lin mn nr ——— — 3 = rm ‘LH ii AMIN Se, ee a ne! le ah ae aT LE OO NE RN Oe Re GT OL 7 Ju (RI QT" EYE VUE) AT lary} ; r : nh. : ( j ata §t'@ ata A pI MTSU SLUT i> | ' 7 a XM a f7 Try f yy YO ’ T/* . VOL. «. JHARLOTERTOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, [380,- NO. 140 Ree — — ween coir — weno ge . ‘ am come: jean emcee teres: mma cine) Scere oa Dei Bhinas ones Secesmeni a ass Seman Cn ETAT Anca SamnenneemanaNianee eine PERKINS New Millinery and Millinery Materials ! DIRECT FROM BEST LONDON PLUSH, FREIZE, IN AL Silks and Satins, in Velvets and Yelveteens, NOW SHOWING A*SUPERIOR STOCK OF VELVET, Lu THE De ann Pompadour, in Plain Colors, Pomnader 103; FUR AND RRWESE SHAPES, and iP and New Laces, Ribbons, &c.. Flowers and Heathers, A FULL SfOCK OF STAPLE AND FANCY GOODS, Ne. cad UNSURPASSE Charlottetown, October 4, 1580. eQré 5 PACIFIC — Mutual insurance va,, —- OF — NSW YORE ee MARINE. ee Assets 31st Dec., 1879, - $744,149.00) Imaurance effected on CARGOES and FREIGHTS, covering $15,000 and upwards en first-class risks. | Gertilicates issued payable in London at the office of Morton liosre & Co., Bankers, or in New York. Risks taken and rates fixed without being | referred to Head Ufiice. FENTON T. NEWBERY, | Agent for P, KE. Island. | May 11, 1880. ~ OLD QUEEN SQUARE LIVERY STABLES: RE-OPENED. | modious Livery Stabies, LATELY OCCUPIED BY MR. JAMES BARR, | North Side Queen Square, Where you can get the Curarest AND Best | TURMOUTS IN THE CITY. | JAMES N. MILLNER. | Ch’ town, Sept. 14, 1580—iy { i QUEEN NSURANGR CO'Y. OF ENGLAND. YHE Subscriber has removed to the com- | GAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIGNS STERLING. NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Puild- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Aliso, on Vessels on the stocks. ial rates for isolated residences, Leases settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Ageut for Prince dward Jsiand Juae, 1877—- Bones. Bones. ae f HE undersigned will pay fifty cents Casn per cwt. for all bones delivered at the, Bone Mill, in the Royalty. No quantity | less than one cwt. (112 lbs) taken. | FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Agent. | Chitown, Dee. 1, 1879 TRY If. MINE NUT COAL) Git ALBION a fair trial and you will not be disap-_ peinted in the result; i is COAL, noi sire clay end slate, For orders apply to G. W. DzBLOIS, ov Sole Agent for P. HB, Island. | @fice—No. 35 Water Street. | Charlottetown, July8, 1¢S0— pat tf © UBSCRIBE for the DAILY BXAMJNER e Provinces, Hat and Bonnet Ornaments. a 8 tere «VU. KK THE Recommended for Regul -_ THE VERY BEST ARTICLE FOR DIETARY USE EVER DISCOVERED. f HE injurious effects which the continuos use of tea and coffee have on the human system are well known, paticnts to abstain from using either. stivute. discovered which has becn found to perfectiy answer the purpose. and Coffee, it contains neither Theine nor Caficine, nor any other poisonous principle whatever which can even by long cozsiitutions. weals nothing but Kaoxka. = ~ : AND VARIETY. PERAING IN VALUE es NEW CANADIAN zk A.OB 4. The Only Satisfactory Substitute for Tea and Coffee. -Highly ar tse at G@rdinary Meais. ——— 10: —- — — — :0:- a it is especially recommenced which it is made are wheat and sugar, nothing more. ‘ For sale in pound aud halt-pound packets at the ‘Crown Greoery,’ South ROBERTSON & CAMERON, Side Queen Squ are. Charlottetown, Oeteber 1, 188Q--30 ins eod IK For For For For For For :0:-—_——— J. B. RIACDONALD’'S, QUEEN STREET. —_—— 20: Readymade Clothing, Custom-made Clothing, Shirts and Drawers, White and Colored Shirts, Hats and Caps, Worsted, Coatings, For Tweed Suitings, For For For - Scarfs, Ties and Collars Silk and Linen Handkerchiefs, New, Stylish and Cheap Goods, J. B&B. MACDONALD’S, GO TO Oct. 11, 1880. STER HOUSES. STRAW sVERAGE! rf tse a The most eminent physicians advise t he Owing to the taste for these bever age which bas been universally acquired, it has been found necessary to find as ub Various substitutes have been tried, but Kaoka is the only one ever Unlike Tea oO use, prove hurtful to the weakest for sick