a ee, ae eat sili» Five DoL_taRs A YEAR, Tapes : ee NEW SERIES. “ This is true Liberty, when Free Korn Men, having to 2 oe CHARLOTTE’ ‘OWN, P. E. ISLAND, THURSDAY. AUGU h ee Sf’ 18, 1891. Sines Copms Two Cents ~~ ane ae = ea VOL. 28.—NO. 71 — 1) rtrom epENDAR FOR AUGUST, 1891, UE MOON S CHANGES, New Muon, : ° us) » Vv : ~ p.m. S gyi} Moon, 1Sth cay, $m., p. m., SR, helaw hor rhird Quarte in 16 Sm,acm , SW Th ‘ Sun i Moon bli, ft Dave pay oF WER we lees lwak'ek tach Mm) thorn atter h om ) Sataruady i 47:7 26; 1 14) 9 34.14 39 | rad) 13) cal @ 7[1024) 37 aday 14 ro a 8 10 52 84 ii feeniay 22} 412/11 27) 39 & Vedges tay 20: 5 20/11 5s 9 § fhursday é a b "6| morn 28 . tay : Lj} ¢ 30; 0 3) Og 8 Naturday a8 3 68 o} gsundiy 14} 936, 133 08] ; 4 . ' } ; i 410 2 Q } | 10 Monday 40 [lil wes lay iLili 43); 2 48 13} Ig Wedaesday 0 341) 39} pa Tours tay “i I O99) 4 50 ri fai Priday ; 8! 6 14 4] ph Saturday i *S} 7 Sa } J Suwisy 23; 8 38/13 59] ij yloruay t Lv Q 34 56) is [ues ay Oo 5 lu v2 53 9 Wediaesuay t so. ti 5 50 | a Pharsday Md) 44) 47 ii Friday S 21 aft 24 44} B® oaturuay S 42) 0 57 4 Zi sua lay i4 : 1D 4). ) 45} as h Monday 50: 9 28) 2 23 us 25| fucaday le 48' 9 56! 33 32 | gr| \Vedaesday $330 30 4 43) 29 | 7 hureday 44/11 11) 6 15 26 | ® Fiidey i3imorn | 7 32) 23 | © Saturday 41) O 2) 8 29) | J) Supuay 39; Cf l 9 16) 16 3i Monday 2 §' 9 55|14 13 5.5, FASTNET A. H, CREWES, COMMANDER, ene trom Halifax every Monday, at 10 p. m., for Charlottetown, call- ing a5 Canso, Arichat, Hawkesbury, Port} Hasti Souris. Returning, will leave Caarlottetown every Thursday calling at same intermediate porta with the | exceptivn of Souris. For Freight, etc., } g+ ang afternoon, apply to — Ws Agent. dy ' } i } CLARKE, ee SOOTHING, CLEANSING, HEALING. instant Relief, Permanent Cure, Failuve Impossible. ¥ es are Am — , 3 7 Many so-called disea Buaatwy syluptoms of Ca i, meh as headache, losing scnse cismell, foul breath, hawking ¢ tad sp tting, general feeling debility, ete. if you are Wublied with any of these or Kinited symptoms, you have Citarrhn, and sh iid lose no time proc a bottle of Nasa Baws Be warned in Gime, neglected cold in head results iu Catarrh, followed by Consumption and death. Sold by all drugsists, or sent, & post paid, on rec: ipt of price ¥ (0 centsandé1 by addressing uty FULFORD & CO. Brevxville. Ont. Mabe ee BRIGH] TON BREWERY, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. ESTABLISHED 1846. | have just opened our Vaults of we : STOCK ALES, brewed in October, November and March, especially for Summer use, and of extra quality and flavor. We Keep constantly on hand Ales brewed ‘roma the best Island Barley and English and “Mercan Hops, at prices lower than any- Sling ever imp rted. The quality of ovr Ale will compare favor- ably wi th English or the best imported. Bey MORRIS & HYNDMAN. F. 5.—We do not sell our Casks. They are numbered and branded, and parties buy- bP r eh: : '§ Or Shipping them will be prosecuted. & k M. & H. | _july8 —all Island prs Im we FOR \ROup 6! CouaHs stioopinG Co COLDS. s°440 YEARS IN USE. po PRICE 25°*PER BOTTLE tz. RMS (RONG & CO. PROPRIETORS St. John., N. B. E OREHOUND ANDAN!S Bie ea G. H. TAYLO ESTABLISHED 1820, NOVA SCOTIA BREWERY EIA LIT RPiA SS. nr, —_——(1) ———— A. KEITH & SON, PROPRIETORS. (x) XX and XXX {eleh ‘ated ALES exces STOUT EXTRA a 20 and 15 GALLON CASKS. Alao, | In HHDS., HALF HHDS., and in in BOTTLES—QUARTS and PINTS— packed, when required, in barrels contain-! ing 4 dozen Quarts or 8 dozen Pints. Sw Saw—jy27 ~~. =— (x) — ~ . OF “uv, SPECIAL During the remainder of Jaly and August we offer at Specially Reduced Prices all Light Colored ‘Trouserings, Light Colored Sum- mer Suitings, Summer Underwear, Straw Hats, ete. f= Spent EB ernttonne 1891—dy & wky 9” “ty Charlottetown, July ~~ RS SRR Ss for infants and Children. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Soeur Stomach, Diarrhwa, Eructation, ie Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di- \ Cagtoria is so well adapted tochildren that {recommend it as superior to any prescripion known me.” H. A. Ancner, Mi. D., gestion, lil Se. Oxford St, Brookiyn, N. Y. Without injurious medication. Tue Centaur Company, 77 Murray Street, N. Y. a Price of Sugar | ——(x -——_—-— ind rer "| ‘raken The Dominion Government having tal the Duty off of Raw Sugar, BHEHR & GORE : ect 3 ¢ i have marked all their Sugars Gown at Puss ocd éarceatly Reduced Prices, BARBADOES SUGAR % Choice West India Sugar. ee elsewhere. BEER & GOFF. Charlottetown, June 23, 1891—eod&wy Just received this morn- « inz, 6,000 pounds of this our prices before buying 4 pou ANTING A CHEAP WATCH “ss se arabes G A GOLD OR SILVER eae RE you WANTING A GOOD ee ots RE YOU WANTING A GOLD-ENGRAY\ Bi aoe RE YOU WANTING A DIAMOND or other Seal RE YOU WANTING ANYTHING IN a oh RE. YOU WANTING YOUR WaTOn SS RE yoU WANTING FOUR JEWELS" core vans RE YOU WANTING ANY THING E d IF sO, CALI AT 12'S, NORTH SIDE OF MARKET SQUARE, Charlottetown, May 14, 1891. become listless, iretful, without ener- ) thin and weak. Fortify and build Up, by the use of SCOTT'S OF PURE COD LIVER GIL AND HYPOPHOSPHITES Lime and Seda, Palatable as Milk. AS A PREVENTIVE OB CURE OF COUGHS OR COLDS, IN BOTH THE OLD AND YOUNG, IT 16 UNEQUALLED. made by Scott & Bowne, Belleville. mon Wrapper: at all Druggists, 60c, and BANK OF BRITISH COLUMBIA. Itcorporated by Royal Charter, 1862. Capital Paid Up....... £600,000, $3,000,000 (With power to increase.) Reserve Fund......... 208,000, 1,040,000 Note Circulation Notice. In acéordance with the provisions of See 45 of the Bank Act, which comes into force on FIRST JULY proximo, this Bank has made arrange- ments whereby notes of the Bank will be RE- DERMED AT PAR by the following Banks at any Of their Branches in the Dominion, viz :~ of Montreal, Canadian Bank of Com- mere@, Imperial Bank of Canada, Bank of Nova Seo ‘Traders Bank of Canada. Bank of Hamil- ton, rehants Bank of Halifax, Halifax Bank- ing Co, Union Bank of Halifax and Commercial Bank of Manitoba. Arra’ ments have been mile with the follow ing Banksto ACT SPECIALLY AS AGENTS for the redemption of the Bamnk’s notes at the undermeutioned cities :— HALIFAX, N S—Bank of Montreal, Bunk of Nova Scotia, Halifax Banking Co. Mer chants Bank of Halifax and Union Bank of Halifax. ST JOHN,NB nk of Montreal, Bank of Nova Scotia, } chants Bank of Halifax and Halifax Banking Co. CHARLOTTETOWN, P E I—Bank of Nova Seotiaand Merchants Bank of Halifax. MON TREAL-—Bank of Montreal, Canadian Bank of Commerce, Molson’s Bank, Kank Nova Scotia und Merchants Bank of Halifax. TORONTG—Bank of Montreal, Canadian Bank Commerce, Imperial Bank of Canada, Molson’s Bank, Bank of Hamilton and Traders Bank of Canada. WINNIPKG— Bank of Montreal, Imperi«l Bank of Canada, Mojson’s Bank and Commercial Bank of Manitoba, The Bank of British Columbia will redeem at parthe notesof each of the above mentioned Banks at any of its Branchesin British Columbia. iM, C. WARD, Victoria, B C, June }, 1891. Manager. junel6—dy 3m oo te a . \Q4 Tt) j } OREENLEES BROTHER B= Glasgow hondon: a Ly CONE ~ A Blend of the Finest Old High- land Pure Malt Whiskey, made in Scotland. LAWRENCE A. WILSON & CO., Sole Agents in Canada, MONTREAL. snniesliandeaheeanpeeesilll * 3 3s VITA THE BSB. LAUVURAN cE Spectacles and Eye Glasses. THE only Optical Goods in Canada which have been recommended by the Presidents and Vice-Presidents of all the Medical and Surgical Societies in Canada and Great Britain. Far superior to any other for retaining perfect vision. le Agent for Charlottetown,— G. G. JURY, Watchmaker, Jeweler and Optician, North Side of