ttt a i iat i he ee all . ee | | Tue Darty EXAMINER. AUGUST 23, 1882. Tue special dispatches to Tur Ex- AMINER, though interesting to-day ,contatn nothing of paramount importance con- ceruing military movements at the theatre of wer. General Wolseley telegraphs that his mew are getting into position for battle and that a fight is imminent. France is growing defiant and restless over the course that Eugland has adopted, aod blows off her superfluous steam in streams of newspaper rhetoric on the tyraony aud duplicity ot England. The visit of the Priace of Montenegro to the Czar forebodes complications, and is a new move in this Turkish game. EL The Home of Intrigues. Dreromacy at Constantinople, daring the past months, has preseuted to the world astrange story. Lord Dafferia, with unrivalled aptitude for diplomatic work, has held endless parleys with the Porte, aud has been dexterous enough to cover the hard steel hand of England with the softness of a velvet glove. Io September last the Sultan told him that “in his opinion, Englaud and Turkey ought to pursue the same policy. Eng- land was a great Mussulman Power, and the friendship of Turkey must be necessarily advantageous.” ‘The end ot the parley is the present crisis. For some time France played an important part there. Everything seemed favor able to her, and there were vague whis perings and obscure symptoms of inde- pendent and uvexplaived action between France, the Sultan, and Egypt. A ghost came along, in the shape of Bismarck, and frightered the Frenchman from the seat of intrigue. Such a hasty retreat has seldom been recorded. With the use the Bismarckian influence, even Spain and Holland got a hearing. They expressed, all at once, a pe uliar interest in the Turk, and in the waterway which is the highroad to their considerable Eastern possessions. Italy and Austria have been there quietly waiting for special advantages. Russia has been savagely active, but not more Machia- vellian than her neighbors, but still creating an exciting stir. She professes ao undying frievdship for Turkey, and has even rendered the payment of he: war indemnity easy to that country. Russia’s evideat desire is to see Turkey fighting. For the Turks to fight means the weakening of Turkey, and the weak- eving of Turkey means Russian predom- inance in Asia Minor. Russia has already hinted to Bismarck that ‘ after the Egyptian question that of Asia Minor must be regulated.” Bismarck was cautious and returned the evasive ans- wer ‘that the proposal must come from the Porte.” This points at the aims of Russia, and shows thet she may reason- ably be suspected of hostile designs. Turkey seems to be drifting farther away from England, and wilt probably awake to the fact that, after all, the best thing for her would have been to follow the course mapped out for by England. Vanity. A rew days ago the Canadian and the American papers had long accounts of the placing uader the ban of ecclesi- astical ceasure, the bangs and frizzes of fashionable belles. The Bishop of Three Rivers was announced asthe dreadful woman hater. As we suspected, the story was not correct. The frizzes, the pull backs, that dainty back curl, and the 25 buttoned glove, and other wemaa- ish vauities of the day remain supreme The greatest objection that can be made tothem is that they are vanities and extravagances, and that they seldom add anything to the natural beauty of the fair sex. Beauty is heightened by taste- (ul simplicity, and never receives addition from frizzes and bangs. When the men get their chance, they are worse thau the women. Tue receipts of the United States Government for the current fiscal year are estimated at $450,000,000 or $45,- 000,000 more than in the preceding year. The appropriations made at the recent session of Congress reached $297,- 000.000, so that the surplus is likely to approach $150,000,000, all of which will be applied to the reduction of the debt, by the payment of the extended 5 per cent. bonds, The authorities of Winnipeg, having