ae. ae . ee ee rive DoLtars a Year. NEW SERIES, ' Pais is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—uxipiwxs, CHARLOTLETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. MONDAY, AUGUST 13. 1883. SINGLE Copres Two CENT: VOL. 13—NO. 71 Oe awe RRR 2h oor gai "cus sane Ovviog,Couvanor Werrn "COMMISSION ald Geasral.. enchant Batis NT hi ibis cusisionmy = Ee abn. DEALER IWPLE. PRODUCE, | r Thies downs, °° 2 “Tas '28Q, WATER STREET, STEAMERS: #- Advertising at most moderate rates. | Contracts may be made for monghly, juarterly, half-yearly or yearly adverctise- ments, on application. ALMANAC FOR AUGUST, 1883. MOON 38 CHANGES, New Moon 2nd day, 9h, 13 7m., p. m. First Quarter, 10th day, 9b. 16.5im. p. m. Fall Moon, 18th day, Sh. 41.4m., a. m. Last quarter 25th day, lh. 19.4m., a. m. Db. . tSan Sun !Moon|High | Days einem WEEK| ises|sets { rises | water | len’h, ’ b m jh ma | morn) aft’n 1, Wednesday (4 47/7 25) 3 16) 9 52 2) Pharsday 49} 23) 4 21)10 82| 3 Friday 50! 22) 5 27111. 8 4 Saturday |} Si, 21! 6 3111 5 Sanday . C2 27 35| m rh | 5| Mond , 53) 1e, 8 37, 0 15 7 Tueedey 55! 16) 9 37! 0 47 8) Wednesday } 56) 15/10 37| 1 22) 10| Friday 53 L2\att 36} 2 39 11! Saturday , 5% 10) 1 34, 3 32\14 13 12! Sunday ‘5 I 9) 2 a 4 ro 13 Monday 2} it 3 28) 5 OS i4, Tuesday 3| 6) 4 i4 7 9 15| Wednesday ‘ 4) = 8 : eeu? | a Wet oa isasemuar | Be 3H sl 318 %) Sunday © 20! Monday f ail 56) 7963.11 47! 21) Tuesday 12) 54] 8 25laft26! 22| Wed nesday 13; 52 8 64f4 8) 23)Timursday | 14) 50) 9 38! 1 53) 24' Friday 15! 48/10 22) 2 46) 25\Saturday | 17} 46/11 12| 3 46/13 33 26 | Sunday 18} 45, morn! 5 30 27| Monday | 19} 43,0 8) 6 47 | 25| Tuesday 21, 41) 1 8) 7 57 29, Wednesday 22) 40) 2 10) 8 48 es ln oe 31\ Friday 5 2516 36 eee wa a me C2..A. Ee - = | DR. 7. W. POMEROY } I AS ARRIVED ON THE and can be consulted at the ISLAND, | OSBORNE HOUSE FOR A FEW WEEKS. Ch'town, July 20. ~L.ARTHUR & CO., GENERAL Commission Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. Bggs and Produce a Specialty. April 26, 1883.—wkly tt McLEOD & MORSON Barristers & Attorneys-at-Law, SOLICITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, OFFICES : ' geform Club Committee Rooms, Opposite Post Otfice, Charlottetown, P. EK. Island, Merchants’ Bank of Halifax Building, Sum- merside, P, E, Island. MONEY TO LOAN, on good security, at moderate interest. Nem McLsop. Nov. 24, '82.—pres her INSURANCE OFFICE. Quecn Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. Lancashire Insurance Company CAPITAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptly aad equitably. W. A. O. Morson. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Agents. Office—South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Sept. 15, 1582, JOHN MAGEACHERN, (Late of Italian Warehouse) AGENT FOR Royal Fire Insurance Company, of England, London & Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, of Engiand, City of Londen Fire Insurance Ce., of England, BAS REMOVED His Ovlice to his New Building, Cor, Queen and King Sts.—Up Stairs. Uwtown, Dec, 7, 87, , June 22, 1853. —6m the acre Ar ke LIPS ASSURANCE 00. St, John’s, Sewfoundland. Capt. Edward English, a member of the firm, will give the strictest attention te con. , sigoments of Island produce, gy P. E. Island vessels for and to charter. 'Jaly 30, 1883. | ---~— | | GEORGE TWEEDY, | ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Notary Public, &c. | OF FICE— West Side of Queen Street, Char- July 25, 1883.— dy wkly 6m BOSTON. Particular attention given to the sale of | Fish and Produce of all kinds, SULLIVAN & MAGNEILL, Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ce. OFFICES—©’Halleran’s Building, Great | George Street, Charlottetown. ¢ae Money to Loan, W. W. Suutivan, Q. C, | Canstea B. Macnuit. Jan. 16,83. | STANDARD —_—_— ——- —— EDWARD T. RUSSEL & GO,, |. “Ht May 17, 1985-pat ner GENERAL | * Commission Merchants, Steam Navigation. Coy. "NO. 264 STATE STREET, . Carroll, 87 tons, Capt, Brown,” Worcesttr, 865 tons, Capt, Blankenship a i Charlottetown for Boston | | NE of thie above FIRST-CLASS ERS wild leave 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. CARVELL Bal : A 41/14 31 lottetown, next door to Stevenson’s Tin Shop. | e P. kK. ISLAND nal ' STEAMERS ST. LAWRENCE AND | PRINCESS OF WALES. — SUMMER ARRANGEMENT, Commencing Wednesday, 16th May,1883, NOVA SCOTIA. Leave Charlottetown for Pictou Landing every Monday, Wednesday, Tharsday and Saturday mornings, at 7 o'clock, connecting there with the Train for Halifax. Returning te Charlottetown on Monday, Wednesday Friday and Saturday, about 2 p, m., on arrival of Train from Halifax, Leave Picteu Landing for Georgetown Thursday, on arrival of train at 2 p.m. Leave Georgetown for Pictou Landing . on every Friday morning, at 5 a,m, NEW BRUNSWICK. CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES. Leave Summerside every day (Sunday T the 57th Annual General Meeting of the Standard Life Assurance Company, | year endcd Lith November, 1883, were re- ported :— 3,038 new proposals for life as- surance were received the year for 2,561 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 The invested funds at same date amounted to Being an increase during the year of $ 9,754,085 38 7,239,048 13 66,936,302 91 2,462,226 59 4,267,546 00 1,062,648 35 JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown. THOMAS KERR, inspector of Agencies, Ch’town, August 3, 1883. WANT to dispose of one doz. handsome American and Turkish Styles, from $49.00 up. Smoking Chairs. A nice variety of Walnut Lounges, Otttomans, Parlor Foot Stools, etc. Upholstery of sll kinds done at shortest notice. Fancy Wool and Fine Silk Work, a specialty. Venetian Blinds Re-done, SHOP ON KING STREET, (Near A. A. Baldwin’s Store.) Can be seen at house any evening, corner King and Great George Street. WM. E. HICKEY. Ch’town, June 22, 1883. Endorsed by the French Academy of Med cine for Inflammation of the Urinary Organs, caused by Indiscretion or Exposure. Hotel Dieu Hospital, Paris, Treatment. Posi- tive cure inone to three days. Local Treat- ment only required. No nauseous doses of Cupebs or Copaiba, INFALLIBLE, HyGienic,CuRATIVE, PREVEN- tive. 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., aud Windsor, Ont. Sold in Charlottetown by APOUTHECARIES HALL CO. May 16. UPHOLSTERY ! Walnut Parlor Suits, in French, Grecian, excepted) on arriva: of Train from Char- lottetown, connecting at Shediac with Trains for each of the above named places ; held at Edinburzsh on Tuesday, the 24th of and at St, John, with steamérs of the Interna. | April, 1853, the following results for the tional Company and Railway for Portland and | Boston. Also leave Charlottetown for Sum- merside every Monday morning at 1 o’clock, Returning, leave Shediac every day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train from St. John, tor Summerside, connecting there with Train for Charlottetown. Also leave Sum- merside for Charloltetowa every Saturday evening, about 5 o’clock, By order, F. W. HALES, Charlottetown, May 15, 1883. Secretary. | STEAMER 29,503,416 00! “HEATHER BELLE.” Summer Arrangement, 1883, if \N 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., for Charlottetown, calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves, where she will remain over night. Also @ lot of handsome Student's and) wednesday, will ieave Brash Wharf for Charlottetown, at seven a. m., calling at China Point and Helliday’s Wharves, leaving Charlottetown at threo p. m., to return, remaining at Brush Wharf over night. 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 Crapand at four a. m., leaving Crapaud 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 Crapaud and re- turning to Charlottetown from Crapaud same evening. FARES—Cabin, to and from Orwell @nd Wharves, 30 cents; deck, 20 cents. Cabin, to and from Crapaud, 40 cents; deck 30 cents. | Excursion Return Tickets will be issued from Charlottetown to Orwell every Thursday evening at one first-class fare. Also, Excur- sion Return Tickets will be issued Saturday to Crapaud at one first-class fare. JOHN HUGHES, ' Agent. | Ch’town, July 2", !.83. \Yaw wkly 3m pres her pat era | JOB PRINTING of every description executed with Neatness and Despatch at the KXAMINER JOR PRINTING KOCMS, cor, Water ad Great George Street, A Chinese Corvette. The Artist and the Dwarrt. _—— Tom Thumb has survived Haydon some | AMUSING er ae bir prem oF THE GUNS 37 years. In 1846 the poor little dwarf was, OF ap ee TORR. holding his levees at the Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly, , Under the same roof, but, of| _ 4 German despatch says that the trial of course, in a different part of the building, | the guns of the Chinese corvette ‘‘Ting the painter—who was not a giant in any re-| ¥!