Terms :—Frve Do.tiars a Year, Saas NEW SERIES. Che Daily Examiner is issued every evening by The Examiner Publ:shing Oo From their office, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Kdward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— Six months ** eee See eRe meee eet eee 50 Three mouths..... btetber nik ah ad besesce Se 50 One month .... Advertising st moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on epplicatica. ALMANAG POR JULY, 1888, New Moon 9th day, 2h, 4.2m. a.m., N. = (below horizon. ) Firse Quarter 16th day, 8h., 0.4m., a. m., N (below horizon. ) Full Moon 23rd day, lh., 32.6m., a.m., S Last Quarter, 30th day, 4h., 17.1m., p.m., N., (below horizon.) Dit a wrek|2@” ‘Sum /Moon! High! Day's M) Tises|sets | Tises |water| len'h jh mth id|'0 | 4 20 h m 1 Sunday 418749 0 4) 4 201531 2!Menda ; | 19) 49 0 27] 5 25) 30 3 Tuesday 19; 48) 0 50; 6 31; 29 4| Wednesday {| 20/ 48) 1 1) 730) 23 5| Phureday |} 21) 43: 1 42/8 20) 27 §| Friday 22; 43,2 16,9 4 2 7 Satarday 22; 47; 2-56; 9.47; .25 8|/Sunday 23; 47! 3 43/10 27; 2 9 Monday 23° +46) 4 37/11 5) 23 10 Tuesday 24' 46) 5 37/1i 42) 2 11}Wednesday 25| 45) 6 52|morn}. 20 12) Thu sday 26; 44) 7 51) 0 20) 18 13| Friday 27; 44,9 11059 16 14 Saturday 28} 143/10 12) 1 39) «15 15 Sunday 29; 43/11 23) 2 25) 14 16 Monday 30) 42 aft 38; 3 18 12 17 Tuesday 31} 41}.1 53} 4 28) 10 is, Wednesday 32} 40' 3 5) 549) 8 .9/ Thursday 33F 39) 4 18; 7 OF 6 2 Friday 34) 38/527; 818) 4 21 | Saturday 35) 37| 6 29) 9 14 2 22) Sunday 36; 36) 7 22:10 3 0 23, Monday 37; 35, 8 710 47/1458 24) Tuesday 33) 34 8 44/11 28) 56 25| Wednesday 39; 32; 9 Wijaft O 53 2v/ Thursday 40} 31) 9 42)-0-43; 51 27| Friday 42; 30:10 6) 1 20; 48 28/ Saturday 43 28:10 30) 1 58! 45 29‘ Sunday 44; 27/10 53) 2 38) 43 30 Monday 45} 26)11 18) 3 25) 41 3l Tuesday i4 46/7 26:11 45) 4 24/1440 "D. A. MACKINNON, L.L.B., Attorney, Solicitor, Notary Public, &¢, —HAS OPENED HIS— Law Office in Georgetown, King’s County, where he will attend to professional work, and loan money on Keal Estate. nov25—wky L. ARTHUR & CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, RECEIVERS OF Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS Poultry, Potatoes, Fruit & Vegetables. 142, 144 Commercial Street, | BOSTON, MASS. yr Ws B-0-8-T-O-N SUNMER ARRANGEMEN ee THE PALACE STEAMERS INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- land, every »ionday, Wednesday and Friday, at 7.23 a. @. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd class; $9.50, lat class. For tickete and other information apply to _A SHARP F. W. HALES, : P, EL RY., P. E. L Steam Nav, Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. May 7, 18%8—eod wky James A, MORRISON. MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, BROKERS —AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX. Consignments of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Rererences:; Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Bank of Nova Scotia, Halifax; George Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia Charlottetown. GEORGE MUSGRAVE ———— WARREN & JONES, TEA MERCHANTS, 71 East Cagar ap 9 & 14 Mrscine LANE, Lonpon, ENGLAND. Represented in Canada by Moageison & Muscxave, Halifax. E DAILY EXAMINER. . This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, havingio advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxirives. CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. DRESS STAYS. The only Dress Stay made tl rill no , i ss Stay made that willnot Break, Rust, Warp or Splits; is not affect- aioe Ts _ Se ae to exact lengths required, or purchased in , engths (6, 7, 8 and 9inches.) Always ready for use. and can be te dress-seam by machine or hand. ’ — THE FEATHERBONE GORSET ! THE