rage = eapoertantemenaceeammn pang Deitars A YRAR. NEW SERIES. ae — = ~~ Terms :-—F ive * This is true Liberty, when Free-bo CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1881. =... re wae ie - —— aerate ene ae tee THe Datuty EXAMINER 6 ISSUBD EVERY EVENING, Br can Examiner Pusuisnine Company, yrem THEIR Orrick, Conner or Water ane GRaarv GEORGE sTRERTS, Charlettetown, - : P. E. Island. Ratss oF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Mouths, - - $2 50 Three Months, - - - 1 26 One Month, - - 0 50 ge Advertising at most moderate rates Centracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half yearly or yoarly advertise wents, en applicatien. S=SOcCo-=_ _—— Credit Foncier PHANGU-CANADIEA, President—Hon. FE. Duclere,Senator, Paris. Vice-Pres.—Hon. J. A. Chapleau, Montreal. ee —_ Capital, - ——— ee The Cempany will make long term loans with sinking fand, and short term loans wi h- out sinking tund, For particulars, apply at the office of Messrs. Sullivan & Morson, Solicitors, Charlottetown W. W. SULLIVAN, Aug. 24, 1881. ALFRED A. BOWN, AUCTIONEER — AN General Commission Merchant ST, JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, Solicits consign ments of all kinds of Produce Butter, Eggs, Vegetables, etc., etc. Prompt returns guaranteed, ences vn application. W. C. BISHOP, SEIPPIN @ —AND— FORWARDING AGENT, MARINE INSURANCE BROKER, —aNp— General Commission Agent, $0 BEDFORD ROW, P. 0. BOX 1 - HALIFAX, N. 8. ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon. Halis, Cargoes and Freights insured in first- elass offices at rnost favorable rates. Consignments of Produce solicited, and prompt rceturus guaranteed, Cerrespondence solicited promptly. EDWARD T. RUSSELL, & C0. GHNERAL Commission Merchants, No. 213 State Street. BOSTON, Good refer- [ju 17 6m oaw answered [ap 7 6m and May 14, 1881. ~ GONFEDERATION LIFE ASSOGIATION. PRESIDENT : Mon Sir.Wm. P. HOWLAND,C.B., K.C.M.G, VICE-PRESIDENTS : Hon. Wm. McMASTER, Wm. ELLIOT, Esq. Attention in directed to the SPECIAL AD- VANTAGES afforded by this Association to persons insur'ag upon the ten-payment life lan, as compared with the uniform Bonus of @ anda half per Cent. plan. Policy No. 7, $5,000 ©. L. A. Actual Re sults for 1530. Tenth year of policy :— ash, SLL 45, or bonus addition, $260 Results unde two and a half per cent. bonus plan— Cash, $52 05, or bonus addition, $1 25' Difference in favor of (*e Confederation Life protits— ee Cash, $59.40, or bonus addition, $135 Profits do not cease with the payment of the premiums in the 10th year, but continue during the existence of the aang: Paid-up policies in this class, in the case 0 surrender, fits. Pulicies non-forfeitable after they have been in force two years, and INDISPUTABLE ter THREE YEARS. —_ J. K. McDONALD, Managing Director. June 27, ’21.—13i For Sale or to Let. HAT Freehold Property, with a front ot eighty feet on Pownal Street and eighty- four feet on Sydney Street, the House con- taining 16 large rooms and two Kitchens. Can be turned into , Dwelling 7 unlock- . Apply on the premises ae tit MRS. BOSWALL, March 12, 1881—tf HE WEEKLY EXAMINER. — Per ‘aon hay ing relatives or friends abroad, and desiring to keep them informed -concernirg P. E. Island, cannot do soin a better or cheap. er way than by subscribing to Tus Ween.s Examiser, Sent, postpaid, to any Great Britain, the United States, or the inion, om receipt of One Dollar. : Charlottetown, Aug. 20, 188). GENERAL Commission Merchants, 108 SOUTH MARKET STREET, BOSTON, MASS. May 16, 1881. [wkly Queen Insurance Co'y OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL - TWO MILLIONS STERLING. Insurance effected on ali kinds of Buildings, Merchandise and Produce, Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences. All Losses settled promptly, GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Priuce Edward Jaland Ju77 LORNE HOTEL. The Popular Summer Resort. For Surf Bathiug. Boat Sailing and General Recreasion no Better in the Lower Provinces. CuarGes Mopera's. Strangers visiting the [sland shouldnot go away without visiting this Hotel. fiy 15 IN Ei W EARLY FAL I. ARTHUR & CO., | L GOODS. 