[ers ¢ DoLttars a VYarar. “* This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Pu blic, may speak free.”—Evxirrpes. SINGLE Corprzs two CrEN?s. NEW SERIES, UHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE SS JUNE 7, 1883. “VOL 13---NO. 15. om . ‘(kW iy . fue Datty Examiner fs ISSUED EVERY EVENING, gy ras Ex swinek Postisnine Compayy, | prow THEIR Orrick, Conner op Waren ANI SAT G8OKGE sTREETS, Charlottet P. KE. Island. Rates oF SUBSCRIPTION : Siz Mon $2 50 Three ‘} tis, - « . 1 25 Une Mon errr, 0 50 ga Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise. menta, On ap pleation. 7 SSD ALMANAC FOR JUNE, 1883, MCON'S CHANGES, New Moon 4th day, midnight, vitet Quarter, 12th day, 10h. 29m. a, m. Fall Moon, 20th day,Oh. 19m., p. m, Last.quarter 27th day, 3h. 25m., a. m. D Sun |Sus |Moon High | Days yi“? or W BEX | ises sets slees water |len’h, i jh mfh m | morn} aft’n \iPriday '417)7 38} 1 43) 7-42 @Seturday | 17' 39] 2 18] 8 41/15 39 3 Sunday | 16) 40) 3 11 9 32 4|/Monday | 16] 41! 3 46/10 19 § Tuesday ' S| 42) 4 39111 4 Wednesday | 15, 42] 5 3911 46; emcotey | 14] 43) 6 44| morn! iPriday | M4 44| 7 50, 0 28) Saturiay | 14) 44° 865P2 7/15 47 Sunday | 14) 45/10 0} 1 48) Il, Monda y 13) 45) 11 3 2 30) 12 Tresday | 1S) 46yaft 2) 3 18) Wednesday | 13! 46) 1 3) 415] J i Tharsday 13) 47) 1 58! 5 20 ib Friday | 93] 47) 3 2] 6 97 17 Sunday | 13; 48° 5 | 8 20 18) Monday 13) 4915 59° 9 5 Tuesday | 14) 49 6 54/9 : M Wednesday , 14, 49) 7 41/10 27 21/Thursday 14, 49, 8 29j11 4; %2\Friday 14) 50! 9 911 44) Saturday 14} 50) 9 45/aft 22/15 52 % Sunday 15) 50:10 13| 1 0 %5| Monday | 15) 50:10 47] 1 43; M)Tuesday | 15} 8011 15} 2 28! 27] Wednesday | lo} 50{11 46] 3 24) Thursday 16' 50| morn) 4 36| Priday 17; 50; 0 23; 5 53 Saturday 17} 50] 0 56 7 21| i t ARCHIBALD MNEIL & FORBES SHIPPING AND WOMMISSION MERCHANTS, 44 SOUTH STREET, NEW YORK. Cash advanced on consignments of Island ace. Agency for canned goods solicited New York. Apply to C, H. MeNEILL, AGENT. Ch'town, April 28, 1883. SULLIVAN & MACNEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. 6@ Money to Loan, W. W. Sutuivan, Q. C, | Caxstsa B. Macnert. Jan. 16, 83. McLEOD & MORSON Barristers & Attorneys-at-Law, WUILICITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, OFFICES: | L. ARTHUR & Co. GHNERATL ‘Commission Mei chants, 121. ATLANTIC AVERUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. Eggs and Produce a Specialty, INSURANCE OFFICE. Queen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, Lancashire Insurance Company CAPITAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS lnsurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptly a and equitably. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Agents, Office—South Side Queen Square. Sph’town, Sept. 15, 1882. <—Z te p - BOSTON STEAMER, STEAMERS: Carroll, 879 tons, Capt. Brown, Worcester, 865 tons, Capt. Blankenship 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. GARVELL BROS., AGENTS, Ch’town, May 17, 1883.--pat her sj yéeform 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. Nai, MeLeop. Nov. 24, ’$2.—pres her Ww. A. O. Morson. JOHN MAGEACHERN, (Late of Italian Warehouse) AGENT FOR Royal Fire Insurance Company, of England, Loudon & Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, of England, City of London Fire Insurance Co., of England, HAS REMOVED His Office to his New Building, lor, Queen and King Sts, —Up Stairs. Ch'town, Dec. 7, 82. Bank of Nova Scotia. ESTABLISHED 1832, $1,000,000 325,000 Paid up © p Capital Reserve Fund —_ =» —- An Agency of this Bank will be opened on ioaday next, 19th inst., in the build ing eas pied by the Baak of Prince Edward r under the maaagement of the under- P%its will be received on interest, and arrent account. . ts granted on the various Agencivs and *spondents of the Bank. “erling and other Exchange bought and aud geucral banking business — ; D. C, CHALMERS, town, June 17, 1882—tf Agent. MR. B. LAURANCE is at the DiamMonp BooKSTORE. See testimonials in advt. f Medi Endorsed by the French Academy 0 . cine for Inflammation of the Urinary Organs, cansed by Indiscretion or Exposure. Hotel Dieu Hospital, Paris, Treatment. Posi- tive cure inone to three days. Local nage ment only required. No nauseous doses 0 bs or Copaiba. ; eae Hyaientc,CURATIVE, PREVEN- give. Price $1,50, including Bulbe Syringe Sold by all Druggists, or sent free by mail securely sealed, on receipt of price. Deserip- tive Treatise free on application. AMERICAN AGENCY “66” MEDICINE CO., Detroit, Mich., and Windsor, Ont. Sold in Charlottetewu vy ; APOTHECARIES HALL co. May 16. i ! | } | ' ! MR. THEO. L.