DoLLARS A YEAR. NEW SERIES. Che Daly Examiner 4a is i : y eveuing by i " . on ye } ‘ The Examiner Publishing %o From their offi %, corner of VV ater and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— YY ha ee I ig ce vias eetunne $2.50 I oi ce ekcce sakkic 1.25 Ce er oe ds ons cote ins . a Alvectising at moderate rates, Contracts may bse made for monthly, quar- terly. half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, oa application ALMANAC FOR AUGUST, 1998, MOON'S CHANGES, + u First Quarter 6th day, 4h., 43.8m., p. m., 8S. Fall Moon I4th day, 2h., 11.7m., p. m., N. (below horizon. ) Last Quarter 22nd day, 3h., 29.3m., p. m., heiow horizon). New Moon 29th day, 8b, 41.9m., EK. a. Mm., s ‘ 4 Ae CHARLOTTETOWN, P. OPENING TO-DAYWY, & us * er’ STANL! _ Pores ieee as BROWNS BLOCK : 1 Case American White Shirts, i Collars and Cuffs, i Scarfs and Ties. Also —New Prints, New Muslins, New Seersuckers, New port Wraps (all shades), Ladies’ Vests, in Balbriggan, Merino and India Gauze, Ladies’ and Children’s Hosiery. «7 , Py) & at STANLEY BROS. Brown's Block, Opoosites Market House. } ** s »? mks Ch’town, June LSS6. - maw be wince ‘Sen Moon! High) Day’s| M rises|sets | rises |water| len’h h mh mjmorn{aft’n h m | Sunday #477 25 6 2111 51 14 38) 2' Monday 48 23) 7 30 morn 35 | 3 Tuesday 49| 22) 8 54 0 33] = 33 | + Wednesday Sl 21:10 81 1 14 30} 5 Thursday 52; 19111 19' 2 0O 27 | 6| Friday 53; 18jaft 27; 2 48) 25} 7 | Saturday 54; 16) 1 34) 3 49 ed 8) Sunday | SS 16) 33615 3 19) u Monday 57 i4' 3 34) 6 22 17 | 10 Tuesday 58; 12, 4 27| 7 30 14) 11 Wednesday 59} 10) 5 15) 8 27 1} 12 Thursday 5 .@ 9) 5 57| 9 12 9 13| Friday | 2 si634 952! 6) 14| Saturday | 3| 67 Goss 3} 15) Sunday 4} 4) 73601 1 OO} 16 Monday o 2) 8 3/11 34,13 57 17 Tuesday 7 1} 8 Qiaft 5 54 IS W ednesday Ss 0} 8 55! O 35 §2 | 19 Thureday | 96 58} 931; 1 9 49 | 20) Friday | 10) 56} 9 50) 1 45) 46 21 saturday | 12) 54/10 22; 228; 42 22 Sunday } 13) 6&2)10 58} 3 19) 39 23| Monday’ | 14 SOlll 4]) 4 29 36 2: Tuesday 16; 49imorn| 5 5) 33) 25| Wednesday 17; 47/0 31/715} 30] 26 Thursday 18} 45) 1 32) 8 25; 27] 27| Friday | 19 43) 240/919) 24) 23' Saturday | 20) 41) 3 54/10 2 2) 29 Sunday | 22; 40) 5 10/10 52) 18 30 Monday 23) 38} 6 28/11 34, 15} 31 Tuesday 15 2416 36] 7 46 morn j13 12} RANKIN HOUSE. THe undersigned will lease for a term of years | the above wel! known Hotel, situated on cor- | ner of Water and Pownal Streets, in Charlotte-| town, Prince Edward Island. Possession given | on the Ist October next. j : i Any information required will be given, either | by letter or personal interview. ' Jc GRAY, _ DAVID STIRLING, Trustees. Ch’town,. June 12, 1886—jun15 2aw her jour } i | } | 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 8.00 a. m Leave St. John at 8 o’clock every Saturday night for BOSTON DIRECT. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, $6,50, 2nd class ; 39.50, lst class. For tickets and other information apply to . ASHARP, F. W. HALES, P. & L R’y., P. E. L Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. May 7, 1886-—-eod wky i. ARTHUR & CO, GENERAL Commission lerchanss, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. ae eee eee Rovs and Produce a Specialty. July 15-—dly wkly CAUTION. FACH PLUG OF THE MYRTLE. NAVY IS MARKED T & B. IN BRONZE LETTERS. None Other Genuine. Oet W } STRICT ATTENTION to Business, Honesty and Square Dealing, and paying Cash every time, is what has placed z 3 iD Ae 4 bo x. PRO W to the front of all competitors, in CLOTHING, HATS, &c. He does not advertize to sell goods at cost, but he guaran- tees to sell from 10 to 25 per cent less than those who do adver- tize to sell at cost. He does not try to deceive the people by miking a big blow and offering paltry rewards, but trys to do things right and has the goods to back him up in what he advertizes. He now about 6,500 HATS and $4,000 worth of has CLOTHING, which he guarantees to sell from 10 to 25 per cent} less than any house in the trade, A lot of this Clothing was bought less than half price, and will be sold less than half price. He does not ask the people to believe his advertisement . ’ , . 5 . . until they see his prices; he knows then they will believe, and knows that the goods and prices back him up every time. All goods freely shown, or sent to any part of the town. Ys Please don’t forget to call. Lee UO WV atu; Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen Street. Ch’town, May 7, ’86—eod wky _— = iD. A. BRUCE Wants to Have His Say---that Is : .7 OU cannot get a Suit of Clothes the same quality of material and workmanship in P. K. Island, Cheaper than from us. We have a reputation for gefting up FIRST-CLASS WORK, that none of our competi- tors can attain to. There is no better quality of Cloths manufactured than what we are showing. Stock, one of the largest you ever saw in this city. Having three Cutters and a large staff of Workmen, we can give you prompt attention. $500 WORTH OF READY-MADE CLOTHING, of our own manufacture, many suits of which were made to order and not called for, but are now SELLING AT COST. We have An Immense Stock cf Hats, ‘selling rapidly, because buyers can save from 124 to 20 per cent. when they purchase from : us. Best Hats yon ever saw for 50 cents. 