¥ ——-——_-— ream Fiyk DoLLaRs A YRAR, ~NEW SERIES. _—_—_- THe DAILY EXAMINER| is issued eve ry ev eaing, by fhe Examiner Publishing Oo. r off Few t ‘e, corner of Water and (reat George Streets, Charlottetown, Vrince Edward Island, KRAtes OF SUBSCRIPTION ; Six M mths . ° J S2 fo three Vi mtha, - - l 25 Une Month, 0 50 ré- Advertising at most moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, prarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertize- ; ments, On app.ication. — ALMANAC FOR OCTOBER, ge. MOON 8 CHANGES, Fuli Moon, 4th day, 5h. 47.5m., p. m. Last Quarter llth day, 10h. 16.7m., a. m. New Moon 18th day, 5h, 18.9m., p. m. Firs’ Quarter, 27th day, Oa. 41.9m., a. Mm, Sun |Sun |Moon|High Lys D DAY OF WEEK, onal Lig Days M. {rises sets ( rises |water len’h. hmihm aft’n mora; hm liWednesday 6 35 36. 3 55) 7 BBL 23 2 Tuursday St 4 26) 8 43 29 3 Priday 6G} 32) 457 9 2: 26 4)Saturday 7] 9| § 2910 6 22 5 Sunday 9 24 6 3,10 46) ig 6, Monda 10) 6; 6 4t/tl 27 16 7Tuesday z! 24) 7 24 aft ‘| 12 5) Wednesday 13, 2218 14,05 9 9 Thursday 14, 20; 9 10) 1 39 6 i9| Friday 16 ISO Lt 23y 2 [1 Saturday 17. 1611 16 3 3810 39 i2' Sunday 13 I4morn| 4 58] 56 13 Monday ; 19) 12:0 23 6 1 53 14 Taesday Zil li] 1 20 7 31| 50 15 Wednesday [| 23 9 236 825; 46 16 Tharsday 24, 7 3 40) 9 9) 43 17) Friday 25} 5) 4 45) 9 48 40 18) Saturday | 27! 445471024) 37 19|Suaday | 23, 2 64910 58) 34 20'Moaday | 29) 0,7 50/11 32, 31 21Tuesiay | 31/4 58| 8 43/morn| 27 22) Wednesday | 32 56: 9440 6) 24 Q3\Thursday | 33) 541035040, 21 24 Friday } 35] 53.11 22; 116) 18 25 Saturday 36, Sliaft 6) 1 53| 1b 26, Sunday | 38 48) 040,242) 12 27; Moaday , 41) 47'.1 20 3 37 9 2yiTucsisy, | 42' 5618 443) 6 29' Wedaesday 43, 45, 2 28) 5 53) 3 30|Thursiay | 44) 44,253) 7 9} 0 31! Friday 45/4 42} 3 24 8 9) 9 59 THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE, (Charlottetown Time.) GOING West. A M. & M: P.M. RT non one v ed 647 912 427 No cw np onns 747 1055 64 P. M,* Reteington .....ccccceccce §42 1222 705 i se TM o0e ds 907 1257 24 Semmerside, } depart...... 9o7 22° 37 | I oes 1030 415 ere ere 1205 657 ncccccscsuuetetuen 1242 747 FROM WEST. ni 4, a. Me SE vs cevececteesnull 202 647 Oe co cocdaskh eueee 240 7 57 ee ee Sumwerside, | Stfive-----+ 517 1207 .) § denettines | 542 122 657 Keusiazton tear eeeeeessees 607 209 7 30 eee Miser... ecccapts 702 325 847 ee ere 802 607 1007 G@CINU EAST, PM. AM Matlothetown. .....0 +00 senccens@ ah, Mies foe : RE «on a008 §22 $8237 Mount Stowart, { denert.......- 527 902 ee BUNGE... 0500 0saceeeanteeenl 617 1002 Pp. M. TL «0s esas ee enne ee eae nan 722 1202 A. M mene Deowads. ...-csaecen nesses 532 907 PD. ; ccecepecchuuleouesur™ 629 1072 MOOT BNCOWR 000s sccccccccesosses 647 1047 PROM EAST. A.M. 6P. M, SN dss dun de » able bos eae 647 217 Wa BOOED... ccwncek cubes hace aes 752 400 , c Teepe 842 517 Mount Stewart, { dopart.......- 847 542 Charlottetown. ......2.scccee sce 952 727 POUR, .ncczctbchan svbestt 727 332} SOS. . cncccnande sen ueusesans 745 357 Mates Cowart; <.0<pcnddeccdd oes 842 512 CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED. R. O’DWYER, Commission aud General Merchant POR SALE OF P, B. I, PRODUOE, 289 WATER STREET, Si. Johns’ Newfoundland. [a connection with the above is Captain English, who is well known in P, E, Island, who will take special charge of all consign- mente, and will also attend to the chartering of vessels for the carrying trade of P. EK. 1. The firm is one of theoldest and most reli- able in Newfoundland Keturns guaranteed to be prompt and satisfactory. Parties wish- ing to procure Labradore Herring should send their orders in time. Nept. 6, 1854,—till 31st dec, ’84. L. ARTHUR & CO, GENERAL Commission Merchants, 12] ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. Bggs and Produce a Speviatty. 7\ Lumber and Coal Dealers, Pownal Wharf, | Charlottetown, our agents, who will keep ' ‘to him while in business in Charlottetown, ‘“ This 1s true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public » m2y speak iree.””