f a gene rs tii Diemer a. — : os ‘ == aS TH CHARLOTLETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1880, VOL. 7. -tL,O ND JUST REC ee ee a ae en ee et ets a ene ON HOU Baz. 20: EIVED EX S, S, “HIBERNIAN,” Black Cashmeres, Black French Merinos, Black Persian Cords, White and Grey Cottons, Velveteen Wincies, . | New Stockinette Worsted Coatings. EX S. S. “NESTORI 80 Packages Choice Teas, 3 Cases Charlottetown, July 13, 1880. Wiboonnbeo = ST mn, OTe A> wegretrnntgegtins . 2 = ; ' | | } ' isso. BRITISH — WAREHOUSE, QUEEN SQUARE. Spring and Summer Goods, COMPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT, VALUE UNSURPASSED. HE Subscribers have, by the S. 8. * Prince Edward,” ‘* Ethel Blanche,” and other a en a ee AN,” luinen and Cotton Thread. G DAVIES & CO. nr enn eee Ete ROYAL _—QUEEN ‘INSURANCE CO’. OF ENGLAND. INSU RANGE CO’ scrrna.. , TWO MILLIONS STERLING, Of Liverpool and London, NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce, Also, on Capital and Reserve Fund, Upwards of $22,000,000, |’ $°<0i.9° stes for inclated residences, cntinnnniings a j Losses settled promptly, LONDON AND LANCASHIRE | om ean ae ad une, _— > Fire Insurance Company Of Liverpool, England. Emigrants, Attention. Insurance effected on every description of | preperty in the above most reliable i So BEST ROUTE FOR panies, at the LOWEST CURRENT RATES, | later arrivals, completed the | LARCEST AND BEST STOCK OF = British and Foreign Dry Goods ANDO GROCERIES Ever imported by them, which they will dis- pose of at the lowest Cash prices. Please give us a call before purchasing elsewhere. W. & A. BROWN & CO. June 1, 1880. . 1) 14] ao eae ee PACIFIC Mutual Insurance Uo, —-OF —- NEW YorREK a WIARINE. $744,149.00 Assets 3ist Vec., 1879, - J‘alian Warehouse, July 14, 1880—imeed | - : the West, IS VIA THE FIRE AND LIFE _|ntercolonial and Grand Trunk Railway, | QUICKER TIME, SHORTER DISTANCE ‘and FARES always LOWER from Prince ag | Edward Island than by any other route. For Tiexets and all information about Of Edinburgh and London, | Luggage, Freights, &c., apply to ESTABLISHED IN 1809) ae a Agent Grand Trunk Railway Subscribed Capital, $9,733,332,00' Charlottetown, April 17, 1880—3m wkly Paid up Capital, - 1,216,666.00) eens Nut Coal. Nut Coal. Transacts every description of Fire, Life | and Annuity Business on the most favorable} _-~ be terms. ' <5 ge oe F | PBzE from Slate and Fire Clay. Also FikE DEPARTMENT—Insurances may be ef- | 4: Round and Slack, at Albion Mines, fected at the Lowest current rates. Pictou, Nova Scotia. F = orders ap ly to Insurances upon Public and Private Build- | 2 G. W. De BLOIS, ings effected on especially favorable terms. Sole Agent for P, E. Island. Losses settled with promptitude and liber- ; Insurance effected on CARGOES and | PREIGHTS, vovering $15,000 and upwards | ea first-class risks. | Certificates issued payable in London at the office of Morvon Rose & Co., Bankers, or in New York. Risks taken and rates fixed without being referred to Head Office. FENTON T. NEWBERY, Agent for P. E. Island, May 11, 1880. Great Summer Resort PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, —— nl LORNE HOTEL. eg DEPARTMENT—New and Reduced pre- | Old Sydney Mines, Cape Breton, miums for Dominion of Canada. ‘ z G. W. DeBuors, , __/!0gan Mines, Cape Breton, } . > Ve — 4 Z Ceneral Agent for P. E. Island. ; oP page ee Coal can be obtained Office, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. i Terms aves —_ G Ww DeBLOIS April 14, ’80—-pat her ne sj kea tf eod " Sole Agent for P. E aan ad ame - ~~. Oftice, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. RO i AN PUNCH, June 17, 1880—pat her sj kea tf ‘ream, For Sale or to Let. it es YYPNHAT Freehold Property, with a front of Fruit ic : eighty feet on Pownal Street and eighty- Water Tees, | four feet on Sydney Street,the House contain- aie ta ; , ing 16 large rooms and two Kitchens. Can ee oak see re be turned into one Dwelling by unlocking a _ », | door, Appl th ises to invite the public to call where they can be! = —— MRS. BOSWALL. April 26, 1880—tf Ice furnished with the best assortment of