20: We have Just Received from Great Britain, NEW BLACK SILK FRINGES, NEW BLACK S8ATINS, NEW BLACK $PANISH LACE, ’ NEW BLACK SILK GIRDLES, NEW BLACK CHIP AND STRAW BONNETS AND HATS (Straw), HAT ORNAMENTS AND SHAPES. PRINTED COTTOHS, VELVETEEKS, FROM MONTREAL, 20 bales Grey Cottons, 3 cases Shirts and Drawers, NEW CREAM LACE, NEW WHITE LACE, NEW SATIN RIBBONS, DAES LININGS END TRIMMINGS | 5 cases White Cottons, 2 cases Klannels, 2 cases Bed Ticking, Wee All of the above will be sold ai the very smnallest profit. PERKINS & STERNS. ~ er “ere ee FIRE! MARINE! LIFE! OR seprennes HORACE HASZARD, General Insurance Agent, —RIPRESENTING— Commercial Union Fire Asurance Company, of London, Eng,, CAPITAL, £2,500,000 STG. Western Fire Assurane Company, of Toronto, Ont, CAPITAL, $800,000.00. British America Fire Assirance Company, of Toronto, Out., CAPITAL, $500,000.00. Sun Mutual Life & Actident Insurance Company, of Montreal, CAP.TAL, $500,000.00. MARINE INSURANCE ALSO EFFECTED. Risks taken on all tenis biotirad Hoopasky at LOWEST RATES. Office—Corner of Queen and Lower Waiter Streets. SSS eS Paper Bag Factory! KENT STREET, Between Queen and Pownal, | Charlottetowa, - FP. E. . VERY quality and size of Paper Bags for ' stock or made to order at short notice, and | sold ut Montreal prices, with usual trade dis- counts. Parties having quantities of paper in stock can have it made into Bags without loss of time and at much Jess cost than they can | import them. Orders respectiully solicited. July 27—3m The Largest Amount of Life Insurance | at the Smallest Outlay ! THE DOMINION SAFETY. FUND LIFE ASSOCIATION, ST, JOHN, N. B. A HOME COMPANY. ProvixnciaL Directors: Jas.de Wolfe Spurr, Jas.T, Steeves, M.D, Wm. Henry Thorne, Thos. Temple, Foster McFarlane,M.D., Chas, F. Clinch, Hono, C. N, Skinner, Q. C., Jas. de Wolfe Spurr, Thos, A. Chipman, President. Secretary The Safety Fund System ! is fast becoming the popular plan of af- fording the protectioa of LIFE INSURANCE! Members only pay actual current cost. No Jarge accumulations of the people’s money in the hands of the Association. Members vote for Directora, Expenses of management limited. Send for circulars. Examine our plan. James McLxop, M, D.. Physician, Ch'town. E. H. BABBITT, June 25, *8!. Special Agent for P. E. I. “4 UBSORIBE for the DAILY EXAMINER’ i Charlottetown, April 4, 1881—tf A NOW OPENING a Grocers, Dry Goods men, Confectioners, | S — = ore; : i Hatters, Druggists, and Pastry Bakers’ use, in ' e —s | o: | J ; e FOR HAYMAKERS! A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF E, H, BABBITT, | BAW FORKS, HAY RAKES, SCYTHES, SCYTHE SNATHES, SCYTHE STONES, &c., &c., &e 0:0 FOR BUTTER MAKERS! Milk Dishes, Churns, Cream Crocks, Batter Crocks, Butter Salt, Butter Prints, Butter Firkins, &., &c. °0i—— For Fruit Preservers ! Preserving Sugar, Preserve Pans Preserve Jars and Crocks, etc., etc., which, together with our large stck of General Groceries, Flour, Meal, Shelf Hardware, Paints, ils, &e., &c., ever offered, at PRICES TO 3UIT THE TIMES. HENRY BEER. eae = CARPETS, Lace Curtains, &c Cheapside, July 26, 1881. eS —s NOTICE TO SHIPPERS BY BOSTON STEAMERS: O FREIGHT will be received after three o’clock on days of sailing. Bilis of Lading must be presented for sig- | nature by four o'clock, j ry CARVELL BROS. and will be sold at very low prices at R. W. TREMAINE’S, the oe and most Newsy Paper published in Provinces, June l, ’8l-—-law wed Tune 1, "Si. 83 Queen Street aily Examiner. rn Men, having to advise Bhe Public, may speak free.”’—Evxiripgs. Sincue Corres Two Crrre. VOL G ~--N i 2 RD, The Decay of Bonapartism. —— — ae — The Boom in Grain. (From the New York Herald.) The French elections have wrought havoc among the Bonapartists, and the returns which are published to-day show ou : : : . |that many notabilities of the party have Hickox, Whitehall Street, the big grain gone down in the storm. There was a ideaiers o. New York, was interviewed | time wien ihe name of Abbatucci worthily ‘few days since as to the high prices of} borne by three brothers, was . tower of grain. He said:—** We have had ajstrength in Corsica, and their influence break in both wheat and grain ote failed to keep & seat for any poli- PRICES FARMERS MAY EXPECT TO RECELVE THIS FALL. Mr. C. R. Hickox, of Hughes & . : ical ally wtituenci iwith a partial recovery, but not nearly/tieal ally whom other constituencies re- . ror te a | Ss ‘ rant tha so much excitement as last Saturday.” | /°° ed. The ballots of Sunday swept the ok Sit idin hitiin Ghd tensile eats) last of the fawily away. There was a it ere : lation ?” jtime when M. Haentjens was strong citement tn the grain speculation ‘ }enough to founda Bonapartist group and ‘Well, the weather in England has) lead an inquiry into the origin of the beeu wet for the past week, and that has|Commune. He new passes quietly .out of excited their markets and ours, too. | political existence. There was a time-when Now. if the weather should become five! ‘he Duc