etna: alpen Rigg AO MANS CLE PRE a ne - ae Re a eta ee OA IE AAG AEE a8 a . . . captains.) oe a5, tet san tli abe a Five Dottars a YRAR. NEW SERLES. Terms Tue Datty EXAMINER. IS ISSCEO BVERY EVENING, By rae Examiner Posiisumye Compayy, rroM THEIR Orrice, ConNER OF WATER AND GKEAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, . : ¥, Rates of SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, . - : * 60 Three Months, - - . 1 25 Qne Month, : ° 0 50 gar Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for wonthly, Broadcloth, quarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. Ss ALMANAC FOR OCTOBER, 1882. MOONS CHANGES, Third Quartet Sr@ day, 10h. 5m., p. m.,N.E. (below horizon. ) New Moon 22th day, lh. (below horizon. ) First Quarter, 19th day, 7h. 42m. a, m., S.W. Full Moon, 27th day, Ih. 5im., a m., S. E, ‘Sun Sun ‘Moon| Hi h Days | or yan ee WER ines | sets | rises | water lan’ h, hh: m h m) aft’n, aft’o) dates 6 4/5 38 8 87; 1 -22)1) 43) 2/Monday 5 9 36} 2 12) 3: T uesday ; 3 > 10 35! 3 5) 4|\Wednesday | 8 29,11 36, 4 13 5, Thursday 9 27 morn| 5 29 6| Friday 10| 25) 0 38) 6 38 7 \Saturday 12, 24) 1 40) 7 39) 8! Sunday | 14! Qe] 2 40! 8 25/11 23 9| Monday | 15} 20 3 40; 9 4 10| Tuesday 16} 18] 4 40) 9 39 il, Wednesday | 17; 16) 5 40/10 14 12’ Thursday 19) 14) 6 41/10 46 13 Friday 20° 12) 7 41)1 49 14 Saturday 21; 10) 8 41|11 5 5 15 Sunday 23; 9) 9 40) morn}ll 02 16 Monday 24, 7/10 36| 0 30 17| Tuesday 26 «Bj 2B) 1D 18;/Weithésday | 27; 3jaft 14] T 54) 19) Thursday 28} 1) 0 55] 2 44! 20 Friday 29) 0 130 3 49| 2))Saturday | Bl}4 58) 2 3) 5 5 22|Sanday 33 56| 2 346 3410 4} 23| Monday St 55) 3 4) 7 43 24 Tuesday 36; 53) 3 35) 8 38! 25) Wednesday | 37) 52)4 % 9 28 26) Thursday | 38 50) 4 47/10 13 27| Friday | 40) 48) 5 31:10 55 28'Saturiay | 41) 46) 6 23/11 39) 29'Sunday | 43| asl 7 20laft 21/10 21 30| Monday | 44) 44/8 22/1 4 31 i Teceday 6 ee 46\ 9 qa 1 49 General Commission Merchants Particular attention given to the sale of Island produce. 121 Atlantic Avenue & 20 Essex Avenue, BOSTON, MASS. May 27, 1882—wkly INSURANCE OFFICE. Queen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, City of London Fire Insur- ance Company. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptly and equitably. JAS. DESBRISAY, General Agent, Office—South Side Queen Square. Ch’ town, Sept. 15, 1882, Bank of Nova Scotia.! » ESTABLISHED 1832, Paid Up Capital . . $1,000,000 325,000 Reserve Fumd .. . An Agency of this Bank will be opened on Monday next, 19th inst., in the buildin letely oceupied by the Bank of Prince Edwar Island, under the management of the under- signed. Dagoctte will be received on interest, and on current account. Drafts granted on the varieus Agencies and correspondents of the Bank. Sterling and other Exchange bought and sold, and yeneral banking business transacted. E. Island. | | Will be sold as Cheap as Imporied, | ' | ‘Island. Prices. very moderate. The best. workmanship | suaranteed, Che ¢ Daily —— ~~ ‘* This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men having to » advae the Public, may dbooli is ott Meine a 133 ‘ CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, b, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4 1882, —_——- D. Pra. BRU cE, MERCHANT TAILOR, ! | Is now offering Cash Buyers the BEST VALUK that | can be had in the market, in W orsted, Scotch and Canadian | Tweed Suits. ' ' A magnificent range of =:<» GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, -~-—IN-— AMERICAN WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS, Collars, Ties, Underclothing, English and American Hats. Ow Readymade Clothing is Manufactured on the Premises, fashionably cut, well sewed, and having good trimmings, We invite you to inspect our Goods, D. A. BRUCE, Charlottetown, May 22, ’82. 