ae Subscribed Capital, $9,733,322.00 VOL..7, JUST ARRIVED! 5.268. bbe ee. ' 4 s Ga W A k 5 ERSONS desirous to attend the Ex 8. S. “Hilberaian,” 4 LARGE ASSORTMENT OF Black Silk Fringe, Corsets, Cashmeres, ‘ Colored and Black Satins, Pompadear Priats, TOILET COVERS & QUILTS, (in Plain and Faney); White, Scarlet, Grey & Fancy Flannels, Cloths, Tweeds, &e., All of which are now opened, and will be sold at our usual low prices. WwW. & A. BROWN & co. Ch'town, Aug. 24, 1880. PACIFIC Mutual Insurance Uo., — OF -— Waw TONE. MARINE. Assets 3ist Dec., 1879, - $744,149.00 Imsurance efiected on CARGOES and FREIGH?S, covering $15,000 and upwards on first-class risks. Certificates issued payable in London at the office of Morton Rose & Uo., tankers, or in New York. Risks t:ken and rates fixed without being referred t) Head Office. FENTON T. NEWBERY, Agent for P. E. Island. May i1, 1580. TRY IT. ‘TRY IT 2s MIVE ALBION MINE NUT COAL a fair trial and you will not be disap- pointed in the result; it is COAL, not fire clay and slate. For orders apply to G. W. DeBLOIs, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Office--No. 35 Water dtreet. Charlottetown, July8, 1§80—pat tf Nut Coal, Nut Goal, REE from Slate and Fire Clay. Also Rovnd and Slack, at Albion Mines, Pictou, Nova Scotia, For orders apply to G. W. DeBLOIs, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Old Sydney Mines,Cape Breton. Lingan Mines, Cape Breton. RDERS for Round Coal can be obtained on application to Terms as usual. G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Office, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. June 17, 1880—pat her sj kca tf QUEEN INSURANCE cO’Y. OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIGNS STERLING, NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- I ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vease 4 on the stocks. ; Special rates for isolated residences, Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 18s77— Pe THE WORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE INSURANGE 6O., Of Edinburgh and London, EISTABLISHED IN 1809 Paid up Capital, - 1,216,666.00 Transacts every description of Fire, Life and Annuity Business on the most favorable terns. Fire DEPARTMENT—Insurances may be ef- fected at the Lowest current rates. Insurances upon Public and Private Build- ings effected on especial:y favorable terans, | pe settied with promptitude and liber- ality. lure Department—New and Reduced pre- mivms for Dominion of Canada. &, W. DEBLOIs, (ieneral Agent for P. E. Island. Oftice, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. - OHARLOTTETOWN. SE RE ew eee ener $ on a nee ae i A NO OL LL LL A LLL ALL NGL LL ALLL A OLN AA : a <a , . ; f J ENGI FIVE “om ee — LMU a DOLLARS I! He PROVINCIAL AGRICULTURAL EXHIBI- TION, to be held in the CITY OF ST. JOHN, N. B,, can obtain RETURN TICKETS at the P. EK. Island Railway Station, On the 2nd, 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th October, Good to Return up to and Upen the ith of October, FOR THE SUM OF FIVE DOLLARS. Bb. POTTINGER, Supt. [. C. R. September 27, 1880.—till 6th oe ee : . - ' " rage THE | ; ALEX, i. W. HALES, Sec’y 8, N, Co, MACNAB, Supt. P. ET R. = FS tees GUARDIAN FIRE AND LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY. 20: ESTABLISHEP !82l. ae 10 READ OFFICE: 11 Lombard Street, - - - .