oar we oc, owe Boak-of No “(Queen Tusurance Company, ee ee See a DP a © Vt . I D ILLARS A Y FAR. T{ " - - mais - —— ————__ $$$ ——_ -—_—— ~ - - This is true Liberty, when Free-& +rn Men having tO advise the Public, may speak free.”’—Evxirwss. Sinere Corpses Two CExts. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINUE EDWA&RD ISLAND, SATURDAY. JULY 22, 1882 VOL 11.---NQ. 52. tue Dairy Examren : i lg A i RRR ETT Pa a , . AAMINE R - ee T = @> nn" v= vilege bas shuddered at what might IS ISSUED EVERY EVENIN: i eS FA rh ‘* l HE DatLy Ex AMIN ER happen tu old Europe if this grand experi- By roe Examuver Pup etl he ad vhs atte @ “ : Bo a” ae ae tk eae — ment should succeed. (Cheers). But you, ruil 4A AMINER UBLISHING COMPANY, 9 ees JULY 22. 1882. the workers—-you, striving after a better PROM TAEIR OFFIVG, CORNER OF WATER RADE MA nn en a ence = |\time—yon, strugglivg upward toward the AnD GkeaT Grorak srReers, 5 $e * Janadi te agazine, (light, with slow and painful steps—you _ a MERCHANT TAILON, 2 ‘Ganaaian Contemporary Magasine. ee ne ae cloak Rares or Supscrirtion : Mr. Gotpwin Smita writes to the Mail, a ney uae ae = ein Six Months, ‘ ' $2 50 y *, ). ;depioring the loss to Canadian literature Peet oka) dae Sein cial 1 25 Is now offering Cash Buy ers the BEST VALUE that . and Canadian enterprise, in the withdrawal hn ae hie reaped: ite | greatest aie. litree Months, : - A 4 One Month, : 0 50 * Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may made for monthly, juarterly, half yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. be ALMANAG FOR JULY, 1882. MOON 5S CHANGES, Full Moon Ist day, lh. 56m. a. m, N. (below horizon.) Third Quarter 7th day, 5h. (below horizon. ' New Moon 15th day, 2h. 49m, a. m., 5S, Firat Quarter, 23rd day, 6h. 5m. a. m., N (below horizon. ) Fall Moon, 30th day, 9h. 49m, a. m., N. W (below horizon.) 38m., p. m., N, Ww. § ae j AMERICAN WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS. can be had in the market. in |g» } 4 ° Broadcloth W orsted, Scotch and Canadian ‘Tweed Suits, |A mnagnificent range of GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, comm FN | i ! D loay ov ween S22 [Sun |Moon|High | Days; Collars, Ties, Underclothing, English and American Hats. M rises |sets | rises | water | len’h, © 5 hm h mj aft’n morn! l Saturday 418.7 48| 8 4:10 43115 27 () R (| (| : . J 7 eR 2 2iSundey | «19! 49/ 8 40/11 26) ur headymade Clothing is Manufaciured ou the Premises * Monday 19} 49! 9 I4laft 8) j 4 Tuesday 20| 48; 9 44, 0 49 | 3 _ : : ’ Semmens. | £2, Si. 19) 1 3 | fashionably cut, well sewed, and having good trimmings, 6: Thursday 21) 7,10 2 28 ye ” © 7| Friday 22} 47\11 11] 3 11! | ; glSaturday 23} 47|11 45] 4 20/15 19) Will be sold as Cheap as Impeoricd, 9 Sunday |} 24 46 morn) 5 41) 10| Menda 24; 46) 0 23) 7 Ij t aee oe ; . - il Teeky 25; 4511 68 8 We invite you to inspect our Goods. 12’ Wednesday , 26) 45) 1 57] 9 0 13 Thursday | 27; 44; 2 53! 9 45 ate a 14 Friday 28} 43) 3 54/10 25) dD A BRUCE 15 Saturday 29 12; 4 66:11 2,15 08} 6. a Gee » Ww & } Ay 16 Sunday 30} 42 5 59|i1 35 | Charlottetown, May 22, ’82. 72 Oueen Street. 17| Monday 31] 41) 7 1} morn | epennees : 18| Tuesday 32; 40} 8 3 0 5 I TrrerrT) fia ee 19| Wednesday | 33; 39) 9 3] 0 39 ‘4 won 20 Thursday | 34) 38/10 4 1 il) BD 45 21| Friday | 35] 37:10 56] 1 45! = 22) Saturday 36, 36\aft 4) 2 25/14 54) é 23|Sanday 37! 35} § 6 3 10! 24' Monday 38; 34' 2 8: 4 10) 25\Tuesday | 39. 33 8 10' 5 26! ———- 0:0-——- - —— 26;}Wednesday | 40 32: 4 9 6 46 9" Tha i 2 3 5 7 7 5d) i ‘ os —-_ . . _ e e + ol Pride | Sal Sal Be oe 4 Ap proprietor of this Establishment, owing to the increased 29| Saturday 44) 29 6 34: 943/14 42) 1 demand for his Goods, has added new facilities to his 30/Sunday | 45; 28) 7 10/10 29| PR de cites Hating of : : ere . siiMmdey (4 a6) 90) 7 43/11 90] Bakery, consisting of the latest and most improved machinery, _ - ——=—-— |etc., and is now prepared to supply the trade with a ESTABLISHED 1832, eee Paid Up Capital. . $1,000,600 Reserve Fund .. . 325,090 An Agency of this Bank will be opened on | Monday next, 19th iust., in the building lately occupied by the Bank of Priace Edward Island, under the management of the under- signed. ; | ‘Deposits will be received on interest, and on current account. Drafts granted on the various Agencies and correspondents of the Bank. Sterliog and other Exchange bought and sold, and geueral banking business transacted. D. C. CHALMERS, Ch’town, June 17, 1892—tf Ageat. EDWARD T, RUSSELL & C0, | Commission Merchants, 213 STATE STREET ROSTON, MASS. Mav 19, 1882—6m |» ARTHUR & CO, feneral Commission Merchants Particular attention given to the sale of Island produce. 