——— ae — _ aes TERE ine ——— si ee — ——— we = - ee a may 2 a . ba Es eo etd ba 2 EEE _ me \ i ‘ a ee ma ne no = ano oz nie ern ee - VOL. 9. CH ART OTTET VN PPINOR RONWART T TIRQHAY QHDTEWREP 8@n 12% T | ARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1879. NO. 112 BIEARS BRB AaMIaAr - Pe shieckes ne ee | a Re ee ~ UNAS i USE ? Ty weg ae Ors . INEWS RV TELECRADH | IRON. 9 id i 8 ae 5 ATR ad | gm EF oN of FX; ; tHWe Wee ED df Deke RUERE ES Ge | inion ’ , ane =< Bs ‘Wl ° aa 4 a 2 E rf - ord ie ae (From ho Mu itin Foubaul ak Wotie Gueen Street, Charlottetown. Neat VY a Ch 4 f & AX Be yO} S. 7.4 ewPramelarmretetgecte nc fp. Sob Ss Ne gg ee . et’ > OP. GRA 6 Ge PROPRIETOR. WINES & LIQUORS. NEW HOICEST Ve ‘i . A L A G ER BEER. FENABLES set at all hours,.with every luxury of the seSon, rest Oysters received daily, Rooms large and comfortably furnished. CoacHEs from this House meet all Trains and Steamboats. ' First Class BARBER Suop. July 4, 1879--—3m een Aenean —_-— QUEEN INSURANCE cO’y, OF ENGLAND. ine CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, NSU RANCE elfected on all kinds of Build. ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences, Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 1877— BRITISH AMERICA Assurance Company. FIRE AND MARINE. Cash Capital & Assets . $1,176 491.43, INCORPORATED 1835. Head Office, - Toronte, Ont. Risks taken oa all descriptions of Property at lowest rates. PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES. HORACE HASZARD, Agent. Oxlice, South Side Queen Square. July 10, 1879. No. 35 Water St., Charlottetown. Pringe Rdward Island Branch —OF THK-— NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANCE CO. Subscribed Capital, $9,733,352.00 Paid up Capital, - 1,216,666.60 CHIEF OF ICES—Edinburgh, 64 Princess Street ; London, 61 Threadneedle Street. Nine-Tenths of the Profits of 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 LOWES? RATES of Premium. corresponding to the nature of the risk. c Lossrs settled with promptitude and liber- ond G. W. DEBLOIS, Dee, 14. ‘ Pa EA PARTY Pic-HIC }=SUPPLIES! —AT— BEER & GOFF’S Lemon, Raspberry. and Pine Apple Syrup Sold in bottles and by the gallon. Piain and Fancy Biscuits, Sold in Boxes & Bbls. and by the pound. —_—_—— Iceing Sugar, Raisins, Currants, Past Flour, Essence of Coffee, Confectionery, Nuts, Oranges, Potted Ham, Drivelled Ham, Potted Tongue, &c, BEER & GOFF June 23, 1870. FURTHER REDUCTION Albion Hines (Picton, i. §.) SLACK COAL. “EACK and ROUND COAL can pow be obtained at the above mentioned Mines. Slack Coal, only $1.30 per ,ton; _Round were 1 to ‘ onmes®, SPP'Y 'G. W. DxBLOIS, Sole for P. E, Island. Orrtce : No. 35 Water street. . Gb’town, June 23, 1879—patsj kca h sp2m ) ee * ( lor NEW DRESS G o— OODS, very Cheap, eo to J. B. MaeDONALD'S For For NEW WINCEYS a NEW MANTLES go to J. B. MaecDONALD’S nd CLOTHS vo to J. B. MacDONALD’S For NEW HATS and B ONNETS 70 to J. Bb. MacDONALD'S For go t For MENS’ and BOYS’ NEW FLOWERS and FEATHERS o J.B. MacDONALD'S CLOTHING 70 to J. B. MacDOoNALD’s For MENS’ and BOYS’ 125 * Foy -GO J. Bi Queen Street, Charlottetown, Sept. 15, 1879. YO UNDERCLOTHING to J. B MacDoNAtp’s GREY and WHITE COTTONS. ST Wee, “MACDONALD’S. Se a lc aetna Se : ———— LOOK = — — = 7 7 ~ = a =~ HERE! cmnorenetincanencnmamcsecn #1) 9? <nimenipigenoannenmeapnpen BRITISH WAREHOUSE. As we intend to make a ch end of the year, we a ange in our business at the re now closing out our Large and -‘Well-Assorted Steck of - DRx~t SUS De At Unusually Low Prices, Meet the Hard 303 Which, we are Sure, Will Vimes. Dress Goods from 6 cents upwards. Grey Cottons from 4 cents ugwards. Prints from 6 cents upwards. Brussels from $1.0 All other lines Competition. W. ’ Hema Carpeting from (2 cents upwards. Tapestry from 59 cents upwards . 