-CHAPPELLE Mr. B. Laurance’s Celebrated Spectacl EDWARD ISLAND, THURSDAY. i HAS ACCEPTED THR AGENCY FOR mae ae Wy and has a full stock, G¢nsisting of every CONVEX AND CONCAVE SICHT, —INob Pebbles and Fine Lenses, —IN= or SPECTACLES AND EYVECLASSES, e ‘ will always be #jund at the DIAMOND BOOKSTORE, And be refers with pleasure to the following loegl testimonials, as to the value experienced by the wearers of 1B, Laurance’s Spectacles. Mr. B. Lauranee will be u Mr. Chappelle's Store FOR THE ENTIRE WEEK from Monday, the 4th, to Saturday, the 9th. READ TESTIMONIALS: _ Dear Srr,—The eye-glasses and spectacles purchased from you in December last have | given me comfort and satisfaction, and I never experience any strain vpon my eyes after, using them. Mr, B. LAURANCE. 20s GOVERNMENT Hovsg, lst June 1883. I remain, Dear Sir, your obedient servant, T. HEATH HAVILAND, Lieutenant Governor. | have been wearing a pair of eye-glasses purchased of Mr. Laurance four months since, and I can remark with truth that I see perfectly the smallest print, with ease and comfort, by artificial light. I purchased, in December last, a pair of Mr. B, Laurance’s eye-glasses, and have much pleasure in stating that I have never had glasses that suited my eyes so well—in reading the DAVID STERLING. smallest print without any strain on the eye. This is to certify that I have purchased from Mr. B. Laurance two pairs of eye-glasses, one for my wife and the other for myself, and we are both very much pleased with our purchase. W. E. DAWSON. OWEN CONNOLLY. Charlottetown, May 31, 1883. June 4, 1383. FURNITURE, FURNITURE, Opposite EDSTEADS, Chairs, Tables, Washstands, Sofas, Lounges, Parlor, and Drawing Room Bedroom Suits, Looking Glasses and Mirrors, Window Furniture, Picture Frames and Picture Mouldings. AT COST. a ae Post Office, JOHN NEWSON, Charlottetown, Jan. 2, 1883.—ly CHEAPEST, SAFEST. SIMPLEST LIFE INSURANCE The Dominion Safety Fund Life Association $50,000 Deposit with the Dominion Government. An Assessment Company with a Safety Fund. Life Insurance Rae Goud IN THE WORLD. ———— () OF ST. JOHN, N. B. 0 under Government License. oO at its actual cost. ———0o=—>————— canvassers Wanted. LEONARD MORRIS, General Agent for P. E. Island. Sigumerside, Oct. 28, 1882.—ly Charlottetown. Working LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. -_——_>--— | “Is this a Mistake?” My Dear Sin,—I have, in my possession, a r signed ‘* Clanranald,” which, | 0 , that the writer had a good right so to sign, fer I agree with Fergus Maclvor, , Vich Ian Vohr, that “the lineal chief of a olan is superior in rank to any Earl.” But, in your issue of Tuesday evening, I read 3 patch from Ottawa, signed, in your paper, *“*“De Winton.” Is this a mistake of the Press? Or, if not, under what Foreign Poten- tate, having ‘‘no jurisdiction in this Realm of England” * is the Peerage claimed by ‘Lieutenant Colonel De Winton, Secretary to ! ©f Aig Excellency the Governor General, and , Commander-ia-Chief, (see Chappelle’s Al- manac.”) I remain, my dear sir, Yours very truly, Ropert Bruce Stewart, Earl of Evandale and Strathgartney, under King James the Thirdy and his son, King Charles the Third, of Great Britain, Ireland and France., —* See the 37th Article of zhe Protestant Church of England. North River Takes the Lead. Sir,—'' A North River Boy” has felt the reproof respecting the statem that have ;been published concerning the den of thieves, as formerly called, that are con- tinually molesting the honest farmers of | North River and the adjacent settlements. ‘The “‘ North River Boy” ought to remem- _ber that we only reprove a gang that ‘is | known by a majorityof the inhabitants of | P. E. Island to bea public nuisance. The ‘* North River Boy” has stated that Corn- | wall harbors thieves more competent to rob ‘churches and church yards than the thieves lof his own” settlement ; but that is clearly and comfort known by the-public to be an impossibility. | Cornwall, like ‘almost all settlements, may sometimes‘ harbor a few thieves that occa. that are causifg® the people for miles around to feel alarmed. : Your’s, A CoRNWALL SUPPORTER. The License Act. | OPINIONS OF THE PRESS AND THE PEOPLE. ‘*Has received very generai endorsation.” —C Canadiun. on many respects.” — Oshawa Vindicator, **More beneficial in its results than the Provincial Act.” —strathroy Despatch. ‘‘A measure that will meet with the ap- probation of even the most sanguine Grits.” —Pembroke Standard. “Under it not one of the abuses incident to the Crooks Act in Ontario will have a chance to creep in.” —Pictou S:andard. ‘‘It is a practical solution of the problem of liquor legislation, which has puzzled the wisest statesmen of the Uld World for the last three centuries.”