E., (below horizon.) Last Quarter llth day, 7h., 24.0m., p.m., N. E. (below horizon). New Moon 19th day, lh, 26.1m., a. m., N. {below horizon). Firet Quarter 25th day, 4h., 8.7m., p.m., SE. Sun ‘Sun | Moon! High! Day’s . j . ‘ , rises|sets | rises |water| len’h D'pay OF WEEK M, : th mjh maftr’n)morn|h m I Monday 4 47/7 25) 5 46; 8 57/14 38 2 Tuesday 48} 23) 6 42) 9 43 35 3 Wednesday | 49) 22) 7 21/10 24; 33 4 Thursday | 51) 21; 7 S411 1) 3 5| Friday 52} 19) 8 24/11 35) 927 $'Saturday 53} 18] 8 Sliaft 9} 25 7|Sundav 54; 16} 9 15) 0 41) 22 8| Monday 56} 14.940) 1 id) 19 9'Tuesday 57| 14110 4/149) 17 10 Wednesday 58; 12/10 29) 2 28; 14 1) Thursday | 59) 10:10 59,314, Ill 12 Friday 5 © 1) 33) 4 14 u 13) Saturday | 8) 8)morn| 5 27 6 14 Sunday } 3) 6) 0 12) 6 46 3 15, Monday |} 4) 4,059,754 0 16 Luesday 5 2} 1 54) 8 <1) 57 17|\Wednestay | 7| 1| 2 58] 9 41/!9 54 (8 Thursday | $8! O| 4 911025) 52 49| Friday | 916 58) 5 2411 7] 49 40 Saturday | 10) 56) 6 41/11 48} 46 21 |Saaday | 12! 54) 7 5 |morn 42 22) Monday | 13) 52] 9 15] 0 28) 39 23/Yuesday | 14) 50/10 30) 1 34) 36 24/Wednesday | 16) 49/11 42) 155) 33 25, Taursday 17| 47jaft 52} 2 45) 30 26} Friday 18} 45) 1 58} 3 53) © 27 27| Saturday 19} 43) 25815 9 24 28 Sunday 2 41; 3 53) 6 33) = 21 29 Monday 22} 0] 4 42) 7 32) 18 30, Tuesday | 23] 38) 5 31) 8 42) 15 31'Wednesday (5 246 | 5 55) 9 24/13 12 «L, ARTHUR & €0., COMMISSION’ MERCHANTS, RECEIVERS for Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS, Poultry, Potatoes, Fruit & Vegetabl Ps ~te 142, 144 Commercial Street, BOSTON, MASS. 1 Dire -BY THE— Boston,{ Halifax and Prince Edward Island Stealiship Line. The Only Direct Line Without Change. Charlottetown to Boston THE staunch and commodious steamships Car- roll and Worcester have been thoroughly refuraished and put into first-class condition im every particular. During the season of 1387, one of these vessels will leave Pownai Street Wharf, Charlottetown, tor Boston, at six o'clock, p.m.,en THURSDAY of each week, and Boston for Charlottetown every SATURDAY, at noon. Excellent Passenger Accommodation! Low Rates ! FARES :—Cabin, $7.K:; Stateroom Berth. $9.50. Lowest Hates for freight, which is always care- fully handled. CARVELL BROTHERS, Agents, Charlottetown. Haxnison Lorine, Managing Owner, Lewis Wharf, Boston, July 21, 1880. - oie B-O0-8-T-0-N SUMMER ARRARXGEMENT THE PALACE STEAMERS New American Muslins, \> New Prin’ ed Batists, New French Muslins, New Printed Cottons. A BIG DISPLAY OF LACES. | Book Muslia, Victoria Lawa, Bishop's Lawn, Check Muslins. Embroideries, in Allovers, Flouncings, Edgings, inser- tions, &ec. | A Big Stock of Gloves and Hosiery. | Linen Collars and Cuffs, separate or in sets. | Corsets, direct from the makers and at the lowest price, o—-——- if you want a Seaside Dress just see eur stock of —e —Cheapest and Best Goods for the purpose to be ound, —_—-—_ —- O-- -_ Perkins & Sterns June J—dy & wky | K HOW all Men bY these Presents tt Thi STAR i ' TAILORING ESTABLISHMENT Is the right place to ret your Clothes made. Because we zive Good Value and a Fit that beats the wor'd. Our Histabiishment is new but our Cutters are the old at business in the Province. We can give a style and finish to our garments that others cannot attain to. ¢ their S —-——_——— —_—O----— WE BOO W Because we know we are right «nd care not what our competitors say. We are bound to knock them out in Fit, Style, Finish, Price, &c. Come and see us, even if you don’t buy. We want to show you our Fine Stock of Tweeds, Worsteds, &c. | mn O aoa ' M°SLEOD MCKENZIE, Queen Street, opposite Watsov’s Brug Store. JAMES McLEOD, late of C. Robertson & Co. J. T. MeKENZIE, formerly Bruce & McKenzie, late of New York. ! Charlottetown, July 5, 1887—-eod & wky —— SUMMER BEVERAGES, &O. —— ee ( ) Montserratt Lime Juice, in pint and quart bottles, This Lime Juice is imported from the Island of Montserratt, and 1s guaranteed to be the best and purest in the world. West India Lime Juice, in bottles and on draught. We import this in casks and bottle it ourselves, and it has given | first-class satisfaction | Lemon and Raspberry Syrups.