0 GENTS FURNISHINGS, Jolilars, Onffs, Ties., &c., Umsurpassed in Style. 4a Prices were never as Low. Don't forget this when comparing with quotations from other establishments this year. iowa. BRO OL, 72 QUEEN STREET. Ch’town, June 23, 1886—eod & wy HAT & FUR STORE, Wewson Block. 0 A NEW. DHPrA BRTURA ! 0 HATS, of the Latest Styles, at the PRICKs. FURS, of all kinds, Cleaned, Dyed, altered and Repaired. HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for Raw Furs, &, STUART. LOWEST very Ch’town, May 4, 1886 4 ISLAND, FRIDAY, AUGUST 13. 1886. DAMSO OTAN, <2 [nents nN f AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson's Botanic Cough Balsam. Tt is as pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have been speedily cured by the use of ADAMSON’sS BALSAM after all other me failed. Sufferers from either recent or chronic coughs or bronchial affections, can resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining licines have speedy relief. Do not delay, get it at once. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS., Bottled at St. Stevens, N. B., by the proprietors, F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druggists, 343 47H Ave., N. ¥. BUT TBRSALI ‘MOOD BUTTER cannot be made without good Salt. Our Salt has take MEDALS AND DIPLOWAS at Exhibitions in different countries. Pure, White and Fine — ae Ouly | Cent per Pound. en BEEN & GOFF. Wh’tewn, June 25, 1886.—2aw & wy x TRY THE ! THA, 25 CENTS, AT THE | LONDON HOUSE ; j | | | | RICHMOND STREET GROCERY STORE NELSON BROS., daelers in Choice Family Groceries, Moat, Fish, &. Those favoring us with their patronage will find Goods as cheap as anyin the city, A call solicited. tes : ROBERT NELSON, SAMUEL NELSON, Ch’town, June 17, 1886—3mo0s law COAL! COAL! ORDERS can be obtained, as usual, at the office of the subscriber, No. 33 Water Street, for car- -oes of the following Coals, viz: Albion Mines, Picton, Nova Scotia Large. CAPE BRETTON Old Sydney, large. Lingan Mines, large and slack, Victoria Mines, large and slack. The Slack Coals from Lingan and Victoria Mines are clean and bright, and can be used in place of several sorts of Pictou Small. G. W. DeBLOIS, June 15, 1886—eod tf LACE SOAP, ANUFACTURED BY COLGATE & CO., for washing fine fabrics; also a large supply of Colgate’s Superfine Toilet Soaps. M Don't take any poor imitations—get the genu ine. Ihe Bestis the Cheapest. B. BALDERSTON. July 3—3 wks 2awk 1827 = = = 1886. T. & HE. KENNY, Dry Goods and Shipping, HALIFAX, CANADA. r r (Fr. €. MAHON) Ship Uwners and Brokers, 16} GRESHAM HOUSE, Sishopsgate Street, LONDON, E. C., England, Secoit’s and Vaugharg; Codes March 29, 1886. & KH. KENNY,' Ganeral GC mmission Merchants, | | rice, call at G. G. Jury’s store and he will be as he has a very | pist« | An Old Account of the Creation. Dr. Augustus Le Plougeon, the indefa- tigable explorer of ancient American ruins, who with his wife has spent 12 years in the heart of the province of Yucatan, explor- ing those wonderful ruins that for ages have lain buried in the dense forests of the peninsula, has just given the reading world a new compilation of the results of his and Mrs. Le Plougeon’s most valuable | study of a now forgotten civilization. His new book bears the title ‘Sacred Myster- ies Among the Mayas and the Quiches 15,- 500 Years Ago; Their Relation to the Sac- red Mysteries of Egypt, Greece, Chaldea and India.” The avowed object of Dr. Le Plougeon’s book is to awaken in American students of archzeology an interest in these ruins somewhat proportionate to that felt by European students in American antiqui- ties. Dr. Le Plougeon finds among the Mayax the counterpart of the story of the crea- tion. In Mayax the primitive rulers re- ceived their titles from the shape or con- tour of their empires. The name Can (serpent) thus became the title of the Mayax rulers (as Khan is the title of the Kings of Tartary and Burmah), who after death, as images on earth of deity, re- ceived the honors of apotheosis. A_ cer- tain King Can, one of the earliest Mayax rulers, had five children, the family often represented by seven rattles in the tail of a great snake, symbol of the King himself. It was the Mayax law that the youngest | son of