0 upwards. we are losing out at Prices that Defy & A. BROWN. Charlottetown, June 30, 1879. = rr Tina 7 fo i . TAKE MOTICE. [Fire Lil. Marine, 7 : N E, o e DHA ory Publisher 2- EADED ASH) GYLQZ 4 M — cc iieniageabent re wr ng HORACE RIASZA RB, in; o~} Te ia ar Genera! lnsurance Agent, A BUSINESS DIRECTORY of the Maritime Provinces— ?ocket Edition— to contain all persons in business throughout the Provinces, even the remotest parts or the | smallest business in Professional. Mercantile, Mechanical, Milling, Manufactories of every description, ete. ieee 500 pages for the year 1880-51 ; price REPRESENTING : Commercial Union Fire Assurance Company, of London, England, Capital, £2,500,000 stg. British-American Fire Assurance Company, of Toronto, Ont., Capital (paid up in full), $500,000 G9, only 75c. or $1, to continue for two years be- fore publishing next edition. The circulation | will be SOME THOUSANDS, and the price being so small, will make it A MOST VALUABLE MEDIUM FGR AD | VERTISINC. If sufficient support is given, will add New- foundland, St. Piaree; Magdalen Islands. The publisher also intends canyassing On tario and Quebec; also Boston, New York, Portland, Philadelphia, and manufacturing districts of United States for subscriptions to the work. Sue ‘ Any parties wishing to advertize will please ond instructions to - ; 19 D. McALPINE, Sept: 3, 1879~—Im St. John, N. B. DR. P. W.G, GANNING, Licentiate Royal Colleges Physicians and Surgeons of Edinburgh. LICENTIATE MIDWIFERY. RESIDENCE : Upper Hillsborough St., corner Hillsborough and Euston Streets, Charlottetown. OFFIUB HOURS: 8:30 toll a.m; 7 to 9 pam. ottetown, June 24, 1879.—eod — Sun Jiutual Life and Accident In- surance Company, of Montreal. | MARINE INSURANCE ALSO EFFECTED. Office, souta side Queen Square. Sept. 16—Ilw eod ‘MAIL NOTICE. Mit LS for Great Britain will be closed at 1¥H 10 o'clock, p. m., on THURSDAY in each week, to be forwarded via Rimouski, and also on MONDAY, the 4th and 18th inst., at 4 o'clock, a. m., to be forwarded via Halifax. ‘ ‘Mails to be forwarded via Summerside and ' Shediac and also for all places on the route to Summerside and in Prince County, will be closed daily at 5.30 o'clock, a. m., also for Summerside direct, at 5 p.m. Mails to be forwarded via Steamers to Pictou will be closed every MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY and SATUR- DAY, at 5 o’clock, a. m. Mails for ,Georgetown and Souris East, and all places on those routes, will be closed daily at 6 o'clock, a. ta. Post Office open from 8, a.m., till 9, p. m, A. A. MACDONALD, ~ Postmaster. HE to get yourPrinting done is at| Post Office Charlottetown, WE EXAMINER Printing Room’ Aug. 2nd, 1879. ‘| the Eastern and Western shores. CANADIAN. Ly 7 ar : \LIFAX, Sept. 26. The frat through t Western Counties Railway from Digby to Yarmouth left Digby at 12.30 on Saturday and arrived at Yarmouth at 4 o’clock. The formal opening takes place on Monday. Two hundred and fifty-six hogsheads of sugar were shipped to Montreal on Saturday, per Intercoloniala, nd 293 hogs- heads and 200 barrels to Boston’ per 5. S. ‘* Worcester.” ‘ A large number of visitors arrived in town yesterday and to-day’ by steamers ‘‘ Edgar Stuart” and ‘‘ M. A..Starr,” from : Six hun- dred are to come froin Yarmouth to-morrow night. Itis expected fully ten thousand will visit the city. d An English Company is reported to have purchased Granite wharf, near the depot, tor the purpose of shipping grain. 1 raih on tne Montreal, Sept. 27. General Sir Fenwick Williams, K. C. B., arrived in the city last night, and proceeded ner 9.30 train this morning to Ottawa. He was accompanied by Major DeWinton, the Goverior General’s Secretary, and Mrs. DeWinton, the former having been des- patched by His Excellency to meet Sir Fenwick in Montreal. A special palace car was placed at his disposal by the manage- ment of the Grand Trunk Railway. Toronto, Sept. 27. Afoul murder occurred at Carleton Vil- lage, on the Grand Trunk, Toronto, Grey & Bruce Railways, a few miles east of here, on Friday morning. Two brothers, named Decoursey, it appears, had a law suit about some property over which they were dis- puting, and one gained the case. The loser laid in wait for his brother with a doube- barreled pistol and shot him. He did not fall, and the fratricide put the pistol to his breast and fired again, killing him instantly. Before arrest the fratricide took poison to end his life, but was