een Wive DoLLaARs A YRAR, TERMS : ——— NEW SERIES. ett — ee nats ee Ie ee ee ae Pin ea een enema cemameentinemttite Em oe tee ec ilaily #xaminer, This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.’’—EvRIPIpEs. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, JULY 6, 1885, SrincLe Coprrs Two Crnrs. VOL. 17.---NU. 59. The Daily Examiner: is issued every evening, by The Examiner Publishing Oo office, cerner of Water and From their Great Georve Streets, ¢ harlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Rares OF SUBSCRIPTION ; . >e F. Six Months, $2 560 Three Months, 1 25 0 50 One Month, pe Adv ertisinag Contracts may made tor monthly marterly, half-ye arly or yearly advertirr : ation, De ments, on applic ALMANAC FOR JULY, 1885. MOON S CHANGES, e_--- Last Quarter Sth day, Sh. 13m., a. m. New Moon 12th day, 1h, 3m., a. m. Rist Quarter, 18th day, Sh. 7m., p. m, Full Moon, 2%th day, 10h. 10m., p. m. ee ey — ’ pay OF WEEK ises{sets | rises | water|len’h nen tease j Wednesday (4 187 4910 2 0 52/15 31) giThursday | s _ pe 2 29) = 3. Friday {| 19) 45110 5812 8! 2s ; ~ ° y (‘Sumy | 4 12525 23 SUPAassed in value on P. K. Island. 9 Sune & ’ eo * ne 3{Moaday 22; 47 mern |! + F9| 26 jiTuesday | 22) 47/028 620° 25) 3iWednesday | 23! oe 6) 7 $5 3 @'Tharsday Ae 6 52| 28) 3 | 10 Friday ’ | 24) 46) 2 46! 9 28) 22 PROFIT. j] ‘Saturday | 25) a5) 3 50,10 22; 20 selesday | 26! 44;5 2/11 7] | 18 j#Monday | 27| 43 6 16/1 53' 16! 14 Tuesday 28| 43 7 32 morn | 15 i5)}Wednesday | 29 = $8 46, 0 34; 14) \@Tharsday | 30 42 957)116 12] , é wkriday | 31) 4U2t 52 vi 20' Ch’town, June 8, 1885 18 Saturday + 32) 40 aft 1b} 2 46 Seen a ai 19|Sunday | 33] 39 1141343) 6. ee ee 20 Monday | 34, 38,215! 450) 4 21 Tuesday 35 37: 3 13) 6 7, 9 [ 92| Wednesday | 36 36/4 7) 715) 0 a o3\Thursday | 37 35, ‘ 58 suit 58 biped 24’ Frida, | 38) 34 54 7! 56 ail 95 Setaniey 39' 32 6 201 9.38; 53} EACH PLUG OF THE 26 Sunday 40, 31} 7 211017) 41] 27|Monday 42, 30, 7 37,10 49| 48) 28'Tuesday 43} 28; 8 7/11 24: 45 o9'Wednesday | 44) 27; 8 34/11 57] 48 S0/\Thursday (| 45!) 2% 9 3laft 29)15 4), 31|Friday 4 46°7 26) 9 30] 1 3/14 40) IS MARKED NOTES. Dog days begin on the 3rd of this month, Independence Day, U. 8. A., on the 4th. The poet Robert Burns died (1796) on July Zi sb. There is no real night till after the 20th of this month. lu this month the mornings decrease 35 minutes, and the afternoons 30 minutes. — For the convenience of the travelling pee, we haye carefully arranged the fol-| 0 wing table of arrival and departure of trains on the P. E. Island Railway, accord- at most moderate rates, h jm h m aft’n ; aft’o| b m | THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE, ' Are now showing and Underclothing and Childrens’ Waists, newest makes in American and manufacture, Panters, New Bustles, New — styles and price very low. Canadian ’ | newest Corsets. Paniers, Hoopskirts ; Ladies’ Corsets, Maids’ Corsets at very lowest prices. New Hoop Skirts, very latest LADIES UOTTON UNDERGLOTHING, Nicely Made, and Finished in Good Style, Sun !Sun !Moon|High ! Days | i | Gcoods Well Bought and will be Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Millinery, &e., not Sold at SMALL PERKINS & STERNS. | IN BRONZE LETTERS. NONE OTHER GENUINE une 1, 1885—1 yr _H. HASZARD’S FOR ALL KINDS OF ' ’ | J G T. & B. LT TT TE Se 5 as Boglish and Canadian Fire Insurance Uompanies. _——_—_ 5) The Commercial Union Assurance Co., of London, Eng... CAPITAL, $12,500,000. 20; ‘The British America Assurance Co., of Toronto, Canada, (INCORPORATED IN 1833.) | CASH CAPITAL, $500,000. —_——! 