the royal family should marry the eldest daughter, in order to insure the le- gitimate and divine descent of the royal family. The youngest son of this family was Prince Coh, and the eldest daughter was Princess Moo. After the father’s death Coh became King and Moo Queen of Chicheu. But Aac, the second son of King Can, was also in love with his sister. To him had been assigned the ancient metro- polis of Uxmal. tHe was not a warrior, but a luxurious courtier, and envious of his younger brother's fame and of Moo’s love for him. He, therefore, plotred against Prince Coh’s life, and determined to have his Queen, and to become sole ruler of the empire. Finally Aac killed his brother treacherously with three spear thrusts, and proceeded to make love to his Queen. was the custom in offering her his hand, he sent messengers with a basket of fruit, her acceptance of which would indicate heraccept- ance of his suit. Ina mural painting the scene is vividly portrayed, the Queen Moo is seen rejecting the messenger and the basket of fruit, while in a tree near by is seen a serpent looking intently at a maccaw ona branch near by, imaccaw being the meaning of Moo, the Queen’s name, ‘*Here we have,” says Dr. Le Plougeon, ‘“‘the garden, the woman, the tempter and the fruit. The story of this family incident, passing from mouth to mouth, from gener- ation to generation, from country to coun- try, has become transfigured, probably by peoples who did not hold women in as high esteem, or did not honor her as much as the Mayas did. The biblical account of the murder of Abel by Cain, or of the fra- tricide in Ramayans, or the Egyptian papyri, the doctor believes to be essentially the story of the feuds of King Can’s chil- dren. This story, treasured by the priests of Egypt and India, preserved in their sacred books and poems, has been handed down to us among the primitive traditions of mankind. But, nowhere, except in Mayax, do we find it as forming part of the history of the nation. Nowhere except in Mayax do we find the portraits of the actors in tragedy. There we not only see their portraits carved in bas relief, on stone or wood, or their marble statues in the round, or represented in the mural paintings that adorn the walls of the funeral chamber built to the memory of the victim, but we discover the ornaments they wore, the weapons they used, nay more, the mortal remains.” Both the funeral chamber and the sculptured tomb of Prince Coh were examined by the Le Plougeons, who finally disinterred his statue, and found in an urn his partly cremated heart, and the flint head of the spear with which he was slain, as the explorers believe, over 11,000 yeas ago. 2 me > 2 Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil, with Hypophosphites FOR WASTING DISEASES OF CHILDREN, Where the digestive powers are feeble and the ordinary food does not seem to nourish the child, this acts both as food and medicine, giving flesh and strength at once, and is almost as palatable as milk, Take no other. ett al The Mayor of Grand Rapids, Mich., last week issued an edict compelling the Sal- vation Army to refrain from public parades or suffer arrest. They disobeyed the in- junction and were locked up—twenty in all. Great excitement prevailed for a time, thousands witnessing the arrest. The Mayor is determined to suppress the par- ades, and public sentiment is with him. The police station was crowded with sym- pathizers of the Salvationists, and the scene was quite dramatic when the prisoners kneeled and prayed for the judge, police, city officials, and the city at large. ‘‘Amens” was heard from all quarters. -— > Apvice to Mornirs.— Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain: and the little shrub awakes as ‘‘bright a5 @ putton.” It is verv pleasant to taste. It | soothes the child, softens the gums, allays : y | ain, regulates the bowels, and is ike best baown remedy for diarrhoea, wheuner from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and a for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take no other feb 4 eod wk kind. ——— ee Ip you want Gold Rings, of any uble to supply your wants, large stock of solid gold and oe Rings, just received. augll 2aw & wy2i As; THE DAILY EXAMINER. SINGLE Corres Two CEnrTs. VOL. 19.