ee ee CHARI AT BRILL LS a. WAREHUUS 0 J Ex S. S. “Hibernian,” 4 LARGE Black Silk Fringe. Corsets, Cashmeres, Colored and Black Satins, Pompnudour Prints, TOILET COVERS & OUELTS, Jain and Fancy); White, Scarlet, Grey & Fancy Flannels, Cloths. Tweeds, &e¢., All of w sold at our ASSORTMENT OF} ' in ft ri ' ich are now opened, and will be sual low prices Wed A. BROWN & CO.~7 Ch’town, Aug. 24, 1880. CHANGE OF TLHE Leaving Uharistietown FOR PICTOU. YTOTICE is hereby given that on and iL after MONDAY, the 4th day of OCTO- BER NEXT, the Steamer: Ni. Lawrence and Princess of Wales Will leave Steam Navigation Co's Wharf at Five o'clock in the morning, in- steid of at 7.30 as during the summer montis, By order, F. W. HALES, Secretary Steam Nay. Co'y. Ch’town, Sept, 28, 80 —tf pat ne her 21 ——— - oo PACIFIC Mutual Insurance ve., ---OF — NEw YORK eee MARINE. Assets 31st Dec., 1879, - $744,149.00 — Insurance effected on CARGOES and FREIGH TS, covering $15,000 and upwards on first-class risks. Certificates issued payable in London at the office of Moxron Rose & Co., Bankers, or in New York. Risks taken and rates fixed without being referred to Head Office. FENTON T. NEWBERRY, Agent for P. E. Island. May 11, 1550. ¥) the Stockholders of the Beliveau Charlottetown, Oct. 7, Albertite and Gil Company : “ATYOTICE is hereby given that a further Cal) of two and one-half per cent. on the unpaid Shares of the said Company was made by the Directors of the Company on the twenty-first day of September, instant, pay- able before the twenty-fifth day of October next. By order of the Board of Directors. Dated at Dorchester, in the County of Westmorland, in the Province of New Bruns- wick, the 22nd day of September, A. D. 1830. k. B. CHANDLER, Treasurer of the Beliveau Albertite and Oil Co. Shareholders in P. E* Island may pay the Wall to the Bank of Prince Edward Isiand to the credit of the Company. Ek. B. CHANDLER. [se 27 till date} Nut Goal, REI from Slate and Tire Clay. . Round and Slack, at Albion Mines, Piston, Nova Scotia. For orders apply to G. W. DEBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Old Sydney Hines,Caue Breton, Lingan Mines, Cape Breton. RDERS for Round Coal can be obtained on application to Terms as usual. Nut Goal, G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Avent for P. E. Island. Office, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. June 17, 1880—pat her sj kea tf rabede. ARY U ° iN IVE ALBION MINE NUT COAL a fair trial and you will not be disap- pointed in the result; i¢ is COAL, not fire clay avd slate. For orders apply to G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Also | et ee OLVTETOWN, PR Oct. lor For For Kor Kor For For For Kor Kor 11, 1880, ‘THE mere SS ee en EE ————— 9): ——_-— J. B. MACDONALD’S, QUEEN STREET. Serene © ( 7 ig Readymade Clothing, Custom-made Olothing. Shirts and Drawers. White and Colored Sh Hats and Caps, Worsted Coatings, Tweed Snitings, Searfs, ' Silk and Linen Handk New, Stylish and Chea GO TO rs ~ irts, es and Collars. erchiefs, p Goods, J. B. MACDONALD'S, queen Street. _ A K M Office—No. 35 Water Street. Charlottetown, July8, 1880—pat tf IN THE MARKEY, THE THE VERY BEST ARTICLE FOR DIETARY i NASMUCH AS THEY ARE ALWAYS FRESH, 7 ECEIVING THE GREATEST CARE AND ATTENTION TR in the MAKING of THEM, and WARRANTED to Keer FOR ANY LENGTH OF TIME. TRY THE FOLLOWING KINDS: Hoston CRACKER, QUEEN DROPS, LPALIAN FINGERS, COCOANUT JUMBLES, SULTANIA LEMON, CARRAWAY TOPS, (FRACKNELLS, ICED ARROWROOT, Uston MIXED, SUGAR JUMBLES. [rattan RATIFIES, VICTORIA SNAPS, Tea BISCUITS, GINGER SNAPS. UALITY OF MY CRACKERS AND BISCUITS IS oe oe water ota, ACKNOWLEDGED TO BE THE i H E B FE § T 0 U 7 JOHN QUIRK, @ity Steam 1830. Bakery, Prince Street, K NEW CANADIAN BEVERACE! sa The Only Satisfactory Substitute for Tea and Coffee. -Mighly Recommended for Regular Use at Ordinary Meals, —— -—- :0:-———_- - —- ——————— 30: USE EVER DISCOVERES. f¥ HE injurious effects which