--As we import these from one of the best houses in the Dominion, we guarantee them to be equal, if not superior, to any other Syrups in the market. Fresh Fruit.—We are receiving Oranges, Lemons and WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. 7 } fos AF Cts. URE. ‘ids ROMPT. AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead t nsemption, have been speedily cured hy the us ADa™MSON’S BALSAM after . he undertook to boss all Europe,and learn that others bave rights worth respecting,and require conveniences as wellas they. They also so far succeeded in ‘‘ pulling the wool over the eyes ” of one of our local M. P.’s as to induce that gentleman to write to the department supporting their claims. If that ‘‘ man from the East” was ,as shrewd as we take nim to be, he would, before pursuing the course he did, thus making enemies for himself, be in- formed of the real cause of grievances, instead S S r=) all other medicines have failed fferers from either soak danas -) atfeetions, ean | Of listening to the plausible yarn of a particul- resort to this great remedy, lent of obtaining | arly interested party who now chuckles over speedy relief. Do not el ‘t it at onee what he considers a clever trick. diene Recreate chor || amen Aine soe Pe Say Be omnia ay ee ean rs, Office are in Lot 40. The old Morell Post > ae Office, which is now changed to Lot 40 Post 343 4TH AveE., N. Y. . * : 7 - Office, has been for nigh 30 years or more in Lot 39. Now, we had a Post Office named ‘Lot 40” situated in the very centre of , Lot SATISFACTION EVERY TIME, 39. Sensible, is it not ! What is the result? Why, it suits business men _ nicely, but it hag so bungled up the affairs of the old Morell Post office, that we might almost as well have no office at all. Letters for persons in the far end of Lot ; + if r Bd ev is eS 40 —six or eight miles distant—now come to Ss aS fe i Sockapatiandenmanaaamdenst the centre of Lot 39, while the mail intended ot " for Morell Post Office (now Lot 40) goes to Rent oF Morell Station Post Office. + Si ad hess i i Now, we protest against this change, and BS Gee Sec i! demand that the old name be restored. We ; eee re ' don’t wish all our lives to be under a false 1 Gesay ays CNR af 4a fee 8 Ff name, and now is the time to settle the mat- Heep Sh RTD eee ter. ‘‘Business,” writing to the Patriot some niin ae = time ago, said that we have two offices called Morell Station Kildare and *‘Morell.” That is false. and Morell are as distinct as tETAILS AT- Kildare Station, Charlottetown and Char- 39 CENTS PER POUND. lottetown Royalty, or Souris East and AIM 1D otumnimiell Souris West. If space permitted we could 9 CENTS PER OUNCE. expose the true inwardness of this matter, but of this not now. In conclusion let me say that if the above demands are not acceeded to instanter, we shall put them in such a way as 2} Oz., 5 Uz., 10 Oz, PACKETS. July 29, 1887--lmo eod ——_—___—_—_—_——— will insure attention. PEOPLE. FOR mae AG BY Morell, Lot 39, Aug. 15, 1887. a & rm at Give them a Chance! HE Subscriber will have, between the present time and first week of October, about forty os Pigs for saie, of a good breed and easily! ed. That is to say, your lungs. :Also all your 'breathing machinery. Very wonderful {machinery it is. Not only the larger air- _| passages, but the thousands of little tubes 'and eavities leading from them. When these are clogged and choked with matter which ought not to be there, your lungs cannot half do their work. And what they do, they cannot do well. Call it cold, cough, croup, pneumonia, catarrh, consumption or any of the family of throat and nose and head and lung ob- structions, all are bad. All ought to be got rid of. There is just one sure way to get rid of them. ‘That is to take Buschee’s German Syrup, which any druggist will sell you at 75 cents a bottle. Even if everything else has failed you, you may depend upon this for certain. =e GEXERAL NEWS. BENJ. E. WRIGHT. Aug. 13, 1886.