—NO. 70. CURRENT NOTES. Nine hundred persons died at Santiago, Chili, of smailpox, in July. The stories about a ruinous drouth in Kansas are pronounced false. _A French woman named Mrs. Brinequir died at Octawa last week aged 102 years. Mr. O’Keily thinks the British cabinet s rich in titles but somewhat weak in intel- ect.” The New York board of health dumped 3,000 pounds of poor tea into the harbor the other day. English reports are to the Hon. Alexander greatly improved. **He Fell in Love With His Wife ” is the titie of the Rev. E. P. Roe’s latest work. Of course it is fiction. effect that Mackenzie’s health has A Johnstown, Penn., woman has been sued by a neighbour for the theft of a pair of scissors valued at ten cents. A rural Canadian recently hunted up a store in Montreal and paid the balance due on a purchase of shirts which he made in 1836. A rattlesnake over nine feet long, carry- ing thirty-three rattles, was killed near Pikesville, Vanderburg county, Ind., the other day. Sir Charles Dilke’s name has been erased from the list of Privy Councillors. Such an event, it is said, has not occured since the last century. An ex-minister named Reynolds, who undertook to preach heterodox doctrines in a tent at Boonton, N. J., was mobbed and driven out of town. The Lowell Courier says: ‘* Lieut. Henn has charge of the Calatea, and its owners are cock sure that when the race comes off he can puilet through.” Major Macray, of New York, says he has found the exact spot where Capt. Kidd’s treasure is buried near New York. He says it amounts to $7,000,000. The Boston Evening Record says: *‘The word ‘full’ has come to have such a techni- cal mearing that it makes one shudder to read that the Prohibitionists of a yiven State have nominated a full ticket.”’ The search for the body of Blair, the wealthy Montreal artist, whose canoe was found floating in Chalk River, has proved unfailing. Foul play is now feared, as he had #500 in his possession at the time of his disappearance. The tragedy at St. Sylvester, Quebec, was a terrible one. It occurred over a dis- puted piece of land, aad Francis Foster literally cut Michael Keenan in two with a scythe. Foster is 77 years old, and this is the second time he has killed his man. Mr. Tilden’s beautiful city residence in Gramercy Park, New York, with its large collection: of rare and carefully selected books, will becom» the property of the city of New York for use as a public library. The value of the building is $1,000,000. The Concord School of Philosophy struck a snag in a paper forwarded by a Texas pro- fessor. It was called ‘*The Platonian Idea.” and after an earnest and hopeless search for the idea, the school returned the paper to the professor with the simple interrogation : ‘*Why don’t you sign the pledge /” J. J, Catlin, yardmaster of the Pennsyl- vania railway, who was struck by a loco- motive while attempting to save a young woman from death, about three weeks ago, has become insane. He imagines he killed the young lady, and that he is to be hanged for the crime. His wife is said tc be dying from constant watching and nervous pros- tration. The formation of an army corps of 48,000 men in Macedonia is due tothe recent’ language of M. Tricoupis regarding the Greek claims, and efforts of the Russian emissaries to ferment a rebellion in Mace- donia, which efforts have been more active since the union of Bulgaria and Eastern Roumelia thwarted the Russia propaganda in Bulgaria. A few days ago a young woman named Lavinia Boal, of Sussex, N. B.,performed a brave act, by means of which the life of a little child was saved. The child wandered from its home and was sitting between the rails on the I. C. R., near Sussex, when observed by Miss Bond. Just at the time she sawa train in sight rattling along. Without losing a moment she ran toward the child and snatched it off the track when the train was within a few yards of it. Miss Boal is loudly praised for her heroism. On Saturday, 3,000 persons assembied at Queenstown, to bid good-bye to the dele- gates to the meeting of the Irish National League of America. Mr. O’Brien, in reply to an address, said he was going to confer with the creater Ireland across the ocean en the political situation. ‘Should coercion be attempted,“ he gaid, ‘‘Ireland wouid be ready to meet it undaunted.” In the meantime headvised every Irishman to do his utmost to maintain peace, in order not to give a pretext for coercion. Mr. Red- mond in his speech said nothing less than Gladstone's measure would satisfy Ireland. The wife of Robert Fay, of Titusville, Pa., during a moment of temporary insan- ity, shot herself Thursday through the la | alone for a shori time to gain a little slesp, , vattern or but the m ; room head. She had been married but a short time. and on Weduesday she expressed 4 of her friends that if ever she some w ish tc arising t}orrme insane they would not take her to an insane asylum. It was supposed to be a passing thought at that moment. Thurs- ay sho requested her mother to leave her ‘hoy had been absent from the less than five minutes when the i shot was heard, and wife and daugh- ter was found lying across the foot of the bed with life extinct.