ee ny HoRSE AND BuGGY—A FIRST-CLASS TURN- eUT—TO HIRE AT THE NorTH STAR,—sep | tf Turk Lorne Hotel will not close %efore October.—sept 5, 2in—pat h lin Mr. A. Houmes’ horse ‘‘Look Out” took second prize in the 2:38 class race at Truro, N. S., on Wednesday. Cooxise Apples, Bartlett Pears, Onions, in choice order, at A. McNeill's Auction Room, No. 11 Queen street.—3i Masor Morris’ battery of artillery will be inspected by the Deputy Adjutant General at Victoria Park to-morrow evening at 4 o'clock. A GERMAN gentleman is desirous to teach the German language. He is willing to teach at the scholar’s residence. Price $6.00 a spate, two lessons a week. Apply to Will. aas, Great George Street, (Spring Park). —3i Tus Viola Crirrron Lady Minstrals per- formed to a fair audience in Market Hall last evening, and left fer Summerside to-day. An extended notice of the performance crowded out. Lorne Horet—Application for room is much larger than at any time during the sum- mer, and this favorite summer Hetel is likely to be well tilled for remainder of the season. Several American gentlemen are having good plover and duck shooting round Tracadie. THe Steamer Quebec has not yet got off’ East Point reef. The tug Druid, of victou, sailed to her assistance yesterday, and the Northern Light, with the Minister of Marine and several] other gentlemen oa board,left this city for East Point at 4 o'clock this morning. Exursirion.—The new Potato Digger re- cently patented by W. C. Smallwood will be shown at work on Mr. James Pempraise’s farm, Malpeque road, near St. Dunstan’s College, on Tuesday, the 9th inst., at 3 o'clock. Farmers and others interested are invited to be present. [sm3i Tae Hectmers of the Charlottetown En gineer Corps have been received. They are something beautiful, being exactly similar to the helmets worn by the British Marine Ar- tillery at the naval review at Victoria Park on the occasion ot the vice-regal visit. Those worn by privates are brass mounted, with the Royal Arms in front, under which is the inscription ‘‘Charlottetowa Engineers Canada Militia.’ Major Dogherty’s helmet beggars description, being far more elegant than those we have seen at the British military veview en Victoria Park. Weare pleased to see that the Province will this year be represented at the annual competition of the Dominion Rifle Association at Ottawa. A team of fifteen men will be selected immediately, and wili probably be composed of the following gentlemen, all of whom have shown themselves to be excellent shots: David Harper, 8S. Gay, James Dover, Vernon Longworth, Ewen McDougall, Ewen McGregor, Benjamin Hooper, Lemuel Hooper, R. Crawford, J. Cocmbs, Lieut. Alex. Horne, Lemuel Younker, Matthew Allen. Ar the annual meeting of the Queen’s Co. Rifle Association held in the Stipendiary Magistrate's Court Room last evening; the following Council of the Association was elect- ed: Major Pollard, Pesident, (re-elected); Major Dogherty. (re-elected); Lieut Passmore, (re-elected); Lieut. Irving, (re-elected) Capt. F. Dogherty, Lieut. Kennedy, Sargt. Ewen McGregor, E. McDougall, Secretary. The regular annual prize meeting of the Associa- tion will probably take place on the Ist of October. A Geu.—-The following appears in yester day’s Patriot: ‘‘The wharves and bridges are allowed to goto rack and ruin owing to the false notions of economy entertained by the Government.” Worcester gives: an instru- ment of torture, torture, torment, extreme in, as the meaning of the word “‘rack.” The ny of the unfortunate wharves aad bridges when they are subjected to the ‘‘rack” must indeed be fearful to contemplate. It is no wonder that Henry Lawson never rose above the rank of a third or lowest class teacher at a time when examinations were merely nominal. Tuat Sea Serpent.—Mr. E. G. Fuller writes to the Summerside Jowrna/ in sub- stantiation of the story told by the Miminigash fisherman. Hesays: ‘‘Ihe same fish, or a similar one, was seea from one of Mr. Belyea’s boats a few days after. ‘There are numbers of men who have seen fish of this description, and although it may seem unusual to ple residing inland, it is considered Co dehermen as by no means uncommon. In company with Captain Peter N. Mc- Donald, on board the schooner C. W. Lyle, and James Cantwell; both of Souris, I had the op. rtupity of viewing a fish of the same shape as described by my men, for two hours of a calm afternoon, about two miles off Cape Bear, in July, 