121 Ailantic Avenue & 20 Essex Avenue, BOSTON, MASS. May 27, 1882—-wkly INSURANCH OFFICE. OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, City of London Fire Insur- ance Company. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptly and equitably, F. KENNEDY, General Agent. Oiice—South Side,Queen Square. town, Feb. 3 1552. MOFESSiGWAL CAG, PALMER & MULLALLY ATTORNEYS-AT-LAN, NOTARIES PUBLIC, Ac. OFFICE—O'Halloran’s Builtng, Great eorge Street, Charlottetown, P. . Island. H.V.PALMER. JAS. W. MILLALLY. April. 10, 1882.9. ye \UBSCRIBE for the DAIL BYWNE: tS the Cheapest and mos Ne® Paper Poblished ig P. B, Island. TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES Island. guaranteed, ~Hard-Bread, Plain-and Fancy Bisentts; bert nnn AT THE SHORTEST NOTICE. —————- — 50; 1000 lbs. CHOICH CONFECTIONERY To arrive per Steamship ‘* Miramichi,” from Montreal. Rese Orders by mail promplly executed. J. QUIRK, — Hats, Caps, Clothing, &, Prince Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Islaud May 4, 1882. GREAT CLOSING UP AT 83 QUEEN STREET. GREAT BARGAINS in Dress Goods, Tweeds, Winceys, Silks, Curtains, and all kinds ot Staple and Fancy DRY GOODS. Come early and secure Bargains. N. B.—Customers will please not ask credit, as sales are for cash only; hence bargains. Parties owing accounts will please call and settle without delay. For Seote ‘ai “English ‘Tweeds or Worsted Suits For Canadian Tweed Suits, For Overcoats of all Descriptions, Bes E* ’ , ati WALL CORNER ill find the largest and best assorémout of Cloths in t The best workmansl!) and a - There you W periect fit Prices very moderate. —ALSO— nis’ Furnishings ap | Felt Has, cheap,&e, &e. . lete line of Ge et two doors abuse Ap the address Remember the address | Oa Se7 2S ¥ : Ay Ae ore } a n \ wi A : i 8 QW PEHEDY PHEOMATISM.. FOR Neuralgia, Sciatice, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of tho Chest, Cout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swel!- ings and Sprains, Burns ard Scales, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frested Feot and Ears, and ail other Pains and Aches. No Preparvtion on earth equals St. Jacons On. as a sufe, sure, simple and cheap External Remedy A trial entails but the comparatively trifling outlay of 60 Cents, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of ite claims. Directions in Eleven Langneges. 60LD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN. MEDICINE, A. ¥V OGELER & CO., Beltimore, Md., U. 8. As fY\HE undersigned has removed to the old CLOTH DEPOT, on Great George Steet, next door to Stumbles’ Harness Shop, and having purchased a large assortment of Fac- tery Cloth from the Mill Valley Woollen Millis Company, at greatly reduced prices for cash, is prepared to sell cheaper than ever during the summer, Highest cash price paid for wool, or ex- changed for cloth, Cc. H, SCHURMAN, —_AT— a Greatly Reduced Prices, A LARGE LOT OF MEN'S AND BOYS’ 2000 Straw Hats, 1600 Felt Hats, 5) Caps, in Cloth, Silk and Linen, 30ys’ Suits, Youth’s Suits, Men’s Coats, Pants and Vests, Shirts, Linders and Drawers, Collars, Ties, Braces, <c. Also, 3.00 Rolls Paper Hangings, Blinds, Borderings, &c. As the subscribers are desirous of clearing out the above Goods during the present month, great bargains may be expected tor ready cash, | | i ; F. LePAGE & CO. July 5, 18s2—wkly POR LONDON. g +e) LOR OR gest : as ayers SS = Se aw “3 i aa A. NELLSON, Master, Wil! be on the berth early in AugustMjand , Ce will sail from Charlottetown fog London, G. B., ; About the 15th August t, providing a sufficient quantity freight offers, and will carry Lobs:dits at very lowest rates _ Shippers will please make early applica- tion. gp, gp Warcehousee receipts wi]} 0 given, and . Slored free of warehase Charges For further particulars pply to the owners, PEAKE }ROS. & CO. | Ch’iown, July 7, 1889—3ay ‘UNION BANK P, & ISLAND. DIVIDEND No, 26. Preteen, s hereby given ¢}, © of eight per ¢ OTI E is ai the rat N | has beex declared go | Bank for the oe hh tic z= thecries Hall Corner ||“ “°° 4 Brane Chalotietown, May bast six men ab ~ of the Canadian Monthly. It is evident 1 that he has lost something on the verture ; i but he says that “‘ one at all events of those ; ho were originally connected with the \Caiadian Monthly deems himself recom. l camkieh for no small amount of mental drudgery, pecuniary loss, and endurance of ‘abuse \by the conviction that questions of importa’ace to Canada, which might other- | wise hav: passed unnoticed, have been dis- cussed, that Canadian talent which might ‘otherwise Rave remained latent has been fealled forth|, and that something of an im- pulse has bden