in view the remarkable growth of the capital of Manitoba, its increased im- portance io the near future, and the necessity of protection against fire, have entered into arrangements which when completed, will place that city in pos- session of avery complete system of fighting fire. Exclusive of wages, or the annual cost of maintenance, the expen- diture on the fire department of the city for the year 1882 is placed at $150,000. > 2 =. — Tue railway returns for the United Kingdom, just issued, state the total ex- tent of railways in the United Kingdom at 18.175 miles, an increase of 242 miles during the year. The tota! paid up eapital is £745,528,162, of which ordinary stock stands at £275,.935,904. aon total cost per mile is thus £41,935,- 8. Accorbineé to a Halifax despatch, the output of coal from the Nova Scotia mives during the quarter ended June 4, by official re urns, amounted to 325,182 tons, an increase over the output during the same period last year of 57,778 , tons, Cape Turner, P. H. I. Extending from Rustico Harbor to Cav- 'endish Sand-hills is a rocky stretch of coast, lashed by the full fury of the Guf waves. There are fishing stations all along it. But the buildings have to be placed high, on the top of the cliffs; and, every night, with launchway and capstan, the boats have to be hauled up, for safety, too. The loftiest part of this cost-line, ex- tending farthest into the surges of the Gulf, is Cape Turner, a headland of red sand- stone rock, towering a hundred feet above the wave. The strata are of no great hard ness of texture, except the bed at the foot of the escarpment, which is a firm calcari- ous sandstone. This has most effectually resisted the charge of the waves, and stands out from its base, like an iron pedestal, on which is reared the giant bulk of the cliff. The view from the top of the Cape, on a bright summer day, is very fine. The broad blue sea, studded with the white sails of the fishing fleet—for this is the very centre of the Bay fishery ;—the scene along the coast, of projecting red points, and white sand dunes, and the far blue buik of Cape Tryon, all girdled by the foaming border of the deep. At the foot of the precipice, far below us, we hear the heavy surge of the waves among the rocks ; and out in front of it, where are some sunken rocks in deep water, the rollers burst round them in a perfect whirlpool of foam, and, with cataract plunges, roar deep thunders in the abyss. Fair forms of beauty, too, adorn its awful brow. The little yellow trefoil spreads a golden carpet over its summit; and the bank swallows, which have their nests in its face, sweep and whirl, and circle so gracefully through the sunny air about it, that they seem to weave wreaths of airy plumes to adorn this stern monument of nature. The strata here are horizontal, snd the same beds are bound all along the coast from Rustico to New London. They are the uttermost beds on the Island, and velong to the Triassic system. They are also the newest rock system in the Maritime Provinces. Beginning at the Cobequid Mountains in Nova Scotia, and ‘ravelling northwards towards this point, we successively pass over newer formations, as we leave the mountains and approach the Gulf. On the mountains we have granitic and metamorphosed rocks, and the rocks of the Silurian system; then some beds of the Devonian on their flanks, At their feet the conglomerate and limestones of the Lower Carboniferous appear, and stretching across the plains of Cumberland is the Middle Carboniferous, which con- tains the rich deposits of coal ; while near the coast we find the members of the Upper Carboniferous, grey beds mixed with red. Then crossing the Strait, on the south side of our Island, we have beds of the Permian formation, and last arrived on the north coast, about Turner, we find ourselves ameng the horizontal beds of the Triassic. From remote ages, the bed of the Gulf has been a great area of subsidence. Since the beginning of the Carboniferous period, it has gone down twenty