the continuos use of tea and coffee have on the human system are well known. patients to abstain from using either. The most eminent physicians advise their Owing to the taste for these beverages which has been universally acquired, it has been found necessary to find a sub- Various substitutes have been tried, but Kaoxa is the only one ever stitute. discovered which has been found to perfectly answer the purpose. anc Coffee, it contains neither Theine nor Caficine, nor any other poisonous Unlike Tea O principle whatever which can even by long use, prove hurtful to the weakest constitutions. It is especially recommended for sick persons and children, Families using white bread habitually should adopt Kaoka as their regular drink at meals. They will then have supplied to them the elements which, when taken into the system, go to form bones, nails, teeth, sinews and brains, and which have been separated from the tine tlour of which the white bread is Thousands of persons who have been afflicted with Dyspepsia, Ner- vousness, Indigestion, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, &c., have been restored to made. perfect heaith by eschewing tea and coffee altogether, meals nothing but Kaoka., It contains no sé which # is made are wheat and sugar, nothing more. ¥or sale in pound and half-pound packets at the “Crowns Greoery,” South Side Queen Square. Rope, chemicals.”’ and drinking with their The elements from ROBERTSON & CAMERON. Charlottetown, October 1, 1880—30 ins cod O ESTABLISHED [825. K —_ CANADA CORDAGE FACTORY. JOHN A. CONVERSE, MONTREAL. ANUFACTURER OF CORDAGE of Every Description, including all sizes Manil Tarred Manilla Hawsers, Lobster Marlin, Hambroline, &c., &c., equal in quality to the best American. Jan, 7, 1880. Tarred Hemp Rope, Houseline aa 6Prices on application. MI? INCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, i } i } | Herald. ‘THe Datty EXAMINER UR. tn NE a alta me ti Al ee a ct Oe ere LO, _ mee OCTOBER —ay nents # [Ss0, NO. 124 a a OCTOBER 16, 1880. In answer to a request of the St. John Sun, as to the truth of a telegraphic report published in the Montreal Gazette, to the effect that Sir Charles Tupper is about to leave the Government, Mr. Thomas White, 'M. P., wired as follows: ‘‘The despatch was an ordinary press despatch, based on gossip in the Ottawa I was in New York when it ap- neared, and never saw it. Moreover, there is not a word of truth in it’ Sir Charles is not going to retire and is not going into the Syndicate.” This ought to settle the matter. —— <> time Jolin THE St News, commenting upon the John, epumerates some of the advantayes Island exhibits at Montreal and St. for farming successfully possessed by the island, and adds : - ‘*‘ With all these advantages, and with markets opening in Britain, and the pros- pect, perhaps, of the estalishiment of potato starch factories and of & beet-root sugar factory inthe Island, the little Gulf Pro- vince will some day be cultivated-like a warden, and will be one of the very finest farming sections of the whole continent. The farmers of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick will have to bestir thems4ives pretty vigotously and skillfully to keep abreast with their Island brethren. Ths fact would be brought home to them strik- ingly hy means of a reaily Maritime Pro vinee Exhibition, in which the agricultural products of the three Provinces should be fairly represented.” act] <> ie — A Free Lisrary, ts proposed by the Rev ‘ r George ffodgson. We hope the proposal may be acted upon. HKuabled to read the works of standard authors without paying the paople of this citv may contract & taste for for the privilege, it is possible that reading and a habit of thinking for them selves. Given the means, the desirable resuli may perhaps be accomplished even in such apathetic and thoughtless persons as com- pose the mass of the population of Charlot- tetown. May we be permitted to ask why