1879. The one we saw was fully three times the length of the schooner, and not over one hundred yards distant. The iece that the men brought ashore lay on the lock for two or three days, and was seen by a number of persons in this locality. Tue steamer Carroll sailed for Boston on Thursday evening with a cargo consisting of 721 barrels and 83 boxes mackerel ; 420 boxes eggs ; 512 boxes lobsters ; 57 barrels codfish ; 4 casks oil and 28 coops fowls—valued at $8267.00. She had also on board the follow- ing passengers :—Miss Warren, Miss Annie Siebiiean. Mr. Brown, Miss Brown, Mr. Smith, Mrs. Williams. Mrs, William Cum- ming, Miss Edith Cumming, Miss McKinlay, Jane Holland, Mrs. Bridget Kelly, Miss Mc- Kinnon, Miss Croucher, William Nicholson, W. H. Campbell, Miss C. H. Ross, Miss Morris, Miss E. Morris, Miss M. A. McInnis, Miss L. Coffin, Mrs. A. A. Baldwin and two children, Miss E. Callaghan, Mrs. E. Jackson, Miss A. McDonald, John Campbell, Mrs, J. Large, Miss e, Mr. J. W. ge, Master Wm. Large, Miss M. Doyle, Miss Lottie Leggett, Jane Holeman, Miss M. J. Brown, Miss Annie Finlayson, Miss C. Ryan, Hannah Weatherbic, Miss. M Martin, Miss F. McLean, Mrs. Jane Cumming, Miss Kate Flynn, Miss Smythe, M. Morrison, Mrs. Bearney, Mrs. L. Gregor, H. Silver, J. Stanlake, Mrs. P. Black. Edward Cummings, J. Smith, A. A. McNeill, Miss M. Rose, Mr. L. Aurthur, J. M. Robins, Miss E. Beer, J. P. Small, Miss McInnis, Mrs. B. Rogers, and « large number of others with return tickets. mn _Leral and Other Items | = NOT L000! Perkins & Sterns. WE BAVE JUST RECEIVED VIA HALIFAX, New Black Cashmeres, New Black Merinos, New Black Satins, New Black Crapes, New Black Velvets, New Black Prints, New Mantle Cloths, New Lace Curtains, New Ostrich leathers, NEW SCARF LACK, de. &e., &€. All of which are marked at OUR USUAL Low Prices. Perkins & Sierls on Ott: eee orresponacnce. ga We do not hold ourselves responsible for the statements or opinions of our correspondents, T’o the Editor of the Examiner. Str—An advertisement appeared in your paper recently informing the public that the Hon. F. Brecken, one ot the Commissioners for this Province, had received ‘‘a few copies of prize lists,” &c., of the great Dominion Kx- hibition to be held at Ottawa commencing on the 22d Sept. inst., also stating that ‘‘full particulars’ could be had on application to Mr. Simon W. Crabbe, of Charlottetown.” Will you kindly inform your readers if any arrangement has been made to issue half fare tickets frem this Province for the occasion ? Several leading agricuultrists from here are anxious to know what reduction of fares (if any) will be made. On former occasions of the same kind, tickets at reduced fares were issued. Perhaps Mr. Crabbe, acting for his honor the Commissioner, will publish the re- quired information. The hon, Senator Hay- thorne is also a Commissioner representing the interests of this Province. Mr. Hay- thorne has always manifested a practical in- interest in the agricultural welfare of our farm- ers. Will his honor, through your columns, throw some light on the question of cenvey- ance to the grand National Exhibition at Ot- tawa. Yours truly, FARMER. Lot 50, Sept. 4, 1875. ail delle titi MISCELLANEOUS. Alex. H. Stephens, of Georgia, the ex- Vice-President of the Confederate States, has declared his preference for the next Presidency to be General Hancock, one of the ablest of the Northern Generals during the war. The Governor of lowa being urged to pardon a convicted rumseller declined, say- ing, ‘‘ while I have great sympathy for Mr. Newton, | have alswu great sympathy for the wives and children who have been made sufferers by the sale of whiskey to the fathers and husbands by Mr. Newton,” The following address is being numer- ously signed in Plymouth for presentation to Capt. Carey on his arrival in the screw steamer Jumna:—‘‘We, men of Plymouth, in welcoming you back to your native coun- try, desire to express our entire confidence in your valor asa British officer and your honor as a gentleman, and our sincere sym- pathy with you in the trying circumstances in which yeu have been placed.” The Canadian Government is employing a considerable number of transcribers to copy what are known as the Haldimand papers, over two hundred volumes of which were acquired by the manuscript depart- ment of the British Museum in 1858. These papers are among the most important con- tributions to the eaaly history of the Dominion, being