@”, @ few days ago, at Swinemunde, spect—was exhibiting his vast canvases, With a scratch crew from the German navy, “Aristides” and ‘Nero,” originally de-|8e™s to have ended somewhat comically. signed thirty-four years before, to decorate | The vessel has two turrets, each armed the old House of Lords. Haydon, in his| with a couple of Krupp guns of 30.0 centim. jadvertisements, entreated “every Briton calibre, which have already successfully who had pluck in his bosom and a shilling | stood the test of an extra charge of powder in his pocket” to crowd to the exhibition t Essen; but it was also necessary to test during Easter week. ‘‘An advertisement,” | the effect of the concussion, of these mon- he wrote, of a finer description to. catch | S*et cannon on the corvette itself. Accord- the profanum culgus could not be con- | 12g to an account published in the serious From London and Liverpool — i CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. et eke ES . » FALL 1883. The Fast-Sailing tarkentine “EREMA,” as 9 299 tons Register, coppered and classed | 9 Al in English Lloyds, ‘RR. RENDLE, Commander, Will Sail from London ON OR ABOUT THE 5TH SEPTEMBER. oe ALSO THE CLIPPER BRIGANTINE “ZERELDE,” 300 tons Register, to class 9years A 1] in English Lloyds, \L. BRICHRMAM, Commander, Will Sail from Liverpool ABOUT 1st SEPTEMBER, Carrying freight at through rates to Pictou, Georgetown, Souris, Summerside and Shediac. TRIPS, For Freight or passage, apply in London to John Pitcairn & Sons, 16 Great Winchester ' Street, E. C.; in Liverpool to Pitcairn Bros., 51 Soath John Street, or here to the owners, PEAKE BROS. & CO. | Ch’town, July 25—2aw tf ENCOURAGE HOME WORK G H. HASZARD is prepared to do all kinds of RELIEF STAMPING, for Envelopes, Letter Heads, on Note Paper, from Business Dies, _ _ Grests.or Monogram Dies, i | Business men, order your Stationery and Stamping as you want it, from G. HERBERT HASZARD’S, ‘and do not be pestered with foreign agents, | who will only take you in. Jaly 25—pat eod Im 4 Garden and Field Needs. — A Fresh Lot Just Received, —AT OUR-— | AGRICULTURAL STORS, 53 QUEEN STREET. A large Stock of the GENUINE HASZARD’S IMPROVED TURNIP SLED, that gave such general satisfaction to our cus- tomers the last three years, to arrive in a few days. DAWSON & LEPACE, May 6.—dy & wkly JUST LANDED —AND— FOR SALE LOW FOR PROMPT PAYMENT : CASKS PAINT OIL, CASKS OLIVE OIL, CASKS MACHINE OIL, CASKS ENGINE OIL, CASKS WOOL OIL, —ALSO— Wholesale and Retail. D. GORDON, Georgetown, June 29, 1883,—iw, wkiy : A full supply of “‘ LONDON PURPLE, trived; yet not a shilling more was added to the receipts!” The Britons—the pro- Janum vulaus—held aloof. ‘They rush by thousands to see Tom Thumb,” the painter | Wrote in his diary; ‘‘they pusa, they fight, _they seream, they faint, they cry help ! and murder! and VU! and ah! bills, my boards, my earavans, and don’t read them. sepse is shut. It is an insanity, a rales, a madness, a furor, a dream. 1 would not have believed it of the English people.” A few days later he wrote:—‘‘lom Thumb had 12,000 people last week; B. R. Haydon 133}, (the 4.a little girl). Exquisite taste of the English people!” He closed his exhibition with a loss of £111 11s 543. On the 22nd June, in the same year, he died by his own hand.