the Provincial Library is kept a close pre- serve to a few politicians and their favor- ites? There are in it many good books; but no one outside the charmed circle is permit tedto read them. Why cannot the Pro- vineial Library be, under suitable regula- tions thrown open to the public which bears the cost of it / Hereford Cattle. There is a saying, ‘‘ Every dog has his day.” This is hardly, perhaps, applicable in the present case, but still ‘* another dog” is going to have a good look in, and have his day at the same time; and from all I can learn it is likely to Be a bright, pros- perous day when the first dog’s day is done, The Shorthorn has had a tremendous run —has been taken up by rich and able men, who have vied with each other in producing the various tribes and strains, which come into and out of fashion as often as ladies’ dresses. Hach and all have their merits, and al] praise is due to those who have worked so hard to bring their favorites and themselves into notoriety. The trade has been an excited and un vftiral one, and it is now beginning to find its level; although prices may be still kept up among owners of the favorite tribes. Other breeds of cattle are vinning to assert themselves, and there is room for.all! Let all have play, both at shows I go be- fair and in the agricul- turai papers. and let honor be given to whom honor isdue. The Shorthorn has no quality superior to that which the Here- ford possesses ; if it has, let it be fairly shown. Take each point in order ; both breeds have been well tried, both as grazers and feeders. It is acknowledged that the Hereforl is the best grazer, and it is asserted in this country and America that | four Herefords can be fed on the same meat as three shorthorns. There is evidence to show that the milking quality of the Here- ford is as good as the high class Shorthorn, and their milk is,much richer. The London market bears testimony to the superiority of the Hereford meat, by always quoting it in advance of the Shorthorn. Their early maturity and weight for age has been tested again and again, and there is little difference ineither breed. The meritof the Hereford for crossing purposes has been disputed, but now it is an indisputable fact that they are fast gaining ground in the good opinion of graisers. ealdtiesh me cpenaoeben A pespatcH to the New York ‘* Herald” of the 12th inst., says: ‘‘ At a Council of the French Ministers, the order of proceed- ing in the execution of the second of the decrees of the 29th of March against the unauthorized religious congregations, was decided upon. The stricigst secreey has been obsesved in regard to it so that the blow may fall where it is net expected, and thus the scandal of a mise-en-scene, such as was prepared for the expulsion of the Jesuits, may be avoided. A number of Jesuit fathers, under the guise of secular priests, have recommenced teaching in their old quarters.” oe | Local aud Other Items. forry-Two Students are attending King’s College. te - WaRrREN Surtru, of Halifax, has gone to England to take part in the Thames Re- gatta, Wer congratulate the Halifax Herald on the good fortune of its editor who has just taken to himself a wife. oh ee Ss lv is reported that negotiations for peace between Chiliand Peru have been opened at Arica with the intervertion of the United States. THe Moncton Times says,---‘* Things be- gin to look as if the Opposition party would be left without a leg to stand on at the approaching session of Parliament.” Derury Warpen Foster of Dorchester Penitentiary arrived here on Monday even- ing and on ‘Tuesday transferred six priso- ners from Queen’s Co., jail to the peniten- tiary; including William Young, who was twenty years ago sentenced to liunprisonment for life. THE Ruben hat, covered with seal-brown plush, and the Tam O'Shanter, in brown or biack plush, are the two greatest novelties in Antumn iillinery. ‘* Tam” is the most hideous monster turban race. He is, nevertheless, much admired and largely wern by city belles. , — - ft Or A Moperare market on Friday, with brisk sales at the following prices:*-Beef small, 6 te 12 cents; Beef, qr. 4 to7 cents; Mutton, 4 to 8 cents; Lamb, 4 to 8 cents; Geese, each, 45 to 55 cents; ‘lurkeys each 75 to $1.00; Ducks each 20 to 25 cents Chickens per pair, 35 to 50 cents; Butter, fresh 20 to 24 cents; Butter tub 18 to 20; Eggs 17 to 18 cents; Hav 35 to 40 cents; Oats 36 cents; Potatoes 18 to 20 cents; Flour $895 to 33,00; Oatmeal 82.80 to 83,00. 