—Chatham Planet. “It has been received with universal favor by the temperance people as a great step in advanee, while the restrictions are not such as to interfere with the reasonable and legitimate sale of liquor, where the | people may not have decided to adopt pro- hibition.” — Perth Expositor. ‘It will give support to the temperance movement and encouragement to temper- ance habits. Mr. Blake and his friends, who childishly refused to act on the com- mittee to prepare the bill, evidently feel that they made a mistake—so far as work- ing any political capital ont of the matter is concerned.’’-— Fredericton (N. B ) Capital. An editorial writer in the Globe the other day announced that Sir John Macdonald had fixed the licensing bill to meet the wishes of the licensed victuallers. The same writer, who also contributes to a weekly Grit paper called the Tribune, states that Sir John has made the restrictions and restraints upon licensed victuallers under the new law ‘“‘galling,” and that the vic- tuallers ‘‘ asked for a fish and they got a serpent.” This is wearing two faces under one hat with a vengeance.—Torunte Mail. Mr. Desnoyers, a member of the Mon- treal Licensing Board, is much pleased with the new license law. In an interview with a Montreal Witness reporter he stated that under the new Provincial statute the com- missioners were obliged to grant every appli- cation for a license, provided the applicant did not bear a bad character. Thus there was no limit placed upon the number of licenses issued. Under the new law the number of licenses to be issued bears a fixed proportion to the population, and of course the issue of licenses is limited. This is a good feature of the law, but the Re- formers wh» also pretend to be of a temper- ance turn of mind do not appreciate it. i The poet has informed us that ‘‘the man that lays his hand upon a woman, save in the way of kindness, is a wretch,” and in such a light Mrs. Welsh, of Pittsburg, viewed her husband Thomas. He attempt- ed to playfully pound her ; but she reseut- ed, and seizing a red-hot bayonet which had been used as a poker, thrust him through the lungs, inflicting fatal injuries. It is true that Tom was a brute and a coward, but at the same time to prod him with a | red-hot bayonet seems kind of sudden and severe. At a Conservative demonstration on Wed- nesday the Marquis of Salisbury delivered an address, in which he denounced to Gov- ernment’s policy in Egypt and Africa, and urged the discontinuance of bitter party antagonisms. The Princess Louise has donated a hand- some collection of sponges and corals from the West Indies to the Geological Museum at Ottawa, [control of the Hudson Bay Company. the position of Head Master in a sionally commit, trifling ‘thefts, but North]. - River apr . to take the lead in thefts in Death ofa Noted Canadiah. The following brief notice has beeri made of the death of Mr..Isbister, whose namo must occupy a prominent place in Canadian history :— Alexander Kennedy Isbister, M. A., LL B., whose death is announced in a @éspatch from London, was chiefly known for the part he took ‘in wresting what waa once known as the Red River Colony from the He was a native of Canada, and was bern in 1823. He was graduated at the University of Edinburgh as M.A, &nd subsequently received the degree of» EM. B.,: from the University of Londen. (Bp due time he was called to the Bar, and subsequently filled Ae grammar school, He took a great interest in educational! matters, und for mang years was editor of the Educational Times, be- sides publishing panidreus school text books. In 1872 he was chosen Dean ~* the College of Preceptors. In 1849, having been appointed standing counsel and agent of the Red ‘River Colony, Mr. Ishister devoted hinself to the task of aiding tie colonists in breaking up the Hudson Bay Company's monopoly, which was a serious o}stacle to the advance- ment of the