“ Port Hill. .| “10 35 “*) “* 425 “) o viel CREE T41..ooe iy. #$12.20pm] ‘* 6.45 ** Tignish.. ‘Ar 1200 “ }Ar 7.35 ‘ TRAINS GOING EAST. | STATIONS. | EXPRESS, | MIXED. MIXED, Tignish .. .| Dp 2.00pm) Dp 6.45am ‘es « {Ar 7.40 ** Alberton .. 2.40 Dp 8.00 “ O'Leary...| “ 3.28 “| ** 9.05 « ‘Port Hill. .| ** 4.25 “| 10.35 « Wellingt n, ‘ 458 “| “11.15 ee Ar 5.35 ** |Arl2 00 ** Dp 6.00 ‘“ |Dp 1.05pm _ Dp 6.30 am Kensingt'n| * 6.25“! 1.40 «| © 7.06 Go’ty Lane.| “* 6.52 “| “ 217 «| ** 7.45 « Bradalba’e' *‘ 6.58 ce Eas 2 * oe Hunter R’r| “* 7.26 “| * 3.05 “1 ** 8.42 N Wiltsh’e| ** 7:39 ‘| ** 3.20 “| ‘* 8.58 ** Royalty Je “* 8.15 “| “* 415 “| “* 9.55 * Ch’town ..|Ar 5.30 ‘‘ |Ar 4.35 +] Arl0.15 PS Ch’tewn ..'Dp 4.00pm Dp 6.¢5am Royalty Jc! ** 4.15 “| ** 7.08 * Womens: “A 226 |) * 7:25 “* Be@iord ..| “‘ 4.43 ‘| ** 7.47 * Mt. Stew’t/Ar 5.10 ‘*|}Ar 8.30 “ + ih OK lie Sabie tae vid: alirienet rte abe PETS TT PATENTS, Terws :—Five Dottars A YEAR, - am . Eye ' aetna) aod i -iciaitie~eneerecntennan ienternemeeibeeees ee ae —-—— ——_ + . . Sinaie Copizs Twe Crnrts. NEW SERIES f 1) ee 7 [ae Dairy KXAMINER! IS ISSUED VERY EVENING, By rue Examiner Pus.isuine Company, rRoM THEIR OrFice, Conner or WaTex aND GREAT GEORGE STRERTS, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. Rates oF SuBSCRIPTION : Six Months, : $2 50 Three Months, - . . 1 25 One Month, . 0 50 ya? Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. “Prince Béward Island RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 16. -_- -——-—- Summer Arrangement. _—_—--— To take effect ou the 23rd May, 1881, ———————— eee =a — = —— <a TRAINS GOING WEST. } cae #TATIONS. i EXPRESS. | MIXED | MIXED, | Scaris .... Dp 6 30am! Dp 2.15pm’ Bear River ** 7.04 “| ‘* 3.00 ** St. Peter’s.| ** 7.44 ‘*, ** 3.52 °° | Morell....| “* 3.05 «| “Am 1 Mt. Stew’t Ar 8.40 “ |Ar 5.05 “| Georget’n .|Dp 7.20am! Dp 3.10pm! Cardigan ..| ** 7.40 “ “* 3.36 +e Mt. Stew’t/Ar 8.40 “ Ar 5.00 **| Mt, Stew't| Dp 8.450m Dp 5.30pm) Bedford...| ‘* 9.14 “ “* G07 “| Werk 2... “931 ‘* 630" Royalty Jc; ‘“* 9.45 “*, ** 6.45 “ Ch’town ..|Arl0.00 “‘ ;Ar 7.10 * Ch’town ..|Dp 6.30am| Dp 9.20am|Dp 4.35pm ae “ Ar 9 40 “e R 6 Royalty Je 6.45 Dp 9.52 ** 4.56 WN Wiltsh’e sé 7:2 te 610.45 sll “ec 5.47 ss Hunter R’r| “* 7.35 ** | “11.00 “' ** 6.03 * Bradalba’e | “* 8.02 «| “11.37 “| “* 6.29 « Co'ty Line. * S810 * | **11.47 “6 “ 6.52 sé Keusingt’n ae 8.39 “es **12.25 pm; “é 7.28 se S reide' AT 9-05 ** |Ar 1.00 ** |Ar 8.00 ** amm s10° Dp9.25 “Dp 245 * | Wellingt’n, ‘*10.02 ** | ** 3.36 ** | Mit Stew’t|Dp 5.25pm! Dp $8. 55am ~ 2 “Wire ” Georgeto’n| Ar 6.45 “‘ , “10.45 ** Mt Stew’t' Dp 5.20pm'Dp 8.50am Morell... ..| “* 5.52 “| ** 9.32 “* St. “Peter’s| “ 6.15 “*| **10.06 “ Bear River| *’ 6.55 ‘*| ‘'11.00 * i Ar 7.30 ‘‘ j|Aril.50 * N. B.—The Express Train from Souris and Georgetown connects at Royalty Junction with the Mixed Train from Charlottetown for the West, in the morning; and the Mixed Train from the West connects, at Royalty Junétion with the }:xpress Train from (har. lettetown for Georgetown ard Souris, ia the sere LB. ARCHIBALD, Superintendent, Railway Office, Ch town, May 21, 1881. JOSEPH GILLOTT'S STEEL PENS. BY ALL DEALERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD. Bens. F. Grarron, Srory B. Lapa Hatsertr E. Pain®. Late Commissioner of Patents. PAINE, GRAFTON & LADD, Attorneys-at-Law and Solicitors of American and Foreign Patents, 412 Firru Sreerr, Wasurctor, D. C, ractice patent Jaw in all its branches in e Patent Office, and in the Supreme and Circuit Courts of the United States. Pamph- lets sent free on receipt of stamp tor postage. septs HE place to get your Printi done is a FIRE! MARINE! LIFE! HORACE HASZARD, General Insurance Agent, — REPRESENTING — Com mercial Union Fire Assurance Company, of London, Eng,, CAPITAL, £2,500,000 STG. Western Fire Assurance Company, of Toronto, Ont., CAPITAL, $800,000.00. British Amezica Fire Assurance Cempany, of Toronto, Ont., CAPITAL, $500,000.00. : Sun Mutual Life & Accident Insurance Company, of Montreal, CAPITAL, $500,000.00. CHARLOTIETOWY, PRINCE EDWAR —— a Oo MARINE -ENSURANCE ALSO EFPECTED. 