the literary remains of Lieutenant General Sir Frederick Haldi- mand, K. B., a Governor for many years previous to 1790 of the Province of Canada. The Pope is about to carry out the re- commendations of his encyclical on the re- turn to the philosophy of Sir Thomas Aquinas. He begins first with reforms in teaching of the schools in the immediate region of the Vatican. A despatch from Rome to a Catholic quarter states that several changes are to be made among the professors of philosophy in the ecclesiastic- al schools of Rome. The same despatch gives an absolute denial to the reports cur- rent in English papers about the bad health of the Pontiff. A strange and terrible accident, which happened to a worthy young citizen of Mill- brook, Master Dawson Hunter, second son of Capt. Hunter, Clerk of the Division Court, is thus recorded by the Messenger : For some time past, young Hunter has been getting sort of deaf, and his parents have been trying te do what they could to prevent deafness setting in. With this end in view they took him a few days ago to Sykes’ Eye and Ear Infirmary, at Oshawa. While in the air bath, the bath exploded, part ef which struck Dr. Sykes, who was passing at the time, breaking his leg in three places and otherwise injuring him, and covering him with the ruins of the wall. It seems miraculous that young Hunter was not instantly killed, as one side of the great iron box was blown completely out, and through a partition and the wall of the house. At the moment young Hunter thought he was not much injured, but shortly after he went‘into a kind of convul- sion, for a time being insensible. The shock has evidently been too much for his system, as the doctors give no hepes of his recovery. His spine is injured. A Company or Zutus—an impi, as the correspondent would say— has come to sig- nal griefin Dublin. Encouraged no doubt by the sympathizing tone of the anti-Eng- lish press, these hardy warriors invaded the Ulundi of Ireland, and at one of the great public kraals displayed themselves, their ox hide shields and their terrible assegais to all persons possessed ef the desirable curiosity and the necessary shilling. Busi- ness becoming dull some of the ‘‘friendly Zulus” were sent out in a carriage by their enterprising manager to beat up a public, even as Little Nell was paraded through the town by Mrs. Jarley. Becoming thirsty they stopped like mere Britons at a beer seller’s kraal, and were practically esinpar-} ing the stout of Dublin with the laager of their native country, when along came an old woman whose son had been killed at the rout of the Twenty-fourth regiment. This simple-minded mother gathered an apronful of stones from the newly-macada- mized roadway, and as soon as the Zulu iimpi debouched from the kraal she began bombarding them with rocks, pouring ina musketry fire of curses at the same time with Hibernian vigor. The Zulu shields thus tested proved not to be made of ox hide tough as irou, but of mere painted canvas, and in spite ef the frightful assegais which, when on exhibition, the Zulus brandished so menacingly, they were use- less. The old woman routed the savages _ HOUSE fe NOW SHOWING ! A Lot of Mens’ White Vests, * AT 50 CTS. AND 75 CTS. EACH. Cheap Lines of Colored Alhambra Quilts 50 CTS, 75 CTS, $1.00. The Balance of our Stock of Ladies Skirts To be Cleared Out Bargain. ata A Fresn Srock OF PRINTS TO OPEW THIS WEEK, MENS’ STRAW HATS! A Large Variety, Very Cheap. LIN OUE. Tailoring Department —WE HAVE a— Capital Range of Broadcloths, Worsted Coating, and Tweeds. ¥ea= TERMS CASH <q and put them to ignominous flight, sound! Ch’town, July 24, 1879. confused and roundly gursed,—J, Y, World, is 20) CASKS PARKS’ BEST XXX VINEGAR, THE BEST QUALITY IMPORTED. CARVELL BROS. Aug. 25, 1879. 2aw 2w ~ AUCTION! VALUABLE PROPERTY For Sale in Chariottetown and Common. To be sold by Public Auctien}(if not pre- viously disposed of by private sale), on FRIDAY, the 5th SEPTEMBER next, at 12 o'clock, neon, at the Court House in Cherlottetown, the following valuable TOper vies --— (Ist) All that tract, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the Common of Charlottetown, bounded and described as fol- lows—that is to say: Commencing at the north adge of the Back Brighton Road at the west boundry of Lot number eight (8) ; thence following the course thereof northwardly for the distance of five (5) chains and ninety-four (94) links, or until it meets the