given, not only to the acti- _vity of Canad\an pens, but to the independ- ence of Canadian minds.” It is, indeed, to be regretted that the Magazine did rot succeed. Its joss will be a heavy one ‘jo latent literary talent in | Canada; and thongh not so severely literary as the great Miagazines of England, and those of the Ufnited States, yet there was something so “fat the national about the publication Ythat the loss to Canada is 'a heavy one. r. Smith points out that | the management jof the magazine has been unexceptionabley and says that had the editor been a Jeffrey or a Lockhart, he. would not haves escaped disparagement at the hands of Ahose in whose eyes the un- pardonable fault was that of every other independent Jjournal, viz., its infringement of a monopoly of opinion. This is a cut at the Globe. ----+ + eeee - ———---- | John Bright. ' Jobn Bright, member of the English Parliament} for Birmingham, is in his 72nd year. During a leng parliamentary life in which he &idiculed and railed at oftice- seekers, he fended by taking an office, and a ,Sinecure at) that. | With mast people in public life. so flag- e from first principles would have been a death blow to confidence. But John Bright }28 80 firmly intrenched in the hearts »”Jtie people that he found no explanatio# * _ his contradictory course to be necessa’yp, He said no word about it, | in or eut of eliament. Long after he had taken office became known that he, had | yielded to solicitations of Myr, Glad- stone to ne a “right honorable” -be-j cause the Pre had declared the presence ; Ot the gt tribune a necessity in his go ‘unimportant because his h tered. The same con pelled John Bri pelled him to , Was Communicat st, practically a sinecure. jalth had been cruelly shav- cientious feeling which im- ht to accept eftice has im sign it. His resignation ; d to the Queen last week. The wonder is Vhat he did not resign before, for it is well kth own that many acts of the Gladstone Gover, ment with respect to Irish affairs were OPfiosed to his convictions As it is, he hag pounded an honorable life by a protest #uainst a cruel war, entered into for agi%andizement and gain—and that protest, /yil] seal the doom of the Glad stone Miniy;,. b This gred.; public character at the out- reak of thd, 4 merican civil war, and when the English} people were ao far misled by their publi, men as to believe not only in the ultimat), triumph, but the right of the South, in a} speech delivered before the workingmen\ of his constituency, said : “I | advise you hot to believe in the ‘destruc- | tion of thé, American natiop. If facts ‘shold hapihen by any chance to force you to believe i , don’t commit the crime of wishing it. )* * * From the very out- burst of this}great convulsion, I have had bnt one hopefand one faith, and it was this: that the resfult of this stupendous strife might be tol make freedom the heritage forever of a fvhole continent, and that the grandeur aid the prosperity of the Amer- ican Union fmight never be impaired. “‘If all other tor gues are silent,” said he, ‘‘mine shall speaK for that policy which gives hope to the bondsmen of the South, and which tends to generous thoughts, and SeNSrons Words and generous deeds between the two gHeat n-tions who speak the English langnagéf and from their origin are alike entitled Jo the Enclish name.” At tfat time Bright grew quite pro- phetic/but his predic’ ions are Lot as yet inifillgd. He said: ‘‘I have a far other and Aar brighter vision before my gaze. It wavy be but a vision, but I will cherish it. parece vast confederation stretcfing from : of the Atlantic westward to the calmer one faith, and, over all that wide contin- ent, the home of freedom and a refuge for the oppressed of every race and of clime.’”” Bright never loses an opportunity of ex- pressing his belief in the social future of the American Continent. In the great the following manner :— #nd..had chosen an e frozen North in unbroken line to the! j glowing South, and from the wild billows waters of the Pacific main,—and I see one be people and one law, and one language, aud, (Cheers). Are you aware of the fact that in ffteen years, which is but as yesterday when it is past, two and half millions of your countrymen have found a home in the Unjted States—( Hear !)—that a population equal nearly, if not quite, to the population of this grest city—itself equal to no mean kingdom--has emigrated to these shores ? In the United States there has been, as you know, an open door for évery man—( Hear) and millions have entered into it and have found rest.’ Bright has mech sympathy with republi- can freedom and progress, but the solid phalanx of English opivion .is, at present, on the: side of that mode of government which may be termed a Republican. Mon- archy—a system avoiding the faults of republics, yet retaining their virtues, and possessing an assurance of stability which has not been, so far, the characteristic of modern republics. _-_- The Great North-West. Judging by the advance sheets of Har- per’s Magazine, for August, we promise its patronsa brilliant number. / interest to Canadians will be the article on the ‘* Can- adian Pacific Railway and the new North- west,” from which the following is extracted :— ‘*In the new Norihwesi, however, we _ see a land that has remained isolated from the rest of the world, untrodden except by the Indian or the trapper, suddenly throwa open for settlement, and on terms as liberal as those offered by our government or land-grant railroads. The Ganadian Pacific Railway is already completed 150 miles west of ade which is already connected with our North- western railroads,’ and it is hoped, not without reason, that another 500 miles will be completed toward the mountains the present year. To build two or even three wiles a day across such a country as this division traverses would be no extraordin- i Branches, uth, wili be rapidly con- _ accommodate existing ate it. Now it seems as if ja} panic, some short 6f some fiyan gross. blundering or xiii ry, could oy the construction of the railroad, or chec the flood of immigration that must surely pour in. Can it be that, with the government Canada etijoys, one as free and fully as democratic as our own, the shadow of monarchy will delay the occupation of this land by other races than that of the Brit- ish ? Here we shall have a chance to see how Canadian enterprise compares with our own. The Northern Pacific Railway bas its agents far and wide trying t» induce settlers to purchase its Jands and furnish traffic for its lines. The two railroads are not far apart, apd the Canadians have quite as good, if not better, lands to offer. Will they be as energetic, as successful, ag their cousins across the line ? The climate of this region is far from what one would expect from its northern latitude. While it can not be said to be entirely safe from early frosts as far north as Dunvegan, in latitude 56 degrees, there is seldom any from the middle of May till “eptember, and even the tender cucumber attains maturity, Wheat, barley, and vegetables ripen every season at the various posts along the Pearl River. Wheat ripens even as far north as Fort Simpson, in llaiitude 62 deegress, while wheat and barley from the Lake Athabasca district took a medal at the Centennial. These crops, it is true, have been raised on the bottom-lands along the river ; aud though the table-lands on each side are several hundred feet higher, they are protected by that very elevation from those late and ,early frosts everywhere prevalent on low- Jy:ng bottom-lands.” me In the form of a letter Alexandre Dumas explains his reasons for not adhering to the French Republic. He prefers to remain independent, but shows a double leaning | towards a censtitutional monarchy,which in ; England has produced many great stutes- men, whereas, with the exception of Carnot, the three republics have seen none. he ‘writer argues that when one man rules he can be kept in order, but when all are kings, what is to be done with them if they prove restive? ‘‘Universal suffrage has to flattered like a sovereign, for sovereign it 18, only it is a king with millions of arms, a stomach, no head, and acrown on. It is something like a crab with a sidelong ac- every | tion.” et A French photographer claims the authorship of an invention that will take accurate impressions of the motions of a i fC ‘* Privilege” in the English bird in full flight, which is a long advance ouse of Commons, he waxed eloquent in! on photographing a galloping horse. Twelve er . |pictures are taken by this process in a ‘* Privilege,” said he, ‘‘thinks it has a'second, of which less than one-fiftieth is great interest in the contest, and every (used in the actual reception of impressions. morning, with blatant voice, it comes into | The rest is spent in the movement of the your streets and curses the American Re- | hand which turns the instrument to bring public. (Cheers.) Privilege has beheld an the several plates successively into opera afflicting spectacle for many years past. It | tion. has beheld thirty millions of men, happy nd . Without : ; , Vitkeet ki Ghee vnlevae? sobpeee), In Naples a kind of wife market is held roundings of a ’, without |@ connection with the foundling hospital nobles, except su: Neer every nage : ae - a a ; / .te - ence in intellect : Kede