SAM PF eSRSHES FROOGLE Gee. .0e eae ee ae ee ee ea eee ee \* P ae poe a REE CN —— hen Pree Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evrrrrss. SineLE Corres Two Crnrs MONDAY, AUG US! 10, 1891. VOL. 28.—NO. 68 ~ if S ? Veda a 3 4) : 8 LAY l a 1 59: 4 5O ? +4 shew 7 > ~ 6 14 4 tsisate ay 4 181 3-34 } i Sudaty 2 § 38:13 59 ° 1°38 lay 0 a Ll} 9 34 RG ti Tues 97 7} 015 3311029] 53 a Wednesday ‘ 2 50 y Tharsday , l D7 G11 44 87 7 #yiday 1] 55:1 $ 2) aft 24 44 » saturd av 12 33 “ 4? 0 57 } 41 * sanday 14] 5M 9 4) 1 45) 38 x Mund iy 15 5 } 28 2? 33! 2m yp Puesday 16} 48,9 56 3 32) 2 | 3{Wednes ay i i. 10 39) 4.43) 29, x Thureday 19} 44/11 11) 6& 15} 26 | » Friday 2 43\morn | 7 32} 23} 0 Saparua, 2 41} 0 2) § 29] ig 3) Sanday 23 39 1 IF 9 16) 16 3 Mooday 524] 37/2 5! 9 55]14 13 (a aula , 2 Af) FO Sut : x od Ron iw ee ‘> z ra eae ounce >. etn _ = ~ ee = a ~ ae Se nee oe a= * > ~~ J < Si = HSAs ane dex ~ ——— Og PUG Sei s gS By Ce Py ee Ws b oobe x AG Od ey) thurs ag yg EE By rt res rs cae i i 3 3 24) # 4 8 8 I ; turday oe ed <I | 7 i: ce 56; 1419351122 )9/*8@ a5 - walt 7 ~ - a “a a oe Be ~ ee ats ’ ae “ This is true Liberty, wh See ee yew SERD CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAN ,\ A ? en Ed NS Lada rds V¥ UN, i HK. ISL ND. _ oe cS — oo ; j - sidisihaiiaiinaeiih i mipyDaR FOX AuuUSt, lol, | SACIIN A ‘> v ; YM Wwreywss Q . a. | ESTABLISHED 1820 : ae | m . A. A KO’. MAE y) 3 2 Je \ E as ? { os , S ] . in a ays, 13.80, Bohs SE, —_—_(x)—— -— Seta dy, To.6 mam SWAT OTT A i ae san Sup l Ei Day: oay OF Wash rises set 1ses VN ienb | & £ a Ror] hw | ij eee 6 47)7 90 1 1 4 14 39 | ‘ j Oe is 24 i I 3i os —. 19 3 3 8,10 52 34} i a. y |S Bi soe Hl ALIFAS. NW. gs. ag y 20; 5 20/11 58 © | Ao OUR, Pi ——ix) ‘‘elebrated XX XXX and EXTRA . ym vasa in HADS., HAL? HHDS., and in 25, 20 and 16 GALLON CASKS < wane an “kids Cok Oe ae “9, < c xALLON CASKS, = Also, in BOTTLES—QUARTS and PIN ('S— packed, when required, in barrels contain- ing 4 dozen Quarts or 8 dozen Pints. SPeG1AL ae ; b smniningsinnicnntianicat Gh ames <uniajgheseanas ow Saw—jy27 o _— - rYa 4 4 &~ 2 > r orn oe! .- 7 q > . Lucrewss, coumaxpzr, (Cr Sulitings, Summer Underwear, VILL sai from Halifax every Mond 1 : . w ' W 2t10p.m., for Charlottetown, call-| SSE v 3 :igs. Gic. inxs at Canso, Arichat, Hawkesb H Port | i Hastings and Souris. Returning, v le ve |} Gharlotietown every Thursday afternoon, | — -—(s; -——- ailing at eame intermediate porta «ith the | aeeptien of Souris. For Freight, et®., apply to . . . vyY VV ‘ LAR by «Agent, oe 4 : Charicttetown, in 391 —ay - # + ~ ~ _ ont > a on eS ee = SP 8 uwuhgarmed hw 4 5 Si SRADS BY (eo een) 6 Gl RS “A at oe & 7 a & | a iG. & ¢ ~ 3 iP 3 herd » | 2 7 toa § HING HEALING. fasten’ Relief, Permaneni B Cie, Faiiure Imzossible. Many so-caliec di timpiy symptoms of such as headache, losing sun ofsme.lfoul breath, hawking g tad mitting, general feeiing of d4ility, ete. if you are troubled with any of these or Einéted symetonis, you have Catarrh, aad slould lose no fine precuring a bottle of ‘sal Bate. Be warned in 6 & a Neglected cold in head ¢ nae in Catarrh, followed ¥ ¥ coasumption and death. Sol by ail Gruggisis, or sent, Pest paid, on receipt of prico (& (eents and 6) byaddressing & FULFORD & CQ, y beaming ee WISNTON BREWERY fli, CHARLOTTETOWN, PEL ESTABLISHED 1846, ee ee W: have just o r Ju pened «.