72 Queen Street, 2 Se § Fi [ CO RRESPOADENt BE. im r We do not hold pe Feipaticiste} be ‘the op LNiONS OF statements of our correspondents. ne 2 a ee — AT— i Teaching on Saturdays. Greatly Reduced Prices, ee ANOTHER PROTEST, A “LARGE*LOT OF 5 0 the Editor of the Examiner. Dear S1k,—Occasionally, there creeps ‘into the.columns of your journal, a com- | MEN’S AND BOYS’ wwunication on the subject, ‘‘Teaching on | } ‘Hats, Gaps, Clothing, be; Saturdays,” from one of the despised 000 Straw Hats, | country teachers more spirited than the "300 Felt Hats, ‘rest. These communications prove conclu- 50 Caps, in Moth, Silk and Linen, ‘sively that teaching on Saturdays is not Boys’ Suits, ,approved of by the people, since they Men’s ( oats, Pantsand Vests, Sbirts, Linders and Drawers, Collars, Pie’; Braces, <c. Also, 3: ou Rolls Paper Hangings, Blinds, Borderings, &c. | As the subscribers are desirous of clearing lout the above Goods during the present ‘month, great bargains muy be expected tor rs cab, P. LePAGE & CO. Pay 5, Ase 2—wkly MORTBAGE SALE, ,TO be sold by “PUBLIC AUCTION, on TUESDAY, the second day otMay next, at the hour of eleven o'clock, in the fore noon, at the Court House in Charlotte- cown, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale Conta ined» in an Indepture of Mort- gage dated the twenty-sixth day of April’ A. D, 1880,@nd made between Albert Duchemin and Jemima Duchemin, his wife, and Edmund Duchemin and Emily Duchemin, his wife, of the one part, and Edward Jarvis Hodgson and Neil McLeod of the other part,— LL that tract, piece or parcel of land Youth’s Suits, ! j | “CITY STEAM BAKERY.”= “VT tec eas proprietor of this Establishment, owing to the incréased ' demand for his Goods, has added new facilities to his Hard Bread, Plain and Fancy Biscuits, &. AT THE SHORTEST NOTICE. . 1000 Ibs. CHOICEH CONFECTIONERY To arrive’per Steamship ‘“ Miramichi,” from Montreal. Ws Orders by mail promptly executed. J, QUIRK, Prince Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Islaud May 4, 1882. j eye +s For Scotch aad English Tweeds or Worsted Suits |. | For Canadian Tweed Suits, For Overcoats of all Descriptions, -GO TO- JOHN MACLEOD & CO’S vw as jU a he UV UY Db, UPPER QUEEN STREET, TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HALL CORNER There you will find the largest and best assortment of Cloths in the i a perfect fit —ALSo— A complete line of Gents’ Furnishings and Felt Hats, cheap,&e. &c. Remember the address, two doors above Ap theeariea Hall Corner Mharlnttatawn Ort +1 12! situate, lying and b: ‘ing in the City of Charlottetown, in Quee.’s ‘ounty, in Prince Edward Island, and being part of Town Lut | Number Twenty six in the second hundred of bop Lots in Charlottetown aforesaid, com- | mencing et the corner of Prince and Sidney Streets, and running southerly along Prince _— the distance of eighty-six feet, or until t reaches the northern boundary of land in Teuton of Thomas Alley; thence at right ~ Bakery, consisting of the latest and most impr ved machinery, vuzles with Prince Street easterly along the L ARTH UR & Co., — ands now prepared to supply* the tradé with’ said boundary eighty-six feet, or until it meets the division tine between Town Lots Twenty-six and Tventy-seven ; thence along said division line parallel with Prince Street northerly eighty-six feet, or to Sidney Street aforesaid, and thence westerly along Sidney Street eighty-six fret, to the place of com mencement, For further particulars apply at the oftice of Hodgson & McLeod, Solicitors, Charlotte town. Dated this 28th day of March, A. D 1882, EPWARD J. HODGSON, NEIL McLEOD, ALBERT DUCHEMIN, EDMUND DUCHEMIN. mar 29 law w, wkly The above sale is postponed till TUESDAY she 6th day of June next, 1882, then to come off at the same time and place, Dated the 2ud day of May, 1882, EDWARD J. HODGSON, NEIL McLEOD, ALBERT DUCHEMIN, EDMUND DUCH» MIN, jma 2 till sale) The above sale is postponed till FRIDAY, the 14th day of J uly next, 1882, then to come off at the same bour and place, Dated the 6th day of June, 1882. EDWARD J. HODGSON, NEIL McLEOD, ALBERT DUCHEMIN, EDMUND DUCHEMIN, | i The above sale is further postponed until, SATURDAY, the 25th day of November, next, to come off at same hour aud place. | Dated the 14th day of July 1882. EDWARD J, HODGSON, NEIL McLEOD, ALBERT DUCHEMIN, KUMUND DUCHEMIN, MORTGAGE SALE. TO be