DoLLArs a YEAR, NEW SERIES, Tus UWAILY KXAMINER SUED EVERY EVENING, By Tue EXAMINER PUBLISHING COMPANY, (HEIR Orrick, Cognex oF WATER LN LFREAT («CORGE STREETS, n, , island, Rares oF Supscrirrion : Six Months, . - . $2 50 Three Months, - - 1 25 One Month, - - - 0 50 -@- Advertising at most moderate rates. tracts may be made for monthly, juarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. ~~ ALMANAC FOR AUCUST, 1283. MOON 8 CHANGES, n 2nd day, 9h, 13 7m., p. m. First Quarter, 10th day, 9h. 16.5m. p. m. Full Moon, 18th day, Sh, 41.4m., a. m. Last quarter 25th day, lh, 19.4m., a. m. ‘ew ‘io D Sun ‘Sun |Moon|High | Days M|UA¥ OF WEES» ises|sets | rises |water |len’h, hm jh m;morn aft’n | 1; Wednesday (4 47/7 25) 3 16| 9 52!) 2Tharsday | 49) 23) 4 21/10 a3) 3/Friday — | 50} 2215 27111 § 4\Saturday 5]; 21) 6 31j1l 41/14 31 5 Sunday '- a2 19) 7 35 morn | 6|Monday | 63| 13: 8 37; 0 15) 7) Tuesday | 55! 16! 9 37! 0 47; 8| Wednesday | 56| 15/10 37} 1 21) 9 Thursday 57} 13/11 37) 1 59 LD Friday | S| I2\aft 36; 2 39 11! Saturday , OY, 10) 1 34 3 32\14 13 12! Sunday 5 1| 9] 2 30] 4 38 13 Monday 2} 7! 3 24) 5 53 14 Tuesday i 3| 6, 4 14,7 9} 15, Wedne sday : 4) 4) + 39) 8 12] 16 Thursday | 6} 215409 3; 17 Friday 7] 1627'9 43 18 Saturday 8/6 59} 6 51/10 30113 54 19|Sunday 9| 57, 7 2211 6 20' Monday Lil 56) 7 53.11 47) 21, Tuesday 12} 541 8 25\aft 26! 22) Wed nesday 13) 52,8 5411 8) 23}Thursday 14! 50) 9 38! 1 53} Friday = |_:‘15! 48/10 a 2 46) 25/Saturday | 17| 46/11 12) 3 46/13 33 + 26)Sunday 18} 45 morn} 5 30) 27|Mnday | 19] 43 0 8| 6 47 Tuesday 21, 41; 2 8/7 57| 29° Wednesday 22; 40) 2 10: § 48) 30 Thursday 23, 37| 3 15) 9 3t| 31} Friday /5 256 36) 4 20:10 91 GRORGE TWEEDY, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Notary Public, &c. OF FICE— West Side of Queen Street, Char~ lottetown, next door to Stevenson’s Tin Shop. July 25, 1833.— dy wkly 6m McLEOD & MORSON Barristers & Attorneys-at-Law, SOLICITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, OFFICES : neform 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. Net McLeop. Nov. 24, '82.—pres her R. O’DWYER, Commission and General Merchant DEALER IN P.E. 1. PRODUCE, 289, WATER STREET, St. John’s, Newfoundland. Capt. Edward English, a member of the firm, will give the strictest attention to con- signments of Island produce, ce P. E. Island vessels for and to charter. July 30, 1883. [NSURANCE OFFICE ‘ueen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, Lancashire Insurance Gompany CAPITAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptly and eqnitably. "i ’ DESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Agents. Otlice—South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Sept. 15, 1882. JOHN MAGEAGHERN, (Late of Italian Warehouse) AGENT FOR Royal Fire Insurance Company, of England, Loudon & Lancashire Fire lasurance Company, of England, City of London Fire Insurance Co., of England, HAS REMOVED His Office to his New Buildiag, W. A. O. Morsoy, L.ARTHUR & CO.,, GHNERAL Commission Merchants, _ ‘F2t ATLANTIC AVENUE, | (ROSS MARKET) BosTON, MASS. Eggs and Produce a Specialty, EDWARD T. RUSSEL & 60., GENERAL Uommission Merchants, NO. 284 STATE STREET, BOSTON. Particular attention given to the sale of Fish and Produce of all kinds, June 22, 1883.—6m STANDARD LU ASSURANCE GO. A T the 57th Annnal General Meeting of the Standard Life Assurance Company, held at Edinburgh on Tuesday, the 24th of April, 1853, the following results for the year ended 15th November, 1883, were re- ported :— 3,038 new proposals for life as- surance were received the year for 2,551 proposals were accepted, assuring The total existing assurances in force at 15th November, 1882, amounted to (Of which $7,753,031.15 was reassured with other offices) The claims by death which arose during the year amount- ed, including bonus addi- tions, to The annual revenue amounted at 15th November, 1882, to 4,267,546 00 The invested funds at same date amounted to Being an increase during the year of $ 9,754,085 38 7,239,048 13 $6,936,302 91 2,462,226 59 29,503,416 00 1,062,648 35 JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown. THOMAS KERR, Inspector of Agencies, Ch'town, August 3, 1883. SULLIVAN & MACNEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT- LAW Soliciiers in Chancery, NOFARIES PUBLIC, &c. OF FICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown, @@ Money to