‘Tun EXa CHARLOTTETOWN, eee a ee VOL. 7. —— 70; - . PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, AUGUST MnONDON HOUSE. JUST RECEIVED EX S, S, “ HIBERNIAN,” Black Cashmeres, Black French Merinos, Black Persian Cords, White and Grey Cottons, Velveteen Wincies, New Stockinette Worsted Coatings. 0 EX S. S. “NESTORIAN,” ; 80 Packages Choice Teas, _ 3 Cases Linen and Cotton Thread. G DAVIEHS & CO. St. Dunstan's College, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ——— ; FENRIS College wil! be re-opened under the | l charge of the Fathers of the Society of Jesus, —oN— Wednesday, September 1th, Intending students should make immediate application. For prospectus and further particu REV. ( EORGE B, KENNY, S. J., Ch’town, Aug. 6, ’80—till sep President. | Isso. BRITISH WAREHOUSE, QUEEN SQUARE. | Spring and Summer Goods, COMPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT, VALUE UNSURPASSED. VHE Subscribers have, by the 8S. 8. ‘* Prince Edward,” ‘* Ethel Blanche,” and other hater arrivals, completed the LARCEST AND BEST STOCK OF British and Foreign Dry Goods AND GROCERIES Rver imported by them, which they will dis- pose o! at the lowest Cash prices. Please give us a call before purchasing elaewbere. Ww. & A. BROWN & CO. June 1, 1980, [j 14 Great Summer Resort PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, ————— LORNE HOTELL. FFXBIS New and Commodious House, situate at North Shore, offers great attraction Tourists who are wanting recreation, sea hing, fishing, etc. , It is within easy access of the City, being enly thirteen (13) miles by rail or carriage. Charges moderate. For further particulars apply to the Manager, or address LORNE HOTEL COMPANY, Charlettetown, P. FE. 1. June 12, 1880. QOREY INSURANCE OOY, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, .. . TWO MILLIONS STERLING. NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Veasale on and Produce 30, Special rates for isolated residences, settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Assets 3lst Dec., 1879, - t f inc Dons. Toes or Prince Edward Island PACIFIC = ‘Mutual Insurance C0., —or— NEW YORE MARINE. Insurance effected oun CARGOES and FREIGHTS, coyermyg $15,000 and upwards en first-class risks. tare ack | Certificates issued payable in London at the office of Morvon Ross & 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, 1580. THE ONLY DIRECT LINE To Boston. I Steamers Carroll = Worcester, OTH STEAMERS are fitted with superior Passenger Accommoda- tion, arrarged for every convenience and comfort, and fitted up in elegant style. FREIGHT carried at moderate rates, and as low as by any other route. Eea@s, in boxes and barrels, handled with the greatest care. LEAVE CHARLOTTETOWN Every Thursday, punctually at 5 p.m. LEAVE BOSTON Every Saturday, punctually at noon. CARVELL BROS., AGENTS, Ch’town, June 3, 1880—2aw mw, ar pat Nut Coal. Nut Coal, REE from Slate and Fire Clay. Also Round and Slack, at Albion Mines, Pictou, Nova Scotia, For orders apply to G. W. DEBLOIs, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Old Sydney Mines,Cape Breton. Lingan Mines, Cape Breton. RDERS for Round Coal can be obtained on application to Terms as usual, G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Agent for P, E. Island, Gftice, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. June 17, 1880—pat her sj kca tf Flour and Meal. RDERS will be received for the follow- O ing Brands of Flour and Meal !— * * (Patent), *‘ Alabaster,” “Golden ae Extra Family,” ‘‘Warcup’s 5u- perior,” “White Kose,” ‘ Florence, ‘‘Beaver,” “Pastry” and ‘‘ Amber,” and choice K. D. Corn Meal—** Golden Star. i for the above Brands otf Flour Ph ene . b. at Mills, or delivered at ; Summerside. Charlottetown or Sum : cure d Shippers’ Agent, piiaers. 90 Taber, N.B, May 6, 980. l $744,149.00. Ocean Steamship Co. UF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, — i ‘AUTUMN TRIP, 1880. The First Class fron Screw Steanship { PRINCE EDWARD, , Ii64 Tons Register, Classed ~100 Al, which is the highest class at Lloyds, | Robert Fraser, Commander, | Will be on the Berth at Liverpool to Receive Cargo about the 8th of September, FROM Liverpool for Charlottetown About the 20th September, Carrying freight at through rates from London and Glasgow, deliverable at Charlotte- town, Georgetown, Summerside, Al- berton, Souris, Pictou and Shediac. For Freight, apply in London to JoHN Prreatrn & Sons, 16 Great Winchester Street; in Glasgow, to JAMES KeELSo, 134 St. Vincent Street ; in Liverpool to Pricarrn Broruers, 51 South John Street, in Pictou, N. &., to Noonan & Davies; or here, te PEAKE BRO’S & CO, Ch’tewn, July 19, ’80—eod tf AND WILL SAUL Managers, en a NED MANILLA ROPE! Manufacturers’ Prices, Orders Solicited, All Sizes in Stock. CARVELL BROS. Ch’town, July 16, ’80—2m 2aw, pat 2m law ROMAN PUNCH, — Ice Cream, Fruit ices, Water Ices. AC I intend paying special attention to my {ee Cream department this season, I invite the public to call where they can be furnished with the best assortment of Ice Creams and Ices to be had in the City. All made from the best material. To parties ordering Creams or Ices we guarantee satis- action or no charge, A. McKENZIE, Confectioner, Queen Street. Charlottetown, June 19, 1880. MACLEAN & MARTIN ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Newson's Building, Opp. Post Office, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. A, A. McLEAN. D.C. MARTIN. June 18, 1879.