Sold by PU PUBLIC AUCTION, on SATUKUAY, the Twenty fifth day of, NOVEMBER next, A. D., 1882, at the hour of Twelve o’clock, noon, at the New Law Court’s Builaing, in Charlottetown, under and by virtue of a power of Sale, contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, dated the First day of March, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight bLundred | ‘ cussed. neylect or refuse to send their children to school op that day; that it seriously affects the average, and in most of cases, if not all, Occasions the deduction of salary’ for want of average; and that the work, done en that day is better not done at all, it being done very imperfectly. lt is also generally known that country teachers are compelled to teach, each year, about a month longer than city teachers, with less payy poorer school accommodation, less regular attendance, and harassed by - the numerous inconveniences and troubles which are generally associated with the lot of a country schooi teacher. Now, why tlis discrimination, | too ask, in common with the remaining abused portion of the profession. Teaching on Saturdays is unknown in the other Provinces ; then, why should we be behind the age? The point, to my mind is clear, teaching on Saturdays should be abolished. Why! Because as a relic of barbarism it should not be tolerated in our civihzed country, because the people will it, because the Chief Superintendent. of Education i has recommended it, and becanse the whole teaching fraternity request it in all jnstice. Let resolutions to this effect be passe 1 at the coming Convention ; and we ask yon, Mr. Editor, and your fellow mem- bers of the press, to favour us with your pen and show.up.the matter in its fairlight. Then if in the face.of all that.is reasonable and just the Government or Board of Educetion (whichever it is) persist in cenying us justice, a more decisive, firm, and united aciion must be taken. Yours truly, AnotHpe Country TEACHER. Belfast, Oct. 2nd, 1882. = Irish National Land League. | The Charlettetown Branch of the Irish National Land League held its. regular meeting in St. Patrick's Hall, on the 2nd inst., John Kelly, Esq., President, in the chair. A recent remittance of $50, forwarded to the Treasurer of the I, N. Land League, was announced. Mr. C. D. Collins delivered an address on the progress of the Land. movement, showing the advanced views of the leaders of public opinion in the various countries where the subject is understood and dis- It is now conceded that the object of the Landlord. and .their allies is. the extermination of Irish peasants who are unable to avail themselves cf the small share of relief afforded by the Land and Arrears Acts. The address was warmly received. Mr. J. L. Trainor read an essay on the ‘* Physical Endurance of the LIrish Race,” in which was demonstrated the capacity of lhishmen to work in all climates and prosper under favorable circumstances in all the departments where labor and talent meet reward. After some desultory remarks by Messrs. Hogan, Walsh and Cox, the meeting ad- journed till Monday evening next. Epwarp C. Grant, Oct. 3, 1882. Secretary. -_—.- A Methodist Move. The Methodist General Conference has adopted a resolution, which, says the Hamilton Times, must be regarded as a step in the direction of union. The presi- | dent of the General Conference was freed from all circuit duties and appointed to | perform the work of an itinerant general | ae pesintesidiat His duties will be like’ those of the Bishops of the Methodist Church in the United States, but the office will not endure for life as is the case with the Bishops. This decision of the Metho- dist General Conference smoothes the way for union with the Methodist Episcopal Church, whose Bishop is ex officio presiding officer at the annual conference as weil as) ‘at the General Conference. The Meth» mony takes place. VOL, 1L--NO, 115 Agriculture in Victoria, Australia. _—_- The agricultural returns for Victoria for the year ending March 31, 188], were :—Number: of heldings, 49.505 ; extent of land in occupation, freehold, 