Loan, W. W. Suntivan, Q. C, | Cusstea B. Macnerut, Jan. 16, ’83. Direct Steamer to London HE Halifax Steam Navigation Company (Limited) will despatch the FIRST- CLASS STEAMER ‘SeSHCELY,” Hatifax to London, direct, About 10th September. FHROUGH RATES FOR LOBSTERS, via P. E. I, Steam Navigation Company, From Charlottetown and all Sta: tions on the P. E. I. Railway. —TO— London, Paris and Hamburg. The “Sicily” has a speed of twelve knots and is expected to make the passage in %} days. Bills of Lading will be given from any Station on the P. E- I. Railway, or at Char. lottetown. Apply for all particulars to Jos. Woo1, Secretary Halifax Steam Navigation Company (Limited), 58 Bedford Row, Hali- fax, or to WM. 4, SHANKS, Agent, Charlottetown, P. E. I. August 13, 1883. ee oN - Ha 1] = eR JOSEPH GILLOTT'S STEEL PENS SOITBY ALt STATIONERS THROU CHOUT THE WORLD -GOLD MEDAL,PARIS 18 78- FAT HERRING. sce Usa Cor, Queen and King Sts.—Up Stairs. | Ch’town, Deo, 7, 82, BARRELS, in Wholes, Halves and 100 Quarters, for sale by ) D. SMALL. Ch’town, Aug, 17, 1883,—2w . Ledilincillee aan RP, EK. ISLAND Steam Navigation Coy, ~~ Sa a STEAMERS ST. LAWRENCE AND PRINCESS OF WALES. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT, Commencing Wednesday, 16th May,1883, NOVA SCOTIA. Leave Charlottetown for Pictou Landing every Monday, Wednesday, Thursday asd Saturday mornings, at 7 o'clock, connectipg there with the Train for Halifax. Returning to Charlottetown on Monday, Wednesday Friday and Saturday, about 2 p. m., on arrival of Train from Halifax, i Leave Pictou Landing for Georgetown Thursday, on arrival of train at 2 p.m. } every Friday morning, at 5 a.m. NEW BRUNSWICK. CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES. ; Leave Summerside excepted) on arriva: of Train from Chap- lottetown, connecting at Shediac w Traius for each of the above named places; and at St. John, with steamers of the Interna- tional Company and Kailway for Portland aad Boston, Also leave Charlottetown for Sum- merside every Monday morning at 1 o’cl Returning, leave Shediac every day (Sun excepted) on arrival of day train from John, tor Summerside, connecting there w Train for Charlottetown. Also leave § merside for Charlottetowa every Saturday evening, about 5 o’clock, - every day (Sun By order, F. W. HALES, Charlottetown, May 15, 1883 Secretary. BOSTON STEAMERS, STEAMERS: Carroll, 879 tons, Capt, Brown, Worcester, 865 tons, Capt, Blankenship NE of the above FIRST-CLASS STEAM- ERS will leave Charlottetown for Boston 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 Bi0S., AGENTS, Ch’town, May 17, 1883.--pat her sj STEAMER “HEATHER BELLE,” Sunimer Arrangement, 1883, O* and after Tuesday, July 24th, the new steamer ‘' Heather Belle,” Hugh McLean, master, will run as follows:— Every Tuesday morning at four o’clock, will leave Charlottetown for Orwell Brush Wharf, leaving Orwell Brush Wharf, at seven a. m., tor Charlottetown, calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves, leave Charlottetown at 3p. m., for Halli- day’s China Point and Rrush Wharves, where she will remain over night. Charlottetown, at seven a, m., calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves, leaving Charlottetown at threo p. m., to return, remaining at Brush Wharf over nigh t. Thursday, will leave Brush Wharf for Char- lottetown, at seven a. m., calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves, leaving Charlottetown at three p. m. to return, leaving Brush Wharf about six p. m. for Charlottetown. Friday, will leave Charlottetown for Crapaud at four a. m., leaving Crapand at seven a. m. for Charlottetown, leaving Char- lottetown at three p. m. for Crapaud, remaining there over night, Saturday, will leave Crapaud at seven a. m. for Charlottetown, leaving Charlottetown at one o’clock p. m. for Crapand and re- turning to Charlottetown from Crapaud same evening. FARES—Cabin, to and from Orwell and Wharves, 30 cents; deck, 20 cents. Cabin, to and from Crapaud, 40 cents; deck 30 cents, Excursion Return Tickets will be issued from Charlottetown ‘> Urwell every Thursday Also, Excur- sion Return (fickets will be issued Saturday to Crapaud at one first-class fare. JOHN HUGHES, Agent. Ch’town, July 25, 1883. [2aw wkly 3m pres her pat era ———————— Leave Georgetown for Pictou Landing, Wednesday, will leave Brash Wharf for{ —— NEW COTTONS, At lreatly Reduced Prices, Just received and in stock, 