—ex2aw WHE place to get your Printing done is a the EX AMI TER PRINTINGROOMS. tt tL LN ET enn . ti Bi nen Oy nntnactncanatanteds MINE a tenes 23, The Grand Trunk. The Grand Trank Railway is Canada’s greatest Railway enterprise. In a sketch of the life of Mr. Hickson, the present manager, we find the following paragraph : “When he (Mr. H.) joined the Grand Trunk Railway in 1861, its traftic earnings were, for the year ending June 30, #3.476,- 773. In 1879 the revenue had increased to $8,476,566. In the former year the pas- sengers carried were 622,086, and in the latter 1,973,519 In 1861 the freight amounted to 595,266 tons, and in 1879 to 2,571,225 tons.” The directorate has recently been most successful in getting 5 pér cent. debenture steck subscribed at a five per cent. pre- mium., The 5 per cent. stock displaces 6 per cent. stock, and the transaction was a most favorable one for the company. _ ——>: +e... When to Cut Wheat. There isa right time to cut wheat, and it is as soon as the grain has passed from the milky to the doughy state. It will then not shrivel nor luse weight, the grains will not be rough or harsh, nor the bran brittle. At this period the bran is thin and most elastic, can be best separated and will leave the largest proporticn of white flour. From this time until it becomes over-ripe, the bran will continue to becume inore brittle, and as the’ bran thickens and increases in weight, the yield of flour will decrease in the same ratio. Wheat cut in its doughy state must not be left tying in the hot sun to dry suddenly, but should be bound and shooked at ence, and if capped all the better, so as to cure as slow as pos- sible. Karly eutting has the advantage of less luss of shelling in the field, the straw will be brighter and more valuable for feed. ~ ties ona 66! el a Vanderbilt Vigor. The healthy Dutch constitution and training which carried the late Commedore Vanderbilt through an active, laborious and pre-eminently successful life to die at 83, the richest man in America, is alse characteristic of his surviving brother Jacob, known familiarly as Captain Jake Vanderbilt, who is President of the Staten Island Railway & Ferry Co., a well- managed and prosperous concern. The old man is as active and as keen as most men of 50 and shows few outward signs of his 85 years, he being the same age as his brother was at his death. To all appear- ance JacoB has 20 years of life in him yet, and the chances are that he will reach the hundred years which some physiologists a:- sign as the true limit of human life. To see him on the Richmend Turnpike sitting behind a pair of splendid trotters, erect; rosy and rugged, he presents the picture of a prosperous, healthy business man of 80 or thereabout. He evidently does not believe in the theory that New Yorkers die at 45. >_> o- aoe = The Princess of Wales. Although the Princess of Wales, says one of her admirers, is never extravagantly dressed, she is more perfectly costumed than any other lady, English or foreign. But, as even arose gains in beauty when it sparkles with dewdrops, so our future Queen has the power of looking more radiant to-morrow than to-day ; and it seemed to all who were at Fulham the other afternoon that the Princess had reached the dressmakers witima Thule— the point beyond which not Worth, nor Elise, nor any other maker of feminine rai- ment can go. The marvellous robe was of peaceck green, studded with golden discs, and all the sunlight seemed to fall upon it and make it mere splendid. In the bonnet were silver beads, and as the reyal lady stood in front of the enormous stone with the gleaming silver trowel in her hand, she was the embodiment of a lovely girl not yet ont of her teens. Upon that slight figure all eyes were at once fixed ; never to be removed ; yet she is s0 unconscious that the admiring gaze of hundreds never per- turbs, much less disturbs her equanimity. While I believe that the menarchy was never so firmly set in the hearts of the Eng- lish as to day, I take leave to contend that the throne is distinctly indekted to the Princess of Wales for a large share of its respect and popularity. An odd case is reported from Carlisle, England. A doctor was called ene evening at seven o'clock to visit a lady aged about fifty-five, who had, as she described it, been feeling poorly all day, but could give uo definite symptoms and complained of no pain. During the examination he noticed a change inker speech. This led him to the investigation of the throat. Outwardly the neck appeared normal, and nothing could be felt te indicate an obstruction ; he then examined the pharynx, but no foreign body could be seen there, ard the examina- tion only brought on vomiting and strain- ing. However, he det2rmined to look a second time, and judge of his surprize t» find bedded low back in the pharynx a set of false teeth, which he extracted with NO. 79 Latest News Notes. 