Pt emt ee Teawa:—Free DoLLaks A Y rar, — NEW SERIES. Che Dain Examiner ie iserte very evening, by fhe Examiner Publishing (Qo. From ther office, corner of Water and Great Georg ts, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, =éres RaThs OF SUBSCRIPTION ° Six Months, 32 50 Three Months, 1 25 ine Month, v 60 ap Advertising at inost moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, suarteriy, half-yearly or yearly advertise. ments, on application. ZUMAMAG, FOR JUNE, 1885. ONS CHANGES, %y Last Quarter Sth day, 7h. 52m., p. m, New Moon 12th day, 9h, 3ém., p. m. Piret Quarter. 19th day, 95. 36m., a. m, Pal! Moon, 27th day, 7h. Sm., a. m. ao San ‘Sun |Moon|High | Days iba! OF WEES -iges sets | rises (water!len’h. — h mh m aft’n, aft’n) h m PMonday [4 17 7 89)10 23) O 42/15 21 eTucsday | 17; 39/10 58) 3 18} 29 gWednesday | 16 SOT! 291151) 23 Thursday {| 15, 4011 58, 240/ 26 § Friday 15 4 ‘morn | 3 30 25 | § Saturday 15, 42] 0 26) 4 35| 97 | 7/Sunday 14, 43) O Pay 5 45! 29 a/ Monday 14} 44119317 0; 30 9, Tuexiay M4, 46 1 50) 8 4; 31 Weduesday | 14 46: 2 32' 857) 32 }i Thersday 14) 47) 315) 947) 33! 12 Friday | Ia! 47; 4 7)10 34) 83) ypSeturday =| I4j 47 & Fill 20') = 32) 14) Sunday i4} 48 6 15'morn 34 15 Monday | 13 4 7 28/0 6 35 li Tuesday | 13 48,8 411050, 35 7, Wednesday | 13, 48, 9 54) 136) 35) Thursday | 13, 4811 4) 295) 35 Frida ; W] 48 aft 12| 319 35 Saturday | i3, 49 117) 424) 35 2] Sunday 3 49,221) 535, 5 42 Monday ; 4) 49 3 22) 6 51 35 oni Tuesday | 4 49,4 21)-7 BC] 35 Wednesday | 1!) 49 5 18 BBS! AS a Tharday = 15! 49 6 12) 9:21) 34 26 Friday | 6 49:7 Tho uN 34 MjSstarday =| 15, 49 745,10 23) 33 ay 16, 49 82521 11, 33 Monday , 16 499 1/11 46) 32 M0 Taowiay 417.7 49| 9 33laft 13} 32 i j NOTES, Prince George of Wales’ birthday on the $ed of this month. Battle of Waterloo anniversary (1815) on 18th. In this month there is no real night, the of the day being 16 hours.and 15 mingtes, and the rest twilight. In this month the mornings increase 6 miautes and the afternoons 14 minutes LIVERY STABLE, GRAFTON STREET. I&ST-CLASS TEAMS always on hand “ So are anmarenmaneinnteal earn o-e8: «> This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak froe,’’—Evuniripgs, ( OF GETTING ——— ‘ TO DISPOSE OF A VERY LARGE STOCK OF New Cloths, Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, Hats, &.. Of the Finest Selections INDUCEMENT FOR BEGINNING ON Every Cash Castomer giving his order for A SUIT OF rl CLOTHES OR OTHER GOODS FOR HOTHIKG. a ! at ee | | | | , | Offer the Following THIRTY DAYS, THE Tra MAY: a Suit of Clothes, ora Single Garment, will | ! receive a Ticket bearing a number, which, if it be the successiul, will entitle him to a Suit ef Clethes or Other Goods, equal in vaiue to that purchased by him. be published. GH This is not a Lottery, but a Privilege ried out in good faith, Gvods in every department will be found Better Yalue than ever offered by us. variety and quality. Employing many hands, orders will be promptly »xecuted. D. A. BRUCE. Va Dominion Day three customers will draw the 70: dupheate tickets, and the result will given to our Customers, which will be car- The CUTTING DEPARTMENT is under the management cf Mr. JAMES McLEOD, | (formerly of the iirm of © E. Rongarrsoy) assisted by two others, whoss ability to turn out! First-class work is 30 well established that it is nut necessarvfor them to belittle any one to make a reputation for themselves ; and althongh we do not boastef our extensive estab- lishment, still it is growing and eur patrons will fiad our stock of Goods complete in | | ; ' Ch’town, May 26th, 1885, eee Seen OUR GRAND DISPLAY —_ C) Y— SPRING CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS is VERY TEMPTING 0 The Men’s