—Evkiprpgs, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 29, 1884, Dr. Toombs, PRYSICIAN AAD SURGEOY, Mount Stewart. Charlottetown, Oct. 20—Im wkly 6m McLeod, Mord & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS » —AND— ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Office in Old Bank. (UP STAIRS). | Ch’town, Feb. 21, 1884 SULLIVAN & MAGNRILL, | ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. 6a Money to Loan, | W, W, Soutivas, Q. C. | Cuzsrse B. Macmann Jan. 16, '82. } W. WHEATLEY, ; (Or Wueartey & Sons, V. E. Istanp) Commission Merchant, 269 BARRINGTON STREET, RATIVAS. Ww. sa. 8 Special attention given to the sale of P. E. Island produce. April 24, 1884. WEST & RENDELL, | Commission Merchants, St. John’s, Newfoundiaud. Consignments solicited. Liberal advances made. July 25, 1884.—2aw 4m APPLES, APPLES, APPLES, CHARLES DONALD & CO., 79 Queen St, London, E. C., Will be glad to correspond with Apple Grow- ers, Merchants and Shippers, with a view to Autumn and Spring business. They will also give the usual facilities to customers requiring advances, augl MONCTON Sash and Door Factory. R. P. LEA, in returning tbanks to the public for the liberal patrcoageextended begs leave to inform his old customers and the public generally, that he, in company with Mr. William Rogers, has appointed Messrs. B. Williams & Co, constantly on hand a full supply of Mould- ings, Window Sashes, Doors, etc., at LOWEST CASH PRICES. All erders entrusted to them will receive prompt attention. LEA & ROGERS, Manrton, N. BR, STANDARD LIF ASSURANUE GU, T the 57th Annual General Meeting of the Standard Lite Assurance Company, heid at Edinburgh on ‘tuesday, the 24th of April, 1883, the following results for the year ended 15th November, 1583, were re- ported :— 3,038 new proposals for life as- surance were received the year for $ 9,754,085 38 2,561 proposals were accepted, assuring 7,239,048 13 The total existing assurances in force at 15th November, 18 82, amounted to . (Of which $7, 753,031.15 was reassured with Other offices) $6,936,302 91 The Late D. Monro, Fsq. J. B. LAD 500 € NEW FALL AN IMMENSE VARIETY Ch’town, Sept. 18, 1884.—2aw wkly, eae 100 Cases and Bales now apen and more to follow. —- 20: Macdonald has Opened a Great som levy Portion ofhis Fall & Wiuter Stock. —-—— - 0 _———— OF CLOTHS IN IES & GENTLEMEN’S WEAR, LADIES DRESS MATERIAL in all the newest fabrics, VELVETEENS & SILK VELVETS, CASHMERES & FRENCH MERINOES, LADIES MANTLES & SHAWLS, FRINGES, GIMPS & MANTLE ORNAMENTS. CLO? HING DEPARTMENT. 0:0 IVERCOATS, 200 REEFING JACKETS, 200 MEN'S SUITS in Worsted and Tweed, 200 doz, SUITS MEN’S UNDER CLOTHING, from 75 cents a suit upwards. 20 bales of COTTON WARP, 150 chests FINE CONGOU TEA. Jnspection Solicited, and the Lowest Possible Prices for Goods at J. B. MACDONALDS. The claims by death which arose during the year amount- ed, including bonus addi- tions, to - 2,462,226 59 The annual revenue amounted at 15th November, 1882, to The invested funds at same date amounted to Being au increase during the year of 4,267,546 00 29,503,416 00 JOHN LONGWORTH, THOMAS KERR, G'townr Regan 16a Agent for Charlottetown. | ‘direct from ‘reputation for selling Cheap Goods, those who patronize me will find my) i * | Prices Low. | 1,062,648 35. ' | MORE ROOM, ———e seulnenapes INO'TLIC-—i. O [Ole PRICES ! racial} abo. aeetiacaettiane LOW ER ‘Goods than usual. ; Every Department is well filled with Choice NEW GOODS, importe the English Markets. CALL AND SEE US; L. E. PROWSE, Sign of the Big Hat, 74 Queen Street. | ( b’town, Sept, 26, 1884,—eod whkly * And, as | am bound to sustain my past; * Fe] ‘ a! = © = In to-day's paper appears a notice ot the of) S w death of D. Moare, Esq., of Alberry | . Plains. ile emiy:ated to this Island from = 3 po Z the Isie of Skye some 45 years ago, being roa ih 4 44 then ahout 20 years of age. His father es i was a doctor, and from him he obtained a oght im 3 — considerable knowledge of medicine. He tn ane 4. , | . — = a ZZ 4: 2 et ee his en Ne ~ va ol ae im _ sion, but his father having died while he j < a a aS Q a os ed a was yet young, he was unable to complete 20 = = = = - them. His skill, however, was such that a a Se ae ) a, = Ce he was enabled to become very useful Ss = DN O32. 