- Vaults of See ALES, brewe? in October, and ~ ye March, especially tor Summer We i extra quality and flavor. ton the ec rumtantly on hand Ales brewed lenin 2 Island Barley and English and bing ever ; "p3, at prices lower than any- The quality of oy Iv Wich Roglish ot : Ale will compare favor- oglish or the best imported. pg yHORRIS & HYNDMAN. Me ucinbeted do not sell our Casks. nine oe i plog them will be prosecuted. They | oF ship dand branded, and parties buy-§ } : M. cl « Ny 5~all Island prs lm . Cp OUND Awan Ho QUENT AND SHOOPING CO oS A ARS IN USE Wig ERICE25 PER BOTTLE tc. ; CO. PROPRIETORS \. John., N. B. Oupe ci COUGHS | NY en, an- a = ££” ow oe > ; ¥ _ oo Kad —_ , - nliedeaalibnie oe , July 27, 1891—dy & wky = FS! Se I ee + SS ag abe ety e Seen | ee *asteria is so well adapted tochildren that : Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, ; ; : Sour £ rach, Diarrhoea, Erictation, recommend it a rescripi Fills Btomiach, } ’ ses. éi- Ir vend it os superior to any p ption Worms, ives sleep, and ai knowntome.” H. A Aacure, M.D. page i111 Sa. Oxford St., Brocklyn, N. Y. 3 Without injurious medication, Tux Czntracr Company, 77 Murray Street, N. Y. Pn i Nar | : . . ; q a . ‘ The Dominion Government uavine taken the Duty off of Raw Sugar, BER & GOFF - sf (x) . ms real “7 have inarked all their Sugars down Greatly Reduced Prices. Re ee prices . > 7. Choice West India Sugar. see our elsewhere. = ow 2 R E> orcs ewe pune 25, 1891—eod&t wy ir... Fou WANTING A CHEAP WATCH Ange ne yi Se enh esi A GOLD OR SILVER a aes YOU WANTING A GOOD TIMEKEEE om win YOU WANT! NG A GOLD-ENGRAVED ae a : you WANTING A DIAMOND or — net oni YOU WANTING ANYTHING IN sana YOU WANTING YOUR waTtou eas YOU WANTING YOUR JEWELRY an YOU WANTING ANYTHING ENGRA tr SO, CALL 44 G. H. TAYLOR'S, NORTH Chariottetown, May 14, 1891. Charlottetown, « RE RE RE RE RE BRE RE | HALIFAX, N S—Bank of Montreal, ) at om »98 aE ust received this morn- ATE G aa? oe Ce Aw _— 5 000 pounds of this al os b abit? ah “Soa Ing, v, pe : efore buying SIDE OF MARKET SQUARE. Y Growing Too Fast become listless, frotful, without ener- gy, tm and Weak, Fertify and build thei up, by the use of sOFPS CF PURE COD LIVER Gil HYPOPFCSPHITES Of Lime and Soda. ; Pzlatable as Mik. As A PREVENTIVE OR CURE OF COUGHS OR COLDS, 18 ROTH THE OLB ANP YOUNG, IT 15 UNEQUALLED. Genuine made by Scott & Bowne, Belleville. ; | a Wrapper: at all Druggisis, 60c, and ) . * BANK OF BRITISH COLUMBIA. Iccorporated by Royal Charter, 1862. Ne er rn er err rue — Narr ener ner rere ae *) NO COLE MLD OO Cl el hl OE LO LOL MOA A OO ee — OER RARER OR ON ORO et On ee Capital Paid Up.......£600,000, $3,000,000 (With power to increase,) Reserve Fand......... 208,000, 1,040,000 Note Circulation Notice. In accordanee with the provisions of See 55 of the Bank Act, which comes into force on FIRST JULY proximo, this Bank has made arrange- ments whereby notes of the Bank wili be RH- DEEMED AT PAR by the following Banks at any of their Branches in the Dominion, viz :— Bank of Montreal, Canadian Bank of Com- merce, Imperial Bank of Canada, Bank of Nova Scotia, Traders Bank of Canada. Bank of Hamil- ton, Merehants Bank of Halifax, Halifax Bank- ing Co; Union Bank of Halifax and Commercial Bank of Manitoba. _ Arrangemenfs have been made with the follow ing Banks to ACT SPECIALLY AS AGENTS for the redemption of the Buani’s notes at the undermentionéd cities :— E NS5. Bank of Nova Seotia, Halifax Basking “o. Mer chants Bank of Halifax and Union Bank of Halifax. ST JOHN, N B—Bank of Montreal, Bank of Nova Scotia, Merchants Bank of Halifax and Halifax Banking Co, CHARKLOTIETOWN, P E I—Bank of Nova Scotia and Merchants Bank of Halifax. MONTREAL—Bank of Montreal, Canadiaa Bank of Commerce, Melson’s Bank. Bank Nova Scotia end Merchants Bank of Halifax. TORONTO—Bank of Moovtreal, Canadian Bank of Commerce, Imperial Bank of Canada, Molson’s Bank, Bauk of Hamilton and Traders Bank of Canada. ' WINNIP#G. Bank of Montreal, Imperial Rank of Canada, Molson’s Bank and Commercial Bank of. Manitoba, The Bank of British Columbia wiljl redeem at parths netesof each of the above mi -ntioned Banks at any of its Branches in British Columbia, WM, C. WARD, Victoria, B C, June 