48 BALES AND CASES ‘(44,556 YARBS) NEW BLEACHED ven onee Vubleached Cottons, COTTON FLANNELS, | AND-— BED TICKINGS. These Goods will be sold low to make room for fall importations, WHOLESALE AND W, h, WE , ell, SIGN OF THR EON, TEAS. TEAS. EW TEAS, of Pri ality, 75 Chests, LN at low cle WHOLTS ALE! . | W. A. Weeks & Co. Ch’towa, Aug. 8, 1882. FROM LIVERPOOL | — TOo— Charlottetown, P. E. Island, DIRECT. * pias 7 Rosa f . Aa FALL TRIP, IS83. (FOLLOWING ZERELDE.) the Clipper Barkentine ETHEL BLANCHE, 400 tons Register, classed ten years Al in English Lloyds, John Graham, Commander, WILL SAIL From Liverpool about the 15th September, Carrying Freight at through rates to Pictou, Georgetown, Souris, Summerside and Shediac. For Freight or passage apply in Liverpool to Pitcairn Brothers, 51 South John Street, or here to the owners, PEAKE BROS, & CO. Ch’town, Aug. 8.—3aw tf Mackerel Barrels. 7 M4CKEREL BARRELS for sale. Terms—Net cash. A. L. BRIDGES & CO, Aug. 15.—3w 2aw wkly 2i For Sale or To Let, VHAT beautifully situated house at ‘‘ St. Avards,’”’ Mount Edward Road, outside city limits, containing nine large rooms, with well of never-failing water in kitchen, to which is attached aforce pump. These prem- ises are within fifteen minutes walk of the Post Offiice, and include*® stable and coach- house. For further particulars enquire of the subscriber on the premises. COTTENS te — ee “ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Evniriwes. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST SS 29, 1883, Irish Poverty. MISERABLE HOMES IN THE BOG SWAMPS OF . CAHERNAKELLY. A correspondent of the Press in Ireland, swamps of Cahernakelly I found three fam- ilies of hard-working people at a distance of about a quarter to half mile apart. My visit was at night. Not one cabin had alight. None of the people had been to church for ten years for want of decent clothes. Not one of them had a change, and all the females had but one garment each—a coarse, patched woollen dress. Tle only food any of them hes is Indian meal, and they do not have enongh of that. @ne family of seven have been to bed several nights within the week fasting. They all have a little land, but it is bog and won’t prodtice; besides, the times since 1879 have been so bad that they are not not able to get seed tosow. In each case their fathers have been living on the land before them, one forty and one sixty years back. When, by toiling and draining and clearing of bog, the land was so that it would raise a little crop, the agent rackrent- ed them, The first house was that of Michael Hannify. He had eight children. A pig- sty is walled offin one end of the cabin, and a chicken coop in the other. Both are empty. Boards are laid over the tops of them, and on them, with very scant straw, sleep the family. The father and boys sleep over the pig-style, and the ,irl on the shelf over the coop. She hasa whisp of straw between two poles, and there she sleeps, eiibpat any cover but the dress she wears. ow, k you, it is even difficnlt and often impossible for these people to have straw enough to lie on. The ‘horse fares far better. ~Hannify has nine acres, for fwhich he had to pay £9 5s. Thomas Whelon has seven in hie family. He has a goat and a donkey. The goat gives milk for the Indian meal stir-about, which his neighbors can not have, Instead of sleeping on a shelf he has a room where the chicken-coop in Hannify’s is. TI saw the bed, dirty straw and old sacks for shects with one filthy blanket for cover. He has three and one-half acres for £3. He has been forty years on the place, and the land even yet is not fully reclaimed. It has taken two and three, and sometimes four generations to reclaim a few acres of bog land. He has one rood of potatoes sow Philadelphia seed he could get, T. Reilly’s hodse is worst of all. The front wall is bulging, and the turf-sod roof is held up by three poles from within. He is delicate. He has a wife and eight child- ren, and only one acre and a-half of ground. When I entered this house the family was standing around’ a small plate of Indian meal stir-about, without sugar, butter, or milk. When it was gone a little child, far from satisfied, said :—‘‘Mamma, is there no more in the pot?’ “No, Alanna, there is not,” was the sad response. These people have not s raw, They sleep on green rushes, which I saw with my own eyes. During the summer these families earn two shillings a day. When that is over and cold winter comes they have no other prospect than to starve. They seem to realize their sad plight. Their vacant stare of hopelessness was heart-rendering. It was ten o'clock at night, dark, and raining, when I left this sad abode. Out- side the door, to my surprise, were two police. They followed us from there all the way to the main road and on as far as their barracks. They had been eaves- dropping. ~-.——- —* <> e———_- — A Terrible Ride. HANGING FROM A BALLOON BY TWO FINGERS —DRAGGED FOUR MILES THROUGH THE AIR. At Royon on Gironde there was, on Friday last, a scene perhaps unprecedented in the annals of ballooning’ M. Gratein, a well-known aeronaut, was about to make his ascent in a hot air balloon, called La Vidouvillaise. Mlle. Albertine, heroine of several balloon ascents, was seated in the car, and M. Gratien was holding in his right hand a loose coil tied on one of the cords that served to attach the balloon. The balloon unexpectedly broke loose, and the cord unrolling itself with lightning rapidity caught in asort of knot around the first and second fingers of Gratien’s right hand,and he was immediately whisked off into the air 600 meters high. In vain he tried to haul himself up on the cord and loop it over his arm. After frantic efforts he became exhausted and hung at the end of the cords, suspended solely by his two fingers, and suffering excrutiating agony, owing to the jerking of the balloon and the cord, which cut like a razor through the flesh to the bone. In that situation Gratien was carried a dis- tance of nearly four miles, at a height of 600 metres above the earth. Mlle. Alber- tine, overcome by the horror of the situation, fainted away, and sank helpless to the bottem of the car. As the air in the bal- loon became cool the balloon descended, but bumped against the earth in the midst of a dense mass of thorny shrubbery. Gratien was not only stripped of his clothes, but his skin was literally torn in strips from his body, as he was dragged for nearly half a mile through thorny brambles. Finally, some peasants managed to cut the cord. Gratien appeared to be a mass of wounds, and to be near bleeding to death. Strange to say he did not lose consciousness for a single instant. He suffered no internal injury, and although his condition is critical, he will probably recover. When the rope was cut and the balloon was freed from the weight of Gratien’s body, it again rose in the air, carrying off Mlle. Alber- tine. By singular good fortune it soon landed in a marsh, and mademoiselle at last stood on terra firma. She was sorely distressed in mind, and badly scared, but otherwise eafe and sound. JOHN T, FERGUSON, May 12,—dy wily Ir you want satisfaction go to the Charlotte- town Boot and Shoe Factory. writes:—In the bog) and the same space of oats. That is all the D SINGLE Copigs Two CENTS, VOL 13.---NQ. 85 Stanley I, King of Congo. FOLLOWING THE EXAMPLE OF HISTORY IN FOUNDING AN EMPIRE, From “ Italie.” If we are to believe telegrams from Am- sterdam, Stanley is signing treaties with the petty kings on both banks of the Congo At least he signs them; as for tne African monarchs, as they never learned to write, they make@ mark at the bottom of the parchment. We must acknowledge that Stanley 1. is acting very correctly from a diplomatic point of view; his treaties are drawn up in French, which, as is well known, is the diplomatic language, and are countersigned by his deputy, named Walk, who probably exercises the functions of of keeper of the seals on the banks of ‘the Congo. One of these treaties, passed with King Jongo de Selo, recognizes the sever- ignity of the Comte d'Etudes du Congo, that is to say, with Stariley. After that - promising commencement, ~the treaty stipulates a series of privileges to Stanley and the committee. (1) The right to trade and reside in the country. (2) Obligation to furnish laborers, etc. In’'re- turn for which Mr. Stanley and the com- mittee engage to pay to Jongo and his de- scendants an annual pension of two pieces of cloth. A similar treaty was passed with the king, or a king, of Manvanga. One of Mr. Stanley's aides-de-camp was thus able to say, with a little adaptation of the facts :— **We are now masters of all the country be- tween Manyanga and. Stanley Pool.’’ These were probably the treaties alluded to in a despatch from Lisbon, which states that they have caused some surprise, as Stanley represents, no constituted Govern- ment. Stanley is, indeed; only the re- presentative of an International Geographi- cal Association, but it was probably for that reason, and to meet objections, that he hastened to form a Government of his own. As chief of his own Government he can make annexations, and later on he will get his Government and his annexations re- cognized. It is said, besides, that the new king has no idea of making his subjects happy in the usual manner—that is to say, by granting them constitutional liberties. As a former journalist, he knows what these are worth and feels, no doubt, a ¢ertain contempt for the liberties of the people he defended when he was a part of the people himself. A letter we have be- fore us says, in fact :—‘‘Stanley is..of, a ate and violent disposition, aecis- tomed to command despotically, and treats thé natives of the Upper Congo as wild beasts. is Zanzibarians, besides, are armed with breech-loaders, which have a most perstiasivé power, and he exercises the right be clams with revolting brutality. ‘Why,’ an old negro chief was asked, ‘did you sell your territory to Stanley ?, He gave you scarcely anything for it, and he sells it very dear to others.’ ‘I am afraid that it true,’ said the old negro.”” That is how empires are founded—by fear» and Stanley has only followed the «xamples of history. : te A Manitoba Romance. COURTSHIP AND BETROTHAL OF A COUPLE WHO HAD NEVER SEEN EACH OTHER, The Washmngton Star has the following account of a romantic marriage. Last evening the neat litile Grace Episcopal church. South Washington, was filled to overflowing to witness the wedding of Mr. Peter McCalmon, of the province of Mani- toba, and Miss Lizzie A. Gabriel, of this city. There isa little romance connected with these parties. The groom lives, as stated, in the province of Manitoba, where the bride has a married sister living. Through the sister the groom, about four years ago, heard of Miss Gabriel, and a correspondence was commenced, during which, notwithstanding they had never seen each other, their feelings toward each others became more than simply friendly. The hearts of the writers glowed with love. Portraits were exchanged, and minute descriptions were given of each other. The result was that a few months ago they be- came engaged to be married, on condition that there was no change of feeling after personal interview. ‘The young lady in the meantime made preparations to take a leave of absence. The groom about the first of the month arrived here. Being desirous of seeing the lady, he wrote a note to her, which she failed to receive until Monday of last week, when she promptly sent him directions to find her place of residence on Missouri-avenue, and he called that even- ing. The chains of love, woven throvgh the art of the mails, were more firmly rivetted at this meeting. The young lady’s friends were highly pleased with the gentleman. The result was that the couple concluded that it was useless to wait longer, and pre- parations were at once made for the wed- ding, which took place last evening. While the ceremony was being performed some mischievous boys tied a string of tin cans under the carriage, and such a din was made as they drove away that the horses were badly frightened, and it was with difficulty that they were restrained. <o - fhe Great French Remedy, LeDuc’s Periodica! Pills. —_—_— Dr. For the cure of Levcorrhea or White's FE cessive or painful Menstruation, Green Sickness, Failing of the Womb, Catarrh of the Uterus or Vagnia, Hysteria, pain in the Back, or Piles, or for the puepose of in- vigorating and giving tone to the Generative Organs, two pills should be taken twice daily, or in very en, febled conditions, one pill three times aday, To effect cures in chronic cases it will be neeessary to continue he use of the remedy for some months, A reasonabie trial will create snfficient confidence in the remedy to insure its being taken until a permanent cure is ef- ected, Stakk Kipney Toronto, Pap Co., 31 King Street, Wit All Druggista, dec, 16 inanimate eiiinapaines Five Hunprep Stubbs’ Hand-saw file, 34, 4, 44 inch, slightly damaged, lot stair rods, dog collars, 3 gross Jews harps, grass clippers, ~ a general stock of Hardware from wrecked brigt. ‘‘Isabella” less than cost. Great Bargains.—W, E. Dawson & Co., Brick Store, 2 a ea