- - - Sondon, B.C. $14,500, 660.0 $2.375.000.00 Teoial Assets, - . . . . ° © 3 . ‘ Annual Ineome, - - . . . « ° . ae Risks at lowest current rates by Carvell Brothers, Charlottetown, July 21, 1880 —Yaw 2m, pat law 2m SS ES aan ——_ Cee aE TSR ET eaSECD en . THE IMPROVED SEMI-GIRCULAR ADJUSTABLE iP GUORSET | P The Latest Novelty. | Agents. The Queen of Bone Stiffened ‘CORSETS Pretty, Attractive, ‘ Ne Plus Ultra , mnt, SD —FoR— D ‘ECONOMICAL Comfort, Ease aud Elegance | cannot be equalled. . | ; EVERLASTING WEAR, ADMIRED BY ALL. ‘TRY ONE. SsonuD © J. B. MACDONALD, Queen Street. Sept. 20, 1880. ESTABLISHED 18%5. CANADA CORDACE FACTORY. JOHN A. CONVERSE, MONTREAL. ANUFACTURER OF CORDAGE of Every Description, including all sizes Manill N Rope, Tarred Manilla Hawsers, Lobster Marlin, Tarred Hemp Rope, Houseline Hambroline, &e., &c., equal in quality to the best American. s@ Prices on application. Jan. 7, 1880. : SEPTEMBER. S§STOVEPIPE. chi, 4 E Subscriber, thankful for past favors, begs leave to announce to the people of both Town and Country, that he is prepared | to fill all orders left at his Store, with neat- jness and despatch. | A splendid assortment of TINWARE con- 'stantly on hand. Stoves and Stovepipe fitting ‘up a speciality. _—_—__— Cc. F. HARRIS, ‘| Bens, F. \ E ARE NOW SHEWING LARGE! Upper Queen Street. lailoring Departmen KING SQUARE. GRAFTON, Srory B, Lapp, AND Vv ARIED LINES IN i Ch’town, Sept. 992, ’80—4w eod | Harpert E. Paine. NEW CANADIAN TWEEDS, — a Scotch and West of England Tweeds, PATENTS. PAINE, GRAFTON & LADD, | Atlorneys-at-Law and Solicitors of American ! and Foreign Patents, Late Commissioner of Patents. Suiiings, Overcoatings, Uister Cloths, A CHOICE LOT OF | Practi tent | in all its branches i Blue & Black Worsteds. ais rie uth Seah BEER & SONS. 412 Firrn Street, Wasnineron, D. C. | lets sent free on receipt of stamp for April 14, ’80—pat her ne sj kea tf eod - Cireuit Courts of the United States. Pamph- Sept. 22, 1880—2w é postage. septa YARD ISLAND, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4. ~ Correspondence, om Wedonet hold ourselves responsible for the statements or opinions of our correspondents The Polling for the Scott Act. To the Editor af the Examiner. Dear Srr.—As you are well aware, the friends of the Scott Act turned out man- fully on the 23rd September last, and re- corded their votes in its favor. The result must be gratifying to those who have grown grey in the cause. Although intemperance toa certain extent was almost unknown amongst the people of Graham’s Read, yet they felt it to be their duty to remove that monster from their suffering fellow men. They felt that they would no longer be witnesses to the fact that some of our young beys were gratuitonsly offered Jodg- ing in the Police cells ef Charlottetown ; they would no longer hear, $6 or 20 days imposed for drunk and disorderly driving upen the streets. The members of «Forest 'Home Division deserve great credit for the manner in which they have done their duty, although some began to grow luke- warm towards the eleventh hour. Yours, &c., The Late Walking Match. Vo the Editor of the Examiner. Sir,—In yesterday’s ‘‘ daily,” Mr. H. &. Hart, has given your readers what he sup- poses isa sufficient explanation regarding the late contest —or go as you please match in Summerside. But permit ine here to say itis not quite satisfactory—and very many of those whe went to see the contest are stillfull of the effects of chagrin at being as they believed duped. Can’t Mr. George Clow give some further information to the public, on this affair, being that he took a lively interest in: the arrangements as welj as the contest, and no doubt came out safe in the matter, ftnan- cially as the door and saloen proceeds were not a little, and the bets were well put, every one of the. Mr. Hart says that ‘‘Unknown” has a race in hand in the United States and for that reason did not wish to make a good record on the Island, hence the title assu med ‘* Unknown,” who at present by the way, is prepared to match Clow again, and if he end Mr. Clow can only get up a good, ‘‘oo if they can” in Charlottetown or else- where, with good prospects for betting, Kc. { fancy the United Staies race might be conveniently postponed, po lve vice, pos- sibly Mr. Hart can prove that ‘‘Unknown” (as he stys) never saw Clow until they met at Summerside —Sueh proof -s necessary to allay