7 Pe fs Se = xz -natteeenar | F An pile: Setgllqeneacltinien a. VOL. 7. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRIN i : dis La EK HXAMINER. ore = ISLAND, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, cama CE EDWARD 1880. NO. 132 —-~_ Ree EY EO SASS ee aad Ph vt Vets a JUST: ARRIVED ! BRITIS EL WARCHOUSE, Ex S, S. “Hibernian,” \ LARGE ASSORTMENT OF Black Silk Fringe, Corsets, Cashmeres, Colored and Black Satins, Pompzdoar Prints, TOILET COVERS & QUILTS, (in Plain and Fancy); White, Scarlet, Grey & Fancy Flannels, Cloths, Tweeds, &c., All ef which are now opened, and will be sold at eur usual low prices. w. & A. BROWN & CO. Ch’town, Aug. 24, 1880. ~ —- PACIFIC Mutual Insurance Oo., — OF — NEW YORK MARINE. Assets 3lst Dec., 1879, $744,149.00 Insurance effected on CARGOES and FREIGH'S, covering $15,000 and upwards on first-class risks. Certificates issued payable in London at the office of Morton Rosk & Co., Bankers, or in New York. Risks taken and rates fixed withont being referred to Head Office. FENTON 7. NEWBERY, Agent for P. E. Island. to the Stockholders of the Beliveau Albertite and Oil Company : OTICE is hereby given that a further Call of two and one-half per cent. on the unpaid Shares of the said Company was made by the Directors of the Company on the twenty-first day of September, instant, pay- able Setore the twenty-fifth day of Uctober next. By order of the Board of Directors. Dated at Dorchester, in the County of Westmorland, in the Province of New Bruns- wick, the 22nd day of September, A. D. 1580. K. B. CHANDLER, Treasurer of the Beliveau Albertite and Uil Co. Shareholders in P. E. Island may pay the Wall to the Bank of Prince Edward Island to the credit of the Company. EK, B. CHANDLER, May 1], 1880. [se 27 till date} ‘Hut Coal. Nut Goal. REE from Slate and Fire Clay. Also Reund and Slack, at Albion Mines, Pietou, Nova Scotia. For orders apply to G. W. DEeBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Old Sydney Mines,Cape Breton. Lingan Mines, Cape Breton. RDERS for Round Coal can be obtained on application to Terme as usual. G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Ayent for P. E. Island. @ffice, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. June 17, 1880—pat her sj kea tf QUEEN INSURANCE OY. OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING. NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- i Merchandise and Produce, Also, on Viisae ot the stocks. a Specia! rates for isolated residences. Loasee settled promptly. GZORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island Jane, 1877— i TRY IT. TRY IT é Av IVE ALBION MINE NUT COAL a fair trial and you will not be disap- peinted in the result; it is COAL, not fire cley and slate. For orders apply to G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Office —No. 35 Water Street. Charlottotown, Jnly8, 1880—pat tf —<—<$—<——— WHSTHRN ASSURANCE COMPANY! Capital and Assets Income for year ending 3ist Becember, 1879 - . 70: HEAD OFFICE, — - : . 0:0 - Risks taken on all descriptions of property at lowest rates. HORACH HASZARD, General Agent for P. E. Island. 20; $1.637,553.10 --— TORONTO, ONT. October 18, 1880. will be received. Quarry OF MY CRACKERS AND BISCUITS IS U [xasmucn AS THEY ARE ALWAYS FRESH, IN THE MARKET, in the MAKING of THEM, and WARRANTED to K cep FOR ANY LENGTH OF TIME. TRY THE FOLLOWING KINDS: Bosron CRACKER, QUEEN DROPS, Lracran FINGERS, COCOANUT JUMBLES, Subranra LEMON, CARRAWAY TOPS, Grackn ELLS, ICED ARROW ROOT, Uston MIXED, SUGAR JUMBLES, branran RATIFIES, VICTORIA SNAPS, Tea BISCUITS, GINGER SNAPS. JOHN QUIRK, City Steam Bakery, Prince Street. Charlottetown, Oct. 7, 1880. OCTOBRE ER. J. B. MACDO ‘Readymade Clothing, Custom-made Clothing, Shirts and Drawers, White and Colored Shirts, Hats and Caps, Worsted Coatings, Tweed Suitings, Scarfs, Ties and Collars, Silk and Linen Handkerchiefs, New, Stylish and Cheap Goods, For For For For For For For Fo1 For For situated Dwelling House with large) m yard, good stable and coach house attached. | 500 Also to Let, near King Square, a Dwelling | House with outbuildings in good repair, | suitable for a small family. Rentlow. For | particulars opply to LONGWORTH & HASZARD. Sept. 28, ’80—1m Valuable Property for Sale BAGS SALT, 200 Barrels Herring and Mackerel BAIT, 300 oars, EREL BARRELS. . 100 barrels 1 ae FAT HERRING. 100 Quintals CODFISH and HAKE. Herring. augl7 | | D. SMALL. 1 $1,001,052. 20 N. B.