9,656,879 acres , rented, 1.935.507 acres; total, 11 592,386 acres; lund. wider til- lage, 1.993.916 acres. Wheat. occupied 976.416 acres, produce 9 719.049 Lush» els, average yield 9.95 bushels; oats, 133,910 acres, produee 2.358.459 bush- els, average yield 17-81 bushels; barley, 68,480 acres, produce 1,063,751 bushels ; maize, 1,769 acres, produce 49,299 bush- els; rye. 1.569 acres, pro‘luce 13,978 beshels ; peas and beans, 23,288 acres, produce 401.922 bushels: potatoes, 44,- 773 acres, produce 124,706 tons, aver- age yield 2-79 tons; turuips, 460 acres, produce 1,932 tons; mangold , wurzel, 1,281 acres, produce 12,105, tons ;, beet, Carrots, parsnips, #79 tons; hay, 249.424 acres, produce 00,184 tons, average yield 1-20 ton; green forage, . 9.617. acres __per- manent artificial grasses. 253 825; acres ; chicory, 236 acie:, produce 960: tons; grass and clover seeds, 2.812. acres, pros duce 26,290 bushels; hops, 428 acres, produce 2,744 cwt.3; . tobacco, .1,990 acres, produce 17,333 cwt. ; vines, 4.980 acres, produce 24,817 cwt., and made into brandy 79,045 ew!.; wine produced 414.028 gallous; brandy. mannfactured: 3,038 gallons; other crops, 984 acres ; gardens, 12.487 acres; erchards. 9 788 acres; land in fallow, 194,001 acres. As compared with the previous , year there are increases ju the yield of wheat of 320,191 bushels ; of hay, 7,777 tons; of hops 205 ewt,; of tobacco, 16.036 ewt. ; and grapes, 8,547 cwt.; and de- creases in all others, namely — oats, 1,664 812 bushels ; barley, 1.679 bush- els ; maize, 12,588 bushels; rye, 4,429 bushels ; peas and beans, 173.032 bush- els ; potatoes, 43,237 tons; turnips, 122 tons ; mangold wurzel, 2.292 tons; beet and carrots, 101 tons ; onions, 2,308 tons ; chicory, 804 tons, An Indian Maiden. The red maiden entertains as high a standard of morality as her caretully nurtured white sister. She is sturdy and strong, and a good housewifs. She may not possess New Engiand notions of cleanliness, but she takes not a little pride ip her personal appearance, and in the arrangement of her lodge she displays some crude ideas of taste aud’ a certain amount of. neatuess. If she marries a white man she makes him a good wite as long as she lives with him. His, home is ber sole comfort, and his comfort her sole ambition, She thinks of him and for him, and makes it her study to please him avd make him respect and Jove her She recognizes in him one of a superior race, aod by her dignity and devotion endears herself to him and siuruggles to make him happy. At. the agencies of the upper frontier thousands of meu are employed, and it is not an exagry eration to say that the majority of them have Ivdian wives and live happily. . They are not sought after by the maidens, for the Indian girl’s custom is to remain quiet uutil after the marriage contract is ‘made. and the marriage portion paid The husband must have ; the over. |dowry, with which he mast invest his projected mothersin-law before the cere- He must be. well known in the tribe, and able to support a wife ; otherwise he cannot hope to win her. The courtship is entirely left to the mother, who makes as good a bargain as she can. insininengpetitatlniittaid slits Literary. Dr, Russel, of Bull Run fame has re- tired from active journalism. The Lop- don Times gives him a pension of $1.000 a year. Mr. George Agustus Sala is preparing 348 acres, prodage oO ere om, we Page and fifty: six, and made betweem, Watson a tthe Cit Mele Ba. ) dists stil] retain presidents of annual con- & Volume on *'Living London,” . with uchemin, 0 y ariotteto ferences, and while the president of the illustrations made by himself. ~ amp war fat Sarah enesal Conference is enjoined to attend P C ' aX James Peake, of @pe City of Charlotte-|** many of the annual conferences as he eter Cooper, who was born in New . ! can. he is warned not to interfere with the! York February Ist. 1791, when the city Db. ©. CHALMERS, Ch’town, June MN, BsS2—tf —, THE EXAMINER — Eee Meme idltine 2 iti sareeamrctteye om ur nts see iar . «sails sp SNE gee Is NM erates W. C. BISHOP, eetdks ky a -—AND— FORWARDING ACENT, Marine Insurance Broker, —~AND— feneral Commission Agent, BEDFORD EOW, P. O. BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. 