THE DAILY EXAMINER. Tekms :—Five DoLiars A YEAR, NEW SERIES. —— “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxiripzs. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1888. Sine ie Copizrs Two Cent VOL. 23.—NO. 80. Che Daily Examiner | is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Co- From their otlice, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. / —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— i on vane cebucéabecdecl $2.50 es PIS. 6 cidhan 60 ede benecd Bibecs 1,25 EE nn... scan dndubcsewune bone 50 Advertising at moderate rates, ; | | | ' | Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on application. ALMANAC FOR JUNE, 1888, MOON'S CHANGES, Last Quarter Ist day, 8h., 40.9m., a.m., S.W. New Moon 9th day, Oh, 21.5m. p.m., 8. First Quarter 17th day, 2h., 37.2., a. m., S.E. | Full Moon 25rd day, 5h., 55.0m., p. m., N. E. | (below horizon. ) Last Quarter, 30th day, 11h., 40.1m., p.m., E. | De op wane oe Moon! High! Day’s M) rises|sets | rises |water| len’h th mth mjmornattr’nh m 1 Friday 4 17/7 38) 0 45) 4 11 1520 2/ Saturday } A7) 39) 213) 5 19) 21 3/ Sunday ; 16) 39 1 40) 6 25; 23 4) Monday 165 40 1 59) 7 24) 25 5 Tuesday |} 15; 41) 222) 8 12) 26 SiWednesday | 15; 42) 2 46) 8 54) 27 §7 ‘Thursday | 15) 43) 3 12) 9 33) 29 8| Friday | 14} 44!) 3 43/10 12) 30 9 Saturday 14) 45) 4 18/10 45) 31 10|Sunday 14 46,5 Ol 32) 32 11| Monday 14] 47) 5 48/11 59) 32 12) Tuesday 14) 47| 6 44\morn| 33 13, W ednesday 14; 47! 7 46) 0 36; 33 14 Thar sday 14} 43) 8 51] 117} 34 15! Friday 13} 4810 0} 2 0} 34% lbs sturday 13! 48 il 10) 2 47) 35 17 Sunlay 13) 48\ait 22) 3 4s} 35 is) Monday 13} 48' 1 34) 5 0) 35 iy Pauesday 13) 48) 2 54) 6 20) 35 20) W ednesday 13} 48, 4 67 34] 35) 2! Thursday 13) 48) 5 23) 8 34) 35 22) Priday 14; 49) 6 37; 9 27) 35 23\Satarday la} 49) 7 45/10 15) 35 24) Sunday 14) 49) 8 44/11 0} 34 25| Monday 15) 49 9 33/11 45) 34 26 Tuesday | 15) 49:10 islaft 2s) 34) 27|\Wednesday | 15) 48/10 47) 1 9) 33) 28/Thurglay | 1G) 48/11 15) 1 50, 33) 99! Friday | 1G) 48/11 40) 2 33) 32 | | 90 Saturday 4 16/7 43 morn | 3 17/}1532 | ' DR. KELLY, Physician and Surgeon, OFFriIc£E: UPPER QUEEN STREET, Four Doors Above Apothecaries’ Hall. = Ch town, March 29, 13883—d 3meod wky D. A. MACKINNON, L.L.B., Attorney, Solicitor, Notary Public, &¢, M48 OPENED HIS— Law Office in Georgetown, King’s County, where he will attend to professional work, and loan money on Real Estate. nov25—wky -FOR- i3-13)-3-'1'-O-N SUMMER ARG’ YGEMEN THE PALACE STEAMERS THE INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. Loave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- iand, every Sionday, Wednesday and Friday, at 7.25 a. ™. Fare from Charlottetown to boston, 96,50, 2nd class ; $9.50, lst class. — For tickets and other information apply to . A.SUARP, F. W. HALES, 2 P, E. I, RYF., P. KE. L Steam Nav, Co. er to your nearest Ticket Agent. May 7. Ixs8—eod wky -_ — —- --—- ames A, MORRIGON. GEORGE MUSGRAVE 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, WARREN & JONES, TELA MERCHANTS, 71 East Cagar AND 9 & 14 MINCING LANE, Lonpon, ENGLAND. Represented in Canada by Moramon *& Muserave, Halifax. JAS. PATON 'e) CONcede the advantages PROvided by the CONcentrated Atractive Bargaias lot Mel eyearayee a ——AT—— JAMES PATON & CO’S. ae (2) Black Worsteds, at Bottom Prices, Blue Worsteds, Very Cheap, Scotch and Canadian Tweeds, nice patterns for Suits, and Straw Hats, Umbrellas, &c., Ke., Ready-made Clothing, Cheap for Ready Cash. Felt Braces, Sears, cpenemcuntennnens'( woe & CO., MAKKEET SQUAR®. ; Ch’town, June 13, 1888—eod & wky “PRO » CON.” We PROclaim to CONVince. --——— VU UDGING from CONstant and PROfuse favors, the Public AND CON veniences of ovr Establishment. To CONfer such benefits, and to PROtect and PROmote our Patrons’ interests, ere PROclivities that CONvince the Public and CONtirm their CONfidence, albeit they CONfound and PROvoke our CONtestants. With CONstancy and PROgress the CONquest. CONversant with your needs, PROficient by experience, PRO- Nhe country, ducing choice goods, and with a business system of honorable PROcesses, you will wisely CONeclude to CONfine your orders; to this CONcern. With CONgratulations over the past, CONtentment with the present, and CONtemplating with PROfound satisfaction the future, We are, PRO bono publico, MARK WRIGHT & CO. Charlottetown, May 11, 1888. OUR JUNE BARGAIN. 