20: Risks taken en all descriptions of Property at LOWEST RATES. :0: Oflice—Corner of Quecn and Lower Water Streets. Charlottetown, April 4, 188!1—tf « —— — ne nn ee = on ae LIFE ASSURANCE POLICIES AT Reduced Rates, ARE NOW ISSUED BY THE North British and Mercantile FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY EDINBURGH AND LONDON, ESTABLISHED IN 1809. . CAPITAL: S b ib d, ' ' . e : 2 : $10,000,000 Piiw,-. --:--xl ptocl ene Nine-tenths of the whole Profits of the Life Branch belong to the Assured. Profits of previous five years divided among Policy-holders, $1,158,500. FIRE DEPARTMENT. Insurances upon almost every description of Property effected at the LOWEST CURRENT RATES. Insurances upon Private Residences effected on ESPECIALLY FAVORABLE TERMS. pay Losses promptly and liberally settled. GEO. W. DEBLOIS, General Agent for Prince Edward Island. [ma 16 3 Office—No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. ae FRANKLIN HOUSE. :0: - SUMMER HOTEL NOW OPEN. Built on high land, it commands a splendid view of the city, and is one of the healthiest sites on the Island. Connected with this House are pleasant grounds, well wooded. If you want cool rooms and quiet surroundings, patronize the FRANKLIN. The dust nuisance will not trouble you when staying at the FRANKLIN. Guests at the FRANKLIN have the exclusive use of the Bath House on the private Beach near the FRANLKIN. Terms very moderate. N. B.—This is a Temperance House. H. F. COOMBS, PROPRIETOR. = DA OE A A =—_——_ LOBSTERS. |__ THE BEST Q{PECIAL RATES of Freight on eri j U RN | p SEED ho per Fishwick’s Express, ‘* Anchor,’ 5 ‘*Cromwell, ’ and other Steamboat Lines, to, to following ports, viz: Antwerp, Bordeaux, | brussels, Bremen, _Copeuhagen, Glasgow, Halifax, Havre, Hamburg, London, Liverpool, } Naples and New York. Parties having such to ship would do well Ch | tt f t Pi t to enquire of L. A. Barnasy, Hollis Street, al’ 1 A OW 0 1¢ Ol, Halifax, or ' A. H. B. MACGOWAN, N OTICE is horeby given that Queen’s Wharf, Charlottetown. | June 14—im 2aw j On and After Monday, 2erd inst.. —_—AT— BEER & SONS. May 31, ’81—eod UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EXAMINER Pictou at 7.30, a. m., instead of 5.30 as at the beginning of season. the XXAMINEK PRINTING ROOMS the Cheapest and most Newsy Paper pabliched in the, Proviness, : } May 20, 1881. . ( the Steamers will leave Charlottetown for Royal insurance Co., LIVERPOOL AND LONDON. fail, 5 2... $10,000,000.00 Cash Assetts, . . . . 23,000,000.00 Annual Income, . =... 5,000,000.00 —_——_—— Unlimited Liability of Shareholders. With the largest net surplus of any Fire Insurance Company in the world, RATES MODERATE, JOHN MACEACHERN, une 20, ’81—eod Agent for P. E. Island. ALFRED A. BOWN, AUCTIONEER —AND— General Commission Merchant ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND. Solicits consignments of all kinds of Produce, Butter, Eggs, Vegeiables, etc., etc. Prompt returns guaranteed, Good refer- ences on application. [ju 17 6m oaw L. ARTHUR & CO., GENERAL Commission Merchants, 108 SOUTH MARKET STREET, BOSTON, MASS. May 16, 1881. EDWARD T. RUSSELL & 60.; CHIN BERAL Commission liferchants, No. 213 State Street, [wkly BOSTON, Meg AG IOBLasa rhs yd «west oubrt Marine Insurance Company