Queen Square, Opposite Post Office. * Ch’town, Sept. 4, 1890—2aw satisfied that life was extinct. The Trouble in India. Lste English papers bring full accounts of the serious condition in India resulting from drought. The Times of the 27th ult. contains « long review of the situation, Che causes of the first alarm it describes as a delayed and deficient monsoon, a heat go terrible that the tramway hurses were drop- ping in the streets and a single company reported 113 of their animals incapacitated up to date, armies of locusts marching across the Northern Provinces, the plough cattle dying of hunger and thirst in Rajpu- tana, the green crop fields turned into tields f straw throughout large areas in Southern {udis and fresh sowings impossible on the baked and cracking ground, -he nucleus of & pauper population already formed and thronging the relief works in Madras, and native journalists were in vain demanda- ing restrictions on the exportation of foot- stuffs, lisved to some extent by the failing of rain, «nd by reports that the locust plague is not) sv rulpous as it was represented hangs in the balance. It is clear, it adds, that the threatened failure of crops extends both to Northern and Southern India, a failure of a general character such as has only once occurred during the memory of living men, and which, if realized, means a widespread catastrophe that must task to the uttermost alike the resources of the Government and the endurance of the people. The cable within the past few days has reported the occurrence of stu- pendous rain storms in parts of India by which hundreds of lives have been lost and an immense amount of property destroyed. It may be that these storms, disastrous though they have been, will save the country from still more terrible evils. These constantly recurring famines com- pletely bafils the effurts and science,of man. The deaths of hundreds of thousands in Hindustan, says the writer, may be silently predestined by climatic conditions in dis- tant trans-oceanic z nes, or by the snow- fall of the Himalayas and Central Asia, six months before a breath of warning reaches the doomed peasantry of India. The last great famine occurred in 1877-8. ———_———a>—<<p> <p Came to Life in His Coffin. A REMARKABLE SCENE IN A RUSSIAN TOWN, A remarkable acene took place recently in the Russian town of Artyni. Prince David Kertitcheff was afilicted for a long time with a serious illness, which finally brought on a state of coma. The attending physicians, however, after a careful investigation, were The body was laid in an open zive coffin and carried amid great pomp to the church, where a large number of mourners and spectators had con- gregated to honor the remains of the Russian nobleman. At the close of the funeral service, as the archimandrite, in accordance with prescribed custom, bent over the body to give the Prince the farewell kiss, the supposed dead man suddenly lifted himaelf up, slapped the astonished priest twice in the face, and said: ‘“‘Canailie, how dare you bury me without my permission?” The people in the church were panic stricken and rushed to the door. Several women and children in the crowd received severe injuries, The mental and physical excitement proved fatal to the sick priuce, He died three days afterward. mem 2 - Fishery Bualletia. (Fisheries Iutelligence Bureau Report.) Hatrrax, Aug. 12,—Anticosti—No bait or no fishing of any kind at English Bay, but a few cod and herring at Fox Bay. New Brunswick—Bankers in report cod fair at Caroquette, mackerel fair. Cod p or at Escuminac. (Quebec—Cod fair at Perce, Newport Point and Paspebiac, but no fishing of any kind in shore at Paspebiac. P. E. Island~—Mackerel fishing poor at Miminigash, but taking hooks freely at Tignish. No change elsewhere. Cape Breton—No change in fisheries. All fisheries been dull in Nova Scotia N fish of any kind taken at Whitehead, and very few of any kind taken on the coast to-night as far as reported. Last Tuesday and on next night, herring struck in at Sand Point, Shelburne Co., and over 100 barrels were taken. Egress ———————__—_——— ‘SHIP NEWS. ENTERED. Aug ll—Schrs Lady May, McDougall, Belle Creek; G H Maryatt, Keeping, Glace Bay; Lily, Rives, Pictou; St Lawrence, Camp- bell, Wallace. 