suspleion. Yours, ee. (JURRY. Oct. Ist. 1880. “fi: Te. the Editor of the Evaminer. Drar Sirn—tn your issue of the 17th insi. appears an article over the signature of M. Laverty, challenging the writer in the Ex- AMINER of the LOth inst. ‘‘to come to the surface’ and prove one of the ‘‘scornful rssertions’ inserted in the letter of ‘‘A Farmer.” Mr. Laverly was well aware who was the author of said letter before he sent his last epistle te the Examiner for publication. Lest, however, any doubt should existin his mind respecting the writer of said letter, or that any innocent person should be charged with the same, [ wish to inform him that I am the author of said letter, and there is no statement con- tained in it respecting Mr. Laverty but I am prepared to substantiate. In his letter of the 15th inst. he states: ‘Fair criticism is never objected to on any public question. On the contrary it is nec- essary and wholesome. There are certain qualities, however, which should be pos- sessed by any person who constitutes him- self a critic, viz., a knowledge of the sub- ject npon which he writes, ability to write the Englishlanguage correctly, and a cour- teous and gentlemanly manner of treating his fellow men.” These lines, no doubt, contain a large amount of prudence and common sense. But when we censider they are not original, but transcribed by Mr. Laverty, the credit is due to the anther and not to the copyist. Who would think such a polemical writer as the second-class teacher of the Fort Augustus Scheol, who uses words of six and seven syllables with as much ease, apparently, as a common scholar does the alphabet, would be guilty of plagiarism? Let us examine this learned geutleman’s last three letters, viz., ‘‘Notes from Fort Augustus” ‘‘Notes by the Way,” and the last over his own signature, and see the spatteien and gentlemanly treatment he has extended to his fellow men. In his letter of 27th August, which he endeavors ' to deny through a point of evasion, he states that those who have been engaged hereto- | fore in buying produce at ovr wharves are | “eommission gobblers, things of bad repute | and lew vital powers, the bane of commerce ‘and the curse of trade, and their death | knell, commercial or otherwise, should be hailed with delight.” The reader will ‘understand by these statements the cour- teeus and gentlemanly treatment the learned teacher has extended to his fellow men, ‘when he peruses these few lines ‘and finds his perfidiousness, his unwarrant- able attack and his inconsistent conduct towards men who have frequently risked their funds in shipping the products of the farmer and very often had to accept fifty A - BN Graham's Road, Oct. Ist, ’80. =] + = - ws NO. 116 invested in the 1980, | per cent of the amount transaction. Had this talented gentleman endeavonr- ed, throngh his writings, to form a’ Farm- ers Club in [ert Augustus, and get him- self elected President of said Club, he would then be in a pesition to offer some inducements to strangers to give him a call, and some gaurantee that they would be well treated and receive a good article for their money. This course Mr. Laverty has not pursued, nur made any suggestions which would tend to improve the farmers present condition, but rushed into slander- Ing men’s reputations without establishing any proof for his unmaniy and unjust as- sertious. The venomous serpent coiled up in the grass, watching its chance to drive its poisonous fang into the passer-by, is no worse than the masked writer whe at- tempts to destroy his fellowman’s character Without a just and reasonable cause. No doubt this sensitive teacher feels a little annoyed at my allusion to his lowering the standard of education inthe Fort Augustus School, but [ think the public will gen- erally agree with me on this point when they read his letter of the 10th inst., un- der the heading of ‘‘ Notes by the