— London World. oe The Blind See. ‘A CURIOUS CASE OF RECOVERY OF SIGHT IN ANSWER TO PRAYER. . Mr, Wm. Orcutt, who liyes in Hudson, N. Y., told a reporter the other day of the extraordinary manner in which he was ,cured of a painful disease of the eyes, that jhad practically made him blind for four jyears. During this time he suffered ter- iribly, and was all the time under the best ‘medical treatment he could procure. At | various times seventeen medical men were jengaged on his case, including the best }Oculists of this city. They did not give him the slightest relief. One day as he ‘was sitting in bis darkened room, he over- heard his wife tell a friend that the family did not expect William to recover, but they {did not tell him so, because he still had ‘hopes of getting well. He was shocked ‘by what he heard, for he never once lost hope of regaining his eyesight. |He staggered to his bedside, and falling upon his knees prayed as he had never prayed before that God would restore his sight. Suddenly he heard a voice saying “Get some clay.” He was almost overcome | when he heard the voice, but he had no ; doubt whatever that the words were an answer to his prayer. His uncle procured ‘some clay forhim. His wife objected to ‘his making any use of the clay, and for |five days he kept it under the stove, not ‘knowing how it would be best to apply it. ,He prayed earnestly for guidance in the ‘matter, and on the fifth day, ashe was sitting in his room, he heard the voice ‘again. It distinctly said, ‘‘Get the clay.” |He procured the pieces from under the stove and found that they had been baked |hard, in which condition, as he afterwards found, the clay could be most effectively | applied. He placed the clay in contact with each eyelid. Itstuck to them like (leeches, and finally could not be removed except by using considerable force. The removal of the clay was followed by the complete restoration of sight.—N. Y. Sun, ee eee ae Greene aaa The Face of the Moon. MEANING OF THOSE GREAT IRREGULAR STREAKS. The moon’s face, says Mr. Richard A. Proctor, tells us of a remote youth—a time of fiery activity, when volcanic action even more effective (though not probably more energetic) than any which has ever taken place on this globe, uvheaved the moon’s crust. But so soon as we consider care fully the features of her surface we see that there must have been three well marked eras of vulcanian activity. Look at the multidudinous craters for example around | the metropolitan crater Tycho, They tell jus of century after century of volcanic dis- ‘turbances—but they tell us more. They mark a surface which varies in texture, and therefore in light reflecting power in such a way as to show that the variations were produced long before the volcanic action began by which the craters were formed. For the variations of texture are such as to mark a series of streaks—some of them two or three thousand miles in length and many miles in hreadth, extending radially from Tycho. Craters lie indifferently on these brighter streaks and on the intervening darker spaces, and some craters can be seen which lie right across a bright streak, with parts of their ring on the darker regions on both sides of the streak. Of course, this proves that the craters were formed long after the great streaks. When the streaked surface was formed it must have been tolerably smooth, for we see the streaks best under a full illumination, and there is no sign of any difference of illumination between them and the darker ground all around; they are neither long ridges nor long valleys, but mere surface markings. Yet must they have been form- ed by mighty vulcanian disturbance, such, indeed, as we may be certain went on at the early stage of the moon's history, to which these radiating streaks must be referred. It seems clear that,as Nasmith has illustrat- ed by experiment, they belong to that stage of the moon’s history when her stil! hot and plastic crust parted with its heat more rapidly than the nucleus of the planet, and |80, Coltraciing more quickly, was rept by the resistence of the internal matter, which stili hot and mo'ten, flowed into the rents, ond epreaai..g formed the long bruad streaks vf brighter surface. They see my, Their eyes are open, but.their | North German Gazette, a large quantity of | skylight and window glass was smashed, a |thick iron rail on the bridge was wrenched | off, a funnel was snapped in two, the deck | Was strewn with coal jerked up from the ,coal bunker, some wooden furmiture was ‘shattered into splinters, ‘‘which the gen- ‘tHemen could put in their - pockets and carry away with them as me- mentos of the occasion,” while one of the vidifors was knocked down. The same fate -wowld certainly have befallen others had they not held with steadfast determination ‘to rails and. tackle. The greatest effect was