eg: ; ; & ates THe EXAMINE eos R. So ee VOL. 7. JUST ARRIVED! BRITS EL WAREHOUSE, Ex S, S. “ Hibernian,” 4 LARGE ASSORTMENT OF Black Silk Fringe, Cersets, Cashweres, Colered and Black Satins, Pompadoar Prints, TOILE? COVERS & QUILTS, in Plain and Fancy); White, Scarlet, Grey & Fancy Flannels, Cloths, Tweeds, &c., All ef which are now opened, and will be seld at eur wsual low prices. W. & A. BROWN & CO. Ch'town, Aug. 24, 1880, - PACIFIC Mutual Insurance Oo,, —_—\ NEW YOoRK MARINE. Assets 2\«t Dec., 1879, - $744,149.00 Insurance effected om. CARGOES and FREIGH'S, covering $1000 and upwards on first-class risks. Certificates issued payable in London at the effice of Morton Rosz & Co., Bankers, or in New York. Risks taken and rates fixed without being referred to Head Office. a FENTON T. NEWBERY, Agent for P. E. Island. May 1), 1880. "J. G. ECKSTADT, Surgeon Chiropodist Union House, Queen Street. OFFICE HOURS—From 2 to 5 p..m. Cerna extracted for 25 centa. Parties waited upon at their residence. Orders |eft at Post Office Box 72. Ch’town, Sept. 28, '80—im TRY IT. TRY UH 4I¥E ALBION MINE NUT COAL a fair trial and you will not be disap- peinted in the result; ¢ COAL, not fre clay and slate. Fer orders apply to G. W. DsBLOLs, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Office—No. 35 Water Street. Charlottetown, July8, 1880— pat tf BARRELS BAIT AND SALT, QUEEN’S WHARF. BAGS SALT, 200 Barrels Herring and Maekerel oO BAIT 300 MACK EREL BARRELS. 100 barrels na 7o ares vols { PAT HERRING. 160 Quintals CODFISH and HAKE, Just Landed—a choice lot New Labrador Nut Coal. Nut Coal. REE from Slate amd Fire Clay. Also Round and Slack, at Albion Mines, Pieten, Nova Scotia. For orders apply to G. W. DsBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E, island. Old Sydney Mines, Cape Breton. Lingan Mines, Cape Breton. RDERS for Round Coal can be obtained om application to Terms as usual. G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Ayent for P. E. Island. Office, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. June 17, 1880—pat her sj kca tf FOR SALE OR TO LET, COMFORTABLE and_ conveniently situated Dwelling House with large yarc, geod stable and coach house attached. Also to Let, near King Square, a Dwelling Hovse with outbuildings in good repair, auitable for a small family. Rentlow. For particulars opply to LONGWORTH & HASZARD. Sept. 26, ’80— 1m UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EXAMINER the Chea and most Newsy Paper peblished m the Provinces. } sane Cnn mee THE NEW nacnblibiecsit O CANADIAN > Kime enionnimart KK BEVERACE! S.A. @ E A. THE VERY BEST ARTICLE human system are well known. stitute. constitutions. drink at meals. made. meals nothing but Kaoka, Side Queen Square. Bi BLACK SILKS. SATINS, VELVETS, CRAPES, CASHMERES, DRESS CORDS. KID GLOVES, RIZ BONS, PLUMES, —AND— Every Description of MOURNING GOODS. IN THE MARKET, Charlottetown, Oct. 7, 1880. OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIQNS STERLING. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), June, 1877— Oo discovered which has been found ‘to perfegt!y answer the purpdse. and Coffee, it contains neither Theine nor Caficine, nor apy. Other poisonous principle whatever which can even by long use, prove hurtfel to the weakest It is especially. recommended for sick perse* ‘ie! childien, Families using white bread habitually should adopt Ka ‘eir regular They will then have supplied to them when taken into the system, go to form bones, nails, teets_ and which have been separated from the fine flour of which Thousands of persons who have been afflicted with vousness, Indigestion, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, &c., have perfect health by eschewing tea and coffee altogether, aud drinking with their It contains no ‘‘ chemicals.” which it is made are wheat and sugar, nothing more. For sale in pound and half-pound packets at the ‘Crown Greoery,” South ROBERTSON & CAMERON. Charlottetown. October 1, 1880—30 ins eod MANTLES, Ulsters and Dolmans. GREAT SHOW OF NEW Corsets and Hoop Skirts, LADIES’ BONNETS, HEADDRESSES & MILLINERY TO ORDER, BY EXPERIENCED HANDS. W. A. WEEKS & CO., Oct. 11, 1880 —tu th s [xasmucn AS THEY ARE ALWAYS FRESH, Reeihe MAKING of THEM, and WARRANTED to Ef in , Kirp FOR ANY LENGTH OF TIME. TRY THE FOLLOWING KIN'™S: Bosro CRACKER, QUEEN DROPS, Lea cran FINGERS, COCOANUT JUMBLES, S ULTANIATLEMON, CARRAWAY TOPS, GrackNELs, ICED ARROWROOT, Uston MIXED, SUGAR JUMBLES, [raLraNeRaTIFLES, VICTORIA SNAPS, Tea BISCUITS, GINGER SNAPS. City Steam Bakery, Agent for Prince Bdward Island | ‘ The Only Satisfactory Substitute for Tea and Coffee. -Highly Recommended for Regular Use at Ordinary Meals, ——_ ———-- '0:-——-- FOR DIETARY USE LYER DISCOVERED. —————— :0:—— a injurious effects which the continuos use of tea and coffee have on the The most eminent physicians advise t he patients to abstain from using either. Owing to the taste for these bever ge” which has been universally acquired, it has been found necessary to find as ub Various substitutes have been tried, but Kaoxa is tiie only one ever Unlike ‘Tea O nts which, _¢nd brains, otse bread is _-» psia, Ner- en yestored to The elements from IN