9: The Citizens Insurance Company of Canada, (ESTABLISHED IN 1864.) CAPITAL, - : ; ‘ sig $1,188,000. :0:.—_— I am prepared to accept Insurances in the above well-) known Companies at Lowest Current Rates. A. 5S URQUHART, GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT, Brown's Block, Queen Square. OUR GRAND DISPLAY Charlottetown, P. E. I., June 20—eod SPRING CLOTHING is VERY TEMPTING. iS The Custom Tailoring Department is fall of Neat, Nobby and Reliable Goods. The Men’s Department is loaded with ari immense display of New Spring Suits. «The Hat Department—well, everybody understands that our Hat Department has advantages over the smaller establishments that place it at the head, and secures for it the bulk of the trade. We are displaying the largest variety of Spring Styles of Hats ever shown, and include all the popular shapes. The Boys’ Department is unquestionaly the best and most attractive in the city. — The Furniehing Goods Department is not only well stocked with all that is solid and staple, but contains much that is choice and novel. —— 10: —-—- No doubt about it. Ours is the largest aud best selected stock ever seen in this city,—not only largest in quantity, but largest in variety of shapes,—largest in variety of materials,—largest in correct styles,—largest in every way. What more could we say, unless it be that OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT,--RELIABLE, HONEST. ROBERTSON’S ONE-PRICE CLOTHING STGHE, ing to local time :— Going West. 4.8%. 2.8 M. | Charlottetown ...........- 647 912 402! A Royalty Janction.......... 702 947 422, North Wiltshire......... ..4 87 1039 509; EE on ccc ccecit 747 1055 5 22) get 812 1132 6857 PT Mscccescececes 819 1143 607)/+ B ooks SET... neces 829 1159 622 7 PM. Ss oe ccccccewes 842 1222 642 iri a \ BETIVE. 00s 907 1257 712 . Summerside, cepart...... 937. 337 Miscouche,..... . anand 9 42 3 00 Ledgers, cor | Reg AP epg ~~ zs ; - TS sian a6 0 bd da 10 29 2 ee 1122 542 Day Books, Alberton.............---1205 657 Ms. oc..sc+aceee 1242 747 J ournals, Xe., From West. es ee yA ; . ‘ Tignish ............2.+++. 207 647 SELLING "VERY CHEAF. Sinks a cvceewtbon 245 757 0 ii ecavcescon nace Lan ili tilhil diane Port | as oe ath altel 420 1029 Re Wi , RE we tne dened . , : e Se co occ seas 7 4 : si { Rens oeke 5 29 12 07 100,000 POP 00 ummerside, A. M. | ee (depart......642 112 657) IN V HK BS, en aa ee eG one ot . 07 ao 7 ro ee 632 227 803| % sl the Steer ica oe Beadalbane...........0+++ 6338 237 812 STEEN... .. cocceaet 702 3165 847 a Bae, Wiltahire ae ie ee fe a byaity Junction.......... 747. 432 $§ Charlottetown. 7 Ss csd¥boe 8 02 4652 1007 FOOLSCAP, Going East. A.M. P.M. — DOW ss ic bakécdd6¥aeeel 7 07 4 17 a MUG sb0eecccdeedducknceaseee 743 444 Siiscs+ sess coveacieunae $04 457 NO : : ee . \ sativa.) ee WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. enenr, | depart........ 857 527 Btls ee eee sees, veoseeen peegae x gp pte Oed 6040006604 0046 600 WON 0 oa? res uo; 953i Stafind’s Jet Black Writing Inks, Mower... ..cc te 902 532 ; . ee 1015 625 § aff "4 Fk Georgetown .2.000000000000200 1037 6 42 tailors GOpylag Inks, From East. a. M. Ball (In all sizo bottles.) ees i be = . }- This is now acknowledged to be the best - owe Mo icwe'slhetovadi a eee 752 3 54| Ink for office and private use. NEE. 66e,c ebicaseesounun 814 427 Mount Stewart AITIVE.. 6... oe 842 5 17 — ; Gepart....eee- . " : +) ALSO IN STORE : Gtk conse eesecseeseeeeee cresee 26 $35 ; hons & Toiary’s SOO WE. «occ ccccceneed aie 9 52 Georgetown. . cescebaoditagial ‘732. 