—2i law wky 2i SOOTHING, | CLEANSING, HEALING. It Cures =| CATARRH, | Gold in Head, HAY FEVER, STOPS | Droppings frem = =! Nasal passages im EASY TO USE. to the throat and excessive expectoration caused by Catarrh. Sent pre-paid om receipt of price, 50c, and $i. Address FULFORD & CO., Brockville, Ont. Gleanliness Next to Godliness’ panlimess NeXt tO GOGMNESS Cleanse Your Beds and Guard Against . Sickness. | An Qhio lover shot his sweetheart TOW isthe time to get your Feather Beds and because she refused to kiss him. Our girls IN “pillows renovated by Dufort’s Patent Feather do not require any such extreme modes of Renovator. which will remain in Charlottetown yorgyasion a few weeks for the purpose of Cleaning I eather 2 P Beds and Pillows, and making them Soft, Ciean | and Healthy. ' Ch’town, a friend for $300. No indictment for | swindling his friend has been found against him yei. ** How quick cana man wink ?” asks the Thousands of our Canadian Housekeepers can scientific editor of the Philadelphia Press. testify to the beautiful work done by this splen- Well, he cannot wink to the soda fountain did invention a ; Sew per ties Medical men and scientists acknowledge its a too quick but that his wife will cateh , him at 16, excellence. Satis i aranteeda—C : . : Satisfaction guaranteed—Charges moderate. | Mr. Ruskin has recently been publishing Remember the place—Terlizzick’s Corner, ' sqvice to young people who intend getting g saya ea mo eod tu th sat married. The old gentleman ought to be cnn - —ee LL ——. | able to give some valuable pointers, for his | matrimonial experiences have been more ‘peculiar than pleasant. | The cyclone ctruck a noted corner loafer in David City, Neb., and slapped him ‘against the side of a brick building, 100 'yards away. On recovering consciousness ‘the victim threw up his hands and cried | piteously: ** Don’t, Libbie, don’t; I’m going | right home.” In 1885 John Hay yas sentenced by an English court to seven years’ penal servi- ‘tude for larceny. He was afterwards ‘pardoned. He brought action against the ous prosecution, but was non-suited on the | ground that, as a convicted felon, he was An Indien man recently sold his wife to | Great Eastern railway company for malici- | Peck for Doncaster, 12,500 guineas paid by the Cobham Stud Company to the execu- tors of Mr. Blenkiron for Blair Athol, and a like sum paid by Lord Hastirgs to Mr. Padwick for the worthless Kangaroo. The battle of Poictiers took place on the 19th of September, 1356, in which King John of France was made prisoner and many of the French nobility lost their lives. The captive monarch, though respectfully treated, was brought to Eng land to grace the triumph of the conqueror. The peace, in 1360, put an end to his captivity, but to obtain his liberty he made over many of the most valuable provinces of the kingdom to the King of England,and agreed to pay a ransom of three millions of gold crowns, which reduced him to the necessity of paying for the necessaries of his household in leather money, in the middle of which there was a little nail of silver. It is not certain in what era—or in what country—the modern art of shoeing horses with iron took its rise. The earliest proof which