EVERY NEW MAKE. Sign of the Lien. Quarry OF MY CRACKERS AND BISCUITS IS * NIVERSALLY ACKNOWLEDGED TO BE THE 7 T E —" s a CC =| 6A rm Oo JOHN QUIRK, Prince Street, ett daennoadaeate QUEEN INSURANCE CO'.) MRS. W. W. IRVING '9S now forming her AUTUMN and WIN- | @ TER CLASSES in DRAWING and PAINTING, in all their different branches, ‘from Model, Life, &c. Intending pupils will kindly send in their NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- | names as soon as convenient. ings, Merchandise and Produce, Ajso, on ; tel on the stocks. Terms, &c., made known on application at ‘her Studio, City Hotel, opposite R. C. | Cathedral. Ch’town, Sept. 11, ’80—2aw tf UY the DAILY EXAMINER for the | latest news—local and telegraphie. Toe Darty EXAMINER, OCTUBER 30, 1889, Princely Generosity. THe town of Birmingham, England, has just been the recipient of a noble gift from une of its merchant princes, in the shape of the ‘*‘ Mason Scientific College,” so named after its donor. The cost of the building and its endowment amounts to the sum of $850,000. Not only will all kinds of scientific subjects be taught, but the study of foreign languages will also be intre- duced; and for a few trifling fees « student may proceed through a course of atudy qualhfying for the degrees of B. Sc. and D.Sc. The influence of such an insti- tution in the very centre of the metal trades of England, cannot fail to be of the most beneficial nature ; and with a view to keeping it in a thorough state of efficiency in future time, Sir Josiah Mason has stipulated that the trustees shall be ‘‘ lay- men and Protestants ;’ and one clause of the statutes instructs the trustees that they must, from- time to time, so change and improve the institution as to keep it always in harmony with the requirements of the age. This is the second of Sir Josiah Mason’s noble gifts to the town in which he rose from a journeyman metal-worker to be one of its wealthiest men—the previous gift being an orphanage built at a cost of $300,- 000, and endowed with property valued at $1,000,600. Men such as these are England’s truest aristocracy, holding the riches God has given them as in trust for the benefit of their less fortunate companions in the race of life. The Crossleys, Salts and Masons of the commercial world contrast strongly with; the many titled nobility whose ambition is limited to the renown to be obtained at the gaming-table or on the race eourse, and whose leve for their fel- low men is exemplified in the depopulat- ing of half a country to make a ‘ deer- run.” - oo OP -— = Professor Sheldon’s Impressions. In an interview Professor Sheldon gave the St. John Sun reporter his impres- sions of Canada, and_more particulary New Brunswick, as follows :-— ‘* While the North-West is destined to become a great country in {the future, at present it seems tome that the best field for English farmers to come to is in the lower provinces. in the first place English farmers are not cat out to be pioneers, either on the prairie or in the forest. Secondly, they would not meet in the North West the comforts they had been accustomed to in the old country, but they would meet with tLen in the lower provin- ces. | consider that Canada, in one or other of the provinces, oders a very attractive field for the settlement of English farmers, and while we are far too thick on the ground in the old country there is plenty of room for them here. It appears to ine that so far as I have seen of the Province of New Brunswick, the two rivers St. John and Miramichi, with the districts surreund- ing them, contain all the elements neces- sary to the happy and successful settlement of them by English farmers. It would be advisable, first of all to come out to this country and spend a month or two before deciding where to buy. ‘There seems to be no doubt that if they come to New Bruns- wick they will be able to find what they want without going te any other Province. The treatment that I have received from the Canadian people has been generous and noble. In New Brunswick, however, | have received the heartiest welcome and th e greatest kindness that has been extend ed to me in any part of the Dominien. I| shall always remember with pleasure my journey thronghout the Dominion in gene- ral and New Brunswick in particular.” Tue article in the Menetary Times-— part of which we republished Thursday— is, we think, a sufticient answer to the croakers who, since the Grits went out and the National Policy was inaugurated, see no improvement in the times. That it will satisfy them of their mistake, we have no hope. ‘*A}l seems infected to the infected spy, As all looks yellow to the jaundiced eye.” In New Brunswick, Professor Sheldon observed that large quantities of marsh land required drainage, and said: ‘‘ Itis far from creditable that such land should be left in such a disgraceful condition. You make a good use of your barnyard manure here, but better care could be taken by proper housing. The great faalt here is that too much manure is put on a thin, hungry soil. On being asked if agricultudal colleges are necéssary here, the Professor said that such an institution would be of incalculable good to Canadian farmers. But the theories would be of little use if not accompanied by practical knowledge.” The Berlin correspondent of the Times telegraphs as follows :—‘‘ The editor of the Borseu Courier has been sentenced to pay a fine of 500 marks or to fifty days’ imprisonment for an article suggested by the alleged intention of Prince Bismarck to incorporate Hamburg in the Zollverein. The indictment esets forth that the accused has libelled and insulted Prince Bismarck, by alleging that which was alse and caleu- lated to render him contemptible.”’ CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1880 | NO, 136 Local and Other teins, nm ae aoc = ~~ Miners throughout Belgium are on strike. Boston is the Winter Port for Allan Line steamers. Tus Porte has iuvited the holders of Turkish bonds to send delegates to Con- stantinople. Ws. B. Hupson, of Cascumpec village, had one of his legs broken in two places on Mill River Bridge on Tuerday after- noon, — oy A few days ago a new discovery of gold, “in extraordinary quantity,” was made in the vicinity of the Montague Mines near Halifax, Marivig Carrie rox Evrors.—Dur- ing the past I1 months Nova Scotia and New Brunswick have shipped 2,500 head of cattle tc Europe, Or the 14,500,000 quintals of grain im- ported into France during the first eight months of the present year 9,000,000 quin- tals came from America. A dispatch to Montreal says Diphtheria is creating frightful ravages in Halifax and throughout Nova Scotia. An alarming number of deaths are reported. Larce bodies of British troops have been ordered home from India This is considered indicative that the government apprehends no serious disturbance in that quarter. Wer understand that owing to the scareity of water at some of the New Brunswick mills, wheat is being sent from that Prov- ince to MecGougan’s mills here to be ground. —J/ ournad, o J. H Myrick has the most extensive country stores and fish stages to be found in the western end of the Island, It is said that he will handle over 20,000 barvels of mackerel and an immense quantity of cod and hake, taken this season.—JS. Journal. A Tur prospecta of the cattle trade with . England are again looking up. cable- gram has been received at Ottawa which contains the announcement that the best grade vattle have gone up two pounds ster- ling per head, and other grades in pro- portion. ANOTHER violent snow storm visited On tario on Saturday last. At Uxbridge twenty inches of snow fell. At Barrie great dam- age was done to fruit trees, which were broken down by the weight of the snow and hail. Ten inches of snow was on the ground there Saturday night. At Victoria Road there was fifteen inches of anow and trains running into Coboconk were delayed by the drifts. At Haliburton, there was over twenty inches of snow on the level and still falling. The storm appears to be very general in Ontario, and in New York and other States. In many parts of Onta- rio all the root crops were not out and will be more or less of a loss. Granp Division, S. or T.—The annua! session of this body was held at New Wilt- shire. on Thursday iast. The day being wet, and the reads bad, the attendance was not as large as it would have been had the weather been more propitious. The following are tlie officers for the ensuing year : David Rogers, G. W. P. J, C, McKenzie, G. W. A. J. Barrett Cooper, G. Scribe, (re-elected. ) Jobn Jury, G. Chaplain. D. W. Henderson, G. Treasurer. Sister Smith, G. Con. W. J. Seaman, G. Sent. In the evening, after tea, the Hall was thrown open anca public temperance meet- ing inaugurated—G. W. P. Rogers pre- siding. The audience was large and atten- tive; the speeches stirring and instructive, and everybody seemed pleased with the proceedings. About 10 o'clock the G. D. resumed business and continued in session till one o'clock, after a pleasaut, and it is to be hoped, profitable session.—Com. Personal. Madame Thiers is seriously ill in Paris. Hopes of the recovery of the Czar are not abandoned. Sir Charles Tupper goes to Manitoba to- day. Sir Edward Thornton sails for England next month. Jerome Bonaparte has taken a house in Washington. Rochefort is preparing rooms at Paris for the Reception of Garibaldi. The Birminaham Post of October 13 says: ‘* As an illustration of the state of feeling among landiords in those parts of Ireland where the present agitation has taken the deepest root, we may mention that a Bir- mingham manufacturer, a few days since, received from the vicinity of New Ross an order for a coat of mail for an Irish land- lord, resident in the neighborhood. The letter containing the order stated that the applicant had been endeavoring to obtain the article in question in several quarters, but had failed to meet with any ons who could supply it. The local firm we believe, has aceepted the order.” HE et Brel ed vm SE tht, "crmcsrsamee « é amy oe AN TIE ae ae mag er 2 oho aap ge Alin m casre eli mle Aine 1 egy 5 cae Setar Manes My lia FO Rg ND ARNE RR ET «. 2 RE APRS EM Meet a, Nat MAE a at AP Fh ROM IMEC A OR ERE Bi a seg « S08 ae a ae sas 2 2 NN SY NINA Sa IE HG SOOO EUR re ‘Mitind te i Riliniide othalin dig adie adit, a LAA SO eg: Al me A i Se ig ee . ee Bp 2 coueeee