06 _ i a, og anong the people, Eespecially in the early => = z CO « N = bs — setilement in this province, “ve an) N 3 médical practitioners were few. r, Zor 4 . = Q ; Monro sat in the House of Assembly for = D we = io i - Ss) = Belfast district from 1853 to 1857, He a est fe SD <u was a supporter at that time of the Liberal Se > . i—-} 3 CO & vA mH df 3 <-} administration of Hon. George Coles, and — a = a) £9 ee he continued to be a trne Liberal until the . CO & Se = Mt day of his death. He was a Justice of the z be G a x Peace for Queen's County, and a member Ss vem Be RN oe r of the Board of Health for Belfast. He cnn mn ‘= je - Py x ae was for a time Commissioner of Small = Si uw & mM = — Debts. In ali these positions he conscien- = en 5 - so ie = tiously discharged his duty. In the com- ‘an UD. eo 3 2 ~ munity in which he livel his memory will ams iz eH | & & a eS not socn be forgotten. — Patriot. = 4H - 3 Ey Am | tes SS mm” a 3 if | Militia Changes. = na s ic 2) J beet = S Es ro Ep ee 2NN 2 Prince Edward Island Provisional Brigade eae 2 a mS ms om pS = = & co Artillery, No. 5 Battery, = @ ~~ & ba = . | Montague:— = 7 es 5 id ie <{ a - The Battery of Garrison Artillery at a 2 a - i {> < o oO Montague (formerly No. 1 Company, King’s ae vw 2 ah ~ ‘County Provisional Battalion of Infantry) = =- 4 a j 8) oon | <j jis hereby ~— to this Provisionai sp a. Aa 3 ) ' Brigade as No. 5 Battery. = © mm 6D << = je 82nd Queen’s County Battalion of Infantry, | oe va a ea Pi. if) fy 4 jem) | Nos 7 and 8 Companies:— = N fF & ‘oad = a) The Infantry Companies at Alberton and = ko i ~ h ~ | Tryon (formerly Nos. 1 and 2 Companies ea i 5 a a = o of Prince County Provisiouat Battalion of > Md sa - a fy ee =* _Infaatry) are hereby attached to this Bat- we o> = a 2 < O AS ‘ _talion, as follows, viz:— e . a. a ie.“ ry fa S 7 3 aborvn omeRens, No. z eeeny, a “> v MS i pon ‘ryon do do oO aeitwe S A ER 7 «et a King’s County Provisional Battalion of sOQn 7, > — | mee <q Ln A | Infantry. No. 10 inpany, Montague: — 7 > Se + pia oe at <~ This Company, (Ne. 1 Montague), is s a e = epee x pm < = S hereby detached een Sea Bat- 2 TS e led “see talion, changed toa Battery of arti on - > re & - t~ = C) < ey Artillery, and atiached to the Prince = Ons a, — a en <S Edward Island Provisional Brigade of Gar- =— 1 S = BS 2 ca sad e. rison Artillery. Pm = a = < ame) ee ~ The King’s County Provisional Bat‘alion 4. “ mH Ww = > SS ‘of Lufantry, have become non-effective, it fl ~ on : “A ™. ‘is hereby removed from the List of Corps = ~~ = fa — S (of the Active Militia; and the following —| Ax A = officers therecf are in Consequence removed & “et x 4 < fromthe list of officers of the Active pe} = = 2 = Militia, viz; Paymaster Edward Vickerson, S 2nd_Lientenant and Adjutant Josepn R = = McDonald and Surgeon James W. Fraser. = = | Prince County Provisional Battalion of In- = ry | fantry. $$ -~ eee _ - a4 No. 1 Company, Alberton, and No 2 ‘Company, Tryon, are hereoy detached from this Provisional Bittalion and attached to i the 82d Battalion. | The Prince County Provisional Battalion er s ; G O O PD S. of Infantry having become non-effective, it is hereby removed from the list of corps of ‘the Active Militie; and the following ‘officers thereof are in consequence removed from the list of officers of the Active Militia ‘viz: Paymaster William B. Dyer and Sur- F. Jarvis. —. -_-~.