A Le A tts net te i eee — at Ete it i ~ ee et ct, en sl ent Ai le ER el ta THE EXAMINER. ‘ a cee eens ra bene a eee HEINGHLISH GoonDs! NOW OPENING AT THE LONDON HOUSE Ex © Utopia” from London, TWENTY CASES Hix “Caspian” from Liverpool, TWO CASHS. Ex “Anglia” from London, 30 PACKAGES THA. @G DAVIS & CO. Charlottetown, Sept. 6, 1880. JUST ARRIVED! — — A r— BRITT SEL WAREHOUSE, THE PUPULAR CHEAP STORE. MACDONALDS. Ex S, S. “Hibernian,” A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF New Black Silk Fringe, Corsets, Goods every Steamer. ets 25 CASES AND BALES FALL GOODS Colored and Black Satins, _ __ . Pompadear Prints, ALREADY RECEIVED, TOILEY COVERS & QUILTS, | in Plain and Fancy); A Splendid Stock of BLACK and COLORED CASHMERES and FRENCH MERINOS, t% all Shades; GRECIAN CORDS and LUSTRES, WINCEYS, PRINTS (New White, Scarlet, Grey & Fancy Flannels, | Patterns), GREY and WHITE COTTONS, NEW WORSTED COATINGS and TWEEDS— ino better value in Town. ; Cleths, Tweeds, &e., All of which are now opened, and will be | seid at our ‘sual low prices. W. & A, BROWN & CO. | Ch’town, Aug. 24, 1880. Summer Goods at Clearance Prices, at J. B. MACDONALD’'S. 65 QUEEN STREET, Aug. 16, 1850. her pat augl6 SEASIDE HOTEL! RUSTICO BEACH, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. (UNDER VICE-REGAL PATRONAGE.) wee ee St. Dunstan's College, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E.1. Te College will be re-opened under the charge of the Fathers of the Society of Jesus, —ON— Wednesday, September 15th, Intendiny students should inake immediat MYHIS Beautiful Watering Place will be open for the reception of Guests from the 24th June till the 15th September. : The above Hotel is situated in one of the most charming spots on the Island, having beautiful scenery, a bracing atmosphere, a beautiful beach, splendid surf- bathing, sea and river fishing, etc., etc. Good Tables. Moderate charges. Special arrangements made for Picnic and Dinner Parties, etc. Also the spacious Pavilion will application iu < m prospectus and further particulars ad- be let for Picnic Parties, etc., at moderate charges. dress Coach will leave Charlottetown every Wednesday and Saturday evening, calling for REV. GEORGE B. KENNY, S. J Guests ; returning every Thursday and Monday morning, at 9 o’clock, a. m., . 4 . Ants 9 * “> ¥ . 2 : Ch’town, Aug. 6,’30—till sep ‘President, Also, arrangements have been made with Mr. Bagnall to meet trains from all = - points at Hunter River, for passage to Seaside—7 miles. ADDRESS, PACIFIC JOHN NEWSON & CO., Proprietors, Mutual Insurance 60, Charlottetown, P. E. Island June 21, 1880. pg ESTABLISHED 1825. — \ MARINE. CANA : A. CONVERSE, MONTREAL. Assets Ist Dec., 1879, * $744,149.00 ie ies JOHN ra C — i : ee . ° . > ANUFACTURER OF CORDAGE of Every Description, including all sizes Manill ee M Rope, ‘Tarred Manilla Hawsers, Lobster Marlin, T arred Hemp Rope, Houseline Insurance effected on CARGOES and | }j4m)} roline, &c., &c., equal in quality to the best American. @ Prices on application. FREIGHTS, covering $15,000 and upwards @n first-class risks. Certificates issued payable in London at the office of Morron Rosz & Co., Bankers, or in New York. Risks taken and rates fixed without being referred to Head Office. FENTON T. NEWRERY, Agent for P. E, Island. Jan, 7, 1350, L. Nut Goal, NREE from Slate and Fire Clay. . | Round and Slack, at Albion Mines, For orders apply to en oe NS seNJ. FL GRAFTON, Story B, Lapp, Hasert KE. Pate. Nat Coal, pore Late Commissioner of Patents. G. W. DeBLOIs, p Sole Agent for P. E, Island. " Old Sydney Mines,Cape Breton, © PArNe, GRarvron & Lapp, | Attorneys-at-Law and Solicitors of American Lingan Mines, Cape Breton, and Foreign Patents, RDERS for Round Coal can be obtained: 412 Furra Srexsr, ‘Wasumorox, D. C. TEAS Oy Hoy rane ST on application to Practice patent law in all its branches in G. W. DeBLOIs, ‘Terms as usual. G. W. DeBLOIS, ‘the Patent Office, and in the Supreme and Sole Agent for P. E, Island. . Sole Agent for P. E. Island™ Circnit Courts of the United States. Pamph- Office--No. 35 Water Street. Office, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. |lets sent free on receipt of stamp for Pictou, Nova Scotia. May i!, 1880. TRY If. TRY IT s s JIVE ALBION. MINE NUT COAL A a ‘air trial and you will not be disap- pointed in the result; it is COAL, not jire Charlotietown, July8, 1880—pat tf June 17, 1880—pat her sj kca tf / postage. sept4 ‘ _CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1880, ‘* Some Beer.” Production of Beer for 1879, from official tables issued by the Austrian Government : | BARRELS, GOTMADY.....cccrccccecccvcccccssecees 23,711,117 DSc ctnta nes cectcasiehse samen es 22,375.010 SE ARN a ss v0 c0 cgodsued cuptcscnc 9,425,252 Austria Hungary..........06e00. 6,938,090 France........ ed sn dahp-aeitinaiedannmtials 5,331,845 NE 6 vieh't «ssh den ssovhestndbette 4,801,778 ME. - “indiiecnedss ovitnalelieiiurd: 1,406,174 Netheriands......... ne ssiincnpale se 978,208 NT obs os Kaien 16 hte nts 672,583 REL, 6 6 ses 0 cbee os. s0sdoestaeebuds Db8 583 OSES AE nce ae 531,909 Switzerland ...........00«. Fa cnectbeos 448,765 OCW snincv ere wegeess sone bekisapsb east 376.000 77,635,228 Or gallons......<.... cobudepeeeeees 2,326,956 ,840 Something like 1? gallons for each human beingon the Globe. Belginm’s preportion to each of the population is 545 gallons ; Russia’s is 54 pints. — -_ em + — —_ Latest News Notes. Snow fell in Chicago on the 7th inst. A Ministerial crisis is impending in Bel. gia, Tahiti and neighboring islands have been annexed to France by treaty. The Florida orange crop has beén en- tirely destroyed by the recent storm. The Prince ef Wales has decided not to visit the Meibourne exhibition. The Turkish Government has obtained a loan of £50,000 from the Ottoman Bank. An International Congress on Commerce and industry is in session in Brussels. Herr Von Bulow has lost the use of his right hand, the result of a paralytic stroke. The damage by the recent hurricane in Jamaica is said to have been greatly exag- gerated. Elections to the Spanish Councils Gen- eral have resulted in the return of a ma- - ority of the Government candidates. J The Afghans are said to have lost 1,060 killed and over 2,000 wounded in their re- cent defeat. General Roberts is entrench- ing the Argandab Valley. The Czar has summoned General Skobe- loff to Livadia, to hold a consultation con- cerning the progress and further prosecution of the Tekke-Turcoman expedition. There are signs of an approaching strug- gle of vast magnitude between several classes of British artisans and their em- ployers for a rise in wages. It does not speak wel! for the future of manufacturing industry in Britain that the destructive contest there between capital and labor seems destined to be eternal. A handsome writing table has been made at the command of Queen Victoria out of portion of the timber of the Arctic ship Repulse, which was lately broken up. Her Majesty intends to present it to the Presi- dent of the United States ‘‘asa memorial of the courtesy and loving kindness which dictated the offer of the Resolute.” The citizens of Montreal are working hard to ensure a greater success for the exhibition to be held in that city, than any before met with in any section of Canada, One hundred thousand copies of a ** Skele- ton Programme” of the exhibition have b@en circulated through the Dominion, and the United States, and 6,000 have been sent to be posted up in the different post offices. The }est time on record of the fastest amateur mile ever run, was beaten on Aug. 16th, by W. G. George, of the Mosely Harriers, at the grounds of the London (iing.) athletic club. The mile was accom- plished in 4 minutes 23 1-5 seconds, thus beating by-over a second and and a quar- ter Walter Slade’s record of 4 minutes 24} seconds, which for over five years has stood at the head of fast times by amateur run- ners at one mile’s distance, The London cerrespondent of the Edin- burgh Sceisman says that controversies be- tween England and France respeciing the French encroachments on the West Coast of Africa have been complicated by some high handed proceedings of the French commandant on Mellicoure River. These vexatious acts are probably intended to worry England into ceding Gambia to France, an object which every French Government for many years past has stead- fastly pursued. ‘The Czar Alexander travels expensively these times though the Russian exchequer cannot be very flush of funds. His Majesty recently went from his winter palace in Si. Petersburg to his pleasant summer villa on the shores of the Southern Crimea ; and forty thousand troops and nine thousand peasants were employed to guard the road during transit against the terrible Nihilists. Rather costly sort of travel that. The guarding process will, we suppose, be re- peated during the autocrat’s journey back. Life is hard for Emperors in Russia. It is a curious fact, writes a missionary from China; that tobacco, sweet potatoes, and Indian corn have all been introduced from America, and are now thoroughly domesticated here. As to the first, so cordially has it been welcomed that nine out of ten adult Chinese males smoke it. They do not chew. Within the last five years the artichoke, which in my boyhood was found with horse-radish in every farm- er’s garden in central New Yerk, is being NO, 98 jintrodnuced in this region. It is pickled and eaten as arelish. It is called foreign ginger. A Sap Casre.