8. ARTICULARB ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Cannea Goeds, and collection of Custom Drwb:ck~ thereon. Hulis, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first-class oftices at most favorable rates, Consignments of Produce solicited, and prow pt returns guaranteed, Saas solicited and enswered wptly “NOV. i, 1est—tyr 'JOB PRINTING OFFICE HAS LATELY BEEN RKEPLENISHED WITH A Large Supply. of Printing Types.and Material OF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW Under the Careful and Skilful Supervision of Mr. J: W. Mitchell, To Paw we LETTER HEADS, RECEIPTS, PREPARED, BILL HEADS, BLANK CHEQUES, NOTES OF HAND, POSTEE™, JHAND me ipngt _ DODGERS, Ac, Ke, town aforesaid, Esquire, merchant, of the other part. Aa that tract, piece or, of Land, situate, lyin rig on the City of Charlottetowa, M3 dnt y Street, that is to say, the } moieties or equal half parts of Lots” oe twenty-six and twenty-seven, in the second hundred of Town Lots, in Charlottetown aforesaid, the said lots béing divided by aline running at right angles w:th Prince Street, equi distaut from Sydney Street and Dorchester Street, through the centre of the said lots until it strikes the western part of lot number twenty- eight in the same hundred as the said lots are laid down and delineated in a certain plan or map of Charlottetown, made, and now kept in the office of the Registrar of Deeds of the gaid Island ; together with the dwellin: house, aud all, other houses: and buildings thereon erected, and the rights, members, and appur tenauces thereunto belonging, or in anywise ap pertaining. For further pine apply at the office of E. H. Haviland, Solicitor, C Charlottetown. Dated this sixteenth day of May A. D., 1882. DANIEL HODGSON, JAMES PEAKE, Surviving trustees and executors'of ‘the last . ° . “tf? On Short Notice, in Good Sty's, at Cheap Prices. dent. intendent is to be paid out of the General Conference fund. +e Beliicose Bonepacteste. Telegraphic news oni Paris dated Sept. 27 says that while the Jeromist section of the Bonapartists were holding a meeting to denounce the newspapers Pays and Petit Corporal, the opposition section of the party forced an entrance into the hall. Revolvers and sword-canes were. displayed, and a number of assaults committed. The Jero- mists declare that the-recent duel between Richard, editor ofthe Petit Corporai, and Demasse, editor of the Combat; in which the la'ter was killed, was virtualiy an ass assination. ‘The feud between the two sectlons is becoming very intense. The Republicans are, of coarge, delighted at the dissensions among their enemies. —_——-—--—_~<—gp eo - They were cousins and loved in Baston. and che said in Bostenese, ‘df opr.grand- mother hagdbad but one “daughter instead will and ie pont f Javaes Peake: deceased. tuts 17 ow. watt prerogatives of the annual conference presi- had a population of 27 ,000, has spent the The salary of the general super- Jast three mouths in preparing |is auto- biography. Wis healih is excellent, aud his mental machinery unimpaired. Mr. W. D. Howells’ novels are appear- ing in Edinburgh with a Seotch parsoa’s puff oo the cover recommendiag them for their moral pathology and other holy qualities. Howells is of a sensitive nature, and the Academy sympathizes with him on this affliction. Mr. and Mrs, Howells (a sister of Larkin Mead, the sculptor) have sejtled themselves. at South Kensington in the pleasauit house just vacated by Mrs. Procior ,widow of Barry Coruwall), and. belonging to her. Mr. Howells is so teted and. **dimnered” that he finds he cannot get ou with a work upou which he is engaged, and is about to tear himeelf away, and seek svlitude st Vevay. After that he will go to Italy, where, with his experience of Veniceand his hingnistic g¢tomplisa- meuts, he would have made av exceilent of two we should have been brother end, stster, ‘ - * giccmdr (0 ttre Inte Miyivter Must.