ONLY PERFECT CORSET! The Lightest and Most Durable Corset! The lightest and most durable. Has no side steels to rust and break, yet keeps its form perfectly and cannot roll up at the hips, OUR GUARANTEE, Each Featherbone Corset is guaranteed to be absolutely un- breakable, to give perfect ease to the wearer, to wash and laundry without damage. and tobe satisfactory in every respect. » Lf not, return within four weeks and your merchant is authorized to ®\:efund your money. £% FOR SALE BY ALL FIRST-CLASS MERCHANTS @R ST. THOMAS FEATHERBONE CO., Sole Manu- facturers, St. Thomas, Ont. E. J. HOWELL, Sole Agent for the ‘Maritime Provinces, 17 King Street, St. John, N. B. HERR Sst! FEATHERBONE CORSETS, BROWN’S BLOCK. —FOR STANLEY BROS.. Charlottetown, July 9, 1888. RESS GOODS, NEW SHADES, AT JAMES PATON & CO’S., NEW TRIMMINGS LO MATCH AT JAMES PATON & COS. —AND— LOW SS] : PR oSaee ATV JAMES PATUN & CO's. DRESS COGDS! DRESS GOODS! 5 OS en Don’t Buy before looking at James Paton & Co's DRESS GOODS Ch’town, June 14, 1888—dy & wky - Cn AE BOOT AND SHOE FACTORY. Great Boom in Boots & Shoes. THE EXCITEMENT RISING! 0—_—_ Our Boots Take the Lead ! Fit any Foot, Suit any Purse.! 70: NOTHING LIKE HOME MANUFACTURE |! To the Whelessie Trade: JOB LOTS, comprising 50-Pairs Assorted Boots, sold, from 20 to 40 per cent. below cost. About 1,000 Pairs of this kind “ALD GOFF BROS. Successors to Dorsey, Goff & Co, BS. DAVIES & CO, CUSTO#}: TAILORS, ——_AND—— Dealers in Mens’ Furnishing Goods. o—- — Large Stock and Very Best Value for your Money, June 21, 1888—eod & wky ; eS é 0 Large Lot of Summer Underwear, very cheap, “ Straw Hats, ” 6 Helmets, . Coats for the Hot Weather, Q All the Novelties in Gents’ Neckwear and Furnishings, ALL AT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES FOR CASH. B. S. DAVIES & CO., ISLAND. MONDAY, JULY 23, 1888. | THE irailee Sal | a Prete TBE . LOKDOa HUUSE is Still Going On. any Fine Grades of Goods, LARGE DISCOUNTS. And every effort made to meet the require- ments of CASH BUYERS. F. W. MOORE, Assignee of Harris & Stewart. Ch town, March 2, 1888. + AURNESS LINE OF STEAMER: Express Line. a > Rishwick THE ONLY DIRECT LINE BETWEEN EALIFAX AND LONDON. No Diversion via United States Ports. IT 18 INTENDED TO DES? ATCH THE S.5. DAMARA, From Halifax for London, About 10th of July, TO BE FOLLOWED BY THE Ss. S. VULUNDA, ABOUT AUGUST 5th. Special attention given to ‘he shipmen\ of Labs rs_by these Lines. Through Bills: _ of “1b issatu Wo VUE Ga VUE Oa Ewe ew from Charlottetown and points on the FP. EK. Island Railway at lowest through rates. : Rate of Insurance low. Goods handled with care. No transhipping charges at Halifax. For Rates of Freight and other particulars arse Ww. W. CLARKE, Agent, Charlottetown, P. E.L, Or to PICKFORD & BLACK, Halifax, N. 8, jy10—2m eod FISHWICK’S EXPRESS LINE, BET WEEN— Charlottetown and Halifax. THE STEAMES M A. STARR, CAPTAIN FERGUSON, Leaves Charlottetowa every Thurs- day Afternoon for Halitax, Calling at Bayfield, Ports Hawkesbury, Hastings Harbor. RETURNING—Leaves Halifax every TUES- a MORNING, at 7 o’clock, making same calls. Special Rates and Through Bills of Lading granted on Canned Lobsters to London and Con- tinental Ports, from Charlottetown and points on the P. E. Island Railway, at lowest rates, In- surance low. W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Ch’town, July 10, 1888—eod tf BLHILARATING FLUIDS I AVING secured the AGENCY forthis Pro- vince from MR. JAMKES.A, ROUE, of Halifax, for his AERATED WATERS, I will be pleased to fill orders with despatch in the following lines. viz, :— Lemonade, } Cream Soda, Plain. * { Ginger Ale, | J LL. Tn Large and Small Bottles. Champagne Cider, Nerve Food, In order to give my CITY CUSTOMERS