1880, The Prince of Wales is to visit Anstralia in Oetober. Serious inundations have occurred in the Province of Thule, Spain. The harvest in, the west ef Ireland is cer- tain to be not only abundant but unusually early. The remains of the late Adelaide Neil- son were interred in Brompton Cemetery, in London, on Friday. The marriage of Lady Burdett-Contts and Mr. Ashmead Bartlett has been post- poned for a fortnight, A letter has been received from General Primrose in Candahar, stating that he has previsions and water sufficient to last 45 days. Great damage has been done to the cereal and fruit crops in Aberdeenshire, by a recent heavy rain storm. Heavy fields of oats have been irretrievably destreyed, and the strawberry and other fruit have suffered severely. The Londen correspondent of the Man- chester ‘‘ Guardian” says: ‘‘ So far from dispute between Russia and China bein near adjustment, | am positively Selina that relations of two powers are as strained as ever and that Russia is taking an attitude which will render peace impussible.” Mr. Colby, M. P., who has recently been spending some weeks in Colorado, has re- turned home. From the Elk Mowntain Bouanza of July 3ist, we learn that he has invested quite largely in mines while in the West, and has an interest in some of the most valuable prcpertics in the particular district where that paper is published. The highest monument in Great Britain, and possibly in Europe, is that erected by his tenantry to the first Duke of Suther- land, on the summit of Ben Vraggie, Sutherlandshire, 1,400 feet above the sea. The pedestal is 106 feet high ; the statue, from a model by Sir Francis Chantrey, 30. of Moray Frith. e Messrs. Reid Brothers, of the Tryon Wosllen Mills, are now manufacturi some very handsome tweeds from impo wool. Some samples shown us the other day are fully as nice looking as any of the men or Canadian importations, and we h no hesitation in saying that they far surpass those geods in durability.—Sum- merside Jonrual, This is a gratifying statement. The Islanders should manufacture mere thaa they do, ‘The Island boat, the other day, took ovér a lot of rough cart wheels! Such freight is not unfreqnently found on the way.-—Moncton Times, ’ The census enumerator reports a colored woman on Martin Rice's place 114 years old. Seeing that the old woman was proud of her age and her recollections of antiquity he asked her some questions teuching Gen- eral Washington’s horse and the Revolt. tionary war, all et which being satisfactor- ily answered, he said, ‘* Old lady, you must have heard the Roman Empire when it fell’ ** 1 don’t ’zactly ’ member the circumstance you spoke of nBw, but I] heard a mighty rumblin’ noise de year de stars feil, and I spec it must a been dat. Things was con- stant fallin’ dat year, and if it fellin old North Carolina you bet your bottom rag, honey, I was dar.” A Wiltshire, Eng.. farmer writes that he has been injured by game to the extent of £1,200, and yet never obtained from his landlord a single penny of compensation. He says that only the day before writing he had met with a young man farming eighty acres of land in that county, who had lest £500 in seven years from ground game ; the farm is now out of* cultivation, He adds :—‘*‘ | can remember a great number of farmers whe have been starved out ef their holdings within a radius of four miles of where I am living—-ene in particular, an aged tenant of four-score years, whom I had been in the habit of calling fer to take the andit with me. He sat on one side of the tire-pilace and his aged partner on the other. Both began crying ; the rabbits had eaten up their crops, and they had no money to pay their rent.” A despatch from Donegal, Lre., states that owing to the recent heavy rains a terri- fic food on Sunday swept dewn the Glen of Glendora and destrvyed the parish church gt Connicona and imperilled the en- tire Meainn, who were at Mass at the time. The flood came with fearful sudden- ness, fairly sweeping around the edifice, and several persons of the congregation were swept away while attempting to escape. Some of these were subsequently rescued, while others were drowned. The priest, after doing all that lay in his p ower to direct the flight of the neople, succeeded in gaining a safe position on high ground. The bridge across the stream at that point was entireiy demolished. Great excitement was created in the neighborhood. Parties of men are now engaged in searching for the bodies of the drowned. Eleven persons are missing and five bodies were recovered at last accounts. oe little trouble.” Upon inquiry the woman | said she had missed her teeth about ten} o'clock in the morning, but had no idea she | had swallowed them. It is remarkable that | A Good Account. “To sum it up, six long years of bed-rid-. den sickness and suffering, costing $200 per year, total $1,200—all which was stopped they had been in the pharynx without | by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by causing her any pain for over ten hours, —_—__<>-—-—— | my wife, who has done her own house- work for a year since, without the loss of # The Russian Government has declined to| day, andI want everybody to know it for negotiate with China on questions in dis- pute between the two Powers. their benefit.” ‘“‘Joun Weeks, Butler, N, Y,’ It is a conspicuous landmark on both sides ~ ennai a), eget SPEEA