2 ee THe New York Herald says:—-‘‘ A com- mittee of the Episcopal General Conven- tion 3s discussing the subject of enlarging the fund for the support of disabled min- isters, and of widows and orphans of clergy- men. It is time something of the sort was done. If the laborer is worthy of his hire 1 it is high time that some arrangement should be made for providing the funds with which to keep Church workers from starvation and freezing.” We are glad to learn that His Lordship Bishop McIntyre has seen fit to place the Very Reverend D. McDouald, Lb. D., late Head Professor of St. Dunstan’s, perman- ently at Georgetown. Besides the Cardigan aud Georgetown parishes, that cf Sturgeon has been given in charge of Father Charles and Dr. McDonald. tev. Win. Phelan preached his farewell sermon et Sturgeon last Sunday. Since Rev. Mr. Phelan took charge of that parish be has dene a good work; and, no doubt, his parishioners feel sorry to lose a pastor so zealous and kind- hearted, but changes must take place, and we feel sure that Father Dan will succeed in his new nussion, —A dvertiser. Wirn respect to the fatal accident at Pictou, the verdict of the coroner's inquest on the remains of the unfortunates exon: erated the manager from blame. It is said to be clear from the evidence that the disaster was caused by the Hank bore net being hign enough. It dees not appear that the difference in depth of the two workings was taken into consideration at allin making the borings. The depth of the old slant was indicated on the plan ouly, if at all, The thickness of the line was drawn to represent it and not express- ed in figures and would necessarily not be very clear on a small plan. The verdict appears to give general satisfaction, A Frencu cable despatch says :—‘* The Radicals aud Communists are preparing to give Garibaldi a ‘grand reception. It re- inains to be seen now whether the French Government Will tolerate any manifestation on the occasion. A few years ago Gari- baldi was offered the command of an expe- dition destined to attack Noumea for the purpose of liberating the Communist con- victs, Hedeclined with: regret, alleging that he. was too old to lead the expedition, but subscribed 6,0O0f. for its equipment, all the money he had in the world at the time, and offered to send in his stead. his sons THe sea-serpent is heard from again, this time by Captain Adams, off New London. The Captain says : On the 6th, while out fishing, his attention was suddenly attract- ed to some great sea monster alongside his boat. Losing no time he got- under way and sailed a mile or two, but found the monster going as fast as his boat did. He had only two boys with him. When ‘the boat luffed, the monster dashed for the Captain, missed and was caught by the gunwale of the boat, and fell back into the sea, making no further attempt, as Captain Adams lost no time in putting his boat towards the land. He says the monster was not less than twenty feet long, with black stripes and large black spots on these parts of it that he he saw. Ue was greatly frightened by the savage aim of the beast. mania -<>- The Montreal Herald denies, editorially, that it',has been purchased by the Pacific Railway syndicate. . - cgi cepeandesteatasiemaiangiamoctaenticiianamiaanaie -- cents than nanlssasecaetiahtiesntiete re ae ta oe : : = = at - . q : Sng pena ses Mee * a a ee stor S , ¥5 y , a Y J Se Sa Te Wy? fs ees a es Jf ’ s