Department is loaded with an and delivered at short notice. e , , . . Telephone connection with all the principal | JOHN F. POWERS, a Proprietor. Ch'town, May 21, 85. licheod, Morson & MeQuareie, BARRISTERS ry! rik i ATTORNEYS weaitk. Ofice in Brown's Block. Queen Square | (UP STAIRS) Ob'iown, Feb. 12, (886 WARBURTON & CONROY, | BARRISTERS & ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Notaries Public, &c. Office ia Cameron's } Block, up stairs ; entrance | i bext door to Tay lor’s Jewelry Store March 94 1985 SULLIVAN & MAGNEILL, ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW Nelicliars in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OFFICES ~ O' Hailoran’s Building, Great George Street, Charicttetos a. we Money to Le CB. W.W.Svuiitv, ¥, QC. January 16, } Cuester B, MACNEILL SSD. DA COSTA & COx Lommission Merchants —-AND= GENERAL AGENTS, BARBiDOS, WEST INDIES, — AN D— 117 Leadenha!] Street, London. BD. Rh. Fall ; Ne lics " Os “ii iptormation given on app sca- tion to Mosars, Middle ton & Uo., 40 Exchange ’ New York. Ch’town, Oct, 28, ’84, the bulk of the trade. We are displaying th ever shown, and include all the popular shapes The Boys’ Department is unquestionaly The Furnishing Goods Department is not only well stocked with all that is solid and staple, but contains much that is choice 70 No doubt about it. city,—not only largest in quantity of materials,— say, unless it be that OUR PRICHS ARE R ¥S-AT-LAW.|ROBERTSON’S ONE-PRIGE CLOTHING STOR®, No. 30 Queen Street. The Custom Tailerizg Department is fuil of Neat, Nobby and Heliable Goods. | 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 Ours is the largest and best selected atock ever seen in this >, bat largest in yariety of shapes,—largest in variety -largest in correct styles,—largest in every way. immense display of New Spring Snits. e largest variety of Spring Styles of Hats the best and most attractive in the city. and novel. a What more could we iGHT,--RELIABLE, HONEST. we { { i | | | 0 TA Cm } | | —————————— | | L.. i \Ch’town, April 28, 1885. Sign of the Bit, HAT MEN'S FELT HATS. ro a ae 4750 NEW HATS JUST OPENED AT L. E. PROWSES, Including all the Leading Styles in Roglish, America aut Canadian. ee. en This is the Largest Stock ever imported to P. E. Island and MUST BE SOLD, beth BARGAINS will be given, Retail so BIG Wholesale and <u ee 7% 3s p> a F ; Se 3% JG Daeg E HA RLOPTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1885. AN OPPORTUNITY & 3. HASZARD’s FOK ALL KINDS. OF Blank Books, Se EP Ledgers, Day Books, Journals, &., SELLING VERY CHEAP. 100,000 100,000 ENV BLOP ES, of all the leading s‘zes, by the 100, } or 4 thousand boxes. FOOLSCAP, LETTER & NOTE PAPER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Sifin’'s Jet Black Writing Tats, Stalford’s Copying Inks, (iu all size bottles. ) This is now acknowledged to be the best Ink for office and private use. « ALSO IN STORG : Carter’s, Stephens & Toiary’s Writing & Copying Inks, To be Sold at Great Discounts. G. H. HASZARD, BROWN’S BLOCK, Queen Square, Ch town, May 18, ’85.—wky MIDStT MME TRIP, 1885. The well-known Clipper Bark “MOOSE LLE,” 500 Tons Register, Goppered aad Classed 10 years Al at Lloyd, £2, RENDLE, Commander, WILL SAIL FROM Liverpool for Charlottetown About the 25th JUNE next. For Freight or Passage apply iu London to JOHN PITCAIRN & SONS, 16 Great Win- chester Street, E. C. In Liverpool to PIT- CAIRN BROTHERS, 51 Sonth John Street ; or here to the owners PEAKE BROS. & CO. Ch’town, June 1, 1885—eod tf - PERUVIAN GUANO, MAP MANURES, —AND Bay State Fertilizer. ~~? oa 5 Bie: a _ Large quan titic fast. s just received and selling 3. M AULD, Grafton Street, W. S. STEWART, Barrister, Attorney, Notary Public, &C., &e. June 5—tu fri S A AC, 74 Gueen Street. OFFIQK: Newson’s South Side ‘Jueen Square. Ch’town, May 30—1wk wkly tf Block, Boston Markets. Boston, June 6. Eacs.