Berenger, in his work on horseman- ship, says he met with was the shoe said to have belonged te Childeric,who lived about 480, which is preserved in Montfaucon’s antiquities of France. It perfectly resem- ‘bles the shoe now in use. In England there is reason to think that they began to shoe soon after the Norman Conquest. William the Conqueror gave to Simon St. Liz, a noble Roman, the town of North- 1mpton and the whole hundred of Falkley, then valued at £40 per annum, to provide shoes for his horses. In the Great Seal of William the First, however, the horse is unshod, but in the kings all the horses have shoes. seals of subsequent | In Germany there 157 pupils attending the elementary schools to every 1,000 of the | inhabitants. That is the largest propor- tion of any country except Switzerland. The average attendance in Great Britain 1s 4,329,434. In Greece the number of pupils is 143,278; in Italy, 1,873,723; in Portugal, 177,685. In Austria-Hungary students and scholars number 4,784,533. Denmark has 231,935 pupils in its parochial scho Russia’s school-sending population is 1,921,- 181. Sweden has 6,617 elementary schools with 697,792 pupils, or 94 per cent. of all children trom eight to fifteen. Mexico has half a million pupils attending 8,986 public elementary schvols, and 17,200 pupils tending 138 superior schools. In the matter of expenditure there is a great deal of difference im different nations. France spends 131,734,827 franes on public instruc- tion and 12,936,655 on the fine arts. For public worship and instruction Germany expends 55,852,894 marks. Spain, on the contrary, spent last year only $1,545,860. |Mexico’s arpropriation is $1,431,081 for education and justice. nw ta. av A Utah despatch of the 8th inst.,reports: ‘*Fred Hopt, alis Welcome, was shot to death in the yard of the penitentiary, four imiles from the city, yesterday. The firing | party consisted of five men with rifles. Dr. Hamilton pinned a rosette over Hopt’s heart, told him to be firm and death would come quickly ; he would not be mutilated, | but would be if he flinched. The condemn- ‘ed man showed the utmost firmness and said he forgave everybody, but if he had got a fair show on the first trial, he would not be here to-day. He came out of his | cell smoking a cigar and kept it inhis mouth to the last. He posed as for a photograph. | He was seated on a chair upon a_ blanket ; sat up firm and straight. | Marshall Dyer gave the word ‘‘ Ready, Fire.” The crack of the five rifles rang out as one, and the rigid body of the dead man retained its pose, the body falling forward and the chair falling over backwards and his stiff limbs lresting on the rung as when he sat upright. Two bullets pierced the small rosette. Death was instantaneous. The murder for which Hopt was executed was committed at Park City, Utah, on the night of July 1880, the victim being John F. Turner, son of John W. Turner, Sheriff of Utah County. ” ws, The following reply to the President's congratulatory telegram sent on the ;casion of her jubilee, was received from }Queen Victoria : on e “eae =A | : ; 7 bi oe ‘ . eal a i az “ah i, ee Bl ee EN dead in the eye of the law. Last week, | “Victoria, vy the Grace of God, of the United a a 2 SEC VE POLISH ‘however, he was himself sued in the Kingdom of Great. Britain "and Ireland [5 <= 3. ay Se Eoyes sa EE | Mayor’s court for $270, money advanced Queen, Defender of the Faith, iompres: P72 ty co tO \e ae Pawns Se ; |for the purpose of his defense on the| India, &., &c. a i iad = \GosetoS vob! Ss ] ES - : mela like To the President of the United States of = = Tee Foe es original prosecution. He now would like 9 i iad (pete 7%. . 