ai ng 3 r * We a aC & td 5 vedi cies pipe ee. ie aie ait - pe Me era! es ae az a x9 “a rerMs Five DoLttars A YRAR —_+- —+ = ‘‘ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men havi 2g to advise the Public, may speak free.’ EuniprpEs, Stve_e Corres Two Cents. NEW SERLES. TRE Datity EXAMINER IS ISSUED BEVERY EVENING, By rae Examiner Poswusaine Company, FROM THEIR Orrice, CoRNER or WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, P. E. Island. RATES oF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, Three Months, One Month, me Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. Chariottetown, $2 50 1 20 0 50 ALMANAC FOR JULY, 1882. MOON S CHANGES. Full Moon ist dav, Ih. 56m. (below horizon.) Third Quarter 7th day, 5h. (below horizon.) New Moon 15th day, 2h. 49m, a. m., 8S. W., First Quarter, 23rd day, 6h. 5m. a.m., N (below herizon. ) Fall Moon, 30th day, 9h. 49m., 2. m., N. W. (below horizon.) 7 a m, 38m., p. m., N. D Leen wane Sun |Moon|High | Days : » ; . . i ui ** “ ‘rises |sets | rises | water len’h. | ihm hm| aft’n morn ilsaturday 14 187 48 2!Sunday 119) 49 - 5 Monday | 19) 49! 9 Idlaft 8! 4; Tuesday 20 45| 9 44) 0 49 5, Wednesday | 21! 48/1019, 131) | GiThuredsy | 21|. 47/10 41; 2 28) | 7| Frida } 22) 47,)U1 bh) 311 8! Saturday 23; 47\U 45 4 20\15 197 9' Sunday 24° 46 morn; 5 4i)| 10| Wonday | 24, 46) 023) 7 1) | 11, Tuesday | 25) 45,1 6 8 8 12 Wednesday ; 26} 45) : 4 9 a 13 Thursday 27, 44) 2 53! 9 45 14 Friday 28} 43) 3 54/10 95| 1GSaturday | 29, 42\ 4 5611 2/15 08} 16 Sunday | 30) 42! 5 59/t) 35 17| Monday | Bly 41; 7 1) morn, 18\Tuesday «| «32 «40/8 3) 0 5! | 19| Wednesday | 33) 39) 9 3)°0 39 20 Thursday © | 34) 38/0 4) 1 11) 21) Friday | 35)-/87.10 56] 1 45 22) Saturday | 36, 36) aft 4| 2 25) 14 54} 23)Sunday S7i 2.1.6.3 24! Monday | 38} 3412 8| 4 10) 25} fuesday 39° «33, 3 10' 5 26! 26} Wednesday | 40 32° 4° 9) 6 46) 27| Thursday 42; 31) 5 3) 7 55) 20 Brida | 43; 30) 5 52 8 53, 29isaturday | 44) 29, 6 34 9 43/14 42) 80)Sunday | 45) 28) 7 10/10 29) 31\Mondary 4 46} 26] 7 43/11 10) —— ee en Bank of Nova Scotia. ESTABLISHED 1832, $1,000,000 325,000 Paid Up Capital . . Reserve Fund .. . An Agency of this Bank will be opened on Monday next, 19th inst., in the building lately occupied by the Bank of Prince Edward Island, under the management of the under- signed. Deposits will be received on interest, and on current account. Drafts granted on the varieus Agencies and correspondests of the Bank. Sterling and other “Exchange bought and sold, and yeaeral banking business transacted. D. C. CHALMERS, Ch’town, June 17, 1852—tf Agent. EDWARD T, RUSSELL & C0,, Commission Merchants, 2:13 STATE STREET BOSTON, MASS. May 19, 1882—6m “1. ARTHUR & CO., General Commission Merchants Particular aitention given to the sale of Island produce. 121 Atlantic Avenue & 20 Essex Avenue, BOSTON, MASS. May 27, 1882—wkly INSURANCE OFFICE. Queen Insurance Company, 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 “ a 4 ’ General Agent. Office—South Side, Queen Square, Ch'town, Feb. 3 1852. PROFESSIONAL CARD. PALMER & MULLALLY ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c, OF FICE—O’ Balloran’s George Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. H. V. PALMER. April 10, 1882. SA VESCEIES for the DAILYEXAMINER Remember the address, two doors above Ap thecaries Hall Corner | the Cheapest and most Newsy Paper Published in the Province: JAS. W. MULLALLY. yuaranteed, OHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARI a3. fre MERCHANT TAILOR, Is now offering Cash Buyers the BEST VALUE that had in the market, in can be Broadcloth, Worsted, sScotchand Canadian ‘I'weed Suits. A magnificent range of GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, sTGe- AMERICAN WHITE. & COLORED SHIRTS Collars, Ties, Underclothing, English and American Hats. } 8 agit 20, “ Our Readymade Clothing is Manufactured on the Premises, fashionably cut, well sewed, and having good trimmings, Will be sold as Cheap as Emperied. We invite you to inspect our Goods. D. A. BRUCE, Charlottetown, May 22, ’82. 72 Queen Street. “CITY STEAM BAKERY.” -O0:0 ‘}\HE proprietor of this Establishment, owing to the increased demand for his Goods, has added new {facilities to his Bakery, consisting of the latest and most impreved machinery, etc., and is now prepared to supply the trade with Hard Bread, Plain and Fancy Biscuits, &e., AT THE SHORTEST NOTIOE. 