Prince Edward Island. — Rost. Lcn@worts, Esq., President. Directors : Hoy. L, C. Owen, 1D. R, M. Hoopes, Esq., Lt. Hanprasay, Esq., | B. Rogers, Ksq., G. R. Bexr, Eeq., Samugt Morcu, Esq. Risks taken daily on Vessels, Cargoes and Freights, at their Office, Cormer of Great George and Lower Water Streets, FRED, W. HALES, Ch’town, April 25, 1881. Secretary Queen Insurance Co'y OF ENGLAND. ee ee TWO MILLIONS STERLING. CAPITAL - Insurance effected on all kinds of Buildings, Merchandise and Produce, Also, on Vessels on the stocks, Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settle! promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), ju’77) Agent for Prince Edward Island. W. G. BISHOP. Ste er La cr —AND — FORWARDING AGENT: MARINE INSURANCE BROKER, —AND— General Commission Agent, 80 BEDFORD ROW, P. O. BOX 1 - HALIFAX, N.S, ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon. Hulls, Cargoes and Freights insured in first- class offices at most favorable rates. Consignments of Produce solicited, and prompt rcturns guaranteed, Correspondence solicited and promptly, CARPETS, Lace Curtains, &c CHOICE ASSORTMENT just opened, and will be sold at very ‘ow prices at R. W. TREMAINE’S, 83 Queen Street. answered [ap 7 6m , June 1, '8i. ISLAND. TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 1881. VOL. 9.---NO. 31, - Bring Home Something. Standard Time for North America. | At the recent meeting of Engiteers' Nearly every farmer goes to the near held in Moutreal, Mr: Sandford Fleming est village to trade, visit a mechanic, or proposition with a view to reguliting ouce a week, He often takes a load to the variation of time on this continent.|market but he rarely takes one hottie. The European countries are compara- | He can, with very little trouble, hauls lows without inconvenience the time ef for nothing, and whieh will be of great jade a very simple dd business-like obtain his letters and papers, at least’ tively small and compact, avd each fol-,load of material that may be obtained’ its capital. But the United States and Canada cover too much longitude to work by such a rule, and hitherto we have had no rule of uu-formity. Each town has its own time determined direct from the sun and each considerable railway run- ning east and west is divided into sections which adopt the time of diferent centres. Mr. Fleming’s proposition was simply to divide the cotintry into sections whose time would be exactly an hout apart and have all places ‘within those sections uniform. Any one passibg from ove section into another would find his watch just one hour astray add would not be perplexed by having to calculate a differ- ent number of minutes of difference in each place visited. The proposition is beng considered: eA ee M arriage. Young people marry their opposites in temperament and general character, and such marriages are generally good ones, They do it instinctively. The young man does not say, ‘*My black eyes re- quire to be wed with blue, and my over- vehemence requires to be a little modified with dulness and reserve.” When these opposites come together to be wed they do not know it, but each thinks the other just like himself. Olc people never marry their opposites ; they marry their similars and from calculation. Each of these two arrangeinents 1s very proper. In their long journey these opposites will fall out by the way a great many times, and charm the other back again, and by- and-bye they will be agreed as to the place they will go to, and the road they will go by, and both become reconciled. The man will be nobler and larger for being associated with so much humanity unlike himsejf, and she will be a nobler woman for having