Ice} Creams and Ices to be had in the City. All, made from the best material. To parties: cipuighiteisiie ae . aoe a tis- | i he [S New and Commodious House, situate a ie ny sii Sites amt ' Valuable Property for pale, r at North Shore, offers great attraction for Tourists who are wanting recreation, sea hing, fishiny, ete. t is within easy access of the City, being erly thirteen (13) miles by rail or carriage. Charges mocerate. For further particulars ®pply to the Manager, or address LORNE HOTEL COMPANY, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. June 12, 1880, Oe emenenuens Se = eer eee a eee TRY If. TRY IT. IVE ALBION MINE NUT COAL A 4 fair trial and you will not be disap- Pointed in the result; it is COAL, not Are and slate, For orders apply to G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E. Island, | purchasers. Office-_No, 35 Water Street. Charlottetown, July8, 1880—pat tf A VERY LARGE STOCK OF Seasoned Pine & Spruce Lumber on Hand, for Sale | Consisting of Pine Boards, Plank & Sheathing; A. McKENZIE, Confectioner, Queen Street. | -yyg BE SOLD, all that part of Town Lot No. Charlottetown, June 19, 1850. 74, in the first hundred of Town Lots in Charlottetown; having a front of 67 feet, Dor- LUMBER. (U MBER chester Street, and running back 80 feet, tos § | gether with the buildings thereon erected. | For further mes apply to Messrs, Hopeson & McLgop Charlottetown. ; Sept. 18, 1879. Delivered at Point Du Chene, | to Schooners, | Bones. ‘Bones. : NHE undersigned will pay fifty cents Cash also Spruce Boards, Scantling, Clap- per cwt. for all bones delivered at the boards, Laths, Shingles, etc. Bone in the alty. No quantity All for sale Cheap, in quantities to suit) less than one ewt. (112 lbs) taken. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, CUSHING & CLARKE. Agent, Salsbury, N. B., June 18, 1880-——3m eod Oh town, ‘Deo, 1, 1879 EXAMI YOHN MACEACHERN, || Manitoba, Colorado, and|. ~ Radern tam dae: ao seed EDUCATIONAL. The following is the course of studies fer candidates preparing for teachers’ licenses :-— THIRD CLASS. (Examination January, 1881.) English. —Parsing and Analysis of passages from the 6th Royal Reader, pages 154-175. | Currie’s Grammar, Reading. An abstract of « narrative. History.—-Outlives of Euglish History of Prince Edward Island. Geography. —Geography ef the Dominion. Outlines of general geography. Arithmetic.— Smith's smaller Arithmetic, throughout. Smith’s Advauced “Arithmetic te the end of Decimal fractions, French (optional)—Same as for second class. History. SECOND CLASS, (Examination, June, 1880.) English.— Paradise Lest, Book I. 386 798. Histery.—The Reman and Saxon periods, CGeography.-—Geography ef the Dominien minutely, Great Britain. Europe. (Camp- bell’s (reography. ) Arithmetic.—Smith’s Advanced Arithmetic or Greenleaf’s new Practical Arithmetic. Algebra.-Coleuso to the end of simple equations of one or more unknown quantities. Geometry.—First three books eof Euclid with exercises. Chemistry.—-Kemshead’s : 3, 7, 8, 9. Latin. —Bryce’s first reader, Part L.; Cesar’s Gallic War, Book f. Book-keeping.—-Katon & Frazee’s. French..—Grammar; ‘Telemaque, Beoks | and IL; Hall’s First Course. School Management. . -Morrison’s. Note,--Beek- keeping of French may be omitted, Chapters 1, 2, FIRST CLASS (Examination, June, 1881.) English.—Brooke’s Knglish Literatuce, throughout ; Shakespeare’s play of Coriol- anus ; Currie’s Grammar. A special exercise in composition will be given on the subject matter of the Play, or en the English Litera- ture, (Breoke’s. ) History. —British Histery—the Reman and Saxon periods ; Smith’s smaller Roman His- tery to the death of Augustus. Geography.—-Lawson’s Elements of Physi- cal Geography. Arithmetic.—Smith’s (advanced) or Green- leaf’s new Practical Arithmetic. Geometry. —Six Beoks of Enelid, with ex- ae Chemistry.—The first nime chapters ef Kemshead’s Inergonic Chemistry. Natural Philosophy.——-Simpson’s Philosephy, first and third divisions, Latin.—Grammar; Cicero’s First Oratien against Cataline; Virgil’s Aineid, Book VI., (416-901) Arnold's Prose Composition, Ex, (1.44). Algebra.