6: ert 1000 lbs. CHOICH CONFPECTIONERY To arrive per Steamship ‘ Mirathichi,” from Montreal. Yes= Orders by mail promplly executed. JI QUIRK|, Prince Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Islaud May 4, 1882, s GREAT CLOSING UP Al 83 QUEEN STREET. GREAT BARGAINS in Dress Goods, Tweeds, Winceys, Silks, Curtains, and all kinds of 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. Scotel and English Tweeds or Worsted Suits For Canadian Tweed Suits, or Overcoats of all Descriptions, -GO TO- oe ae eanhAarT = —=_— 6. wT 5 JOHN MACLEOD & £0’s UU as, dV Mm UY BW, UPPER QUEEN STREET, TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HAL CORNER There you will find the largest and best assortment of Cloths in the a ee Island. Prices very moderate. The best workmanship and a perfect tit —ALSO— A complete line of Gents’ Furnishings and Felt Hats, cheap,&c. Xc. Charlottetown, Oct, 11, 1881, ) ISLAND, MONDAY, | j j | t ; | Gbobl * | e: ‘RIEUMATISN, Neuralgia, Seiatice, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of tha Chos?, Cout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swei!- ings and Sprains, Burns ard Ecalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ecr and Headache, Frosied Feet and Ears, and ail otier Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacons On. as a safe, sure, simple and cheap External Remedy A triai_entaiis but the comparatively trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of ite claims. Directions in Eleven Languages, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A. YVOGELER & CO., Baitimore, MWd., uw &. As REMOVAL! f¥\HE undersigned has removed to the old CLOTH DEPOT, on Great George Steet, next door to Sctumbles’ Harness Shop, and having purchased a large assortment of Fac. tory Cloth from the Mill Valley Woollen Mills Company, at greatly reduced prices for cash, is prepared to sell cheaper than ever during the summer. Highest cash price paid. for wool, or exe changed for cloth. C, H, SCHURMAN. June 7, 1882—2m 2aw, wKly li SELLING OFF —AT--+ Greatiy Reduced Prices, 4 LARGE LOT OF MENS AND BOYS? Hats, Gaps, Clothing, &e., 2000 Straw Hats, 1600 Felt Hats, 5) Caps, ia Cloth, Silk and Linen, Boys’ Suits, Youth’s Suits, Men’# (oats, Pants and Vests, Shirt##@Linders and Drawers, Collat®, Ties, Braces, xc. Also, 3.0) Rolls Paper Hangings, Blinds, Bordérings, &c. As the subscribers are desirous of clearing out the sdbove Goods during the present month, great bargwins may be expected for ready cash; F, LePAGE & CO. July 5, 1892—wkly LONDON, FOR | SSS ES The Clipper Brig A. NELLSON, Master, Will be on the berth early in August, and will sail from Charlottetown for London, G. B., About the (5th August Next, providing a sufficient quantity of freight offers, and will carry Lobsters at very lowest rates Shippers will please make early applica- tion. Warehouse receipts will be given, and goads stored free of warehouse charges For further particulars apply to the owners, PEAKE BROS. & CO. Ch’town, July 7, 1882—3aw | UNION BANK P. &. ISLAND. _—_—_- DIVIDEND NO. 36. 7 OTIC E is hereby given that a Dividend N at the rate of eight per Cent, per annum has boem declared on the capita] stock of this Bank for the past six months, payatle at its Head Office azd Branches after this date, ; GEORGE MAULEOD, Charlottetown, May 31, 1852. Cashier, JULY 24, 1882, CORRESPONDENCE. | We do not hold ourselves responsible for the | opinions or statements of our correspondents. 1 sll aut EE UES alla sie ai Hilisborough Park. To the Editor of the Examwer. Deak Str,—The thanks of citizens gen- erally, but especially those residing near this Park, are due the Stipendiary Magis- trate and Marshall Fiynn for having suc- cessfully enforced the observance of peace which it is now pleasing to see men, women, and children, in the cool of the evening, taking their quiet walks, free from the annoyance of unruly crowds. Our present marked, in his place in Parliament, that direct strangers, for 2 quiet and pleasant walk, was Hillsborough Park. At that time the grounds were kept in better order than they are to-day. The old flag-staff, then among the attractions of the Park. Now that our civic authorities are giving some attention to this place, it is fitting that they should cause the walks to be cleaned up, the fence to be painted, and a fiag staff to be again erected. If they will only do this, the ladies will again provide a suitable flag. Yours truly, OBSERVER, P. E. Island Manufactures. a (Correspondence of the St. John Telegraph.) The establishment of manufactures in a country—even if that country be a mari- tine one—in which there is neither coal nor iron nor surplus population can only be worked out by practical men of much enterprise. These manufactures — apart from those of fishery preducts—can be based only on the products of agricultar- ists, as flour, forage, fruits, vegetables, and animal toods. This would limit the main possible manufacturing industries to 1, the milling of flour and meal,.to whieh may be added the baking of