-e—_—_-— Drift of American Partyism. —— (Ottawa Sun.) All evil passions appear to have been let loose, in the present political campaign, in the United States. Riot, bloodshed, and ‘at several places open deliberate murders | have taken place. This bodes ii] for that system of Republicanism which has been adopted by our cousins and neighbors. | These frequent struggles for party mastery, are becoming more fierce and bloody every ‘four years, Indeed it is not difficult to ‘imagine a not distant time when the armed jand uniformed mobs of partizans of to-day ‘may be succeeded by regular armies going |to war for the presidency. Next will come ;a dictatorship, to be followed by tyranny, HATS & CAPS in GREAT VARIETY AT LOW PRICES, | ana perhaps a general dissolution of the | Union. If the American people were wise they would abolish the presidency altogether. That office is really incompatible with a ‘true democracy and is only a foolish imita- tion of a monarchial idea. Its tendency is naturally towards absolutism, and in abso- -lutism it will end as similar offences have | always ended in every pation and in every |age where and when they were established. ‘On acocunt of the vastness and peculiar position of the United States they may 'prove an exception to this rule. |time may come when the great body of the people will have beeome heartsick and l abolish the machme, do away with the pre : ; sidency, vest the sujreme power in the , oc S my Store has been greatly enlarged, my importations have been greatly House of Representatives, and make fiicial their shoulders, ana having carried hum A increased, thus enabling me to s:ow a very much better assortment of peculation a capital crime. No sys'em of government yet devised by, One efter avo her off After : i | ell have failed, and tyrants have invariably |encountered Constable Lepierie, on St. to power on the ruins of pepular|Catheriue Sueet, and a shout was im- hope- | wedistely raised to ‘Heng the d-—--d cop- d man was ever perfect. | risen ? ‘rights. Considering these facts it is But a weary of the unending turmoil, viclence) andgrascality of demagegucry, and conient- ‘edly accept the rule of a strong man 4s | preferable to that of the mob. pre Tr MO R K GOO D \ e| We have infinite faith, however, in the ‘abiding love of freedom inherent in the | 'Awerican people, but if they would pre-'@«mons- | serve their bberties they should reform their | system, bring their best men to th» frene, SINGLY Coprges Two CENTS. VOL. 15.--NO, 138. The Redistribution Bill. ARKANGEMENT OP SEATS AS PROPOSED bY THE ““STANDAKD S” DRAFT, | A ccording to the London Stundard’s ver- isioa ef the proposed Redistribution Bill, there will be 668 members of the House of ,Commons, of whom 465 are allotied to (England, which gains 6; 30 to Wales. | which remains siationary ; 103 to Ireland, jwhich also remains stationary; and 70 to Scouland, which gains 10. Iu England al! boronghs with a population of less than 10,000 lose their members, as do also Cricklade, East Retford, New Shoreham, ‘Suroud, Ayisbury, Wenlock, Macclesfieid, ‘and Sandwich, the last two on account of their corruption. Hereford and Rutland also lose a seat, while one member is taken from every borough with iess than 40,000 people. The total gain of seats is thus 1i0, of which 56 will be given to the Counties of Cheshire (2), Cornwall (2), Deven (2), Durham (4), Essex (2), Gloucester (2), Hants (1), Hertford (1), Kent (2), Lon cashire (12), Middlesex (5), Monmeuth (1), Nottingham (2), Somerset (1), Sussex (2), Wilts (2), the North Riding of York (2), land the West Riding of York (i1) The remainder will be given to the grat towns, Finsbury having im future 6 mem- bers; Lambeth, 6; Marylebone, 6; Hack- ney, 6; Bumingham, 6; Liverpocl, 6; Manchester, 6; Chelsea, 4; Leeds, 4; |Sheflield, 4; Westminster, 3; Southwark, 3; Greenwich, 3; Bristol, 3 and Wednesbury, |2; while the new boroughs of Croydon, St. | Helen’s, Aston, Barron-in- Furness, and ' Yarmouth will have one member each, and |West Ham two. In the case of the boroughs, as ia that of the counties, the singie priucip'e in allotting seats has been to give them so far as possible in’ propor- tion to pepniatiop, each London borough, for example, obtaining oue representative for every 80,009 peup e. In Wales, Pembecke and Haverfordwest are to be united, and Radnor and Brecon to be abolished, the three seats being given to Glamorgaashire (2) and to Canarvon- shire (1). Ia Ticland, Athlone, B