thousand feet. If at that time, the highest peak of the rocky mountains had been placed in the Gulf, its top would now be sunk six thousand feet below the level of the sea. And that great depth has been filled up with the slow accumulation of sediment washed from the adjacent lands. Who can tell the eternity of time necessary for the accowplishment of this? And yet this is only asmall part of the geological ages. The deep ether lit with the blaze of count- less suns and systems, does not open to the gaze of the astronomer more fully the in- finitude of space, than the geological records open up the infinitude of time. What grand records of that past eternity do the rocks contain! And what eternal truths will we yet learn from them, when their story comes to be fully understood Between Turner and St. Peter’s Island, in Hillsborough Bay, there must be about four thousand feet,verticle depth, of strata. We do not know the duration of time which this represents. But we do know that it was long enough to change the whole complection of the vegetabie forms of the district. Along the shore about Cape Turner are found some traces of fossil plants. They occur chiefly in a bed of sandstone, stained yellow with carbonate of iron. The fossils themselves are sometimes coated with ferangineous oxide. We found the re- mains of pine trees with strenbergia piths, knorria, calamites and limbs of tree ferns, all of which were of different species from those found cn the south side of the Island. Mere fragments they were, coming down to usfrom the dim eternity of the past. But enough te tell of waving forests, aud of crowding thickets of tree-like reeds, and fern trees, whose delicate fronds filled the summer sky with wreathed plumes of fairy- like beauty. A world of beauty then, as now, clothed with intelligent beneficence. ee Freight Receipts at Moncton Sta- tion, I. C. R. The following is a statement of the receipts at Moncton station of the I. C. R. for the four months ended July 31st :— FORWARDED. KECEIVED. April— 1881 $2,546. 43...000 000000000 $3.288.43 1882 Bateneve cohecoous 6,621.61 May— 1881 $2,245. G3..ccccccccccese 4,585.02 1882 2,019, 84....00.-0000008 7,600,09 June— 1881 $2,277.58....2+sceccerse 2,854 22 1582 1,873.94 ..000- sesesesee 5,463.26 July— 1881 $2,115.18........cccccee 4,485.02 1882 DOO iri tins banc cdik, 7,600 68 Total receipts for freight for four months $33,141.05. Increase over corresponding four months of last year $10,307 80. Not so bad after all. ———— ee -ee Oanada’s Correspondence, Canadians wrote 72,000,000 letters and post-cards during 1880. This would give an average of 18 letters per head. The average number of letters per capita written in Great Britain during the same year was 37, and the average in the United States was 22. Canadg was therefore beaten in the extent of her correspondence by the Mother Country and by her southern neighbors. She, however, surpassed the Netherlands, whose average was 17 letters per head, Belgium, whose average was 16, Germany, whose average was 18, and France, whose average was 14.—Muil. ames coin entity ae aay Fuller Particulars from the teat of War. os The London News has the following from Suez:—Have just returned from Shaloof, when I witnessed a fight in which 250 of our men, = cluding highlanders, blue jackets fand marines brilliantly defeated twice their number of the enemy. The fight lasted from 11 o'clock Sunday morning until nearly 5 o'clock, p.m. The firing of the Highlanders was remarkable for coolness and steadiness. The Gatlings on the tops of the gunboat worked with admirable pre- cision and did much execution among the enemy, who advanced to within 106 yards of the banks of the Canal. The success was all the more brilliant owing to the extremely difficult nature of the country, which abounded with low ridges and water courses, Lieut. Long, of the Highlanders, gallantly crossed the fresh water canal 10 the face of the hot fire and brought back a boat, thus enabling the companies, each of Highlanders