every satisfaction, I have secured the services of an Experienced Expressman, who will deliver Goods toany partof the city without delay. Special Rates to management of Picnics, &c, Highest Price paid for all kinds of EMPTY BOTTLES. | Telephone in connection. JOHN JOY, Olid London House, WATER STREET. jul6—tf —— - ing of each week ; week, NEWTON L&‘E. Fons 22, 1888 CAMERON BLOCK, OPP. POST OFFICE. , 1888. Oct, 24, 1887— June 1, 1888. Gleanings From My Common-place Books. | NATIONAL RELATIONS ALTERED BY DISCOYV- ERIES OF WATT, STEPHENSON AND WHEAT- STONE. Watt, Stephenson and Wheatstone, al- ready and while their discoveries are in their infancy, have altered the relations of every country in the world with its neigh- bors. The ocean barriers between conti- nents which nature seemed to have raised for eternal separation have been converted into easily travelled highways; mountain- chains are tunnelled; distance, once the most troubleso.ne of realities, has ceased to exist. The inventions of these three men determined the fate of the Slave States. But for them and their work the Northern armies would have crossed the Potomac in mere handfuls, exhausted, with enormous marches. The iron roads lent their help, The collected strength of all New England and the West was able to fling itself into the work; negro slavery. is at an end, and the Uniou is 2% to be split like Europe in- to a number of independent. States, but is to remain a single power, to exercise an in- fluence yet unimaginable on the future for- tunes Of mankind. Aided by the same mechanical facilities, Germany obliterates the dividing lines of centuries. The Ameri- cans preserved the unity which they had. The Germans conquer for themselves. a unity which they had not. France inter- feres, and haif a million soldiers are col- lected and concentrated in a fortnight; armies driven in like wedges, open rents and gaps from the Rhine to Orleans; and at the end of two months the nation whose’! military strength was supposed to be the, greatest in the world, is reeling paralyzed | under blows to which these modern contrivences have exposed her. So far we may be satisfied; but who can forsee the ul- timate changes of which these are but the initial .symptoins? Who will be rash’! enough to say that they will promote neces- | sarily the happiness. of mankind? They are but weapons which may be turned to! good or evil, according to the character of | those who best understand how to use them. —J. A. Froude, in Fraser's Magazine, Jan- wary, 1871. { i i | MODERN DEMOCRACY. It isa melancholy reflection that but little has been done by modern democracy to dignify and exalt mankind. The area of human happiness has certainly been extend- ed by the diffusion of freedom and _—— ——— SINGLE Copies Two Cent VOL. 23.-NO. 53. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. rs Legislatien Extraordinary. Sir,—Anyone taking the trouble to look through the volumes of literature annually produced by the Local Legislature, must wonder at the necessity for so many acts ‘*to vest a vertain tract of Jand in Mr. So & So.” There is a venerable supersition in British dominions that the proper method of transferring land is by a deed of con- veyance, and in such regard is this ancient practice elsewhere held, that a man laying before any legislature a bill to vest a tract of land in himself, would be properly re- ferred to the party in whom the land was vested, to obtain from him the required conveyance. But it appears that our legis- lators take a different view of matters, and have added to their already onerous duties the management of a small conveyancing office, where for ten dollars the most shaky title can be made as secure as it is possible for an act of