persons and children, Families using white bread habitually should adopt KaeKa as their regular drink at meals. ‘hey will then have supplied to them the elements which, when taken into the system, go to form bones, nails, teeth, sinews and brains, nd which have been separated from the fine flour of which the white bread is made, Thousands of persons who have been efflicted with Dyspepsia, Ner- vousness, Indigestion, Sleeplessness, tick Headache, &c., have been restored to perfect health by eschewing tea and cofiee altogetter, and drinking with their It contains no ‘ chemicals.” | | HATS, Plain Colors, limbessed, & STERNS. K envoumemnenst me The elements from Queen Street. i VE) nN o_o ee - rhY iT ‘BARRELS BAIT AND SALT, CHHrBUVUCTO QUEEN'S WHARF. BAIT, 300 MACK EREL BARRELS. om Poe ee aed 100 barrels jist FATHERRING. 50 half-barrels 100 Quintals CODFISH and HAKE. Just Landed—a choice lot New Labrader | the Cheapest and most Newsy vee Berring. nm augl BAGS SALT, 200 Barrels Herring and Mackerel D. SMALL. / Tnsurance Association | MARINE E. PALMER, Junr.,. TTI DAK BReARITUO THis PAiDl MONI. NOTES OF ‘up. If however, it is to UNITED STATES, Since the results of the Indiana elections were known, the Republican victory was generally expected, and these expectations bave been fulfilled. In 1860 Lincoln was first chosen President, and since that time the Republicans have always elected their candidate. So that party may now claim a rule of twenty-four years. Yet when Lincoln was first elected he had only a sninority of votes cast, Just as during the past four years Hayes, the nominée of the | minority, has been in the President's chair. ; Very few political parties can stand ®quar- ter of a centry of prospetity, and the Re publican party is in no way likely to be the | exception to the rule. Probably the return | of a Democratic President would have done ; a good deal to bring about a more real union betweer the north and south, if only by showing the latter that not even a man | of their own would now work any radical change iu the Constitution, and hy proving to the North that the supremacy of no section of the country would real-| ly endanger the Union. But a that risks a revolution aud fails. must pay, | as one of its penalties,a jong exclusion trom power. The intrigues of the Tories, at the end of Queen Ann’s reign, were prematurely checked, and not a blow was struck, Yet} even their unsnecessful plot kept that party outof power for thirty years. So the Demo crats are only reaping as they have sown. Jt is to be feared that the representations of land agents are not now any more trust- worthy than when Martin Chuzziewit was} inveigled by them to pnt out his shingle as an architect among tle swamps of Eden. Kansas, which was spoken of as a paradise ) : choice party | on earth, and tiie splendor of whose pros- | perity dazzled the imagination of some of | our wisest statesmen, is sufiering from a} famine. The New York Herald says: ‘In| Vestern Kansas no wau cari raise crops | enough to keep himself from starvation,” and calculates that many thousands must, during the coming winter, be supported by charity. ‘T'oo many of our people, it is to} be feared, are beginning to find ont also that a crowded iarket means no work, or, at the least, iow wages, just as surely in Colorado as in any other part of the world, and are coming back, when they | are so fortunate as to be able to get back, with a painful experience as their only gain. The rapid decrease in Aiferican ship- ping, notwithstanding the wonderfulmde- velopment of the country generally, is a remarkable fact. In 1859 the total inward and outward tonnage of the United States was, in round numbers, 155 millions of tons, of which 104 or about 67 per cent. were American vessels. In 1860, the Am- erican proportion had fallen to 293 per cent of the total, and up to the time when the figures were made up for 1880, the gross tonnage was 34 millions and the native was only about 6 millions, or 19 per cent, as against 67 per cent in 1859. : labor CANADA. Although there has been no official an- nouncement of the Pacific Railway bargain, it