1 lb. 28 cent Tea —AND— 1 25¢. Milk Dish,) AVING bought a large quantity of MILK PANS at a very | low figure, we want to work them off, and therefore offer this Special Bargain to our customers and friends. We also want to introduce our new 28 CENT TEA, which we have just received from London, G. B., knowing that it 1s extra good value, and if once tried, we will have your trade in future. EGG&8.—We want good fresh Eggs, and to customers bring- ing them direct to our Store, we will allow One Cent per Dozen over the Highest Cash Price. BEER & GOFF, Queen and King Squares’ Stores. All for 40 Cents. June 7, 1888—oaw & wky MARINE British and Foreign Marine Insurance Co., OF GREAT BRITAIN, Over Seven Million Dollars. (0) California and Union Insurance Companies, Assets, Over Two and a Quarter Million Dollars. GL, CARGOES AND FREIGHT INSURED. STERLING CERTIFICATES issued, payable in Great Britain or in principal Cities on the Continent of Europe. INSURANCE. :0: Assets, a ne I FIRE INSURANCE. NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE INSURANCE CO.., Assets. Over Thirty-Six Million Dollars. This Company has transacted business in Charlottetown for Twenty-five Years, and well known for its prompt and liberal settlement of claims. (°?)-——— Glasgow and London Instrance Company Makes a Specialty of FARM BUSINESS, and pays losses by Lightning whether fire Br ae FRED W. HYNDMAN, LONDON HOUSE Church, Mr. Karle is open toan engagement as ‘ ‘ oT: j i ! Organist or Trainer of a Choir. for our PROgramme, we, as PROprietors, PROpose to CON tinue | Organist oF Trane ot a cquarter, hour lessons —AT THE— is Still Going On. Many 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. Livery and Exchange Stables, (Opposite St. Dunstan’s Cathedral, ) GREAT GEORGE STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E, IL ee ee P. P. GILLIS, - - PROPRIETOR. NE Horses, Coaches, Buggies, Baronches and open Wagons on hire daily at all hours. Telephone to all parts of the city. may 1l0—3m MR. S. N. EARLE, Teacher of Piano and Organ, WEST STREET, Charlottetown, - - P. E. Island. SUMMER CLASSES will cemmence May Ist, when Mr. Earle will be glad to receive a few pupils in place of some who do not remain in town during 'he summer. Having resigned hia position in St. Paul’s Five Doliars per quarter, half hour lessons. Special attention given to young ladies from 2aw (mon & thur)—aplée —-1888— BOSTON DIRECT, —BY THE— Boston, Halifax and Prince Edward Island Steamship Line, THE ONLY DIRECT LINE WITHOUT CHANGE. Charlottetown {0 Boston. THe stannch and commodious Steamships CARROLL and WORCESTER, having been thoronehiy refurnished and put into first-class condition in every particular, will, during the Season of 1888, run as follows, commencing with The Carroll, on Saturday, Sth May. One of these vessels will leave Boston for Charlottetown every SATURDAY, at noon; and Charlottetown for Boston every THURSDAY, at 6 o’clock, p. m, Excellent Passenger Accommodation! Rates! FAKES—First-class Passage Berth in well- furnished Cabin, $6 50; =tateroom Berth, $8.50, Lowest rates for Freight, which is always care- ully handled. Low CARVELL BROTHERS, Agents, Charlottetown, HARRISON LORING, Managing Director and Treasurer, Lewis’ Wharf, Boston. Ch’town, May 3, 1888—pat sum jour “ALL RIGHT.” rt ‘ ALL RIGHT will be at Charlottetown from Monday afternoon tili Wednesday morning, and from Thursday at noon till Saturday morn- ing of each week; and at Summerside from Saleenee noon until Monday at noon of each week, NEWTON LEE. _June 1, 1888. EXHAUSTED VITALITY. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the great Medical Work of the Age on Manhood, Ner- vous and Physicial Debility, Premature Decline, Errors of Youth, and the- untold miseries consequent thereon, 300 pages, 8 vo., 125 pre- scriptions for all diseases. Cloth, full gilt, only $1.00, by mail, sealed. Illustrative sample free to all young and eee men. Send now, ‘The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the National Medical Association. Address P. O. Box 1895, Boston, Mass., or DR. W. H. PAR- KER, graduate of Harvard Medical College, 25 years’ practice in Boston, who may be con- sulted confidentially. Specialty, Diseases of Man. Office, No. 4 Bulfinch Street. jul3—lyr eod & wky PIANO, ORGAN, SINGING. Voice Culture a Specialty. Gleanings From My Common-place Books FOR THE BENEFIT OF YOUNG MEN ATTENDING THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS. HISTORY !ND TRAGEDY. I have followed the moral teachings of a poet in those tragedies, which serve to show the salutary influences of sorrow, and the lessons of history give further confirmation. For what does history tell of half so much as of suffering? If science teaches that this earth of ours is a glittering planet, the records of history as surely teach that it rolls on stained with blood and with tears. So has it ever been, and the pages of his- tory which impress us most deeply are its tragedies. In all the annals of the ancient dynasty of Egypt, what is there like that tragic midnight moment, when all the first- born of the land were smitten-—‘‘ from the first-born of Pharoah that sat on his throne unto the first-born of the captive that was in the dungeon?’ Thechronicles of Baby- lon have perished, and we bear in mind only that tragic hour, when there came forth the fingers of a man, and wrote upon the palace wall the prophecy of an empire’s doom. Turn to classic story, and what rises up to the memory more readily than the sacrifice in the tragic pass of Thermo- pyle ¢? Come to the annals of our father- land, and where have they a deeper interest than when the career of King Charles— him who had been the companion of the loose and profligate Villiers—him who had broken the covenant of the constitution— turned into tragedy, when gloom was gath- ering over his fortunes, from the day on which the royal standard was raised at Not- tingham only to be ominously cast down in a stormy and unruly night, until at length he made a bloody ztonement on the scaffold; and, as his corpse was borne to an unnoted grave, with no other funeral rite than silent loyalty, snow fell heavily but purely upon the black pall that covered his cotiin. Thus itis that history as well as poetry, shows what has been finely called ‘* the power and divinity-of suffering.” —Reed’s Lectures on English History. HOMER’S FAME. There is something inexpressibly strik- ing, it may almost be said awful, in the fame of Homer. Three thousand years have elapsed since the bard of Chios began to pour forth his strains ; and their reputa- tion, so far from declining, is on the in- crease. Successive nations are employed in celebrating his works; generation after generation of men are fascinated by his imagination. Discrepancies of race, of character, of institutions, of. religion, of age of the world, are forgotten in the com- mon worship of his genius, In this univer- sal tribute of gratitude, modern Europe vies with remote antiquity, the light Frenchman with the volatile Greek, the impassioned Italian with the enthusiastic German, the sturdy Englishman with the unconquerable Roman, the aspiring Rus- sian with the proud American. Seven cities, in ancient times, competed for the honor of having given him birth, but seventy nations have since been moulded by his productions. He gavea mythology to the ancients ; he has given the fine arts to the modern world. Jupiter, Saturn, Mars, Minerva, are still household words in every tongue; Vulcan is yet the god of fire, Neptune of the ocean, Venus of love. Juno is still our companion on moor- land solitudes; Hector the faithful guardian of our flocks and homes. The highest praise yet bestowed on valoris drawn from comparison to the god of war; the most grateful compliment to beauty that she is encircled by the cestus of Venus. When Canova sought to embody his conceptions of heroes or loveliness, he portrayed the heroes of the Iliad. Flax- iman’s genius was elevated