—The Halifax Chronicle re- lates a sad story. Sume time ago a young lady of that city was married to Mr. Crane, a young Nova Scotian residing m Chicago. Several months cago to locate in British Columbia, and his wife came to Halifax to visit her relatives. Mr. Crane settled in the city of Victoria, B. C., anda short time ago sent for his wife who, with her infant, left for her new home. She would probably reach San Francisco yesterday. On Tuesday, Mr. Crane's friends received a telegram an- nouncing his death. Mrs. Orane’s is a daughter of Mr. James Reeves, of Dart- mouth. Tre Jcice or rae Tomaro PLANT AS AN Insecticmpe. A writer in the ‘‘Deutsche Reitung” says that last year he had an opportunity of trying a remedy for destrey- ing green fly and ether insects which in- fest plants. The stems and leaves of the tomato are well boiled in water, and when the liquor is cold it is syringed over plants attacked by inseets, It at once destroys black or green fly, caterpillars, etc.; and it leaves behind a peculiar odor which pre- venis insects from coming again fer a long time. The writer says that he found this remedy mere effectual than fumigating, washing, etc. Through neglect a house of camellias had become almost hopelessly in- fested with black fice, but two syringings with tomato plant decoction thorougly cleansed them. Singing is one of the healthiest exercises in which men women and children can en- gage. Tne Medical Wocheneerift, of St. Petersburg, has an article based upon ex- haustive researches made by Prof. Monas- sien during the autumn of 1878, when he examined two hundred and twenty-two singers, ranging between the ages of nine and fifty-three. He laid chief weight upon the growth and absolute ciremmference of the chest, upon the comparative relation of the latter to the tallness of the subject, and upon the pneumatometric and spirometic condition of the singer. It appears to be an ascertained fact from Dr. Monassien’s ‘experiment that the relative and even ab- solute circumference of the chest is greater among singers than among those whe do not sing, and that it increases with the growth and age of the singer. The profes- sor even says that singing may be placed physically as to the anithesis of drinking liquor. The latter hinders while the former promotes health, Excreement Over Two Witts,—A des- patch to the Halifax Citizen from North Sydney, says: Some little excitement has been raised lately over the will of the late William Gammell. On Thursday his body was to have been removed from the grave for the purpose of a medical examination of his stomach, but ewing to the incomplete- ness of the arrangements the grave is yet undisturbed. It may not be very generally known that there are two wills on file, bear- ing the name of William Gammell. In one recorded a short time after his death, he bequeathed everything he owned to his wife, amounting, it is said, to $250,000. After he had been in his grave more than a year another will comes to light, by which the order of things is reversed, and Mrs. Gammell is left nothing. A copy of this latter will was published a few weeks ago, and was immediately after placed on record in the Judge ef Prebates office. The whole affair has been placed in the hauds of emin- ent counsel, and will come up before the | courts ere long. It will, no doubt involving as it does so much money, be the most in- teresting will case ever brought before the courts of this country. The Electric Light is said to be coming into use extensively among wholesale stores and other large institutions in New York, but so quietly that few are aware of it. Several large warehouses onjBroadway find it convenient and practicable to do their shipping at night,when foot and light traftic has almost ceased, thus avoiding the incon- venience and delay which attend such work in the day time, when the streets beeome blocked with cases and drays and carts,pro- ducing confusion and discomfort as well as annoyance to the public and all concerned. lt is said that the electric lamps do not give nearly so much light as is commonly supposed, or rather, as the registered candle power of the lamps would imply. An ex- periment has shown that so calied one thousand candle power lamps only give as wich light as two hundred aftd fifty stand- ard candles, and that the strongest of all do not exceed four hundred candle power. A great objection to the light is its non- diffusibility and its radiation in area, Thorough Ulomination is impossible, areas beneath the lamp being dark. Prof. Dewar, of the Reval Society of Great Britain, finds, by investigation, that electric light, as well as gas light, generates gases. Nitrous gas is generated by many of the lamps in use at the rate of one gramme or twelve to fifteen grains per hour. The amount varies with the length of the arc. There is also some eneration of hydrocyanic acid. _ ———> ©: Gp +: o-——-——-—-- A Good Account. ‘To sum it up, six long years of bed-rid- den sickness and suffering, costing $200 per year, total $1,200—all which was stopped by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by my wife, who has done her own house- work for a year since, without the loss of a day, andI want everybody to know it for their benefit.” ‘“Joun Weeks, Butler, N, Y,’ later Mr. Crane left Chi- . pena atiasee ee eres | ne eee RRR emcee com i aleieaieaadeiithendetiaes diamnieniy «ditt eteahiinasiemeiineaiaeiameniil ae nae - ee ee ee ae eS ee see eee ee eee a ae ey ey eee Te ee ae eee ‘Va Bo Ot tt in die Rei diiliet tai d Me Bilin sii a