y “HE PERKINS & STERNS ARE NOW SHOWING A SUPERIOR STOCK OF New Millinery and Millinery Materials ! DIRECT FROM BEST LONDON HOUSES. PLUSH, FREIZE, IN ALL 70: VELVET, THE FUR AND STRAW HATS, NEWEST SHAPES. Silks and Satins, in Pompadour, Brocade and Plain Colors, Velvets and Velveteens, in Plain Colors, Pompadour and Embossed. New Laces, Ribbons, &c., Flowers and F'eathers, Hat and Bonnet Ornaments. A FULL STOCK OF STAPLE AND FANGY GOODS, UNSURPASSED Charlottetown, October 4, 1580. IN VALUE AND VARIETY. PERKINS & STERNS. “fe oe + — AT— BRITIS—EL WAREHOUSE, Ex S. 8S, “ Hibernian,” A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF Black Silk Fringe, Corse ts, Cashmeres, Colored and Black Satins, Pompadoar Prints, TOILET COVERS & QUILTS, (in Plain and Fancy); White, Scarlet, Grey & Fancy Flannels, Cloths, Tweeds, &c¢., All of which are now opened, and will be sold at our usual low prices. Ww. & A. BROWN & CO. Ch’town, Aug. 24, 1880. - —_—___ PACIFIC © Mutual Insurance Co., —-OF — NEW YORE MARINE. ne ee Assets 3lst Dec., 1879, - $744,149.00 Insurance effected on CARGOES and FREIGHTS, covering $15,000 and upward en first-class risks. . Gertificates issued payable in London at the office of Morron 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. Islandg May 11,q@650. 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, Cane Breton. Lingan Mines, Cape Breton. ERDERS for Round Coal can be obtained on application to Terms as usual. G. W. DeBLOIs, Sole Ayent for P. E. Island. @ffice, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. Jane 17, 1880—pat her sj kea tf UBSORIBE for the DAILY EXAMINER JUST ARRIVED !|K the Cheapest and most Newsy Paper published in the Provinces. THE NEW O CANADIAN BEVERACE! K A. O KK ALS fhe Only Satisfactory Substitute for Tea and Coffee.. - Highly Recommended for Regular Use at Ordinary Meals. neces mene 0S THE VERY BEST ARTICLE FOR DIETARY USE EVER DISCOVERED. Oe cer eee e 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- stitute. O Various substitutes have been tried, but Kaoka is the only one ever discovered which has been found to perfectly answer the purpose. and Coffee, it contains neither Theine nor Caffeine, nor any other poisonous Unlike Tea 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 Kaoxka 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 fine tlour of which the white bread is made. Thousands of persons who have been aftlicted with Dyspepsia, Ner- vousness, Indigestion, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, &c., have been restored to perfect health by eschewing tea and coffee altogether, and drinking with their meals nothing but Kaoxka. It contains no ‘‘ chemicals.”’ The elements from which it is made are wheat and sugar, nothing mgre. . “ ¢ > 2 — For sale in pound and half-pound packets at the ‘‘Crown Greoery,” South ROBERTSON & CAMERON. Charlottetown, October 1, 1880—30 ins eod Side Queen Square. O SS adcat tena a ee arm SIGN OF THE LION. INOW OPHNING, GENTLEMEN'S DRESS SHIRTS ALI SIZES! . ’ Gentlemen's Linen NEWEST STYLES. Collars and Cuffs, Gentlemen's Linen Handkerchiefs, Braces, Ties, Gloves, AND A COMPLETE STOCK OF FURNISHINGS. Please Note—Our Shirts and Collars are all ** AMERICAN” Goods and much better in make and material than Canadian. W. A. WEEKS & CO., Sept. 25, 188Q—tu th sat Queen Street. OLD QUEEN SQUARE LIVERY STABLES RH-OPENED. i pe Subseriber has removed to the com- modious Livery Stables, LATELY OCCUPIED BY MR. JAMES BARR, 3 North Side Queen Square, Where you can get the Cueaprst anp Best TuRNOUTS IN THR CITY. JAMES N. MILLNER. Ch’town, Sept. 14, 1880—ly Bens. F. Grarror, ee ee eee nt Srory B, Lapp, Havererr E. Pars. Late Commissioner of Patents, PATENTS. PAINE, GRAFTON & LADD, Attorneys-at-Law and Solicitors of American and Foreign Patents, 412 Friern Street, WaAsurtneron, D. C. Practice patent law im all its branches in the Patent Office, and inthe Supreme and Cireuit Courts of the United States. Pamph- lets sent free on receipt of stamp for postage. sept4 CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1880, Western Items. (Frem the Pioneer.) As we go to press Mr. McNeill is having the Drill Shed fitted up for the Exhibition and making the necessary arrangements for the outside part of the show. So far every- thing looks as if there would be a gvod turn-out on Thursday next. There are grave complaints in the west- ern part of Lot 11 for want of Post Office accommodation. li looking over the Atlas we found that the people in that section have every reason to complain, as the’ P. ©. is no less than five miles from a large number,and even a greater distance from a few families. Our informant said that many of them took no paper owing to this cause. We have no doubt, however. that if the peopie of the locality in question, get up a petition and exert themselves in the usual way, the inconvenience complained of will be removed. A well-tce-do farmer in North Bedeque in- formed