337 Carter's, Stephens lary ERs onccccsccccees ohetinen 749 400 ey ' : Mount Weowart....5..cckccke dees $42 5612 Writing X Lopying [nks, WARBURTON & CON ROY, To be Sold at Great Discounts. BARRISTERS & ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, er Notaries Pablic, &c. G. H. HASZARD, Cffice in Cameron’s Block, up stairs ; entrance BROWN’S BLOCK, next door to Taylor’s Jewelry Store. Queen Square, Maroh 23, 1885-—wky2m Ch town, May 18, '85.—wky No. 50 Queen Street. | Charlottetown, May 21, 1885. DO NoT Throw your money away in buying Shoddy Boots. Come come at once and buy a Good Solid Leather pair of Boots or Shoes for Spring, at a Low Price We want to keep all the money we can on the Island, so we are bound to give better value in our make than can be had in any imported Boot Therefore, buy from us. DORSEY, GOFF & CO. (bees Wes ob YY. tease AND FURNISHINGS: Rome. cS | 3 Where are the footprints of the ancient dead, | Who dwelt and wrought in Rome and made Ra mankind ? What memory have the mighty left behind In this imperial place where they were bre? ? Like minute-sands the centuries havo sped To cover nations with their dust-clond blied ; Fraginents of beauty past are all-we find, Whose perpose, with the flying years, is fled. In this vast universe is left no place For that fleet breath that fleeting man calls Fame. Those stones, that mind us of some facing ' name, And watched the passing of earth’s strongest race, | Will vanish too ; the long years hold no grace | For earth’s memorials of praise and blame. | | ‘Lottie,’ said Alice, as the two seated | themselves on a bench inside the sereen of ‘roses, ‘I suspect Tom isn’t pleased, and jreally, I think you are treating him badly.’ ‘How so? ; ‘You are not kind to him. You know | he loves you, and until within a few days, 7 felt sure that you loved him.’ ‘Oh, well,we like each other well enough. | What have I done to bring upon myself,one ‘of your solemn lectures !’ | ‘If you really love Tom, why do you en- |courage Mr. Redmond?’ } ‘Why, Alice, ’m not married to Tom ‘yet, and I don’t know that I ever shall be. | And, my dear, you ought to know in secret —it’s alwaysa good thing to have two strings to your bow. It gives you a choice, you know; for if one should fail, you have the other to depend upon.’ ‘Lottie, you’re not in earnest? ‘Indeed, I am. [ like Tom. He's handsomer than Archie Redmoud, and richer, too, with this fine farm ail his own and the money his father left him; but some would say that Mr. Redmond was a better maich altogether.’ ‘Why, Lottie, if you really think in this way, you cannot really care for them. I felt sure that you and he would make a match.’ ‘Well, it isn’t impossible. Oaly he hasn’t asked me yet.’ ‘But he will.’ Lottie laughed. ‘Suppose -he don’t? Then I may have Archie Redmond t6 fall back upon. And suppose | ean’t get Archie? ‘Then there is Tom.’ Tom Wheeler rose up slowly from the sofa, and walked sofily from his room, out into the yard and garden. ‘So that is her game, ia it? 1 would not have believed it of her. Two strings te one bow? Two stovles to sit upon, rather. Well, she’ll come to the ground for any support that she'll get out of me.’ The picnic was a very pleasant affair to everybody but Tom Wheeler. Strive as he would against it, he was con- sumed with jealousy and disappointment ; and his unhappiness was apparent to most lookers-on. Even Mr. Archie Redmond perceived it. ‘What is the matter with Tom Wheeler ?’ he said, 2s the latter turned away after giving an abrupt reply toa remark of his: ‘He is not like himself to-day.’ The inquiry was addressed to his cousin, Miss Redmond ; but Miss Tiplett, the gos- sip and news-monger of the neighborhdéod, took upon herself to reply. 