—Trade has been light the past three days, but prices are fairly maintained, Sales of Eastern extra this morning at L4c. and firsts at 13 to 13}¢ per dozen. There is a steadier tona at the close. We quote : P. E. Island, 13 to 134. . Porators.—There is not much change to note in pototoes. Choice Houlton Pro- lifics command 65 to 68c., and Hebrons ‘are taken at 65c., but Rose will not go over 60c, and some go down to 50 to Sie. We quote :— ent Of. MRO «J. 0. wtp nnomee +d 50 to 65c 5 ON IN, 1 5 ino c chee bs bos 55 to 60c | RODEN Sg <n dns 8.0 02 Lh: noninennnate cue ee ope ee 65 to 68c | Fisu-—Receipts of mackerel for the week | iwere from home ports, and 368 bbls. from ' the provinces. Trade shows a further slight improvement. and prices are firmer on ‘mackerel, owing to the comparatively light ‘catch the past week. Sales in fare lots have been made at $5.75 to $3 per bbl, but |packeres are not willing to pay the latter | igure except where there is a good propor- |tion of large fish. Inspected iots are sell- ing at $3. $83.25 for medium 3’s, and $8.50 |to #6 per bbl for large 3’s. Inspected lots in Portland are held at $3.50 and $6 per | bbl. A cargo of 300 bbls large No. 3, |from Barrington, N, 8., sold at $6 per bbl, ‘fishermen’s order. Old Mackerel are held about 25c per bbl higher, $2.75 being the asking price for large lots. Jobbers are selling old and new me- dium 3's at $3.25 and $3.50 per bri. Old dry Codfish are in fair request at $2.75 for large and $2.624 for medium. Old pickle cured Bank are nearly all cut of market. Nothing of consequence doing in Hake, which are nominally $2 and $2.25 per qtl. qnete Shore Splits nominally $3 and $3.25 per bri. Smoked Herring continue in large supply, and prices rule low. Canned era are quiet at $1.50 and $1.60 per ozen, ee The Northwest. LIFE OF A SETTLER’S WIFE—HOME DUTIES OF MRS. GOWANLOCK, 'n her last letter to her friends in Ontario Mrs. Gowanlock, who fella prisoner into the hands of Big Bear, says (March 20) :— ‘* Tt’s not cold enough to freeze an Indian up here ; we are having beautifcl weather for nearly two weeks ; it does not freeze in the day time. Rita-ke-lop-wat-akowe-yan, ketapwalakoweyah. Sakehikooyitiowealook- waketapwatapwatakowinanewekopun, Ako- winanuounokowun. Effie, read this and find the meaning ; as you have got to be a teacher you should be able to pronounce these words. On Sunday, Johnny and I went up to Mr. Delauey’s, and in the after- noon he and Mr. Delaney went out for a ride, out seven miles, to see if there was any timber to be had We got our dinner and supper, and then they brought us home in the evening ; it’s just a nice walk, and there are trees on each side of the road We have no fences up here either; and some of the In- dians were chopping wood. The Indians make their squaws do the work and they sit on a log and smoke and Jook as happy as you please. I asked Johnny why he did not marry a squaw and he would not have to work. They bring us large white fish all cleaned nicely. All [have to do is to wash them. We had fish and potatoes, beets and prune pie, and bread for dinner. Johnny taught me how to fry potatoes, and they are nice too, «1 put some gravy in the pan and after the petatoes are boiled I put them in the pan and take a knife and mash them all nice and fine, put pepper and salt on, and then eut them up and take a plate, lay over the top, and brown them slowly, and then turn the pan upside down and you will have a nice dish. And I take canned tomatoes to make them go farther; I put more water with them and take soda biscuit