12—Sea Bird, Hyde, Murray Harbor; Maggie H, Wryg@ Buctouche; Brown, Boston. — OLEARED, Aug 11—Schrs Lady May, McDougall, Bele Creek; Fanny, Fronceth, Rustico; Triumph, Bonchie, Pictou, Lily Reives, Pictou; St Lawrence, Campbell, Pugwash, 12— Sea Bird, Hyde, Murray Harbor; St Mary- atte, Keeping, Pictou; Ocean Bird, Brud- nard, Pictou; Genesta, Jorden, Murray Harbor. ___ no aan MorHer’s are your daughters suffering from any of these ailments peculiar to girls budding iato womanhood? Are you yourself suffering from any of these maladies that make woman's “fe a burden. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pilla are an unfailing cure. Try them. Sold by all dealers, or post paid on receipt of price (50c. a box). Dr. Williams Med. Co,., Brockviile, Ont. lw ————_-2.——__— Ir is impossible for Jas Paton & Co to detail the endless bargains in their immense stock They therefore givea few of the lots in each of the departments, as indica- tions of the advantages which their great alteration sale presents. }ties of the **Gem of the ( while wheat had been pouring out of the) country during the preceding three months| side and thence to this city was enjoyably under the stimulus of high peices in Europe, | spent, Since then the strain has been re-| Genesta, Jorden, Murray Harbor; se Carroll, a A Day’s Outing. _On Saturday last the 1. C. R. enployes | picnic took place at Point du Chene. Over 3,000 pecple were present, but unfortunate- ly about noon, when things were just as- suming shape for a perfect day’s enjuyment, the clerk of the weather ordered the flood gates to be «pened. A deputation of ~ engineers’ from our Island road went over, ostensibly to greet their brothers on pleasure bent, but really to take in the excursion which the Steam Navigation Co. gives every Saturday on the trim and speedy Northumberland. The sail over from the western capital was charming ; and the more voluble ones of our party were loud in their admiration of the beau- iulf” and the nautical scenery as seen from the deck of the steamer. The return trip to Summer- though Neptune exacted obeisance from several of our number. These excur- sions are becoming very popular, and well they may—the beautiful scenery of the route, & first-class steamer and the so‘ici- tude of her officers for the comfort of their W tu be ;\ passengers, making it without doubt the nevertheless the Times comes to the con- | best manner in which to spend a day’s out- clusion that scarcity and suffering;ing. To Capt. Cameron and Chief Steward are inevitable. Whether the ecarcity wili Collings the writer and his brother amount to famine, and the suffer-j‘‘ engineers” are indebted for many favors ing to widespread starvation, atill | exteuded, Hoping that soon again we may enjoy another such pleasant “tour of in- spection,” and that each mile of the route may be marked with similar mementves, | subscribe myself ONE OF THE Parry, _pow ———— a News Notes. _ Bad weather is said to be spoiling crops in Austria and Hungary. Nova Scotia gold mines yielded $23 700 worth of the precious metal in June, A 340,000 fishery cruiser for the Dominion Government is on the stocks at the Polson Works in Owen Sound. A shipment of furs to England, valued at $40,000, waa made the other day by the Hud- son Bay Co., from Victoria, B. C. A despatch from Blunt, South Dakota, intimates