~ oe sos ee 6 mane mee A I TT — i a ee ee ee - NAMINER. vols OA % Tue Datty HEXAMINER [a Published every Eventng. OFFICE: LNGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. FE. I. HATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, . 32 of Yhree Months. l 25 (ne Monti. 0 3U a me Week 0 12 es Acverti-ing at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- erly, or half-ycarly advertisements, on apphi- eation. Ww. L. > | J. W. MITCHELL, Otfice Sup’t COTTON, Manager. No. 35 Water St., Charlottetown. Prince Riward Island Branch —)F THK— NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANCE 60. Subscribed Capital, $9,733,332.00 Paid up Capital, - 1,216,666.60 CHIEF OFF iCES—Edinburgh, 64 Princess Street ; Londen, 61 Threadneedle Street. Nine-Tenths of the Profits pf the Life Assur- ance Business are divided every Five Years. ‘The Tables of Rates are moderate. Fire Insurances effected on nearly every description of Property, at the LowEsr RATES ot Premium. corresponding to the nature of the risk. Losses settled with promptitude and liber- ality. | G. W. DEBLOISs, General Agent, Dee. 14. ~ DR. P. W. 6, CANNING, Licentiate’ Royal Colleges Physicians and Surgeons of Edinburgh: LICENTIATE MIDWIFERY. RESIDENCE : Upper Hillsborough St., corner Hillsborough and estan Divoote Charlottetown. OFFICE HOURS : 8:30 to 11 a.m.; 7 to 9 p.m. Charlottetown, June 24, 1879.—eod + BRITISH AMERICA Assurance Company. FIRE. AND MARINE. Cash Capital & Assets, $1,170,945, INCORPORATED 1833. Head Office, - Toroato, Ont. el Risks taken on all descriptions of , Property at lowest rates PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES. HORACE HASZARD, Agent. Office, South Side Queen Square, July 10, 1879. o-- -- MAGLEAN & MARTIN, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Newson’s Building, Opp. Post Office, Charlottetown, P. EL 1. A, A. MeLEAN. p.¢. MARTIN. June 18, 1870.-—ex2aw +o FURTHER REDUCTION [N PRICE OF Albion Mines (Pictou, N. 8.) SLACK COAL. LACK and ROUND COAL can _ now be rteiped at Pe éise mentioned ioe. 4 Slack Coal, caly $1.30 per ton; ‘Roun Coal, $2.00, : For orders, apply to G. W. DeBLOIS, Sele Agent for P. E. Island. Orrice : No, 35 Water street. Ch’town, June 23, 1879—patsj kca h sp2in NOTICE. N and after MONDAY, the 30th Sep- tember, | intend adopting the strictly CASH SYSTEM $2 my business. ALBERT SIMPSON. ( HARLOTTETOWN, P a a ee BRITISH } WAREHOUSE. say —_————— As W. & A. BROWN are about making a change in their Firm, they are now selling their Large Stock of FALL & WINTER GOODS. At prices that defy competition. ——— —-—— 092 - -—— New Manitles, New Friilings. New Ulsters, New Cottons, New Flannels. New Cloths, Jew Tweeds, New Dress Goods, New Clouds, New Velveteens, | And a large line of Woollen Goods, of every description, all \of which they intend to close out within the next five months This is a bona fide sale. selves. Come one, come all, and see for your W. & A. BROWN. Charlottetown, October 8, 1879. ee © For For For For For For For ee = Fall Goods. onommcemienemunninnty Tang NEW. DRESS GOODS, very Cheap, go to J. B. MaecDONALD'S NEW MANTLES go to J. B. MacDONALD’S NEW WINCEYS and CLOTHS go to J. B. MacDONALD’S NEW HATS and BONNETS | go to J. B. MacDONALD’S NEW FLOWERS and FEATHERS go to J.B. MacDONALD’S MENS’ and BOYS’ CLOTHING . v0 to J. B. MacDona.p’s MENS’ and BOYS’ UNDERCLOTHING go to J. B MacDonatp’s For GREY and WHITE COTTONS, CHEAPEST YHT, “a, uD J. B. MACDONALD’S. Queen Street, Charlottetown, Sept. 15, 1879. TEA —AND— BEER & GOFF’S Lemon, Raspberry, and Pine Apple Syrup Sold in bottles and by the gallon. Plain and Fancy Biscuits Sold-in Boxes & Bbls, and by the pound. Iceing Sugar, Raisins, Currants, Pastry Flour, Essence of Coifee, Confectionery, Nuts, Oranges, Potted Ham, Drivelled Ham, Potted Tongue, &c BEER & GOFF. June 23, 1879. _—— To Inventors and Mechanics, ATENTS and how to obtain them. Pamph P et of 60 pages free upon receipt of stamps for postage. Address GILMORE, SMITH & CO., Solicitors of Patents, Washington, D.C. ‘Re ert". DWELLING HOUSE, Out Houses. &c., pleasantly situated at the West End of Possession on the city, in good condition. the 15th inst. Enquire of JNO. WM. MORRISON. Oct 6, 1879.—3i e w > a E DAILY EXAMINER, Bi or tet news—local and telegraphic PIC-NIC §=SUPPLIES ! Italian SUL)-{SUL CUTSTeTLLO PARTY E. G. HUNTER, WORKER IN = American Marble DEALER AND Guaranteed Satisfaction — ' MONUMENTS TABLETS, HEADSTONES, TOMB-TABLES All trom Original Designs. Best quality of Stock employed. Prices the Lowest of any Shop on this Island ! Also--Mantles, Centre Table and Commode Tops, Wash Bowl Slabs, Bracket Shelves, &t. de ’ de, Kent Street, Ch’town, Sep. 6, 1879. -—tu th sat 6mos & wkly rO\HE WEEKLY EXAMINER. — Per sons having relatives or friends abroad, and desiring to keep them informed concerning P. E. Island, cannot do soin a better or cheap, er way than by subscribing to Tue Wess EXAMINER. Sent, postpaid, to any address m Great Britain, the United States, or the Dominion, on receipt of One Dollar. j CIE for the DAILY EX | Sablished'» the Provines . ——we INCE EDWARD ISLAND, THUR = SDAY, Ne ee NEWS BY TELEGRAPY. UNITED STATES. New York, Oct. 21, At Bloomington, UL, yesterday, William Hogg, an old and respected citizen, deli- berately shot his daughter, 18 years of age, |and son, aged 12, fatally wounding the \fermer. He then shot himself fatally. , Later—Hogy is dead, the children cannot ‘survive. Probably insanity was the cause {of the deed.’ CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 21. Steam fire engine No. 6, while going to a fire this evening went at full speed into the river at Columbus street bridge, drown- ing both horses and badly injuring three men. The bridge was swung, and the draw was out ef repair ; the driver was un- able to stop the horses. AFGHANISTAN. ltis reported that the Russian troops de- feated at Feok Tepe will winter on the shore of the Caspian Sea. Lanore, Oct. 21. Much anxiety is felt respecting the con- dition of transportation in Khyber Pass where the supply trains are completely blocked up. Three attacks have been made on the British by tribes in Kurrum Valley since the 12th. The Ghilzais are reported to be again preparing for hostilities. It is expected that Yakoob Khan’s son (five years old) will be recognized as the successor to the throne. Berun, Oct. 21.- General Kauffman, Governor of Turkes-. tan, who has been some time in St. Peters- burg, returns to Turkestan immediately with fresh instructions based on important events in Kulkja and Afghanistan. Sima, Oct. 21. The latest news from Ali Kheyl repre- sent the frontier tribes dispersing since learning of the fall of Cabul. RUSSIA. Sr. Pererspvree, Oct, 21, An immense fire has taken place at Ufa ; more than one-fifth of the town is con- sumed. Many persons were killed. The loss is enormous. MEXICO. San Antonio, Tex., Oct. 21. The latest Mexican advices state that the insurgents so far, have been unable to cap- ture the city of Chipnahan. They are massing a considerable army in the ad-- jacent territory and have notified citizens that they will exact the payment of $127,- 000. Troops are on the way to the rescue. The wheie State isin a ferment. Reports of Indian outrages are shocking, nearly 100 men, women and children having been murdered. People are under arms to pro tect themselves. A number of bands of Indians are raiding the country west of here. ee PERISHED IN A GALE. Wreck of an an Unknown Schr. and Loss of Life. Picrov, N. 8., Oet. 21. Early this forenoon a messenger came into town from Cariboo Island with the in- telligence that the body of a man had been found washed ashore near the lighthouse there, and that a schooner, supposed io be of about 60 tons, was to be seen about half a mile from the shore bottom upwards. The | schooner had been first seer: early on Mon- day morning, but so violent a storm pre- vailed all day that no one attempted to board the wreck. Mr. Matheson,coroner, ar- rived at Cariboo Island this afternoon, by which time.the bodies of two more men had been found washed ashore and the schooner had drifted so near the beach that men were able toreach her on foot. Nothing was found on any of the bodies by which they could be identified. One body is described as that of a man apparently about 60 years of age, rather stout; a second appeared to have been aman about 30, with whiskers and moustache of a sandy color; the other body appeared to be that of a delicate boy. A large quantity of bark, and about 100 pieces of pine boards had drifted ashore. The schooner lies so deeply imbedded in the sand that no name can be seen. Mr. Matheson made arrangements to have the bodies buried in the Cariboo Island Cem- etery, to-morrow. It is supposed the schooner was struck by a squall on Sunday evening. —_-_-—-+-+-_--2. > oo -_—_— ——_ -—— Russian Military,Policy. A great council of the most eminent gen- erals in the Russian army has been held at Livadia, under the presidency of the Czar. The object has not been disclosed, and the contineutal papers are exercising their ingen- uity in trying to discover what it really was, One suggestion is that its main object was to find out a new mode of mobilization which should be more efficient and quitker than the present one has been found to be in practice. According to another version, it was the pol- iticai more than the military situation which eccupied the attention of the Council, and, above all, the policy to be followed in the Pans part in Eastern affairs, lends pro- bility te this supposition, \CTOBER 23, 1879. —— | —_——-- + NO. 114. Sir Francis Hincks. Sympathy is expressed in the Upper Province journals on the misfortune of Sir Francis Hincks, who has been found guilty, as President of the Consolidated Bank, of preparing, or allowing to be prepared, false returns to the Government of the condition of the Bank. The’ Montreal Gazette says that ‘‘the jurors did not remain sufficiently long in