us the other day that the combined labor of himself and his fields amounted, this season, to 1300 bushels oats, 150 bush- els wheat and about fifty of buckwheat, with four acres of potatoes to hear from. Now this amount of crop, although respect- able, is not unusnal in quantity; but when it is considered that the land was plowed, the seed sown, the ground harrowed and rolled by the farmer himself (except one hand for three days), it must be confessed that his time was pretty wel] occupied. When preparing for market, he, and a few hands, threshed, winnowed and bagged eiyht hundred bushels of oats in four days. Some More Rich Gold Mines Dis- covered. About three months since four colored men came to the city and took up feur gold claims at Montague, on the 15th range, in the very centre of the Montague gold field. They had found a number of boulders, and were convinced that a ‘‘rich lead” was in the immediate vicinity. For three months they searched diligently for that lead, and were about to give up the search in despair, when, just before quitting work on last Thursday night, they put in a blast, which, under some three feet of slate, turned out five hundred dollars worth of gold. Thelead was thus discovered, and turned out to be fifteem inches wide, and, at the present time, gives promise of being one of the richest ever worked in this Province. The discovery of this valuable lead, in a location where it was generally considered that the claims were exhausted, has caused considerable excitement among those interested in gold mining. The ex- citement at the gold discoveries at the North West Arm, is also increasing. On Saturday afternoon, Mr. Young discovered two leads in his field, just back of Oxford Street. These leads are on the surface— one ll inches, the other 15 inches wide The quartz looks well and is believed to be valuable. We hear that a crusher jg to be immediately erected at Hosterman’s, North West Arm, and crushing by water power will soon be commenced. It is re- ported that Mr. Baker has completed the sale of his Oldham Mine to an American company for $25,000, and ‘is about to com- mence work on another mine.—.f«. Herald. +<<4b>e- Telegraphic Rates. It now appears certain that the cable rates of telegraphy have been settled by the various companies for the immediate future. It is now officially stated that the Anglo, the Direct and French Cable com- panies have signed an agreement to pool receipts. At a meeting of the joint board of the Anglo and Direct Cable Companies, held on Friday last, in London, MM. Ponyer-Quertier and Monier, on behalf of the French Company, signed the working agreement by which the receipts of the three companies are to be pooled, and the French couipany is to receive 15 per cent. of the whole traftic. The scale of rates is to be raised to two shillings on and after October Ist, The Anglo-American Cable Co. announces that on and after the Ist of October, 1880, the tariff from New York and Canada to the United Kingdom will be increased to 50 cents per word. English, Frenchand American Government messages one-half cable rates; press messages will be 25 cents, with a deferred rate of 125 cents. The rate to France and places beyond the United Kingdom remains unchanged at 125 cents, but on and after December 1st it will be increased to 50 cents, and English, French and American Governments one- half cable rates.— Monetary Tiines. 7a Pay Up This Week. . About as regularly as the harvest comes round we hear of promises on the part of country traders that are going to make prompt that farmers and others have promised to pay up their accounts. Somehow or other, the performances of either party to this under- standing rarely equal the promises; and we have reason to fear that the efforts to make collections are relaxed by storekeepers at the yery critical time. There should be no re- laxation of effort now, to get store-bills paid, for the conditions are more favorable for the purpose than they have been for many a day. The case is well put by the Lindsay Post, which urges its delinquent subscribers atter this fashion, and the hint is worth taking by every country dealer: ‘‘ We desire our sub- scribers to pay up this week. This is not ‘sarkasm,’ as Artemas Ward would say. Everybody is going to pay readily this fall— not merely their subscriptions, but all other collections in October and November, and’ NO. uv accounts, There will be a general settling up because there is a splendid harvest to put money into circulation. A good deal of money has been realized for stock, which has been.sold mere largely in “this country during the past few months than for years before; and the healthy activity in the lumber trade has also been extremely beneticial.”’ ~ <-=hsldibimiimacripticaysiitnipiin ae —— . ~—— Clippings From Late Papers. Castler, the great Spanish orator, re- ceived a grand reception in Algiers. The Right Rev. Michael Augustus Corri- gan, N. J., who has just been appointed Coadjutor to Cardinal McCloskey, is 41 years of age,and is a graduate of Mount St. Mary’s College, Baltimore. He has been Bishop of Newark seven years, end takes the title of Arch Bishop in New York. Imports into France for the eight months ending Aug. 31, show an increase compared with the corresponding period of 1879, of 250,000,000 francs during the same time, The increase of imports is almost exclusively in foud, and the increase in exports mainly manufactured articles. The total imports exceed exports by 1,098,000,000 frances. The cotton crop of the United States fer the year ending Sept. Ist, is estimated at 5,757,397 bales, the largest probably ever raised, and worth $200,000,000, For 1878- %, the crop was 5,073,531 bales. This year’s crop, not yet picked, is expected to be still larger than that of 1879-80. These figures show that the South is rapidly recovering from the effects of the war, and that free labor is far more profitable than siave. The New Brunswick Railway having changed hands, the company has a new Presi- dent. The Board of Directors includes Lord Elphinstone, George Stephen, Isaac Burpee, E. R. Burpee, Alex. Gibson, Donald A, Smith and —-——- Thorne, of New York, Esquires, with George Stephen, Esq., of Montreal for President. It is said an early connexion will be made with the Inter-Celonial Railway at tivere dn Loup —S?#. John Sun In the course of his first speech, after re- turning to his seat in the Commons, Mr. Gladstone made the significant statement, ‘* That the tolerable discharge by the Porte of the duties of Government towards its sul jects was no longer a secon ta primary object, and that unless Turkey is prepared to discharge those duties the integrity and independence of the Ottoman Empire must learn to shift for themselves.” A French newspaper represents a restless speculator as consulting his doctor who says tohim: ‘The exciting life that you lead is wearing you out rapidly. If you keep it up you will be a dead man by this day twelve- month.” ‘‘By Jove! sir,” cries the restless speculator, ‘If 1 were only sure of that I’d make a fortune—I’d go to a life insurance company, and insure myself for a million ! it would be the biggest operation of the century.” Mayor Prince of Boston, makes a big claim for his native city. Following is a sentence from the oration he delivered on the celebration of the 250th anniver- sary: ‘* She established the first church, the first free school, and the first college; built the first vessel, the first printing press, the first hotel, and the first rail- road; started the first newspaper and the first temperance movement; organized the first abolition movement and the first thanksgiving celebration; originated stump- speaking and created the first public park.” Mr. ©. Slater, of Yorkshire, England, for- merly owner of the principal cotton mills in that section of the country, is about to settle in Brantford, where he will engage in the manufacture of winceys, Oxford shirtings, toweling, etc. Mr. Slater will employ about two hundred and fifty hands, and will have ten thousand spindles in his mill, which is expected to be in fall running order early in December. The steamship ‘* Moravian” has just brought ont one hundred tons of machin- ery for the new mill, and auother large con- signment is to follow. He intends to manu- facture for the home market, and from his large experience and the facilities of the new mill, anticipates an extensive and prosperous business. Tue Benign INFLUENCE OF SeRRow, — In the massive brain of Beecher was never conceived a truer thought than the one he gave utterance to a few years ago, while addressing the Evangelical Alliance, in the city of New York. ‘*‘ The lioness,” said he ‘*brings forth her young and in a few short months they maim the forests in search of prey; the eagle hatches forth her young— they need no tender care, and the mother svon leaves them te care for themselves; but poor man generally comes into the world crying, and goes through life crying at every stage of the journey.” Is net sorrow the common lot of all here below / And alas how many of the choicest spirits that the world has ever produced, have trod this earthly pilgrimage footsore and weary ; and even of the mster was it not written ae he was a mn of sorrows and acquaint- ed vith grief; and we hid our faces from him in affliction, so that he was obliged te tread the winepress alone, for of the people there were none left to help him.” ee nee A Good Account. “To sum it up, six long years of bed-rid- den sickness and suffering, costing $200 per year, tetal $1,200—all which was stopped by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by my wife, who has done her own house- work for a year since, without the loss of a day, andl want everybody to know it for their benefit.”’* ‘‘Joun Weeks, Butler, N, Y.’ enorme a ee —* i ap eames RR, -<oremen: EGE CARI Se PE ae ; ; ' ; ; Y ' rt =