is generally understood that a company has been formed, to whom wiil be given a quantity of land, and’ whose bonds will, to a certain amount,be guaranteed by Canada. Whether this latter condition is in addition to, or in lieu of, a cash payment, is not certainly known. Guarantees are to be given for the completion and dne working of the road. The names latterly mentioned as belonging tv the Company do not seem sufficiently strong to assure the work going on, without reference to the favor the bonds of the Company may find with the public. But security for the principle on fertile lands in the Northwest, and for in- terest by a government guarantee, will probably fioat them without much difficulty. An early, but not a special, session of Parliament now seems probable. The Government has scored another vic- tory at Brome,where the vacancy caused by the death of an Opposition member has been filled by a Government supporter. Al- though the Administration is now in the third vear of its existence, it has not lust one, and has gained several seats. This is an unusual record for any party, more par- ticularly fer one that came in with a very! large majority. It certainly looks as | though, if they manage with ordinary pre- | dence, the present Government will retain power for a great while to tome. : It is nowcertain that the Finance Minis- | ter will meet Parliament with a largely in- | creased revenue, —almost certainly with a! surplus. As this will be the first Financial year that the new Tariff has worked undis- turbed, its friends will score a point in lts favor, and even the most grumbling free- | trader will grumble a little less, when he | finds that, at Jeast, deficits are overcome. The resignation of Mr. Masson and Mr. Baby’s elevation to the Bench, will open two, probably three constituencies in Que- bec. ‘we are. reminded that we are far i¢ 'chants will be fatal to both. ‘failer sueseed together. > oe © . ‘don said at St. ;} we are. fare as fat ‘ent, the reporter asked if he There is not much doubt that the | way to pay interest and asinking fatd on the evstof the buil lings; and i is to be hoped that the matter mag soon be taken be a Government natter, important as it is, it can only claim a second place. Goud and efficient build- ings on the Stock Farm are the first in the list of our requirements. Professor Sheldon’s visit to our Island may prove useful in many ways. We are, if anything, inclined to uaderrate our natural advantages aud to blame an imagined lack of opportunities for the con- sequences vf opr own lack of enterprise and push. After what we have been told of the excellenog.of our grass lands, the fair quality of “Gipoeheep, and the very poor quality of our eattie ; when, further, more favorably situated for exporting than the wore Western « Provinces, and that the difference betwSea the price of ‘good meat here and ia England is some- thing that Professor Sheldon ** cannot un- ' derstand,” there is surely enough to stimu- late Doth the farming and mercantile mem- hers of the community to increased exer- tions, and, it should be added, toa co-opera- tion. Jealousy between farmers and wmer- They will Professor Shel- Sohn that there must be 'somedefectinthe commercial arrangements. To what defect, it may be asked here, is it due that the owners of the ‘* Prince Ndwarda” have to send her to Montreal fer ‘a freight, and consequently hundreds of sheep have to be transported to Quebee for shipment. In other words, while Nature placed us 800 miles to the east of Quebec, and wuch hearer our ‘* defective eoutuercial arrange- us in the same position as market, ments” put ‘those 800 miles to the west of that city, or / 1,600 miles farther from the market than This surely should set every merchant and farmer thinking It increases the risk and lessens the profit of the mer- chant, and decreases the value for éxpurta- tion of every sheep on the Island by at least the freight on 1,000 miles transport. Professor Sheldon is, evidently, observ- ant of all things, not cattle only, but men and women. He was stror: by the ‘* red- ness of our faces.” Can it be that, seeing the