manhood beside her, that seeks to correct her deficiencies and supply her with what she lacks, if the diversity be not too great, and if there be real generosity and love in their hearts to begin with. The old bridegroom, having a much shorter journey to make, must associate himself with one like him- self. A perfect and complete marriage is, perhaps, as rare as perfect personal beauty. Men and women are married fractionally, now a small fraction, then a large fraction. Very few are married totally, and they only, I think, after some forty or fifty years of gradual approach and experiment. Sucha large and sweet fruit is a complete marriage, that it needs a very long summer to ripen in and then a long winter to mellow and season. But a real, happy marriage of love and judgment between a noble man and woman is one of the things so very hand- some that if, the sun were as the Greek poets failed, a god, he might stop the world in order to feast his eyes with such a spectacle.— Theodore Parker. ya No Horseshoes. The argument against horseshoes seemed to me so strong, and the con- venience of doing without them so great, that I resolved to try the experiment. Accordingly, when my pony’s shoes were worn out,I had them removed, and gave hima month’s rest at grass, with an occasional drive of a mile or two on the high-road while his hoofs were hardening. The result, at first, seemed doubtful. The hoof was a thin shel, and kept chipping away, until it had worn down below the holes of the nails by which the shoes had been fastened. After this, the hoof grew thick and hard, quite unlike what it had been be- fore. I pow put the pony to full work, and he stands it well. He is more sure- footed; nis tread is almost noiseless ; and his hoofs are in no danger from the rough hauds of the farrier; and the change altogether has been a clear gain, without anythiog to set off against it. The pony was between four and five years old, and had been regularly shod up to the present year. He now goes better without shoes than he ever did with them; and without shoes he will cortinue to go so long as he remains in my possession, The use of horseshoes is asin; they are unnecessary, and ‘‘ their results are purely evil ;’ they torture the animal and shorten his life ; and the sin carries along with it the curse of being a continual source of worry and expense to his owner, ‘* Fash- ion” cannot plead effectually in their favor, as they detract from action, activity, smart- ness and speed. But then, perhars, “fashion” demands clatter; there is no accounting for taste. The bearing-rein would be still less need- ed for a horse which, having no pains in his feet, would not be shifting about, and put- ting himself into slouching postures at every moment in order to relieve them.— Horses and Roads. a> GooseBERRIEs, Cucumbers, Pine Apples, Bananas, Apples, Lemons, Oranges, at ‘‘ The Confectionery.” a22 2i ‘benefit to his land. ~ Most village people make no use of the ashes produced in their stoves or of the bones taken from the meat they consume. Scareely any brewer has any use for the hops that have been boiled in his vats, and the “black- smith hardly ever saves the elippings he takes from the feet of korses, All these materials make excelleit manure. ‘A barrel of shavings cut from the ‘hoofs of horses contains more ammonia, than i# contained in a load of stable maniire, Applied to land without preparation tley might give uo immediate results, but they would become decomposed in time, aud crops of all kinds would derive benefit from them. They may be so tre that they would produce immediate ‘re* sults. By covering them with fresh horse mauure they will decompose