de Padoue, son of General Arrighi in England it would weaken their mar-| “0 the first Napoleon ennobled, sent ket and we should feel the effects also.” orders to the proefects of France to prepare “Will the ¢ hs * A , * | for another coup d etat at the Tuilleries ; i 2e corner in August wheat oo | when he orgaaized a pilgrimmage to Chize]- go through successfully, or will it prob-|hurst and used MacMahon’s name to re- ably collapse ?” cruit his scattered party. His fall was ‘Oh, I.hink the clique will come out} prepared in the abortive prosecution of a victoriously and force the shorts to buy! Yer ago, and the elections only served to in thé. arheat they Lave sold? * | hasten what was inevitable. All the best : . lelements of the faction hav le r ‘* Do you regard the present decline ‘ r eters. fees aieny da tidtule: 1 f from it. ‘*‘ A devoted servant during times ia: 10 Heating a collapse of the bull specu-| of good fortune,” wrote M. Rouher in his ation ? ' E : letter of retirement; ‘‘ a &faithful friend in ‘* No ; I regard it only as a natural re-| bad time, £ think I haye loyally accomplish- action from an unreasonable speculatiou|ed my task. After long years employed in —that’s all.” the labors 0f politics I have the right of not ** Does this forcing up of prices injure proceeding further, and of belonging re- the ‘consumes ?” ligiously, exclusively, to the past.” Baron : Haussman was more indignant. ‘‘ I cannot ; * Oh, the consumer don t buy on the rally,” said he, ‘ to the Jeromist pro- bulge’ of prices ; they wait till there is} gramme of a kind of Imperial Republic.” a liquidation and purchase on the declitc. | So Prince Napoleon was Jeft alone to clab- The bull speculation certainly gives the| orate his scheme of employing against the farmers higher prices for their products, Republic the weapons which had been di- and does that much good.” rected against the Empire. And now there : . bide with the party these tl -—J 52 re E 22 o abide wi 1e party these three-—Janvier But the excessive price of August de la Motte, Lraouche-Joubert and Paul wheat injures the consumer, does it de Cassagnac, and the greatest of these is Paul de Cassagnac. > e+ ae +s oe the consumers don’t buy it now; they wait. It is the speculators who buy it.” ‘“‘ What is the now ?” ‘* Well, the chances are tnat there will ot further decline in corn, and possibly | gelical Clergy, held at Berlin on the 25th also in wheat. linst., the Inspector of Missions of Plath ** Do you think the advance has beet said the Jewish community which is hostile legitimate ?” | to Caristianity is not content with enjoy- “Yes, toa great extent. The advance | ing equal rights with Christians, buat aims in corn has been caused principally by | #* absolute predomination. Christians, he the great dronght, but, of course, is | *4id, ed eee ee from “ a . . | premacy of the Jews. 16 tights already always, speculation forces re beyond | pecorded the Jews could be se ten their legitimate changes. For all that, I} ,nd he recommended the substitution of think we have a sufficiently healthy re-| relative rights for the absolute civic equality action, corn having dropped five cenis|they now erjoy. They moreover should from its highest prices on Friday, andj be firmly kept within the prescribed limits wheat also four cents to five cents, and 1| by means of special measures in order to do ot look for a heavy break.” break the Jewis autocracy. The confer- Od ca 08g ence adopted resolutions to this effeci. 3 ; es 2 t ee ! resident’s death | Stoeckers spoke against the Jews at a Con- affect the speculation! servative electoral meeting on 25th. The ‘*T suppose everything would be affect-} anti-Jewish agitator, Reppell, addressed a ed by it more or less, but I don’t look for| Conservative meeting against the Jews. a great break even then.” The meeting dissol:ed amid great tumult, BReppel being obliged to fly. —_— «- <b> +e oe ——_——_.. The Jews. URGING THE CHRISTIANS IN GERMANY TO WATCH THEM CLOSELY. speculative outlook 2 a © ame i Mish on Ice. ‘““Wartrxs ror THe Last Hove.”