to the highest point in embodying its events. Lyric poets, in subsequent times, have done little more than imitate his machinery, copy his char- acters, adopt his similes, and, in a few in- stances, improve upon his description. Painting and statuary, for two thousand years, have been employed in striving to portray, by ihe pencil or the chisel, his yet breathing conceptions ; lan- guage and thought themselves have been moulded by the influence of his poetry. Images of wrath are still taken from Achilles, of pride from Agamemnon, of astuteness from Ulysses, of patriotism from Hector, of tenderness from Andromache, of age from Nestor. The galleys of Rome were—the line-of-battle ships of France and England still are—called after his heroes. The Agamemnon long bore the flag of Nel- son ; the Bellerophon combatted the gigan- tic Orient atthe battle of the Nile ; the Polyphemus was the third in the British line which entered the cannonade of Copen- hagen ; the Ajax perished by the flames within sight of the tomb of the Telamonian hero on the shores of the Hellespont ; the Achilles was blown up at the battle of Trafalgar. Alexander the Great ran around the tombof Achilles before undertaking the conquest of Asia. It was the boast of Napoleon that his mother reclined on tapestry, representing the heroes of the Tliad, when he was brought into the world. The greatest poets of ancient and modern times have spent their lives in the study of his genius or the imitation of his works. The drama of Greece was but an amplifica- tion of the disasters of the heroes of the Iliad on their return from Troy. The genius of Racine, Voltaire and Corneille, has been mainly exerted in arraying them in the garb of modern times. Parnassues is still the emblem of poetry: Olympus, of the council-seat of supreme power; Ida and the Cyprian Isle, of the goddess of love. The utmost exertion of all the arts combined on the opera stage is devoted to represent CLASS FOR LADIES. STREET, or to Mr. C, AGENT. Oot. 24, 1887 — Ch’town, April 11, 1888—dm law Street. lyr dy eod -may5 - For terms, etc., apply at Residence, FITZROY P, FLETCHER, Queen the rival goddesses as they appeared to the =, 7.2 — a —_ preecen gae son of Priam on the summit of Gargarus. receive Pupils in the above taones < meee Withdraw from subsequent poetry the im- 3 . la addition to the ve, Mr. Martia in-; ; — Pm se a gh~ ae ote a SINGING 8823; mythology and characters of the Iliad, ‘and what willremain? Petrarch spent his shock of Europe and Asia almost exactly as Homer has done the contest of the same forces, on the same shores, 3,000 years be- fore. Milton’s old age, when blind and poor, was solaced by hearing verses recited of the poet to whose conceptions his own ae spirit had been so much indebied ; and Pope deemed himself fortunate in devoting his life tv the translation of the Iliad; and the unanimous voice of ages has confirmed his celebrated lines :— ‘* Be Homer’s works your study and delight, Read them by day, and meditate by night ; Thence form your judgment; thence your max- ims bring, , And trace the muses upward to their spring.” —Sir Archibald Avcison., June 23, 1888. se eS ‘To Invade Spain. The New York Herald of the 16th inst., publishes the report of a conversation with a prominent army officer, telling of a plan made by Gen. Grant, in 1874, of an invasion of Spain by American troops. The idea grew out of the butchery of Ryan, the fillisbustering leader, and nearly 100 of his followers in Cuba. Gen. Grant was President at the time, and he is said to have made every preparation for hostilities in the event of Spain refusing the demands of the United States Government fer repar- ation for the barbarous execution of Ryan and his men. Gen. Sheridan was tendered command ef the proposed invading army, with Gen, Meade as his chief staff. Grant's inten- tion was to rendezvous 50,000 veterans of the civil war, who were to be mobolized near New York, and a fleet was to be pre- pared to carry them across the Atlantic into two divisions. The idea was to pretend it was for service onthe Island of Cuba, but really to land on the