very ‘rapid- ly. They may also be leached in-a bar+ rel and the water that covered them drawn off and applied to plants. Water jin which pieces of horns and hoofs have ‘been scaked is an excellent mauure for plants that require forcing. It stimu- the growth of tomatoes, rose bushes and house plants very rapidly, aud emits the offensive odors. A vast amount of fer- tilizing material is wasted in towns that farmers could obtain the benefit of with very little trouble-—Chicago Times. ne 0 A 2 Ei Clippings: from ‘‘ Grip.” Electricity in Franklin’s time was @ wonder ; row we make light of it. ‘**Fine feathers do not make fine birds” but they certainly do make fine beds. A new defivition—A jury is a body of men organized to find out which side hes the smartest lawyer. There is one good thing about. this whole business of a man’s conscience smiting him—generally he isn t hit very hard. Now's Her Cuance.— Montreal has been appealed to by her sister, Quebec, for a little financial aid to the sufferers, by the past fire. Of course the commer- cial metropolis will be equal to the occa- sion. As in the case of the lamentable St. John fire, she will magnanimously put her hand in her pocket; but Grir hopes she will not, as in that instance, forget to take it out again. ie ___ An Army of Monkeys. Some sailors belonging to a vessel anchor- ed near Colombo, while ashore, tried toe capture a monkey. As soon as they put hands on him he gave a series of yells, when, as if by megic, every tree swarmed with in- dignant monkeys. An order to make for the boat was promptly obeyed. When the monkeys saw their enemy on a full retreat they formed in a solid body and followed hurtiedly in their wake. Sticks, stone and every available missile were hurle furiously at the heads at the flying sailors, In vain did they drop their prize, hoping that it might pacify their enraged pursuers. it was not so; only one dropped out of the ranks to gather im its hairy embrace the unoffending object of the fray, while the others rushed on more frantically than ever. Ceaching the boat they had no time to jump in, but shoved her off from the shore clinging to the gunwales and crawling in only when some distance had been placed between them andthe implacable: foe. When they had arrived at a safe distance to lie, they rested on their oars and curiously scanned the infuriated army on the beach; There appeared to be thousands of them running up and down in wild confusion,and hurling stones far out into the water in the direction of the boat. inet ti. ltt Prince N apoleon’s ] Programme. Prince Napoleon has published his electoral prozramme in his official organ, Le Napoleon. He is in favor of the pars tial revision of the constitution, more particularly of that part which relates to the election’ of the President. . The Privce regards the direct nomivation of the President by universal suffrage as all- important. jet <P The Moncton Times says that : **With- in a week, that is, from the 14th inst. to the 20th inst., inclusive, the Americau boats brought 295 passengers to St. ‘Jobo, and took away only 184. This,is according to the reports of passengers in-~ wards given in the St. John papers, the. authority for the number outwards being the St, Johu correspondent of the Sum merside Jour:al, It is stated Sir Hector Langevin will leave about the ist of July for an ex; tended tour through New Brunswick, Noya Scotia, Cape Breton, and Prince Edward Island. i lalate el An Ottawa despatch says: ‘It tS un- derstood that owiag to pressing official engagements, Sir Charles Tupper has declined the proposed banquet. London“ Trnth” says that thé Queen is as observant of trifles as George IIT. was.