1, 1891. Manager, junel6—dy 3m Assembly of the Province of Prince Edward Island, made and passed in the fifty-fourth and fifty-fiftth sears of the reign of Her present Majesty Queen Victoria, Chapter Ten, iutituled *An Act to Amend the City of Charlottetown Incorporation Act,” and to decides as to its adop- tion or otherwise. In pursuance of the provisions of the above recited Act. l, the undersigned. ‘Thomas Heath Haviland, Mayor of the said City of Charlotte- town,do hereby give PUBLIC NOLICE that I havenominated and appointed Wednesday, 12th day August next, A. D. i89t, as the day for the PLEBISCITE VOTE to be taken upon the said Act, and that the same will be taken t tue several places following, that is to say :— In Ward No. 1,at or near Firs Engine House on King Street, between Great George and Prince Streets. In Ward No. 2, at or near the house of the late Thomas Connolly, opposite Mr. KR. ileartz’s Warehouse, Sidney Street, between Great George and Prince Streets. In Ward No. 3, at or near the Market House. corner of Kent and Queen Streets. In Ward No. 5, at or near the carriage shop of Carroll & McAleer, corner of Easton and Great George Streets, And at the said Election the Poll will be opened at nine o'clock in the forenoon, and con- tinue open until five o’clock in the afternoon of the same day. DESCRIPTION OF WARDS. Number One shall compris? all that part of Charlottetown which lies south of Dorchester Street, and the parcel of land formerly known as the Military Barrack Ground. Number Two shail comprise all that part of Charlottetown which lies south of Richmond Street and north of Dorchester Street. Number Three shall comprise all that part of Charlottetown which lies south of Grafton Street and north of Richmond Street, Number Four shall comprise all that part of Charlottetown which lies south of Fitzroy Street and north of Grafton Street. Number Five shall comprise all that part of Charlottetown which lies north of Fitzroy Street, including the Common of the said Town. QUALIFICATION OF ELECTOI:S. Sec. i2 of 54 and 55 Victoria, Ciiapter 1) :— ist. “Any person entitled by law to vote for Mayor of the said City at the last C:-yiz Elec- tion.” De vynd. ‘Or any person who shall have paid the tax which entities him to vote at any time before he actually polls his vote under this Act. MANNER OF VOTING. See. 11 of 44 and 55 Victoria, Chapter 10:— Pell shall vote either *FOR written inthe Poll Book under an appropriate head.” L. S.J T. HEATH HAVILAND, Mayor of the City of Charlottetown. .M. DAVISON, - City Clerk. Mayor’s Office. Charlottetown, July 20, 1891. july 2i-—dy 12i wky 2i ‘ er3 for “The Life of Sir Jobn,” nephew, Col. Macpherson, A. vb. Cc tes, is the a: ond the late Premier revised the M3S for large territory made with Firms or Genera nts highly recommended. for the Dominion. 3 i BoEG TT ON ‘and receive a warm-hearted welcome from Rev. Ernest Bayne, well known in many NDER provisions of an Act of the General | 1 In Ward No. 4. ator near the new City Hall, “K Elector offering himself at his proper Paea cae a & THE ACT” or “ AGAINST THE ACG?,” and his name sha‘l be in part before his death. Special agreements | ng House, St. John, N. B., Publishers PUBLISHING es ‘VACATION NOTES. A Trip to Cape Breton. Pot DESCRIBED. The Glendyer Mills. } | There are signs of activity at the \“* Mouth,” as the good people of Mabou call it. A fine whurf is being built and rapid preparations are making for the ship- ;ment of plaster in large quantities. The ‘enterprise of Col. Snow is developing this branch of industry, The supply is practi (cally unlimited, On every hand the white ‘gypsum crops out, here showing itself }through the green foliage, there on the bare hillside scantily covered with verdure; jagain the whole roadbed