—Colenso’s te the end of Quadra- tics. Greek.—Bryce’s First Greek Reader, part Xenophon’s Anabasis, Beok I. French.—CGrammar; Hall’s Second Course, te page 78. L’Avare (Maliere.) Trigonometry and Practical Geometry. —- Hanns ‘Trigonometry, chapters 1, 2 and 3; Chamber’s Practical Mathematics, solution ef plane triangles; heights and distances, School Management— Merzisen’s. Music. Note—Females may omit Greek, ‘Trigon- ometry and Practical Geometry. FIRST CLASS HONORS (Academic Class.) The examinatien for this class will be epen to all first-class Teachers ef two years’ ex- perience, who have ebtained first rank ia pro- fessional work. tin, —Arnold’s Prose Campositien, Part I. Natural Horace, Odes, Beok I. Livy, Pooks xxi, chaps. 1-37. Greek. — Arneld’s Prese Compositien. Homer, Iliad, Book I. chaps. 1-42. French—Moliere, LeBourgeois gentilhom- me. Racine, Iphigenie. French Composi- tion. Mathematics. —Alyebra, Colenso’s Students Algebra (throughout. ) Geometry.— Euclid (with exercises), solid reometry, and Geometrical conic sections. Trigonometry.—-Plane and Spherical Trig- onemetry, with practical examples frem Cham- bers’ Mathematics. English and English History.—The Histery and Literature of the 19th century. An ac quaintance with the principal werks of the period required. English language (Angus’.) Candidates, in order to obtain the grade of license sought, must make 50 per cent, of the whole number of marks ebtainable; 30 per cent. im English, 50 per cent, in arith- metic ; and, also, net less than 20 per cent. in each of the other subjects. ‘The examination for third class licenses will be held in January and August of each year. Candidates for this gradeof license must, after passing the non-professional examinatien pre- scribed by the Board ef Education, attend one term in the Training Department of the Prince of “ales Cellege for professional instruction, and pass a satisfactory examination therein, after which they shall receive third class licenses. The examination for second and first class licenses will be held in June of each year. Ne one will be allowed te take this examination who has not attended aterm at the College and Normal School, unless he had previously obtained a license for the third class under the Public Scheels’ Act, 1877. D. MonrceweEry, Sup’t. of Education. Education Office, Ch’town, Aug. 7, 1880. Rarus tretted a second heat in 2.13} in | Hartford, Cenn., on the 23rd August, 1878. Twenty days before that he went a third heat in 2.13{ in Buffalo. On the 25th of Herodotus, Book J, ~ last October, the California wonder,) St. Julien, did a first heat in 2.12} over the course at Oakland, Cal., but these three in races 7 | time. The 2.134 of Maud &., at Chicage iast Saturday, is the best time ever made by a trotter in a race against a tretter. great performances were ill eesntibainbe. ~ LL A A ANE ce ttt gts NO, 67 Corresyonodence. a ae A ee ~ — we Wedonot hold ourselves responsible for the statements or opinions of our cerrespondenis ~~ —~ — ee To the Kditor ef the Examiner. Sir,—A go-as-you-please match took place on the day ef the Railroad Picnic, between the excursion train and Fred Bevan, for five tuifes. It appears that Master Fred was just in time to be too late, for the excursion train + —-who were nearly allon board for home at the time Fred arrived at the station.---When off the train went, leaving him behind, and aa the train was gving to stop some time at County Line, Fred thonght that he would catch her there. So, off he went by the main road at the speed of a deer, when to his great surprise and astonishment she had just left him again, so he came to the conclusion te give up the chase, and lay olf for the Express, that was shertly expected. It appears Fred- went to the picnic to combine business with pleasure, as it was arranged that a 30 minute, go-as-you please match was to take place, but when his opponents saw Fred in sugh geod condition for the race, and dressed in his gay running costume, they ene and all backed out —leaving him master ef the track. We un- derstand that Fred is now preparing himself