—Applications from persons willing to’act as Agents throughout the Province NIVERSALLY ACKNOWLEDGED TO BE THE os T ECEIVING THE GREATEST CARE AND Ae E =| CC =i rm © NALD'S, QUEEN STREET. Go 'TO J. B. MACDONALD'S, Oct. 11, 1880. Queen Street. FOR SALE OR TO LET, /BA®8ees Barr AND sacs, COMFORTABLE and ndabidieatte| QuasnNs WHARF. Just Landed—a choice lot New Labrador THe Datty EXAMINER, | OCTOBER 26, 1880. The St. John Telegraph's correspondent reports that : ‘ ** Professor Sheldon was _ particularly struck by the manner in which the plum trees in New Brunswick, were protected in winter. When he entered the plum orchard he saw about two hundred trees lying flat on the ground, and upon inquiring what it meant, was told that to protect the trees during the winter, the earth is loosened around their roots and they are then bent down on the ground, where they are cover- ed up by the snow. This praetice is followed till the trees are about twenty years old, The trees that are thus covered by snow give a much larger yield than those that are exposed ail winter. The idea was a novel one to the delegates, who were greatly taken with it,” This is a hint by which persons in this Province, who have plum trees, may per- haps, profit. = - Ir is gratifying to know that telegraphic communication has been established with Anticosti. When the line is completed telegraphic eommunication may be had, with all important parts of the Island. A late report from the island respecting what has already been done in this mattér, says :— ‘¢ There are about 60 miles of poles plant ed between here and East point, leaving 30 miles to complete that section. No wire is out up in that section. From this to English Bay, about 35 miles of poles are planted and 10 miles of wires up, leaving 35 miles of poles to compete that section ; it is expected to be completed next June. The cable was successfully landed here on the evening of the 18th, and is now working splendidly direct to Gaspe Basin. The Morse printing instrument and the Silver- town patent Ceclanche battery agglome- rate cells are working well. They are cutting a trench in the rock for the cable and will finish it in a few days. happy to say that we shall no longer be separated from the mainland during the winter.” a ae Temperance. The following item, which has the right ring about it isan extract from the pro- ceedings of the P. E. Island Baptist As- sociation held at Tryon : ‘‘This Association of Baptist Churches takes this opportunity of expressing our most devout gratitude to God, that the liquor traffic is at least to a gfteat extent shorn of of its respectability and Jegal pro- tection by the enactment of the ‘* Canada Te:aperance Law.” We also wish to record that loyalty to Christ, as well as the terms of our enlist- ment, bind us to wage an intelligent and persistent warfare against intemperance, wherever and in whatever form it may pre- sent itself. Therefore Resolved, That as a body we pledge ourselves to use all laudable means to render the law already enacted as effectual as possible in freeing our beloved coun- try from the baneful, blighting scourge of drunkenness. Resolved, That this Association cannot look upon any church as in good standing, that will allow persons to remain in her communion who will persist in the use of intoxicating liquors as a beverage. That this Association regards such a church as throwing the her influence around and perpetuating one of the most -insidious agencies Which the enemy. can.use against the Redeemer’s-cause on earth: We desire still to record our heartiest conviction that the Gospel of Christ is ‘the unfailing power to emancipate thée* in- ebriate, and that every minister of Christ should give the subject of temperance a permanent place in his regular preaching of the word.” ———— > <-> 2 — Morcan O’Brrex, who had been drink- ing heavily all last week, was arrested and lodged in the’ Dartmouth (N. 58.) Police station on Friday last. During the night he commited suicide. He took his silk handkerchief, twisted it into a rope, and, fastening ene'end securely to the cross bars ef his cell, made a strong slip noose of the other end, and; lacing it round his neck, by drawing up his feet and folding his arms, let the whole weight.of his body come on the cord round his neck, which ran tight and strangled him. +o Heavy Senrences.—At the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia, on the 22nd inst., Chief Justice Young sentenced White and Foster, the two soldiers belonging to the 97th Regiment, who smashed the windows | in Hollis Street, to eight years each in the) Dorchester Penitentiary. George Mason, of Dartmouth, for indecent exposure of his person, and Edward Turner, for unnatural crime, were each sentenced to two years in the Penitentiary. iccineeiaiiitiins We are Clippings From Late Papers. Sir A. T. Galt is in Ottawa. Carlyle is within a few weeks of 85 years old. A Japanese lady is at the head of one of the classes at Vassar College. A Berlin despatch to the Times announ- ces that Prince Hohenluhe, whose serious illness with gastric fever was reported on. the 17th inst., is better. A Paris despach to the T'imes says :—‘‘ The announcement that M. Gambetta’s speeches will shortly be published, has given rise to ‘s the idea that he intends, at the next oppor- tunity, to be a candidate for admission to the French Academy.” The Cologne Gazette and the Berlin Post combine to attack and denounce Mr. Glad- stone. The former calls him a dangerous fanatic, and attributes the agitation in Ire- land to the contagion of his revolutionary schemesinthe East. The latter accuses him of pursuing a policy in the East op- posed to the true interests of England. A letter purporting to have been written by Gambetta, has just been published in the Gazetta del Popolo. Gambetta declares that if Garibaldi should