44 | to know how a dead man can be sued and America, seudeth greeting to our gooa iriena: m & = cO ee Be = 22g re x i hi : F We have received from the hands of Mr. ol = oS ee ere linen cates S: E =o | the English lawyers are puzzled too. Phelps, United States minister at.our court €3 == oe : 7 SALT. i Mr. a B. Freeman, M. z. P 4 408 North | the letter you ,didressed us on th =U. Ly ote oO 4 Latest | Norfolk, recently travelled through the |+ast, mw hich: yoy, convey Your oo re -——__— $2 | counties of Lincoln, Welland, Haldimand, | *\0Ps and those of the people of the bed i S oo i - ; , S 5 > OCcCasii } ne celebration of BrantfordyHalton, Norfolk, Wentworth, |’ tates on the occasion of tn a gr thee SCC SSIOM VW bas and as far west as Oxford. He says the the 50th anniversary of our a i ; ‘ ~ ‘ - 2a Jaar : ra es OF THE Apples, every Boston steams Ay and W ill hav c I ars, Gr p — a throne. We request you to accept our best Strawberries, Watermelons, &c., in their season. {ee A Ch Ieee! [crops in these divisions have suffered fear-} +) .n4s {or this proof of friendship aud good INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. \ ° . . . ] is % ro yt) bisa aoa Uh oe fully from the unparalleled drought. Many will, which with similar proofs we have Confectionery.—-Having a very lairge stock of good, whole- 7 PURE COLO MAN EG co Sos farmers are feeding their stock. The pas- | recovered from the rulers of people of other Leave St. Joh ton, via E i port| some Confectionery, we are prepared to give extra value in @eeectegtete oy U8 eared turage is as bare as the sidewalk. Autumn | «tates, have caused us most sincere gratilica- ve St. John for Boston, via Eastport and For 1recuo y> prepa O give orn SR Ago Sota al eee bala pte | wheat thrived fairly well. But coarse grains |tion. In thanking you also tor the choice which you have made ot Mr. Phelps to be the _ land, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at - ‘ ; : jare more or less shrivelled up by the in- this line. 8.00 a. m. Aleo leave St. John at 7.20 every Saturday Ww ANTED : a s Mh time has lincerpretor of your sentiments on this oc- ‘ . ~ 3 ‘ : tense heat and lack of rain. The time has}inverpretor of } en n » * a ‘ - i. ; ‘| . nial os Tea Committees will find it to their advantage to give usa 9 lcone by .when showers, no matier how|casion, we. request; you, to accept in return : TUnD Pac RP FOR <¢ +} . . + . our best wishes for your ow uninterrupt Os ON Di EC call before buying elsewhere A LI\ E CAN\ A SS ER eens liberal, can be of any benefitto the crops. pout . . ee" n in uprec 8 | 2g | . “ i OOO a tl marty : " ee happiness and Weilare, ana over Ui u ” and Land,” ;ust now ready, with 300. Raaetengene Dr. Hamlin, returned missionary from | Ba of the United States of America. jm deep and jungie. r —— oe of the wonders of the Turkey, produced a great commotion/,~ recommend you to the protection of th — on ; -e" © beautiful Chromo Plates, over, 800 pages ; print ‘ sane rem Chatetnany to Boston, 36,50, 2nd BB a id Ry, —&— (+ C) a ¥ Be and paper excellent; low priced, Nothisg like it] amongst Canadian residents of the lhous- Almighty. Given at our court at Windsor > 9.50, lase. ; z : wrnel + . = s° : pa me ! = a yj in the worid. ands Islands Park on Friday afternoon. He ‘Castle the 18th day of July, in the year of our ign. o Ww. E. EARLE, St. John, N. B., Manager for ot yc J. S. ROBERTSON & BROS.. cided to embrace the Christian religion (aa they were not permitted ty do su by Eng- stated th:t when the slaves of Turkey de- ; Lord, 1887, and in the 5lst year oi our re Your good friend, Salisbury, _For tickets and other information apply to G. A.SHUARP, F. W. HALES, P. ELL Res P. &, L Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent, April 18, 1887~e0d wky QUEEN SQUARE AND KING SQUARE STORES. ‘Ch’town, July 9, 1887—eod wky Vicrogi4, R. July 25, 1837,