and Marines, to cross and take the enemy on the right flank. The fenemy fought bravely. Their commander was killed. Cae General Wolseley is now reconnoitering at Nefiche. The second army division has been order- ed to hold itself in readiness fur a pursuit of the enemy in the event of their retreat. Reuter’s telegram telegraphs that the Khedive decree charging Cheuf Pacha with formation of a ministry says : ‘In troubled times like the present the direct action of the sovereign’s authority should become more sensible and manifest, | shall, there- fore, use the right to assemble the council of ministers under my own presidency. As supreme chief of the Egyptian forces I al- ways iatend to render my command effec- tive without, however, restricting the power which the Minister of War holds for for me,” The main body of Arabs, 2,500 strong, gone to Geneffe, taking with it a quantity of railway stock. ji A further report from Admiral Hewitt, dated Suez, 6.15 p. m., yesterday, makes killed and 62 prisoners. The latter include 27 wounded. The Daily Telegraph's Constantinople correspondent says: The Porte refuses to permit the exportation from Turkey, of mules, for British service in Egypt. Lord Dufferin states that this is a contravention of treaty rights and has addressed a strong protest to the Porte, stating that Turkey will be responsible for heavy damages. The company has refused to send pilots on board men-of-war. The British occupy Retich. The Arabs have abandoned Ghe mileh and withdrawn to Damietta. The transport Calabria, from Alexandria, with the cavalry, have arrived here. Said Pacha has abandoned the idea of reconvoking the conference. He has pro- mised Lord Dufferin that he will strongly urge the Sultan to accept the conditions of the Military Convention, which the British declare indispensable. The principai one, which is that Turkey shall not undertake any operation in Egypt without the assent of the British Commander. The British have evacuated the offices of the canal company. Traffic of the canal will be only temporarily suspended, in order to allow the British vessels to pass. saints Shiliieaialineate table The Celtic Conterence in Session. The conference of delegates from the Celtic Conference was held at Dublin on the 21st inst. Justin McCarthy, member of Parliament for Longford, presided. On motion of Mr. Sexton, member of Parlia- went for Sligo, an executive committee was formed, including representations of the Irish Parliamentary party and pro- mninent members of the Land League. The Conference adopted an address to Parnel! expressing determination to found an asso ciation which would extend to the different classes in Ireland. These efforts which hitherto have proved so fruitful in the direction of land reform. The Corporation vf Dublin passed a resolution in sympathy with Gray. The resolutions described Gray’s imprisonment as arbitrary and oppressing, and expresses the opinion that proceedings for contempt should be re gulated by statute. Conservative members of the Corporation were absent from the meeting which passed the resolution. -_—_- one Rome to Ireland. A letter from the Pope to the Irish Bishops, dated August 1, is published His Holiness, expressing his profound regret that tranquillity has not been restored in Iceland and that murders continue to be committed says :—‘‘ The Irish people, by following the advice of their prelates, may hope for the alleviation of the ills from which they suffer, A just cause must be upheld by just means. Secret societies must be shunned, In the words of St. Angustine, ‘The first characteristic trait of liberty is the non-commission of crimes.’ The priests ought to be active supporters of public order during the present troubles.” The latter concludes by expressing the hope that the English government will do justice to the equitable claims of the Irish people, remembering that the pacification of Ireland constitutes an element of tran- quillity in the whole empire. —— oe Personal. Jupck James, of Nova Scotia, has been sworn in as Judge in Equity. Mr. Lone, the American Consul, was as- saulted by Arabs in Alexandria. It is said that Bostonians use the word *‘ocean,” but never the word “sea.” ADMIRAL NICHOLSON denies the report that he notified the Egyptians he would reply in kind if they fired on his ships, Sik Jonny Rosk and Mr. G. W. A. Her. bert, one of the permanent secretaries for the colonies, left for Montreal, on Saturday last, cn route for England. It is stated that Commander Jeffrey's, of the torpedo school at Portsmouth, wil! take command of the gun boat Condor which Lord Beresford vacates on account of his promo. t on. _ DeFreyctner, the ex-French Premier, con- siders the Egyptian question will soon be settled by England with the assistance sh- will receive from the Soudan d the Shei El Sanousi. ~ oe Tue Saturday Review says it is conceded that the New Yorker takes unwarranted liberties with the canons of pronunciation current in the old country and that he habitually indulges in expressions more the enemy’s loss in fighting at Shaloof, 168: ed fan, Music ee 2 ln THH DAILY HXAMINER, AUGUST 23, 1882 NOTES. Four prominent Reformers of North Ha t- ings, Ont., are to be proceeded ayainst for corrupt practices, Tue Pall Mall Gazette strongly denounces the sentence passed on Mr. Dwyer Gray as a scandal of the first magnitude. THe Customs Department have, it is under- stood, added a number of special detectives to to the force already employed, with a view of more effectually checking smuggling across the burder in the future. Yettow Fever,—The reports of this dis- ease in many Southern ports, have induced the health «flicer in New York to make care- ful preparations to enforce through quaran- tine, A MORTGAGE deed of $1,140,000, said to be the largest individual mortgage on record, was executed in New York, last week. The mouey borrowed is to be invested in mam- moth apartment houses, SFARCUES for arms in Ireland are generally fruitless, The weapons, well-greased, are wrapped in what may be callled waterproof paper, and buried in a tilled field, the owner alone knowing the precise spot, as crop is grown upon it. Mar. N. Z. Lorrain, of Ottawa, has re- ceived the Papal bull appointing him Bishop of Cytherea in partibus and Vicar-General of Pontiac. His consecration will probably take place on the 2ist September. In the township of Guysborough, N. § there are 440 inhabitants, comprising 83 families. There are 30 families with only three p:rsons in each family. There are 20 persons 70 to 90 years ef age, and twenty persons 60 to 70 years of age. A youne lady in Toronto, named Priestly was to have been married jn Toronto, on Tuesday, her lover coming from Texas to claim her, but she died Jast Tuesday of typhoid fever, and her funeral was postponed to permit the attendance of her lover. Ata recent English wedding the brides- maids wore dresses of pale primrose surah, with broad brown silk sashes and sprays of wild flowers and hats to match; they each carried a bouquet of wild flowers, also an ivory mount- presented by the brid groom and painted by the bride. THE census of 1874 showed that in New- foundland there were 18,935 children attend. ing school. This gave an attendance at school of about one in eight of the population. The population is now 155,000, and the num- ber now in attendance is 24,971, or about one in seven of the population, In New Haven Conn., at 842 State street resides Major}Russell W. Norten. For years the Major had been troubled with sciatic rheumatism, and at last found substantial re- lief by using St. Jacobs Oil, after everything had failed to do him good, He thinks the Great German Remedy is a capital thing, aud recommends it highly. Special Notices. _A CLERK with some experience, will find a situation by applying by letter to P. O. Box 212. Must be well recommended. {au 22 | For Sate—Three thoroughbred collie pups, Pedigree guaranteed. Price twenty dollars rch. Apply at this office. —3i pd Our Boots and Shoes are taking the lead.