ships’ bread; 2, the pressing and export of hay, the prodnetion of tissues in straw, such as straw-plaicing, and there is no reason why, with such urely crystalline water as is everywhere 3. until recently, every French family, pro- duced an annual supply of linen for home use and barter, and found no difficulty in raising flax of a fine, strong texture although not very long. This is a fabric peculiarly adapted for the hands of French Acadian woman. ‘To this add lace-making; 4, woollens —Probably there is not a district of equal extent in the western hemisphere hetter adapted to the raising of wool than is P. E. Island. Sheep are the hardiest of Island stock. They have absolutely no diseases and multiply with great regularity. Except in the immediate vicinity of towns they have no care and cost nothing except a supply of hay in the stockyard when they return home in winter. In summer the great buik of them forage for themselves on the commons and along the edge of woodlands. With the little attention they receive it is not to he wondered at that the wool is generally coarse and that no large quantity is exported. At least three-fourths of the total population clothe themselves more or less in the fleeces of native sheep, spun and woven at home, and dressed at the mills. The cloth thus produced, both for under and oOver-wear, is of superior quality, custom having set up a high stand- ard, and there being a wholesome rivalry among housewives as to who shall produce the best cloth. Island homespun is gener- ally either of undyed grey, or natural or black-dyed for over-wear, and of fancy plaid or mixed patterns for under garments, and is much thicker and closer woven than the average grey homespun of Nova Scotia. The writer, a few years ago, donned a suit of grey Island homespun in the U. §., and had actually more than one offer. TO BUY THE CLOTHES OFF HIS BACK. Icannot but think that were more and hetter wool grown and more cloth mann factured, every spare yard of it would meet with a remunerative market abroad. A silly and tawdry taste for ‘‘ store clothes” is unfortunately growing up among the youngsters, who are net con tent to wear such good and durable ma terials as sufficed for their fathers. Any- body with half an eye can see that these expensive and slicked-up materials are mere shoddy. specially manufactured for second-class ‘* exportation to the colonies” and meant to sell, not to wear. At the present time there are several cloth mills on the L-land, with room for more. A gen- eral way of dealing with these mills is to pay so much cash and so many pounds of wool in exchange for an agreed number of yards of a cloth ‘‘ lighter” and ‘“ slicker” than can be made at home. Some of the mills turn out really excellent good:. Among them may be mentioned the milis of Reid Brothers, Tryon, and others, and I think the woollen manufacturers made an error when they decided not to send speci- mens of their goods to the Halifax exhibi- tion last year, where, visitors say, they would have carried off prizes. There can be no doubt that manufactured woollens will sooner or later supercede the export of caw wool from this sheep growing country Le A waggish journalist, who is often merry over his personal plainness tells this story of himse!f. I went to the chemist the other day for some morphine for a sick friend. The assistant objected to giving it to me without a prescription, evidently fearing that I intended to commit suicide. *Pshaw!” said I, ‘do I look like a man who wonld kill himself?’ Gozing steadily at me a moment, he replied, ‘‘1 don’t and order on those beautiful grounds, upon | respected Lieut.-Governor once truly re- | the only spot in this, his native city, to| which he could with pride and pleasure. with the Union Jack floating from it, was| VOL HNO. 53 Egyptian Notes. All along the line of Arabi Pasha’s re- treat the villagers are in a starving con- dition, having been robbed of everything ‘they possessed by the heroes of the Egyptian army. | The London Fun has a cartoon of Mr. Gladstone, as hampered by Miss Erin on ‘the one side and Madame Egypt on the other, and singing, ‘‘ How happy could I be with neither /” | Those who look. for. their prosperity to other sources can hardly appreciate the importance of the Nile overflow to the people of Egypt. If the water beonly a few feet less than usnal, whole ¢i |will be injuriously affected failure of the waters to spread to the re- quired distance. If the over be greater than usual, the felaheen will be prevented ‘from pursuing their work at the proper ume. In 1818 and 1829 a great devasta- |tion resulted from this cause, as has often jhappened along the course of the Mi isippi. The Barraje, to a great ‘remedies this defect, when the rise is in sufficient, bat the means for draining ef wen it is excessive, are as yet very incom- piete. There is good reason for the popular in- dination which prevails across the lines at the utter inefficiency of the American navy. The Government have expended on vessels $500,000,000 since the war. Yet the brace of men-of-war off Alexandria, bearing Stars and Stripes, are wooden craft/of @n- tiquated pattern. Regarding shipbuilding, the Phildiadelphia Times says that mo one of the five ironclads, now on the docks, if finished according to the original plans, would be able to stand the bombardment of even the British second-class war-ships, such as the Ajax and Agamemnon. But if they were equal to the demands of modern naval warfare, the guns alone for the new vessels cannot be got ready under two or three years. The Egyptian budget for 1882, which was pnblished in December last, amounted to £3,463,968. Of this sum nearly four millions anda half go to the public credit- ors, while fhe’ army calis for over half a million, and £700,009 goes to Turkey. All other “expenses are covered by about two and three quarter million pounds, In hia speech, at the opening of a Parliament which, though he knew it not, was alout to enter on & most eventful session, the Khedive said that the burdens of the coun, try had been made as light as possible, thanks to the aid of friendly foreign pow- ers. Such a debt is a terrible drawhack ta a country’s prosperity, though, of course, it is only just that it should be paid If the spirit of the national party moved in the direction of a desire and a determina- tion, even at no slight present self-sacrifice, to free their land from that terrible burden, it would show more »atriotism than it does, by engaging in mad hostility to foreigners and in projects which can only add to the people's difficulties. A ee The Stream of Life. And pow, as the stream goes on so grandly, think for a moment what it is at which we gaze. Wecallit protoplasm, but it is the current of | life, the * physical basis of life’—the common bond which binds in one the whole kingdom of organic things. Think, too, of the antiquity of that stream, its lineage. The brook that ‘* goes on for ever’ is as nothing to it, for here the stream has come flowing down through ages which are to us an eternity, ever since life began on earth. The moun- tains have been hoary with years, and have disappeared beneath the level of the all- producing sea, but this stream is older than they. Continents have grown old, and been renewed, rebuilt from the debris of this same stream, and life has agaiu flood- ed the continents, but its origin is older than they. But now that we have before us such a fine large stream, may we not make further investigation, may we not know its mys. tery, the hiding place of its power? We touch the cell with our need'es, open its wall to make minuter inspection ; bat in an instant the charm is broken, the mystic river forgets to flow, the tiny par- ticles settle into unbroken peace. ‘* The parent fountains sink away And close their erystal veivs ; And where the gl tering current flowed, The dust alone remains.” We are permitted to look in ani s e how the work of life goes on, but we can as yet go no further. We may exp.ain. We usay say it isall the resultof chemical forces which <<e working there; but such an explanation de- mands an explanation, Dees chemical action renew itself! Chemical action is one thing, chemical action pecpetuated and controlled by life is quite anothr We aay say, life is the property of protoplasm, or we may Teverse the statement and say that protoplasm is that form of matter which manifests the phenomena of lite, but that is as far as we can go. The streawlet hemmed by the narrow walls of the cell of any plant is to usa boundary. On one side the line, peace unbroken, eternal fixity, rest,of a world whose chemical forces acted once and for ever; on the other, the vast procession of life begins, rises before us, spreads away in variety, activity, in beauty, in wonderfulness incomprebensit-le —Populer Science Monthly. ——-_- os Mac«’s Macnetic MeEpIctNe is a positive remedy for nervous exhaustion and all weak- vess of the generative organs in both sexes. ~old in Charlottetown by Apothecaries Hall Co. See advertisement in ano:her column. [july 22 2w wkly _~— seo Every farmer shou'd have one of Hick’s Champion Creameries, It is the easiest and most economical means of producing good batter. It will raise the cream in a very know. It seems to me if | looked like you. 1 shidula be tly tempted Yo kill myself. tga SRE SNH Tg "3, “ey l wy cee U er eae nea! ne eer | asl sowie Sto 4 vy é eager sorts Hers V age a