shores of Spain and march inland to Madrid. Both Grant and Sheridan desmed the movement a feasible one, and had the United States de- clared war it would have been attempted. Some Salmon. The captain of the schooner George E. Tibboo, on his last trip to the Grand Bank, reports that one of his dories, when overhaul- ing the bultows, took from one of them a splendid salmon, plump and in!good condition, which measured 4] inches in length and 19 in- ches in circumference at the thickest part. Its weight was close on 50 lbs. It had taken the bait on the hook just like an ordinary codfish. We believe it is a most unusual oc- currence for a salmon to be taken under such circumstances—-so far from the shore and on the hook employed in codfishing. It was a temale having an immense quantity of imma- ture roe. The weight of the largest ever tak- en, according to Farrell, was 83 lbs. and Pen-- nant mentions another only ten pounds less, These, however, were giants of the race, and extremely rare. In olden times, before the days of railways, when the rivers of Scotland were not over-fished, and the salmon were allowed time to grow to maturity, salmon 35 lbs. and even 40 Ibs. and 45lbs.in weight, Were not uncommon. Now, since the trade in fresh salmon, packed in ice, has reached such dimensions, the average weight of salmon taken in such rivers as the Tay, the Spey, and the Tweed, does not exceed 15 Ibs. The general run of the fish were formerly heavier than at present. The reason of this is not hard to find. Suchis the demand for salmon, that time is not given for them to grow to the full size. The greater portion now taken are from two to three years old, and range from 8 tu 16 lbs. in weight. Allow- ing that a salmon grows at the rate of 5 Ibs. per annum—a liberal estimate—then this one taken on the Grand Bank mnst have been ten years of age. ne He Got an Awful Twist. An Irishman, living up three stories in 4 flat, was awakened a few nights ago by an alarm of fire. Jumping from his bed, he grabbed the first article of clothing he could find, it proving to be his pants, and putting himself inside of them as quickly as possi- ble, started to make his escape. In his hurry he did not notice that he had put his trousers on hindside before until he attempted to button them up. There was no time to change, so he fastened the top button over the small of his back as best he could. Rushing to the head of the stairs, he made a mis-step and down he went, rolling over and over, passed both landings without stopping, and brought up against the wheel of a hose cart at the curbstone. A policeman leaned over to assist him, asking himif he was much hurt. ‘Faith, an’ I dunno,” said the Irishman, getting to his feet and feeling of himself to ascertain, when, noticing the way his pants were on he said, evidently having had his memory .knocked out bim by his descent: ‘* Be jabers, an’ I must have got an awful twist.”—Chicago Herald. Moruers.— Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural quiet sieep by relieving the child from pain; and the little cherub awakes as “bright asa button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regulates the bowels, and s the best known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. (April 1 °88 ceppineneemeiemelinlaniaany tin ‘* Willie,” said his mother, with stern re- proof in her tone, ‘I shall certainly have to punish you this time. You promised me faithfully you would never play again with that bad boy, Sammy Shackelford, and here you have been playing ball with him for more than an hour.” ‘‘ No, I hain't, mamma,” protested Willie, red-faced, breathless and vehement,, ‘‘I’ve been play- in’ against him. He was on the other side.” ADVICE To To THE Dear.—A person cured of Deafness and noises in the head of 23 years’ ny by a simple remedy will send a description o best years in restoring -his verses. Tasso portrayed the siege of Jerusalem and the it FREE to any person who applies to NicHoL sox, 30 St. John Street, Montreal. 4m—mlé¢ PAE SEE LANE TLS A TT Ate Htc Rie mE ag gee APR Ds oF a ecm 9 ges we ant Smee eee ate aL ES EEL i aE i TE wae