and roll them in and season. I have no trouble in baking bread. I may make my own yeast, with hops and flour, and then, before putting away, | put ginger and sugar in, and when I set bread in the evening, about six o'clock, |] take warm water aud make a thin batter and put the yeast in and let it stand two or three hours, and then I add some more warm water and make it in a thick batter. In the morn- ing it’s away up to the top of the bread pan; | then knead it down and let it get pice and light, and then put it in the dishes. I have the oven nice and hot be- fore putting it in and my bread comes out a nice brown and is white and flakey. The flour we have is far nicer than you have down there, and ours is spring wheat too. Mrs. Delaney says when her cows give milk enough she will let us have butter. She is avery nicewoman. We are going to have a post office ui here shortly. The men are working as hard as they can to have the mill going in about six weeks, and then it will sound like business, and then the place will nut beso quiet. Johnny got his feet wet, and he has a cold and speaks very hoarse. Mine has gone now; it’s his turn I suppose i? = - Some Decorative Don'ts. WHAT WILL ADORN YOUR HOUSE AND SAVE A WORLD OF TROUBLE. Don’t forget this elementary principle, that a room must not consist of unrelated colors and objects, but possess a harmoni- ous unity in its plan of furnishing and de- coration. Don’t put high colors on your walls or in your carpets or tapestry, and very little of it anywhere else. Wall paper must be quiet in tone if you desire to produce a pleasant efiect. Pictures cannot look well if hung against loud patterns or positive colors ; your bric-a-brac is sure to be in- have been 3,623 bbis, of which 3,255 bbls. | New Shore are selling at $3 25 per quintal. No movement in Pickled Herring, and we | Sineie Corres Two Cznrs. VOL 17.—N0. 19. effective and tasteless ; its designs are con- fused with the designs and colors against which it is placed. Don’t fresco walls or ceiling. Fresco painting is very weil for large halls or grand saloons, but the effect is not good for domestic rooms. Colour‘on the walls in this way is sure to be in conflict with what- ever colour may be brought in, whether in pictures, furniture, hangings, or decorative objects. on’t select carpets with yay tints or pro- nounced designs. It is impossible for furniture to appear to good advantage set upon florid patterns, clamouring, so to speak, to be seen. Carpeis and wall colours should be as foils for colour and crnament, rather than colour and ornament in them- selves. It is impossible to furnish a room agreeably unless this principle is kept in mind. Don’t have white marble-topped tables or marbie mantels in your rooms, for objects of this kind are enough to chill the heart of a bronze statue. White walls ina room are equally chilling. It is impossible to do anything with them. COLD AND UNRELENTING SURFACES they will remain, plan as one may. A touch of grey or brown in the tint ie ao great help, but white is absolutely fatal to decorative effect. Don’t be persuaded into varnished floors ‘and rugs instead of carpets. Floors treated in this manner are a serious nuisance. Every footfall mars them, and costs more to keep them in good order than to pay for ‘carpets at the outset. If, however, these are repeatedly oiled and varnished and ‘ceaseless pains taken to keep them in good condition, the effect is very pieasing. |Articles of furniture stand out against the | dark varnish in rich and artistic contrast. Don’t be induced to lay upon your floors,Turkisn or Persian rugs. The figures ‘and colors of these rugs are considered very artistic, but the fact is they usurp the at- j}tention