deliberation.” The Herald says ; “There can be no donbt that the public, and especia!!y stockholders in Banks, have had grave reasons for complaint of the manner in which their affairs have been managed. ‘The prevalent system of making Bank returns as stated in evidence raises a most disagreeable doubt as to the value of information which Bank Man- agers vonchsafe to the public. Gen- eral sympathy is expressed for Sir Fran- cis on account of his fall at his time of life.” The Quebec Chronicle says :—*‘In this trying ordeal, notwithstanding the gravity of the charge, we are sure Sir Francis will receive the sympathy of many in the community in which he has been for so many years a prominent figure. He has left the impress of his mind on the affairs of Canada for nearly-thirty years. and it isa thousand pities that in his old age, after having contributed so much to the history of the country and after having been hon- ored in an especial manner by his sovereign that his declining days should be embittered by a criminal prosecution in his adopted city. We are sure none of the stockholders vf the bank are revengeful. They will probably be among the first to offer sym- pathy to Sir Francis and his family in these dark days of their trouble. -_————-——— > oo aD eo &- eee Courtney’s [ll Luck. Probably no other oarsman ever had any- thing like Courtney’s experience in profes- sional rowing. His first race as a profes- sional was to have been rowed with Riley, on Greenwood Lake, in July, 1877 ; but it was not rowed because Courtney was ill and claimed to have been poisoned before the race ina drink ‘of cold tea. The next year he undertook to row a race with Dempsey on Seneca Lake. and upset at the turning stake—he claimed that his oar had caught in a wire set there to turn him over; the referee could not find the wire, and ordered the race to. be rowed over; but the men concluded not to do it. Two weeks later he beat Dempsey easily, just as he had beaten Riley three times succes- sively after the previous botch. Abouta year ago he was beaten by Hanlan, and had the chagrin of hearing his admirers ac- cuse him of selling the race. Thursday's disaster of the sawed boats was the most novel yet connected with the hapless car- penter’s career. And yet, despite the num- ber of times that great crowds of spectator’s have been disapnointed, and have vented their anger, no doubt Courtney, next year, would draw another great crowd, even if only to see if the race wonld really come off.—N. Y. Sun. —* —_2oe «+ Mussel Mud as Manure. A Kent county, N. B., correspondent of the Telegraph gives the following testi- monial of the value of mussel mud as manure : Another matter to which many of the farmers of this country might turn their attention with profit, is the digging of what is called ‘“‘mussel-mud,” and manuring their farms with it. Some few who have been using it speak highly of its benefits. One farmer told your correspond- ent that he manured a field with ‘“‘mussel-mud”’ eight years ago, and he could see the effects of that single coating on the crops to this day. It is well known that in P.E. Island, where there is, generally speaking, better farming than anywhere else in the Maritime Provinces, it is largely used. There is not*much difference be- tween the soil of Kent and that of IP. E. Island, except in color; they are both formed of the underlying sandstone— one grey, the other red—so that there is no rea- son why the farmers in Kent should not utilise this fertilizer to the extent they do in P. FE. Island.” The superb mansion known in the West End of London ironically as ‘*Grant’s Folly,” is to be put up for public auction. It was built by Mr. Albert Grant in his most flourishing day for $70,000, and comprises an immense house, the reception hall of which is the most magnificent in-London. Skating rinks, vineries, orangeries, and greenhouses are in the garden, not to speak of a large artificial lake in the centre. Several projects were on hand for dividing it among the creditors. One Was to sell to the Duke of Connaught when he married ; that failing they tried to sell it to some en- terprising contractor, whe would pull it down and build smaller houses upon it. No one coming forward for that, the creditors are going to put it up for auction, when it is expected it will sell fora third of the building money spent upon it. : The Sixth of November, by order pub- lished in the Canuda Gazette, ia to be ob- served as a day of thanksgiving. This is a holiday in which all nationalities and creeds can unite. Canada has much to be thankful for. Peace and increasing prosperity have been hers during this year, and the outlook is very bright. It is well to acknowledge as @ nation, as well as individually, that every 90d thing cometh from God, and we a East. ‘The presence of Prince Lobanoff, Gen- | 8904 eral Kauffman, and others who have taken a! that this year the acknowledgnrent will hearty and unanimous from every part ef tho Deminion.