Way,” and find that this intelligent gentleman, in his description of Monaghan Settlement and Lake Verd, asserts that the ‘‘ beauti- ful corn fields, and the comfortable farm houses greeted him during his journey.” if Mr. Laverty can substantiate his state- ments in this matter, 1 must freely admit that I never considered there was such a saintly person in our midst, nor have [ shown him that respect which his exalted position requires. The respect tendered to the high crown- ed Kings and Emperors of Europe, who have millions of subjects at their ¢om- mand, all sink into insignificance in com- parison to that which has been tendered by the cornfields and dwelling houses of the Monaghan Settlement, to the uncrowned teacher of the Fert Augustus School. In his letter of the 12th he accuses me of charging the people of Fort Augustus with ‘‘dishonest practices.” This is not true, and only goes io prove his inability to analyse my statement correctly. On this peint at no distant day I may be compelled to show where dishonest practices have been perpetrated by certain individuals. Inconclusion, Mr, Editor, Ithank you in advance for your valuable space, and trust I shall not be called upon again to say anything more on this trifling subject. Should this learned teacher wish to con- tinue, I trust he will lay aside his Billings- gate, produce facts in his own composition, and not appear like the proud Jack-daw, in borrowed plumage, lest his old friends might abandon him, and his new found ones despise him. Yours truly, J. H. CumMiskry. Fort Augustus, Sept. 20, 1880. Summerside Items. (From our own Correspondent, ) Finlay MeNeill, Esq., has been ap* pointed to the office of Port Warden for this port. An allotment of young cattle from the Government Stock Farm will be sold at the Drill Shed square on Exhibition Day. Our annual civic election of a chairman and six councillors takes place on Monday, October 4th. There are no names men- tioned in connection with the election as yet. On Exhibition Day, the 7th of October, both the ladies of the Methodist and Bap- t st churches intend providing dinner and tea tables, and in connection they will have tables for the sale of useful and faney articles. Aciub has been formed in this place to be known as the *‘ Summerside Instru- mental Club, for the study of instrumental music. President, Dr. D. G. McKay; Vice- President, J. Gray; Treas., L. Morris; Sec’y, A. A. MeLennan ; Conductor, 8, Bairnsfather. Mr. Norman MeLellan, of New York, was advertised to give a lecture in Ludlow Hall on Monday night last. Subject : ‘‘Goral and Coral Reefs.” For the want of an audience Mr. McLellan was com- pelleé to give up the idea of delivering his lecture upon this occasion. The schooner ‘‘Cepola,” of Lockport, Maine, arrived here on Tuesday, and is being loaded by D. Rogers, Esq., with white oats for the West Indies. The same morning the schr. ‘‘ Katie” arrived from Halifax, and is also being loaded with white oats for the West Indies, by R. T. Holman, Esq. ° During the week ending 28th Sept., the Island steamer took from this port 1027 bbls. oysters, 252 cases eggs, 25 horses, 1028 sheep, 4620 !bs. wool 66 lbs. mackerel, 1000 lbs. meat, 400 yds. cloth, 925 Tbs. leather, 1150 lbs. butter, 350 pelts, and 200 Ibs. cowhide, the value in all amount- ing to $8,844. Excursion tickets from here te St. John, N. B., will be issued on beard the steamer ‘‘ Princess of Wales” on the 4th of Octo- ber. These tickets will be good to return up to and including the 12th October. This will give our people an opportunity of at- tending the exinbition to be held in St. John on the Sth, Gth, 7th and 8th October. The tickets will cost $4. The Town Council and the Board of School Trustees of this town are at logger- heads with each other, and the Town Coun cil has refused to give any more money te the Sehool Beard until such time as the