saved by a stomach pump. The brothers have lived at Lamb- ten mills throughout .their lives. Their parents are both dead. Sypney, Sept. 27. Schooner. Cathrine Royal, owned by Capt. Alex. Boudrot, of Port Royal, and comnianded by his son Frederick, left Glace Bay for Boston, August 16th, and has not since been heard of ; believed she foun- dered during the gale on the 19th ult. There were six men on board, four of whom leave helpless families. Schooners Golden, West and Emma, of Lahave, have been wrecked near St. Esprit Island. . NEWFOUNDLAND. Sv. Joun’s, via Harirax, Sept. 27. Gratifying fishery reports contiune and impart a buoyant tone to trade. CONDENSED DESPATCHES. Advices from Simla say the Viceroy has sent the following despatch to London : ‘‘General Baker received a letter from the Afghan Commander-in-Chief, yesterday, at Kushi, asking whether he would receive him and the Ameer’s heir apparent in camp.” The Madrid ‘‘Correspondencia” says it is probable that Senor Castillo will resume the Presidency of the Ministry before the re-opening of the Cortes. : The Paris ‘‘Republique Francais” pub- lishes, under reserve, the following : ‘‘Lord Salisbury, during a recent interview with Waddington, assured.-him that England would endeavor to obtain the unconditional cession of Jauina to Greece.” 2 The London “‘Standard’s” Ali Kehyl cor- respondent reports that Gen, Baker has reconnoitered as far as Zargun Shahr, and the whole of his force will be concentrated shorily in Lorgar Valley for a rapid advance on Cabul. The Constantinople correspondeni of the “Standard” telegraphs: ‘‘It is thought that an understanding between Greece . and Turkey is impossible. Warlike prepar- ations are progressing on both sides. It is the opinion here that it is Austria that is obstructing the efforts for an understanding, and that in the event of hostilities she would immediately occupy Macedonia.” The ‘‘Standard’s” Constantinople de- spatch says: Prince Labanoff is bearer of a project for an alliance between Russia and Turkey. It is announced that Russia is willing to renounce 809,000,000 of francs of war indemnity, and to give back some of the former Provinces of Turkey in Asia. The London Standard’s Paris despatch says : Le Nord publishes an article, presum- ably by Gortschakeff, making a guarded attack on Germany and openly denouncing Austria. A London despa‘. ': says the British ship Langdale, Capt. Jc ‘inson, which sailed from San Francisc» Jnne 14th, has been wrecked near Carnsore~ Point, Wexford. The Captain, his wife, three. children and four of the crew were drowned. The London News’ Allahabad special says it is expected that Cabul will be entered on the 6th October. Resistance is doubtful, as the rebels lack leaders. Gen. Roberts and party has been fired on. A doctor was severely wounded. A force has been sent tu assist the last five men. ~ Messrs. Pearce & Bevans, of New Yerk, cotton brokers, have failed. Liabilities ismall. + 3 re i ha = a oe SM ll i MR A Rd aie Fe ad a aR ie Sir Charles Tupper’s late purchase of ? | Steel rails is probably the last that will be made by him outside of Canada. Needing in the near future a supply of these, and feeling the pulse of the market, he made a purchase which evidently, it is judged from the remarks of the English correspondent of the iro Age, quoted in our last, could not be secured again. -The River du Loup track and the metal- ling of the Pacific read from Lake Superior to Winnipeg, will absorb all this purchase, and will almost anticipate its delivery by the demand. We may look’ forward, therefore, to a- policy of building henceforth Canadian roads with Canadian steel. and nowhere else, as in Nova Scotia, within the bounda- ries of our wile Dominion, can this forg- ing of a highway be done so well and with so great an Tmpnise to the prosperity of the nation. The declared policy of the present gov- ernment is, as far as possible, to have all work required by Canada done by Canadian hands, and this outcome of the National Policy will be to create in Nova Scotia an industry that must make her powerful - among the iron-workers of the