-—Says the Boston Advertiser of Saturday :—‘‘' Since the 15th of April, 1855, no sadder day than yesterday has been experienced in thi com- munity. From early morning till night set in, people lingered about the bulletins, read- ing the hopeless tidings, and passed on with- —nenaiie i out speaking. There was no effusive emotion, (Victoria, B, C., Colonist.) but a prevailing sadness, asif the impending hereavement were personal te every one. The Mr. Samuel L. Kelly, of this city, has/ first thought in all minds, the first enquiry on A BRITISH COLUMBIANS SOLUTION OF THE FRESH FISH PROBLEM——SALMON TO BE FROZEN, EXPORTED, AND THEN REANI- MATED. CHOICE ASSORTMENT just opened, |? patented an invention by the employment of which he says that he can freeze a salmon und thaw it out at the end of a year, when it will be full of life and as delicious as when it was first drawn from its native elements. The invention com- prehends the production of artificial ice, aud the process ig something like this :—) A fish enters an iron tank where there is just sufficient water to allow him to swim. ‘To this tank is attached a re- frigerator or freezer. Presently the cold) air is turned on. The water congeals, the fish ceases to swim, and struggles. Then as the water grows colder he falls into a geatle doze, passing from that into a deep sleep. The water solidifies and closes about him and in a few min- utes the salmon is encased in a solid block of ice and prepared for shipment to any part of the world. Neither cans, cases, nor lables are required. The steamer in which he is shipped is fitted with re- frigerating chambers, At the end of the jeurney the block is exposed to a temperature of fifty degrees. The ice casing gradually melts away from the salmon, which is then placed in a tank of tepid water. Presently, under the in- fluence of the grateful heat, the salmon awakens and enjoys its restoration to fish-life as keenly as if during the time that he had lain on ice he had been swimming in the Fraser River. The process is one of suspended animation. The fish does not die. He only falls asleep in the cold embrace of the block ofice. The functious of life are simply suspended, not destroyed. His heart ceaseses to beat, his blood to circulate, his digestive organs to act. To all in- tents and purposes he is dead, and yet the life-principle is active, requiring only to be quickened by heat te move on again. The salmon when frozen by this process, Mr. Kelly says, is simply like a clock that has ran down. Wind the time- iece up and it will goagain. Give the fish heat and it will ‘‘go” again. The in. ventor promises developments in the course of ashort time, and hopes to have the all lips, was fer the last report from Wash- ington. To the country, the suspense has been painful and terrible. What must it be to those whose hearts are breaking as they count the weakening pulses, and wait for the last hour.” —— . Virive rebuking vice by means of dynamite and murder is altogether too much of a good thing. A house of ill-fame at Hawk Lake, Manitoba, occupied by the celebrated Joe Brush, was blown up on Saturday night by a bottle of nitro-glycerine, The house was wreeked, and Patrick Crossly, an oid man, was killed. This is no doubta radical way of re- moving a very great evil, but “ reformers” of this kind are legally and morally marderers, and should suffer for their crime. It is very evident that unless the ‘‘dynamite fiend” is eurbed, life will scarcely be worth living on this planet of ours. — Hz. +4n> The Pall Mall Gazeite, referring to Sir Charles Gavin Duffy’s address to the people of Ireland on the Land bill, heads its article with the title ‘‘ Timely Words Well Spoken,” and says that no mere admirable introduction to the Land bill could be written. The opinion grows that the working of the Land bill will be found efficacious in the removal of the worst Irish grievances, and during the next session of Parliament whatever imperfections may be found in it will be remedied. ~~ a In Pickard’s Warehouse. North Side Market “quare, the Farmers can see good and very cheap Mowers : The Harvest Queen Reaper— there ie none better; the Meadow Lark Com- bined Mower and Reaper. light and good; some second-hand machines (cheap); the Bush- nell Improved Sulky Rake, light, strong, and easy to handjJe. Any boy that can drive the horse can dump the rake. If you want a plain or spring ooth Harrow, you will find bem there.—-J. W. Pickarp, {a2 Reapy Grur—A glue ready for use is made without the application of heat by dissolving the glue in common whisky iustead of water. Both are put together in a bottle which is then corked tight, aud allowed to stand three or four days. If prepared in this way, it will keep for years and always be ready for use, except in extremely cold weather, when it will be necessary to set in warm water before using. A strong solution of process iu working order in time for the sock-eye run next year. ? isioglass made in the same manner is an excellent cement for leather, x — eS eee eee lle gi amass: 1st dello oe