settlement. His c pon- dence with tbe Colonial Office on this sub- ject is very voluminous and fillg more than one Biue-book, In 1856, with the,aid of Mr. Gladstone, the late Duke of Newcastle and others, he secured the appointment of a House of Commons committee to make an investigation. The result of this was that after a few more years of negotiation ghe Hudson Bay Company, in consideration of $300,000, surrendered all their rights of exclusive trade and jurisdiction in British North America. This. was the first step leading to the subsequent accession of British Colambiaand Vauconver’s Island and the formatjon of the confederation of all the Britigh.colonies in North America under the it of the Dominion of Canada. oo nr em : se : Tan a8 a Disinfectant, ¥ One of thegadst powerfal of disinfectants is tan, or the debris of tannery, employer in the preparation of skins, and it is to c re- gretted that if is not oftener used, for it is within the reach of everyone and at a moderate price. Tannin, the chemical principle which nature seoms to have iin- ‘pregnated into the bark of trees to protect them from thousands of insects. which at- tack them on every side, has a very strong smell, which keeps off all parasites, great or small ; and everyone knows that tannin vents f ion, and destroys most of the virus, thus often preserving us from contagion, which would in time commit great havoc. On that acoount (says L’ Aviculteur) it is a known fact that in Franze country people cannot give up the idea of losing the skin or hide of any animal which has died from contagious disease, not- withstanding all sanitary orders to the contrary. There is in the action of tannin an indisputable fact, and of which up to now people have taken no great account ; and one can easily believe, as it has been reported, that in tan yards and at leather dressers, where the wieanipulation and waste emitted at times as a most disagree- able odour, it is known that people employ- ed in these establishments have escaped epidemics and contagious diseases. At all eventa, it is quite certain that in tan-yards vermin never make their appearance. This is a capital remedy, and little known, to disembarrass habitations of that repug- nant and tenacious insect which, in warm countries especially, cause such sleepless nights. Merely spread over the floor of the room infested a thick layer of tan, close hermetically doors and windows for some days, repeat this two or three times, and the place will be freed from these trouhie- some Visitors. -<-- Military Notes. The newly-raised Egyptian Artillery is said to be in a more forward state, and to give greater promise for the future, than the other branches of the Khedive’s army. The artillery has, indeed, always been a corps d elite in Egypt, the officers and men being especially selected, and scientifically trained. The War Office hea decided not for the present to extend the movement for the formation of mounted riflemen in connec tion with volantcer corps, but will await the result of the experiment being made by the Earl of Mount Edgecumbe, in connection with the Princess of Wales’ volunteers at Plymouth. Mr’ Childers’ scheme for the territoria!- ization of the British army is an acknow- ledged success, sco far as it relates to the infantry and artillery, but there is a pros pect that it may have to be abandoned for the cavalry. A genera) order is under con- sideration providing that the recruiting for the cavalry shall be conducted under a dif ferent system. One-half of the twelve prominent princes and generals upon whom the Emperor Wil- liam of Germany conferred the rank of field- marshal general in 1870-73 are dead, viz : Von Steimmetz, Count Roon, Count Wran- gel, (who, however, received the title as long ago as 1856), Prince Frederick of the Netherlands, Prince Charles of Prussia,and the Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Those who survive are the Crown Prince, Prince Frederick Charles, Count Moltke, Prince August of Wurtemburg, Baron von Menteuffel, and Genera] Herworth von Bit- tenfield. ~~ | Hon. Peter Mitchell participates in the opinion generally entertained regarding Mr. Blake’s inane criticisms of Ministerial mea- snres during the late session. He says : ‘During the session I do not think Mr. Blake has done anything to improve his po- sition or that of his party, and Sir John has proved himself as astute and able a leader as ever.”