altogether too much, and it is difficult to get them in harmony with walls ‘or furniture. A rug made from well select- ed Brussels carpet is much more satisfac- tory. A rug of this kind, with a queer centrepiece and a broad border, in which a little color is introduced, and made so as to have about two feet of stained floor space around it, gives much of the efiect of rug furnishing, without the annoyances that pertain to floors with large spaces uncover- ‘ ' 1 | ed. Don't put elaborate brass grates in your room unless you intend to use them. A showy brass grate, unstained by smoke or ashes, suggests in ail the glittering newness, A SHOW-ROOM ANL NOT 4 HOME. A fireplace not consecrated toa fire, that has neither warmth nor suggestion of warmth is a dreadful sham. It is not ar- tistic; it is not decorative; it kiils, rather than gives pleasure. Don’t hang upon your walls huge black engravings set in vast spaces of white mar- gin. Pictures of this sort are very depress- ing. Instead of white margins substitute a grey paper, and if you must have black prints select these that have a good deal of grey in them—pictures with tone and meliew effects. Etchings commonly have more softness and artistic effect than engravings. Don’t heng chromos on your walls, or colored prints; don’t display long lines of family photographs; don’t hang mosses, or colored leaves, or dried grasses about DON’T HAVE FANCY DEVICES for picture frames. Picture frames should be of gilt or oak or walnut, never of vel- vet, never of ornamental leather work, never of shelle or burrs, or anything fantas- tic. Whatever the material, let ornament be sparingly used. Picture frames should set off the picture and not set oif them- selves. ~ a . Clean Kitchens. THOROUGH CLEANLINESS AS MUCH A GIFT OF NATURE AS POETIC GENIUS, A very pretty little personal paragraph, says The Cook, is going the rounds to the effect that George Eliot's favorite room in a house was a clean kitchen. This is worth knowing and emphasizing. Not that anybody would be surprised at her preference, bat becauge the knowledge may give the clean kitchen a boom, There is no doubt in the world thata ‘thoroughly clean kitchen is one of the healihiest and cheeriest places to be found. Every house ought to be clean from cellar to roof, but the kitchen ought to be par- ticularly clean. It is the place where the food that is to maintain the human body and to evolve itself into human ideas is prepared, and from which it is served, Any dust or cobwebs or vile odours about the kitchen are sure to get into the food, and so help to poison the human victims fed thereby. But the breath of a kitchen fire and of healthy cooking are as invigorating as anything short of an ocean breeze. People who have madea study of human faces know very well that the George Eliot type of face means cleanliness and good housekeeping where ever women are found. Perhaps this gift, or combination of gifts, resulting in thorough character and thorough cleanliness, is as much a gift of nature as the gift of poetic genius itself. A clean kitchen is not a question of servantly hire. A dowdy woman will have a dowdy kitchen ne matter how many ser- vants she has; and next to impurity of character in a woman, impurity of kitchen becomes the curse of any house where it is found. -e se The Imperial war minister is drafting a plan for a large increase of the army based upon calculated results of the coming gen- eral census. The peace effective will be raised from 418,000 to 480,000. F:esides this, two new batteries will be added to each corps d'armee, and two guns to each battery so mobilized, practically augmenting the artillery sixty per cent. The cavalry increase has not yet been decided upon.