come to Paris he would be welcomed with love-and gratitude as the hero of Dijon and the representative of noble, generous Italy, It is not inappo- site perhaps to recall here the Yact that when dictator in 1880 Gambetta once gave orders for the arrest of the Dijon here, Ina press despatch it is stated that the Government have ample security for the completion of the line in ten years, from Lake Nipissing to the Pacitic. The details of the ageeement will hardly be made pub- lic, however, until the meeting of Parlia- ment. Membera of the Syndicate are anxious for an early session, so that ar- rangements for the immediate prosecution of the work may be made. The school question is again looming up in Ottawa. A dispatch says that ‘‘ Bishop Duhamel has expressed his willingness to meet a deputation of Roman Catholics and discuss the school question, and if it can be shown that Catholic children suffer in~ the race of life in competition with Protest- ants on account ef the defects of the separate schools, he is prepared to govern himself accordingly.” Harp on THE Porrrmrans.—The New York Herald says: ‘* For once the travel- ling public has been mistaken in its very natural supposition that every one who be- haves in public conveyances in a rude and irrational manner is a politician. Twenty- four actual lunatic have just been trans- ferred by rail from one asylum to another, and some of them acted almost as badly as a lot of delegates coming home from a convention, ” The cradle of the infant Princess of Spain is of polished ebony, inlaid with sil- ver ; itsformis that of open shell; the curtains are of silver gauze enamelled with white velvet flowers, the coverlet of white satin on which are embroidered’in brilliant colors the arms of Spain. One lady grand- esse atands at the foot of the cradle and during the royal infant’s slumbers to watch the precise moment of her awakeuing ; another grandesse stands at the head, arm: ed with a huge feather fan to chase away the flies. The royal Spanish crown, which in silver gilt hangs in front of the cradle, is the work of Froment, the great Parisian goldsmith. The cost of the cradle, with- out the hangings of fine lace and the garni- ture of marabout feathers which surround it, is estimated at $1,400. The condition of Macedonia is said to rival the condition of France before the Revolution. Assassination was never se common. Within less than two months twenty-seven Turks, including a wealthy bey, near Kenprulu, and two tithe regis- trars, have been murdered by Bulgars in the district of Kenprulu alone. The Turks have been prompt to respond, and about dovble the number of Bulgarians have paid the penalty of their lives to the revengeful feelings of the Turks. The prisons of Kenpralu and Perlike are overflowing with ‘‘unfortunate wretches arrested without ac- cusation or warning. In the districts of Kenprulu and Prilep affairs are more es- pecially bad, for they are the two principal centres of the Bulgarian pepulation of Northwest Macedonia. With the country Turks the feeling toward the Bulgarians is a composite sentiment of hatred and fear. ‘The latter has been aroused on ac- count ot the ill treatment of the Mussul- mans in Bulgaria, thousands of whom are in Macedonia as refugees, slowly diminish- ing in numbers from disease and starva- tion. The beys and aghas look on the wretched Christians as so many cattle. Men like Hamid Agha, at Kenprulu ; Char- | kir Bey, recently murdered at Vettersko, iclose to Kenprulu, by a Bulgarian, for hav- ‘ing carried off his sister; Kessad Pacha, ‘near Uskup (this latter makes every newly- ‘married bride among his Christian villages pass the night of her marriage in his com- |pany), are ‘nerely examples of what goes on all over tae country. ———-: ae +--+ > nom A Good Account. | | **}'o sum it up, six long years of bed-rid- den sickness and suffering, costing $200 per } i i eal) =e ee ee A - eee pa anaes SR TS a 7 sla Aa aR a ieee er ee a ome | a fin nin =e ina Lieutenant General Leicester Smyth has | year, total $1,200—all which was stopped sailed from England to take command of | by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by the English troeps at the Cape of Good my Wile, who has done her own house- Hope. _work for a year since, without the loss of a sisoae~sanitalnwnaniel day, andl want everybody to know it for | ‘TueRre were on the 23rd inst., sixteen their benefit.” ‘Islend vessels in Malifax harbor. } ‘‘Joun Wuexs, Butler, N. Y.’; ~~ BUILDING LOTS. } ARTIES wanting to purchase Building ‘ 3 ae in Victoria, Let 29, wiil please ap- y XO BE SOLD, all that part of Town Lot No. | MUSIC AND SINGING 1 74, in the first hundred of Town Lots in| ' a Charlottetown; having a front of 67 feet, Dor-| (\N and after AUGUST Ist, Mrs. James, chester Street, and running back 80 feet, to, O Brown will give instruction in Music | gether with the buildings thereon erected. and Singing at her residence, King Square. For further iculars apply to Messrs. | Terms on application Hovesow & Me Charlottetown. Ch’town, July 29, 1880—3m 3taw tu ths DONALD PALMER, Eszq., or a MRs, HENRY HARDAY, duly 20, 1880—saw Summerside. i |