seems to have been scarped out of gypsum rock. It was pleasing to hear that contraets for large quantities had been secured, and the Do- minion Government, with that praise- worthy desire to assist in developing the resources of Canada, which the Conserva- tives have always manifested, have the steam dredge ‘*Canada” at work to improve the entrance, sothat the plaster can be readily and safely shipped. This is what Cape Breton needs. Were her magnificent resources developed, few islands of her size would be richer. From the wharf at the mouth the steamer follows a broader but still winding channel to Mabou proper, or ** The Bridge,” as it is usually called. The sail is a beautiful one, yet | would recom- mend the drive, which, though somewhat longer, lexds through some lovely pieces of scenery, with the water on one hand and on the other the hills rising up tii they }culminate in the distance in the table land jof Cape Mabou. The village of Mabou ‘contains some good stores, well stocked jand with goods inarked at moderate prices. | There are two hotels, a telegraph office and {post office combined, presided over by a ;most obliging and courteons cflicial, and a }public hail. Just as you cater the village, | lon your way from the ** Mouth,” you pass '@ large wooden chapel and convent, which | bear witness to the untiring zeal and energy jof our Roman Catholic brethren. Perched \in a commanding position, they are the first objects that catch the eye as you_approach the ** Bridge” by water. But our desti- ,nation is Hillsboro, three miles further on, ‘and bidding adieu to the good ship Hamb- lin, to whose narrow limits we have growa somewhat accustomed durivg our ten hours’ passage, we step into a comfortable carriage, and winding along a road scarcely | wide enough for two vehicles to pass with ! safety, we epjoy the cool evening breeze till we reach the hospitable manse | } | | | parts of the lsland, especially to our friends Murray Harbor, where he ministered faithfully for years. To say that the Mistress of the Manse is a daughter of the late Rev. Alex. Munro, the sainted pastor of Valleytield and Brown’s Creek, is enough ,to set any one’s mind at rest as to what a sojourn here means. Should these notes meet the eye of any members of the lite ,Mr. Munro’s congregation, they will under- stand me when I say that Mrs. Bayne walks in her mother’s footsteps and one can’t well say more than that. We were prepared to llike Mabou, but if any one thinks the pic- lture overdrawn they must remember that ‘in such a home things are, perhaps, seen through rose-colored spectacles, and after lall the effect of scenery without depends somewhat largely upen the state of mind ‘within. The charia of this whole district, ‘especially to one whose eye has grown accustomed to our level sweeps, is endless ,diversity of surface. As you stand upon ‘the winding road the hill rises abruptly «bove you to perhaps a hundred and fifty ‘feet in height, while on the other side it ‘sinks just as steeply into a ravine or gorge. |The whole hillside is clothed with trees, ‘and dimly through the foliage you catch glimpses of the brawling brook far below, whose hoarse murmur is borne to your ear cn the breezes. The cool recesses of the woods, the play of light and shadow in the quivering leaves, the rustling of the breeze in the tree tops, the white foam flakes on the brook as it dashes on in its rocky bed, contrasting with the dark green of the foliage form a picture which one can so thoroughly enjoy during the warm summer days as to prompt him, for the moment ac least, to join in the resolve of the lotus eaters. “Let us swear an oath and keep it, with an equal mind, In the hollow Lotus land forever to live, and lie reclined, : On the hills, like Gods together, careless