hospitable beard of the Revere House surrounded by the rubicund visages of #0 many hens vivants, he judged that we all and well hkiug as those he there saw around him, and so ex- claimed, with a pathetic outburst of honest John Ball sympathy, ‘‘ My friends you are ruddy |” eet The outery for ‘Justice to “Prince Edward Island” which the recent railway appointment has caused, shows the urgent necessity for the introduction of some defi- nite principle to govern both appointments ‘to, and promotion in, the Civil Service. When a general examination tests the fitness of these who enter the service, and special technical one decides the question of promotion, it may be hoped that gradually the question of the accident of a man’s birth-place will become quite unimportant as compared with his fitness to discharge his duties. The success that attended the first meet- ing of the Teachers Institute, will doubtless lead to their being continued at regular in- tervals. The benefits of such gatherings are obvious. Not the least is the premotion aud encouragement of an esprit de corps among the members of the honorable profes- sion of teachers. Mr. Lindley deserves the thanks of the community for the treat he gave them in bringing Mr. Forbes here to lecture; and it is to be hoped that he has received a sub- stantial remuneration for his risk and suffi- cient to enconrage him to provide other en- tertainments of an equally high order. Increased supply of books, development of new branches of literature, and varions other causes have so changed circumstances that the drama will never again occupy the high position it once held as among the first of the intellectual and moral forces of its time. But it still has, if a humbler, still a very definite sphere of usefulness,— to provide cheeerful and innocent amuse- ment, and to have, at least, a refining effect, by sternly suppressing what is coarse and low in all its surroundings. ~ If in addition to good dramatic representations, there are also cccasionally provided such musical anf intellectual treats as those given by the Boston (Quintette Club. and Forbes’ lectures, we shall have no reason to complain of evr popular amusements. Mr. Ancursatp Foknrs AND THE AMERI- can Revorrers.—The Enylish papers quote the following with great glee: Mr, Arebi- bald Forbes was interviewed by a New York Herald reporter immediately atter his arrival in America. Having in answer to questions detailed his experience as a war correspond- had ever seen service while acting as a soldier. Mr. Forbes: “The only service | saw while in the British army Was in some political riots in Ireland, where I was knocked off my horse with a brick.” + -- i Tne effects of jumping from a train is thus Government will be able to hold their own | illustrated by the St. John Telegraph: When there. ‘the man jumped his body turned and be came OUR OWN PROVINCE. ‘down head first, alighting on top of a cooking stove that was on the platform of Moncton has had some rufflings of excitement in the | Station, One of the stove covers was knocked ; past month. The success that attended our | sf and his head passed through the hole. exhibitors at Montreal, and St. John,/ qi. nose and one ear were cut and a long awakened more than usual interest in our | 451; made in his sealp, besides bruises to the home show; and both the cattle show and | jody. exhibition were much above the average. se kt | Ch’town, Oct. 22,’80—Im Exchange Building, | This very success proved clearly the neces- EPUY the DAILY EXAMINER for the, latest news—loeal and telegraphic. sity for suitable buildings for both. The in-- creased receipts would probably go a great oonineenin’ Ne ll pm Tie new beverage “‘ Kaoka,” is for sale at George Carter’s Grocery Store, Great George Street. Call and geta package. [oct. 18, eis: = ees ae nme ~_ om womens sauna wares a ee i aap eo cies pe nop pa IE pn ng ay ay ene - tee a nee J 6 mi spore ee Pa aes ” pee: a eee eee, , ' waaay MBF TH aD Re Ming: She i peat eel OE inp ERATE Beas Re AG ge SI ge eee cnt 9 RG ERE SI TEE I om FIM II aE. Ne OE te fi ath | Sine ” rs - rome « oF ; ‘th ad Bring 2 Yip ad