world. The mineral wealth of Nova Scotia has hitherto been developed with much the same activity, as a few years ago, the rich soil of our northwestern prairies was tilled. Then, an enthusiastic inhabitant showed a small acre with a splendid crop, but his garden patch was surrounded by a _ wilder- ness of fertile soil. The flood of immigra- tion is now rippling over this soil, and the industry of the plow is breaking this wilder- ness into wheat fields. In like manner here we have had an in- dividual case or so that showed what our powers as iron-makers might be if we had one fair chance of entering on the arena; our Londonderry Steel Company has made its mark, but all the rest of our provinoe has practically remained undeveloped. We had iron, coal, capital and hardy labor, but they lay apart, and like chemical substances that have an aflinity for each other, they remained side by side without any action. Envelope these in the fusing influence of a decision carrying ont the national policy of building our own roads with our own iron, and an action will at once begin that shall produce in shape and life an industry cleary native to the soil al- though the policy of free traders would have | denied its right to exist here. Within six months we will see the be- ginning of this great change, and the next two years will preduce a growth of iron manufactures that will be as great a sur- prise tothe sceptical free trader of these provinces, as was the development of agri- culture in the northwest to the Hudson’s — Bay stock-holders who considered their ter- ritory only fit for the production. of fur- bearing animals. We are passing the point of being mere customers of fish merchants and importers ; we will realize the position attained by North Englishmen, whose manhood has found in the scil the means that made them sovereigns of trade, and that turned petty seaports and fishing villages into marts of commerce which are quoted in the foreign markets of the whole world. ———— eS gt — English newspapers are beginning to talk as follows, this selection being from a journal called The Machinery Market :-— ‘Wnder the present system we have to buy £70,000,000 to £89,000,000 worth of food per annum from abroad. Supposing we pay half of this to the United States of America, what do they do with this money / Simply keep it to themselves. They buy very little from us, and are determined that what they do buy shall he as little as they canhelp. By means of a high protect- ive tariff the Americans ensure that this money obtained from usshall be spetitamong - their own manufacturers instead of witlf us. The conseqnence is that American mant- facturers cre flourishing on the money paid forthe food. we buy from them, whilst English manufacturers are starving.” ~ ae oe While General Sherman was down in Kentucky the other day, among the crowd of old soldiers who gathered around him was one who shook his hand with great delight and exclaimed: ‘‘ Why, General, I'm delighted io see you; don’t you re- member me,—Stanley, formerly of Leaven- worth.” ‘‘Why, of course, I recognize you,” said the General, ** what in the-—— are you doing in this country?’ ‘‘ Why, sir, ’ was the reply, ‘“‘ I am preaching now.” ‘*‘ Preaching,” said the General, suddenly changing his tone to one of more respect for the clergyman, ‘‘1 hope to heaven you are cing well, -—— -—— — 2. -——— Faise Impression. : It is generally supposed by physicians and the people generally that Dyspepsia can not invariably be cured, but we are pleased to say that Gre:y’s Avaust FLowrr has never, to our knowledge, failed to cure Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint in all its forms, such as Sour Stomach, Costiveness, Sick Headache, palpa- tation of the heart, Indigestion, bad taste in’ the mouth, &c. Out of the 50,600 dozen pottles sold last year, nota single failure wes reported, but thousands of ree try letters from Druggists of wonderful cures. Three doses will relieve any case. Try it. Sample Bottles 10 cents, Regular size 75 cents, For” sale by all Druggists. Woov Tooth Picks,—60,000—at Dodd’s Medical Hall. } | / :