oi mankind.” Even the thought that summer si’ps 80 swiftly by, and that winter winds make these fair hillsides bleak, and howl mourn- fully among the leafless trees, but tends to add to the enjoyment of the present scene Follow the road a little further, and the hill sinks into a broad plain of interval land, where the river winds through meadows almost breast high in natural lgrasses. The river banks are fringed with elms, the most graceful of the forest trees, with their long branches decked with airy drapery that hangs in graceful festoons almost tothe ground. When the slanting ‘evening sun shines through a clump of these ‘trees the effect is singularly beautiful, sug- | vesting a fairy palace fantastically decorated ' GENTS !—We are ready to appoint canvase- jand changing into new forms of aeatds be y his) z-phyr waves the pendent foliage with This biogra- the z-phyr waves the pei g he, fully illustrated, incluiiaz two fine steel : y only one written with Sir John’s perhaps ‘its gentle breath. It is aland of pastures, l grass grows not so well adapted as our Island ‘ ‘tor grain and root crops, but the fragrant luxuriantly even upon the Apply to EARLE gteep hillsides, aud the cattle in detiance of) fous the laws of gravitation, seem to find little an interested spectator, ‘or no trouble in grazing there. I was 'strongly tempted to examine their hoofs to see if Dame Nature, who seems to accom- | modate herself and her children to their | Surroundings, had not endowed the Mabeu jcattle with something answering to the | provision whereby a fly walks safely upon ;our ceilings, but discretion was the better | part of valor, It was hard enorgh to maintain one’s own equilibrium, and the thought that aslight push meant a descent of 100 feet or more,with a cold bath at the bot- tom, somewhat checked my ardor to make discoveries in natural history. Nowhere have I seen finer cattle, nowhere tasted sweeter butter, nowhere revelled in more abundant rich cream. If the breezes from the hills create.an appetite, nowhere can it be more readily satisfied ; and if one de- sires to add a few pounds to his weight, or put on an extra layer of fat as a precaution against the cold of a coming winter, I know of no place where it can be more readily done ; while, on the other hand, if you are over-burdened in this respect, climb the Mabou hills regularly, and I feel sure it will be equal to the training jockeys undergo prior to contesting races, and cer- tainly the process of reducing weight will be far more pleasant and healthful. The soil here is heavier than ours, and though it costs more trouble to bring it under cultivation it holds manure better and is easier to keep in good heart. Then owing to the large stock kept on the farms, the manure problem is not so difficult a question as itis with us. The farm houses areas arule large and comfortable, and the barns are model iastitutions, commodious in their dimensions and kept with care and neatness. The hospitality of the people seemed to the writer boundless. Oa all sides there were iuvitations and one had to remind his good friends occasionally of Sir Boyle Roche's famous adage: ‘‘No man, unless he be a bird, can be in two places at once,” while the ample provision and urgent solicita- tions of husts would almost have justified the wish of the London alderman ou Lord Mayor’s day. Reading in a book of natural bistory that, by a wonderful provision of nature, the camel was furnished with seven stomachs, he exclaimed—‘*Prodigious ! I wish I were a camel myself,” For real enjoyment give me @ picuic, got up as our American cousins say, by the good people of Mabou, and they know how to get them up, including a drive by one of their pretty roads to Mabou coal mines, an afternoon spent ia exploring