fer the Caledonia match, and will no doubt give a good account of himself on that day. His younger brother Job. a coming runner and pedestrian, took first purse at the Rail- w.y Picnic race that day, as well as the first prize at St. P’s T. A. and B.S. picuie race, held at Mr. Handrahan’s grounds on Wednes- lay last, against seven competitors. This same young Bevan made extraordinary run- ning in the Skating Rink, among the men in the tive-mile race—he having made the dis- tance in the short time of 37 minuies, despite the mean attempt of one er two of the mean young men who tripped and threw him sev- eral times, while inthe race. If young Bevan enly takes care of himself fer the next three or feur years, he will, with a little training, make one of. the ewiftest runners of. the age. We wish the young fellow much success. SPECTATOR. —§———— A Husband’s Discovery. ANIMATED NIGHT SCENE IN TME HOUSE OF 4 MONTREAL CITIZEN, A few days agoa young French Canadian gentleman, well known and highly esteem- as aman of honor, a resident of St. Hu- bert street, had eccasion te ge into the country for 2, time on a pleasure excursion, leaving his wife and children at home, He returned home hastily the same evening, and upon trying the doer found it lecked. He rapped, and waited for a time, expect- ing hia wife te go dewn and adzit him. He noticed at the same time a light iu his bedrvom. At length it flashed upen him that burglars might be in the house, and without more ade he burst in the doer and rushed to his reom. He could see no one, but the light was turned on and the bed had been recently vacated. He tried one door after the other, and then came to the wardrebe. Pulling open the deer, he discovered, to his utter bewilderment, a man and woman in a semi-nude state. The woman was his wife, the man a doctor well known in Freuch Canadian circles. But a still greater herrer awaited him, for upen dragging the man into the light he dis- covered that he had in custody his wife’s uncle. The wife screamed, and the doctor implored mercy, ‘‘Pourle bon Diew!? The enraged and eutraged husband seized a rifle and demanded which of them he should kill first, as both should due. They fell upen their knees and implored mercy for their conduct; the woman adding that, if only for their children’s sake, her husband would not place his own freedem in peril. This appeal stayed the hand of the hus- band, and bundling the pair into ‘the streets as they stood, he locked the door, and informed the nearest police that there were to be found at a certain street, ina gateway, aman and woman who wanted some clothes to cover their nakedness. The husband is a military man, and he has seen service in Italy and France.—-T'oronto Globe. seen A Chilian Vessel Blown Out of the Water. ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY PERSONS KILLED BY THE EXPLOSION, The Chilian transpert Loa was blown up in the harbor of Callao by a Peruvian tor- pedo boat sét afloat by Peruvian officers on the 3rd of July. The boat was an ordinary one with 300 pounds of dynamite ina faise bottem, which carried considerable fruit, ete., and was so arranged that any additional weight would explode the dynamite. The Lea's crew discovered it and towed the beat alongside, when the explosion occurred. The Loa was almest lifted out of the water and sank in a few minutes. Every house in Callae was shaken to the foundation, and other ships shook as if an earthquake was taking place. About 150 men perished. Forty were picked up by boats, but many died. The second commander was wounded, and the surgeon aud.ene engineer were the only officers saved. The condition of things in Lim is daily becoming worse. One decree fellows the other in rapid suevession, and the pur- pose of nine tenths of these appears te be te divert the attention of the people from the actual condition of affairs. In the meantime the Chilians are recruit- ing actively, and by the firat of Oc- tober they expect to begin the siege of Lima. By that time the foreign’ element remaining will be greatly reduced, and but few will be left as spectators of the final .