Parliament to make it. ** To what vile uses are we put, Horatio!” If, however, the Legislature stopped at bolstering up bad titles the grievance would not be too great. But when they boldly undertake to vest a tract of land described by metes and bounds in any person who chooses to ask them to do so, and who is willlng to pay the necessary fee, the matter becomes almost unendurable. A _ glaring instance of this species of legislation is afforded in chapter twenty-two of the Acts of 1888. There, under a cloud of recitals, _which no man, be he ever so well aware of the facts, could read through and under- stand, a tract of land, in the possession of a party, who, at the time of the passing of the act was defending an action of eject- {ment in the Supreme Court, was, without the slightest notice, vested in the plaintiff in the case. After this, no man can feel secure in the possession of his property who has an enemy willing to spend ten dollars to dispossess him of it. Are there no bounds to such legislation? In truth the only limit seems to be that which nature has placed on the impudence of men, Yours &c., P QO. ar eee The Curiosity Shop. WHY THE YEAR 19090 WILL NOT BE COUNTED AMONG THE LEAP YEARS. The year is 365 days, 5 hours and 49 minutes long; eleven minutes are taken 15 sence tai ea lt ial and Mulgrave, Arichat, Cape Canso and Sheet) knowledge ; and we rejoice in that result. ' every year to make the year 365 1-4 days But the creative genius and power which jong: and every fourth year we have.an enlarge the boundaries of thought and! extra day. This was Julius Cvesar’s arrange- action thrive not upor that level plain ment. Where do these. eleven minutes ‘**upon which every ant-hill is a mountain! come from? They come from the future, and every thistle a forest tree.” Democracy,'and are paid back by omitting leap year it may be, bears with s+ tha destiny or the’ every Ww" years. Dut if leap year ic Stans ene alana Froen | Oinitted regularly every 100th year, in the in the United States, where it reigns without ' aoe of 0: Sue: aS pote pa one control, no man since Washington, who only have been paid back, but that a whole was certainly no democrat, can be said to | q ay will have been .given up. So Pope bare ion, to tron cminnes ren under Gregey Ili why proved on Can : , calendar in 105zZ ecree that y or manifestation of intellectual force bears! centurial year divisible by 4 cha te 2 no proposition at all to the spread of popu- leap year after all. So we borrow eleven lation and wealth. In like manner, France minutes each year, more than pay our never was at any former time so populous, ' borrowings back by omitting three leap so rich in all material gifts, and apparently ' years in three centurial years, and square so prosperous as in July, 1870; but never jhatters by having a leap year in the fourth in all her varied history wasshe so destitute | .onturial year. Pope Gregory's arrange- of retnan, whether in couneal ors ann outa exact ‘and the owrowing_ a to ourselves. Great Britain in 1805 had | porns yarn eee “¢ eee none : : rrow. more than we pay bac 1€ not half the population, probably not one- lettent.of ouly one day in 3 B66 pai: fifth of the wealth, and far less materiai . culture, education and freedom than we enjoy atthe present day. But we cannot boast that our age is more prolifie of great : j ‘ men in statesmaaship, war, literature and} The steamship Fulda, which arrived on science than the first decade of thiscentury; Tuesday from Bremen, ran down on an un- ‘and there are those who think, we trust known fishing schooner on the banks of erroneously,that the relative strength of the Newfoundland last Saturday morning. nation, as compared with that of some Dense fog