naturally produced when the four big guns were fired together. The cannon |being loaded, the turrets, for safety’s ‘sake, were cleared of the men, and then ‘on & given signal one solitary gunner | pulled with all his might at the end of four long cords which had been atteched to a bar. The shock was tremendous, and | the damage in smashed glass, wrench- \ing off of iron rails, and disturbed coal- bunkers, ete, was immense, How the Chinese are to face the French or any other foe with such disastrous guns is a question | well worthy of theit cdnsideration.” *‘Truly 'a triumph of German industry,” writes the naval correspondent of the North German Gazette with reference to the fact that the Ting Yuen, or ‘Everlasting Peace,” was put together at Stettin. > © a Italian Storms. Startling accounts have been received of the storms that have eccurred in the north of italy. At Varese a hailstorm, lasting a quarter of an hour, covered the town and the surrounding country with a layer of ice ‘several inches deep. The hailstones were the size of walnuts. The maize and the grapes were conpletely destroyed. The wind uprooted a number of trees, and blew away the roofs of several farm houses. Many peasants have lost their all. Jia the Commune of Dayerio a farm house fell, burying three of the inmates in the ruins, and gravely injuring four others. An old woman, overtaken by the storm on the road between Verese and Bisnschio. was beaten down by the hail and rain, and expired. A number of peasants were more or less injured, and many fow!s, goats, and even some cows were killed. The valley of Intelvi was also ravaged by a terrible hail- storm, which utterly destroyed the crops. The trees were stripped of their leaves. At Sampicrdarena, near Genoa, considerable alarm was raised by a waterspout bursting on the beach. The sheds of the bathers were blown away, leaving many of the occupants in an embarrassing state of desha- bille. One of the servants of the bathing establishment had his arm broken. +<—e- ~ A Remarkable Passage. Says the San Francisco Alta California of July 27th.—The recent passage of the British ship ‘‘Kambira‘”’ from Rio, in 68 days, is a remarkable one and has seldom been excelled. The British ship ‘King Cerdic” arrived here September 7th, in 67 days, and the American ship “Storm King” arrived here December 30th, 1880, in 65 days, the latter being, to the best of our recollection, the best on record; The passage of the ‘‘Kambira” is well worthy of notice, and a brief description of the vesse] is inorder. She was launched in Kingsport, N. 8., in the month of October, and proceeded to St. John, where. she joaded for Liverpool. On arrival at ‘that port she was coppered, loaded coal for Rio Janeiro, was 46 days from Liverpool to Rio and 69 days from Rio to this port, making one of the fastest passages on record from that port. From the looks of the ship alow and aloft, we must say the captain’ and officers deserve great credit for the fine appearance of everything aboard. We must aleo note that this ship is owned by Mr. C. B Burgess and others, who also own the British barque ‘‘Recovery,” that ar- rived here from Montivideo last year in 65 days. —-_- Before and After Marriage. Before marriage—‘‘Excuse me George. Did my parasol hurt you. “Oh, no, my dear. It would be a pleas- ure if it did.” After’ a marriage — ‘‘ Great heavens! There was nevera woman underthe sun that knew how to carry a parasol without scratching a fellow’s eye out.” ‘‘And there was never a man that knew enough to walk onthe right side of a woman with a parasol.” “There isn’t any right side toa woman with a parasol.” — —-<- ot The trial of the prisoners charged with breaking open the Manitoba gaol and liber- ating the prisoners therein was commenced at Rat Portage on the 7th inst., and after hearing some evidence the case was remand- ed. One of the witnessess for the defence was arrested on entering the court-room, ‘being recognized as one of the leaders in | the assault on the gaol. me Mippe aged men, often lack vigor, this can _be restored by that great brain and nerve food known as Mack’s Maguetie Medicine. Sold in Charlottetown at Apothecaries Hall. Read ‘the advertisement in auother column of to- days payer,