ndon, Carlow, Ciountel, Coleraine, Ducgarvan, Dinginnot, Downparick, Enéis, Eousi- kilien, Kinsale, M Low,’ New Rovs, Port- arliogion, and Trawe will be cistranchised, while Galway aud Watertuid will lose one member, the cighteen seats being piven to Cork,, which will have six mem ers; An- trim, Down, Mayo aid Gslway, which wil have four; and Donegal, Kerry, Tipperary, and Tyrone, which wiil bave three each, Dublin, though not.quite deserving it by eunibers, will have four members. In Scotianud there will be no distranchisement ; but South Lanark will have four members, aud Fife and Revfrew one additional mem- ber each, while Glasgow will have six members, Edimburgh four, and Aberdeen three. As regards the method of election, the three-cornered apstem is swept awey absolutely and everywhere, and the general principleadopted will not be to treat the ureat cities and counties as entities at all. They will be subdivided into wards or districts, each one of which, with certain few excep- tious, will return two members. The single-seat system is not rejected, for Berk. shire, Buckinghamshire, Dorsetshire, and some Other counties will be divided into single-seat districts; but it is sparingly applied, and the approach to equality is only roughly and approximately made. Still, the gross anomalies, if we leave out London, will become very few, and a singular little step is token towards equal electoral districts, it being suggested that the new subdivision or ward should be called after the most important place within it. The effect of that scheme will be that the apparent connection with the county or city will be lost, as it must beif equal electoral districts are ever adopted, We shall be curous to see if that proposal will cause irritation, or if the local e nviction that everybody must know where, say, Edgbaston is, will overpower municipal and county pride. Ic will be observed that the plan of grouping boroughs, which finds tavour with Tories trom their hatred ot urban feeling, is almost entirely dis- carded. though no grouped boroughs except Radnor and Brecon are swept away. --_>- Students on the Rampage. Some people imagine that we must go abroad for professors of vandalism and perpetrators of ruffianism, but the acts this week in Montreal, of a crowd of rtudents of the Victoria and McGiil Coileges, prove conciusively that we ere pursessed of a few who can «qual the acts of outsiders. About eleven ociock on Thursday night, in that city, a large crowd of students from Colleges, with an old torn fleg, marched down Beaver Hill to Craig street, along Craig to Bleury, up Biury to St. ‘Catherine, and x«zlorg St. C.therine to Philips = square, Oo Uxir route they extingurh«d street lumps, puiled and bicke coor bells, carrie! away sigu-boards, ard shouted and yerliced hke lu order to prove then s-ives courageous, they surrounded Suv-Con- istaile Martin, ow Bieury St., whom they dragged awng. After diagyimg Corsiable M rian for sume distance, they litted Lim luutil they reached a good yale of mad, they ‘dropped him into it ard thw cleared havirg Meitin, the gang 'less to expect that the Great Republic wil) per to the lamp-post.” Some of them then ‘be an exception in history unless indeed aavanced toward the constable, when he let ‘there should be a revolution among the his fist fly, and in Quality Good. Assortment Large. Sin tasciien circ foundation of society, and result in the |students hors du combat. comparatively short ‘time had put halfa dozen, or more of the The remainder ‘establishment of government on the only /now began to ce nsider that discretion was ‘firm Republican basis—Liberty, Equality, | Fraternity. i 2s. Overcoats —L. F. Prowse has just received , D a which he 4¥e not in a position to ideytify even ore v: in job line of Yorsted Uvercoats * all aa a br Heath. fay & Wey—verd the ‘the better part of valour and left him alone, land, tuking to their heels, went teariny | weatward along St. Catherine street. Ne acres's have yet been made, and the police brave one hundred: Co fy