the beauties vf that charming spot, a Mabou luncheon and a drive home in the cool of the e © ing. Such «a day will be a bright spot in u Lietime, There are two places which every tourist should visit and which demand more than a passing notice. The first of these is Glendyer, the seat of the Mabou woolen mills. It would be hard to find a prettier spot, the vlen which is but the level bottom through which the river runs, flanked on both sides hy steep hills, whos» trees, from a little distance, almost seem to overlap and shade the valley below, and, right in ‘the heart of this veritable Arcadia, the busy hum of life, the rush of the water wheel, the hiss of steam, and the whirr of the spindles and busy looms, At first thought it seems almost like » desecration of the lovely valley, but if the old Roman was correct in saying ‘He has gained every point who has united the useful with the beautiful,” certainly the Mc- Doneld Brothers have achieved the feat. Are you an admirer of the beautiful ? Stand at any point yon please and gaze around. Is the useful the objeet of your search? Walk through the mill and see how rapidly and skilfully the raw material is transformed into fabrics which find their way all through Nova Scotia and Cape Breton, and even farther, for if you wish to inspect the quality ,I have no doubt Messrs. John Mc- Leod & Co., Queen Street, can show you a good sample of Glendyer cloth. Pluck, combined with industry and skill in this day, must come to the front, and here you will find all three. ‘To know the enter- prising members of the firm is to like them, and to see the neat white cottages clustering round the mills is a sufficient evidence that those em- ployed in the various departments of work, share in the prosperity which has attended the enterprise. But one thing more is needed. Vieit the beautiful home of Mr. Walter McDonald, the senior member of the firm. Enjoy the graceful hospitality of his charming wife, and the effect of a day spent at Glendyer will be complete. Foremost in every good word and work, long may the McDonald Bros. increase in prosperity, for their success means the progress of all that tends to the true eleva- tion of the district, J 2+ }++ vrurS At next session of the English House of Commons a resolution will be introduced favoring the conclusion of a treaty between England and the United States by which the two nations agree to submit to arbitra- tion all differences that may arise between them and which they are unable to adjust through the usual diplomatic channels. The French have the only navy in the world that has as yet departed from whiteto black in painting their ships. The vessels of the French fleet now cruising about the European ports are all painted a dull, sulphurous gray, exactly the color of can- non smoke as it issues fromthe gun. The contention of the French is that this color has the advantage of being as allusive and indistinguishable in fogs and sea mists and darkness as during the smoke of battle. It is more baffling to the search light than any other tint. Official advices from Santiago, Dechili, state that the rebels who are in possession of the Northern Provinces ia whic) are situated the enormous nitrate doposits which have added so greatly to the wealth of Chili, are working the deposits and sell- ing the nitrates. The Balmacedan cruiser Almirante Lynch has cruised along the northern coasts and reports that she saw little signs of military activity on the part of the Insurgents. Oa Sunday last the authorities issued orders for the mobilisa- tion of the forces. Within eight hours 12,- 000 loyalist troops, 1,000 cavalry and artillery. with 50 guns were within easy distance of the city. A sham bsttle was fought, of which President Balmaceda was ere 8 i meager