— Lorsgy, Gorr & Co, Koos —Highest cash price paid for Eggs at Beer & Gots. _ F tha 22 HOTEL ARRIVALS. RANKIN HOUSE, Mr and Mrs McLelan, Ottawa; Miss Mc Lelan, do; Miss Colby, do; Miss Colby, do; TE Whelan, do; F J Craig, Halifax; J 8 Leskey, Toronto; JC Mulligan and wife, Bath, Me; BH Locker, Beston; J Emory Hoar and _ Brookline, Mass; Miss Elizabeth Baker, 0. } ST. LAWRENCE HOTEL. August 19—Jas Webster, city; Mrs W A Chapinan, Boston; George Tait, Halifax; Miss Laurange, Boston; E NS Lavers, New York. 22—Mrs L Conroy, Tignish; Miss Conroy, do; Miss Hlowlan, do; D Finch, Boston; § Schurman, New Glasgow, N 8; E L Hedge- wood, Montreal. OSBORNE HOUSB. August 22—Robert Glover, Summerside; Miss Martin, Boston; A J Strachan, Halifax; John A Smith, Egmont Bay; Alex Campbell, do; D Rogers, Summerside; J B Sheffoer, Halifax; Wm Brown, Port Mulgrave; Robert Brown, do; Arthur P Currier, Boston; Daniel McPhee, do; Mrs Carr Bangor, Me. 23-- Murdoch McKinnon, Lot 14; Joseph Wight- man; St Andrew’s Point; Richard A Thorn- ton, do; R © McRae, Pinette. MILK COWS. By Auction, Next Friday, Aug. 25th, AT 12 o'clock, Noon, ; IN FRONT OF THE MARKET HOUSE, 1 Large White COW, 1 Black and White COW, 1 Red and White COW, 1 Red COW, Terms cash, all giving Milk. A. McNEILL, Auctioneer, Apples, Peaches, Melons, BY AUCTION. | Will Sell To-Morrow, Thursday, 24th AT Il O'CLOCK, a, M, AT MY SALESROOM 40 barrels APPLES, 20 crates PE At ‘HES, 100 WATER MELONS. Te: ms strictly cash before delivery of goods, W. D. STEWART, Auctioneer, Aug. 22, 18829} 4ug. 23, 82. Cece convent of Notre Dame, Charlottetown, P. F. I, STUDIES will be resumed MONDAY, Sept.4 Terms per Session of five months: %oard & Tuition, English and French, $32.00 betel bh ia tiihisins ctecsn as te ERTS 10,00 Aug 23 18s2-—eod till 4th Sept. Je PRINTING of every description, executed with Neatness and Despatch forcible than elegant. at the EXAMINER JOB PRINTIN ROOMS, cor. Water and Great George Birdos EXTRAORDINARY —AT THE— LONDON HOUSE. We have purchased Forty- four Cases and Bales of English and Scotch Goods, recently imported and not delivered to the party order- ing them. These Goods have been bought at a great advantage, and we shall clear them out at extraordinary low prices for Cash. GEO. DAVIES & CO. July 11, 1882—wkly Se NOTICE JUDGE REDDIN Opposite the Raiiway, Dwelling House, Stables, and large Ware- house, The property fronts 170 feet on Water and 100 feet on Weymouth Street. Also, Horses, Carriages, &c. siysnsinatalipullniapaniinnssiniipdienase diiliiiles acuhiiaiaiie HIORSES WANTED. R TABOR will be at the Osborne House from the 22nd to the 26th, and will buy 2) draft and carriage horses weighing from 1050 to 1300, Ch’town, Aug, 17, 1882, in os sie SHOP AND DWELLING, 5 rooms, on Great George Sireet. A good stand for a Dress Maker, Apply to H. COOMBS, Aug. 18—~3i eod TO LET. HE Shop and Wareroom sear the Woollen Factory, Malpeque Road. There isa good Cellar some 30 feet equare under the Building, and it is well acapted for a produce and provision trade, H. COOMBS. Aug 18—3ieod TO LET e fFLHE COOPER SHOP on Euston Sireet, near Malpeque Road. Apply to H, COOMBs, To Lime Burners ! For Sale—400 Tens of PLYMOUTH BEST ENGLISH LIMESTONE, To arrive by Brig ““ALPHETA,” due here about the 15th inst,, and by Brig “ZINGA,” due here about the 20th inst, PEAKE BROS. & CO, Ch’town, llth Aug., ’82—2w 3iaw. INCREASE ¢ YOUR CAPITAL. Thos: desiring to make money on siralland medium investments in grain, provisicus and stock speculations, can do so by oper- ating on our plan. From May lst, 1881, to the present date, on in- vestments of $10.00 to £1,000, cash profits have been realized and paid to investors amounting to several pipes the Original invest- ment, still leaving the original in- vestment making money or pay- able on demand. Explanatory cir- culars and statements of fund W sent free. We want 1esponsible agents, who will report on crops and introduce the plan. Liberal comniss'ons paid. Addrega, een : PEGEILAM, Som. m on erehan or fee i SN a $10 $20 WHEAT $50 STOCKS $100 Clifton Farm for Sale, L have decided to offer my valuable farm for A sale at public auction, on Thursday, the 23rd day of Augusi, if not disposed of before. Above furm consisis of 70 acres more or les, most of which is clear and in ah gh state of cultivation, situated in Lot 48, cne mile from Southport, known as ‘ Kelly’s Cove.” and also convenient to Market, Churches aad Schools, ALBERT KELLY, Wishes to Sell or Rent His Property THE P. B. ISuAND EXHIBITION WiLL BE HELD ar Tae Drill Shed & Governep's ai CHARLO iicTOWN, OV Wednesday & Thnreds 11th and 12th, October neyg. Amission Tickets—Adultg 20 conte » Obj dren under 12 years 10 centg s For full particulars get Prize List ¢ a ing Rules, R gulations, etc, to be had applying to the Secretary of Prince ri , Exbibition at Summerside —the Secteiar Kinu’s County Exhibition at Cardigen + ¢ Market Clerk, harlottetown ;and ae ’ Secretary's Office, Charlottetown, ; . A ot L Secretary Provincial Reh Queen St., Ci..own, Ang. 23, 1882, wie UNICN BANK STor TNO be sold by AUCTION, on BRy NEXT, at 12 o'clock, "a the | scriber’s Room, Queen “quare,— oa 40 shares in the Union Bank of ward Island. WILLIAM Dopp, 4 & Ang. 22, ’82. Steam Tug Winnie Fy be sold by AUCTION, on NEXT, 29th inst, at 12 @elosk she new lies at Steam Navigstine Wharf, the Steem Tug Winnie, of abor or {2 tous measurement. i Sale positive. WILLIAMTI Ang. 22, 1882, A uctiones NOTICE, MEETING of the Georg A of the Liberal-Conservative will be held at their rooms on MONT 28th inst , at 7 o'clock p. m., for the tion of business, ey A punctual attendance is uested, a By order of the Comeniiii ; Aug, 22, 1882—8i HERRING JUST ARRIVED, 300 Barrels Prime, Large and T. J. FARQ Queen St., Aug. 17, 82. TO TOURIST WILL hire my Barow be and & Victoria one-! corse teem Careful Orders left at my store orat A, Auction Room will be atvended to. will attend at any of the Hotels and deg: ei gewee OY city, dation of summer vi © for instructions and terms, | H,C | Aug, 18—pat 3i Covent of the congregation Yotre Dame, geo? | FREI err NTUDIES will be resumed in this tion on ‘the first of September a Pupils may enter as boarders on very ace terms. August 17th, 1882. WANTS, LOST, FOUND, yj |; AN TED-— A Nurse-maid to go #® John.—High wages; good required. Apply to Mrs. T, 8, Pete ® Hon. Judge Peters, Sidmont. a22 ee \ ANTED IMMEDIATEL Y— Twodinig room Girls in Hotel. Apply sat Examryga Oflice, aug. hE OST—(n Saturday evening, the 2 inst., @ Black Worsted Coat, doné up” parce], aud addressed, The finder : rewarded by leaving it at this Office, aut W ANTED, for an office, an intell Boy, about 15 years of age, who write a good hand. Apjly in a handwriting, at Examnex ¢ fice, au ive ANTED, by the first of Sept, a Nani mai*, Must be well recommended, Ap ply to Mrs Gray, Inkerman House, av la \ ANTED IMMEIATELY, a steal young man to drivea tam to and fom Rustico. Apply at the Fish Market, Graftet Street, Charlottetown, au 18 sea \ ‘ ANTED TO F XCHANGE, « Singlet a Double, or Vis-a-vis Wagon. Ht Coomes, au 183 rgsO SELL OR TRADE FOR A HORSRE Pediar's Wagon, 1 very Light Expr Wagon,] sulkey, | American Driving wa very light.—H. Coomns. au 184 ANTED, Bricklayers to work oD the Moncton Cotton Mill, Apply to De Durry, Moncton, N_ B. au 18 i AY ANTED, a widdle aged capable pe son a8 Housekeeper in a small family Apply by letter Box 43, Post Office, or Pe senally at the office of this paper. [au 16 : ae OARDERS can be accommodated in ® private Boarding House, with parlor amt two Bedrooms, Rovums large, airy, and wer venlilated, Situation the best in the a Apply at the Examiner oflice. e— FWXHE SUBSCRIBERS have about $3000 ef the Bank of P. E. Island Notes @” hard for sale. ‘ HAMILTON & SMITH. > Shediac, N. B., 9th Ang., 1882. aug! (tx HOTEL TO L&T— Ths Hoel B” finely situated, standing opposite r Bishop's Palace, on the hig*est ground It contains 37 roo and being lixuous to the 8 eam NV Wharf, is admirably ad 1Cht > July 4, 1882, tf Terns easy, A & Cos, London H s2—pat tf~