prevailed at the time and the foreign States, has declined. —~Edinburgh schooner disappeared astern almost im- Review, Janwary 1871. ‘mediately after the collission. At the = jtime of the collision the schooner’s entire ORIGIN OF THE PROVERB RELATIVE ‘TO crew, which appeared to number about PEOPLE LIVING IN GLASS HOUSES THROWING twenty men, were cn deck clinging to the STONES. | Tigging i ae re i help. aa ; ; . ‘air was filled with their frantic shouts , ee Doe of Racking. om the ee which caused all passengers of the Fulda to to os Salle that it ae el r 4 ae oar? oe are Bie rp ast < sar , r don as the Glass House. Numerous Scotch- ae hh ah od pee ga L ee poe men came to London with the King who | yy,,i,. ” while anu ofthenn.entaanennitte i . - . , ; : ° Rhy SN arn are or pe oe gg 7 ; s Ps back into the water ore assistance co Speman i Te EE ee *®) ‘he given them. It cannot be said whether apa itee See: es ’ the whole band of fishermen perished or | °* Steenie, those who live in glass houses not. As soon* as the Fulda could be | should be omens te they fling “ere and brought toa standstill she was turned thusiarose the well-known. provern. iround and for over an hour searched itor ee ae aaah ee a wreck and its victims, but could find no » SAYINGS A) Se The phrase ‘* comparisons are odious, ” ttle. eee eam pnd — in Burton’s pues 4 anes: far as could be observed she carried about ‘* Measures not men.’’-—(roldsmith. \sixteen dories. ‘The wrong sow by the ear.” — Ben Jon- Se ea son Butler. ‘‘The cups that cheer but not inebri- Duelling in France. ates. ”—Cowper. : amet id.”—A The bill introduced in the French Chamber Speech is silver, silence is gold."--A (+ Deputies, on Monday, by Bishop Freppel, Dutch Proverb. to abolish duelling in France,is the outcome ** Of two evils the less is always to be of the Boulanger-Floquet affair. It is doubt- chosen. — Thos. A: Kempis. é ful if it will pass the Chambers. The last af- “All that glitters is not gold.” —#hakes- fair has not by any means had the effect of A Sea Tragedy. “ALL RIGHT.’ | are.. ‘The soft impeachment.”—R. B. Sheri- dan. «* Peace hath her victories, No less renowned than war.” — Milton. ‘“Who shall decide when doctors dis- | agree ?’—Pope. ‘* There is no new thing under the sun.” | —Eecles, 1—9. ‘‘He that toucheth pitch shall be de- filed therewith.”’—Eecles 13—1 e242. B. Brrmupa Oxtons.—35 crates just received ALL RIGHT will be at Char'ottetown from’ ex M. A. Starr from Halifax, in prime order. Monday afternoon till Wednesday merning, and from Thursday at noon till Saterday morn- and at Summerside from -|Saturday noon until Monday at noon of each | —-A. McNeill, Auctioneer. 3i—jy2l —___4.>e———" Barrietr Pears, Bananas, Apples, Oranges and Lemons just received at Beer & Goff 's. ) -jyl9—3i temas iain ating ' making resort tothe ‘‘code” unpopular. Beyone question M. Floquet is stronger and more re- _spected to-day in France than if he had not ‘fought. As for General Boulanger, his wound in the neck may or may not be as serious as ‘reported, In either case he has lost prestige | with the army, where he never was idolized, by allowing himself to be worsted in a ¢on- test witha civilian. Frenchmen, generally, seem inclined to think the figure he cuts in the whole business slightly ridieulous—or perhaps not slightly. A would-be dictator who provokes a duel and gets the worst of it is less dangerous than he was. Already some of his leading friends have abandoned him. He continues to progress toward recovery. ——<-- To rue Dear.—A person cured of Deafnes, and noises in the head of 23 years’ standing by a simple remedy will send a deseription of it FREE to any person who applies to NicHoL soN, 30 St. John Street, Montreal. 4m—ml4 I” aa aisha SS UES