south bound- ary of Common Lot number two (2); thence ‘following the course of the same westwardly one chain and sixty-eight links ; thence by a right angle therewith running southwardly te the said road ; thence following the course of the said road eastwardly ene chain and sixty- eight links to the place of commencement, con- taining one acre of land, a little more or less, being plot number nine (9), in Common Lot number one, in the Common of Charlottetown, as defined in the plan of the late Samuel Mitchell’s estate at Brighton, aforesaid, refer- ference being thereunto had will fully appear. (2). Also, all that tract, piece or parcel «f land situate, lying and being in Charlottetown, aforesaid, being part and parcel of town lot number seventy-four (74) in the first hundred of town lots in Charlottetown, fronting on Dorchester street, and is abutted and bounded as follows, that is to say : Commencing on the north side of said street at the division line between said town Tot uumber seventy-four (74), and town lot number seventy-three (73) and thence along the said line at right angies to the rear of land occupied by Daniel Brenan, Esquire, thence northeastwardly along said line a distance of sixty-seven (67) feet, thence by a line parallel to the division line between said town lots number seventy-three (73) and seventy-four (74), eighty (80) feet to Dorches- ter street, aforesaid, thence along said street southwestwardly to the place of commence- ment. (3rd.) Also, five-eighteens undivided equal parts, in ALL that piece or parcel of land being part of Town Lot number seventy- three in the first hundred of Town Lots in Charlottetown aforesaid, commencing at the corner of Town Lots numbers seventy-three and seventy-four, and running along Dor- chester Street until it meets Queen Street, eighty-four feet thence north along said Queen Street fifty-seven feet ten inches; thence north and east by a line parallel to Dorchester Street aforesaid thirty eight feet, thence north by a line parallel to Queen Street, aferesaid, eighteen feet, thence north and east by a line parallel to Dorchester Street, aforesaid, forty-six feet, er to the line dividing said town lots numbers seventy three and seventy-four, and thence followimg said line to the place of commencement on Dor- chestor Street, aforesaid. For further particulars of title and all infor- mation, apply to Messrs. Hodgson & McLeoil, Solicitors, Charlottetown, Dated this 20th day of August, 1879. JAMES MALCOLM. aug 20, 1879 Wants. Lost, found, &c TRAYED from the subscriber's premises near Spring Park, on the 27th August last, a small RED HORSE. Any person giv- any information as to his whereabouts will be suitably rewarded. Tuomas Woop.—sep 5 tt ANTED— 15 or 20 women to scrub and otherwise clean Faleonwood Asy- lum. Apply to Dr. Blanchard, at the office of Theoph. DesBrisay,on Friday and Saturday afternoons, between the hours of 2 and 3 p.m. Sept 4. U ‘UX7ANTED—A Girl for general house- work. Must come well recommended, Enquire at this office.—sept 4, 3in LET—RENT LOW—A house con- taining seven rooms, situated near the Malpeque Road. Good dry cellar. Apply at this Ottice.-—-Nept. 3—tf TRAYED-~- From the premises, a Red Cow, with horns and a white heart on forehead. Any information as to her where- abouts will be thankfully received by Isaac W. WapbMaN, Grafton street.-—sept 3 SNTED—By a YOUNG LADY, a situation in either a town or country Store. Address Box 103, P. O. Charlottetown —Sept. 2, 2w OST.— A silver ornament with stone set ing belonging to a dirk worn on Highland kilts, The finder will be rewarded by leav- ing itat E. W. TayLor’s Watchmaker, ete. [Sepé. Ist. | ra\O LET—A house, furnished or other- wise, in a central part of the city. Ap- ply at the Examiner Office.—Sept. 1—3i ENTAL STUDENT—A young man. suitably qualified, desirous of learning Dentistry, will hear of an opportunity by en- quiring of C. ‘L. STRI-vKLAND, [ang., ANTED,—A Housemaid and a Nurse. Apply at the EXAMrsEr office. [30-—3i ANTED TO RENT—A_ house containing 7 or § rooms, and situate in a good locality. Apply at the Examiner office. [aug 18] ro Ler.—4 HOUSE containing 5 rooms! situated on Euston street east. Apply to Mrs. Orrer, Queen Street. [Aug. 8.—tf] TS LET—A TENEMENT HOUSE situ ated on Kent street, next door to Dr. — Apply to Mrs. Orrenr, Queen street. (augl— VINEGAR. gi 3 : roils an eo ees SS oe i a I nnn ape x ARR Mg Ae IE w a ee ae a aa pace a mre ome