that everything is as dry as tinder, avd the people are in continued suspense, fearing prairie fires. The new proprietors of the Authracite coal mines in Alberta, in the Canadian North- West, are importing a number of the atriking miners from Franklin, Wash., to work their mines at Anthracite, A Pacitic coast exchange renarke that the Chinese are getting a sure and strong hold in Victoria. They already own the greater portion of three streets, and the other day Fai Yuen & Co, paid $25,009 for a block of land on Government St. . A consignment of confiscated liquor was sold in Quebec the other day. It consisted of sixty barrels of alcohol, one hundred and sixty cases of gin, four puncheons of ram, and an assortment of Scotch whiskey, brandy, claret, etc. The alcohol brought from $2 to $2.15 per gallon, including duty, and the gin $4 90 to $5 per case. The directors of the National Rifle Asao- ciation of Americaon Wednesday adopted a motion allowing the use of the Martini- Henry rifle by the members of Canadian or English mfle organizations which might participate in any of the association matches. Advices from Auckland, N Z, show that a great flood which had the appearance of a tidal wave prevailed at Melbourne, July 13. Houses and factories along the Yara river were submerged. Many small vessels were wrecked. In one suburb of Melbourne 2,000 people were rendered homeless. Business is almost suspended in the city. The loss of life, it is believed, did not exceed ten. It is estimated the total loss to property has reached £200,000. The Murray was rising and floods in the Albury district are feared, Much sickness prevails in Melbourne, attributable to exposure and to deposits of slime left by the flood. The Montreal Gazettesays: ‘* Unthelist of subscribers to the Langevin testimonial appears the name of ‘‘ Peter Mitchell,” who is set down tur $100. The attention of the Herald is respectfully drawn to the nefarious conduct of this man Mitchell. As the Herald lays it down, a minister should be like Czesar’s wife, above suspic- ion. Now, Caesar could not hold hia wife thus highly if she was getting $100 bills from the P, Mitchells of the time, and if she was to be suspected, plainly the afore- said P. Mitchell must also be open to ques- tion. We look to the Herald to assiat in discovering and exposing this P. Mitchell that he may be properly pilloried for thus seeking to debase the occupsnt of one of the crown’s highest posts.” Archbishop O’Brien, in his address at the United Empire Trade meeting in Hali- fax, the other evening, made some witty as well as clever remarks aneut the grumbling politicians out of office, who are eternally predicting that the country is going to the os. When a younger man, the Arch- biraop confessed, he used to take some stook in these dismal wailings, and had had in his time dire forebodings lest the final catastrophe and general smash up of the world would take place before his early career could run its full course. But the dies ire never came, and the Archbishop— grown famous and respected like the youn Dominion of which he is so staunch an gifted a citizen—-has learned by experience that the pessimism of defeated politicians has to be taken out with a large amount of reserve. But it sounds very real while it lasts. —~ — _-_--- Lonpoxn, Aug. 10.—The St. James’ Gazette takes a very gloomy view of the condition of British trade. In to-day’s issue it says: ‘tit looks as though we have already reached the end of good times. The great decline in exports from Great sritain is undoubtedly due to the operation of the McKinley law in the United States. The immediate object of the law was to hit foreign manufacturers, especially those of Great Britain, and it ss plainly evideat augll, 6i, wky 3i that this object has been atvsined.”