2 <> OO ew eee BETWEEN TWO STOOLS. [CONCLUDED. ] {and I’m going home with mamma and {the rest. Nothalf so nice as walking, is ait? | Poor Lottie! Both her bow strings had failed her—a prediwament she had not fore- seen, or toaceept Tom’s version, between two stools she had come to the ground. However, a kind neighbor gave her a ‘ lilt’ in his wagon, in which situaticn she had the mortification of secaang Mr. Redmond drive jpast in Mrs. Calvert's carriage, beside pretty May Calvert, while Tom and Alice, in the new buggy, had left them far | behind. | She was angry with Tom, though she had to admit that it was all her own faalt. And |when she left the farm, a few days after, she and Tom had not quite made up; neither had Archie Redmond again called upon her. Lottie had promised to spend another fortnight at the farm, and she made up her mind that she would be satisfied with Tom and marry him after all. Rut before the time for her visit came she had heard two astounding reports: Mr. Archie Redmond was to be married to his cousin,Miss Marion Redwend, and Alice Brown was engaged to Tom Wheeler. There were to be two big weddings, and Lottie was invited to both. There is no doubt but that she was bit- terly disappointed, for, as she confessed,she really liked Tom. But she had also to ad- mit that enly herself was to blame. She had tried to sit on two stools at once, and she had come to the ground, Miminigash Notes. The fishing up to the present has been very dull. Of herrivrg, however, there has been a fair catch. “Mackerel have not made their appearance yet. Lobsters are very scarce at present, and several of the fac- tories have discharged some of their hands. What nearly resulted in a serious acci- dent the other day was while the eflicient Harber Master was moving a vessel from the Breakwater, the mooring line in some way gotaturn around his leg, and there being a swift current running at the time, he was taken off his feet. Only for the timely assistance of some persons standing near, who caught the end of the rope and held it, the result might have bcen serious. FisHERMAN. Miminigash, June 29, 1885 —-— sere — — Killed with a Bat. On Saturday evening about half-;ast six o'clock, a sad accident occurred on Ann Street, Portland, which resulted fatally toa little boy, six years old, son of Mr. Joh» McDonnell. He was standing orjpassing near where a young man named Williams was batting in a game of ball, and was accidentally struck in the fore- head with the bast. After the first stunning effect of the blow he recovered consciousness, and was able to walk about. On Tuesday he became worse,and Dr. Wm. Christie was called in, but was unable to save his life, Mr. McDonnell wes in Fredericton at the time of the ead occur- rence, and was called home. Much sym- pathy is felt for the parents so suddenly be- reaved.—St. John Telegraph. mee A despatch from Teheran states that 1,000 Persians are at work constructing the Trans-Caspian Railway. Tne Russians are bridging the river Murahab, on the confinee of Afghanistan. Eight hundred Russian infantry soldiers are at old Sarakhs. The ‘Why, Mr. Redmond,’ she said archly, ‘you ought to know if any one does,’ ‘[? What have I to do with it? ‘What a look of injured innocence! But really you ought to be ashamed to flirt so and cut out poor Tom Wheeler, you naughty man !’ And Miss Tiplett smilingly showed her false teeth, and playfully tapped Mr. Red- mond with her fan. ‘Really, Miss Tiplett, you speak in mys- eries.’ ‘You do not really mean to say that you id not know that Tom Wheeler is as good as engaged to Lottie Steward? Why, it’s been an naderstood thing for at least a year ast,’ Kedmond colored, He had admired Lottie,and been struck with her pretty face and sweet manners; and this news regarding her somewhat affected him unpleaaantly. ‘I never before heard of this,’ he said quietly. ‘Is it possibie / oe But then you have been here so shortatime. “‘ell, in that case we will exonorate you. But there is no excuse for Lottie. A girl who can change so suddenly as she has towards Tom Wheeler, must be altogether heartless. Archie Redmond overheard one or two other similar remarks during the day, and watching Lottie closely, he saw that while she gave him undoubted encouragement, she yet seemed anxious to not entirely bieak off with Tom. He was pained, for he had, unconsciously to§himself, become interested in the pretty, sprightly girl. ‘She is deceiving either him or myself,’ he thought, ‘ and in either case is not the right sort of a girl for me.’ ‘Tom,’ whispered Lottie, with one of her sweet smiles, ‘ Alice is to go home with her mother from the picnic; I'll ride back with you in the buggy. I’ve told Mr. Redmond that I am too tired for the long walk back.’ ‘Thank you!’ said Tom, coldly, * but Alice won’t ride home with her mother ; I've promised to take her home in my buggy.’ Lottie turned and looked around for Archie Redmond. She would have to ex- plain, and walk back with him, which was no disagreeable prospect, despite her decla- ration cf weariness. The weariness, in fact, had been assumed, for she saw that Tom was not pleased, and she wished to put him in good humor again. ‘ Where is Mr. Redmond ?’ she said has- tily to Kate, who was at that moment skip- ping past. ‘Cousin Archie? Oh, he’s gone home with the Calvert—Miss Calvert asked him Persians are fortifying Persian Serakhs, and building barracks there for troops. A foundry has been started at Herat for the casting of heavy guns. A St. Petersburg despatch states that a telegraph cfiice has been opened at Mery. In his Arbor Day proclamation the ¢ov- ernor of Kansas says that the state, which the pioneers found treeless and a desert, has now more than 200,000 acres of forest trees, all planted by settlers, and metero- logists assert that there has been a conse- juent great increase in the rainfall. ~_.- Search thine own heart. What paineth thee In others, in thyself may be ; All dust is frail, all flesh is weak ; Be thou the true man thou dost seek ! — Whittier. ‘ids pnaiiateeatetitintiiatas a vacant hy the death of General Manteuifel, has been abclished. The commandant of the Fifteenth Army Corps succeeds to the military command of the provinces, while their civil administration will be directed from Berlin. The post of Governor of Alsace-Lorraine, ~-_>- The Dict of Brunswick is discussing with closed dovurs the ducal succession. The public is rigorously excluded. It is under- stood in Berlin that the Diet has quashed finally the claims of the Duke of Cumber- land to the succession. --—9 <> o-—— The Republican Journalists’ Association, of Paris, announces its intention to insti- tute proceedings in the English courte against Lord Wolseley for setting a price on the head of Olivier Pain. i ip Tm Terrific storms have prevailed recently in the French Provinces. The destruction of property by the winds and floods has been enormous. Eight persons were killed by lightning. -<42P-- The Russian Government propeses to abandon the White Sea fleet. The White Sea is frozen over in great part from Octo- ber till May. : <<: - A million and a half of roubles have been granted to complete fortifications in the harbor of Nicolaiov on the Black Sea.