errr TTT ee Liaw JA. } I'ne Lazarett De. Georer H. Fox, lecturer ou skin diseases, at the College ot Physicians and Surgeons of New York, recently paid a visit to the Tracadie Lazaretto, N. is for the purpose of to better purpose the various phases of leprosy and to utilize the knowledge gained, in his own practice In the beginning of the century there were about 100 cases in the neighborhood of Tracadie. A hospital was built on Sheldrake Island, a short distance from Tracadie especially for lepers. This hospital was abandon- ed in 1849 for what known a: the shore hospital, which is under the studying ig now supervison and care of some Sisters of Charity from the Hotel Dieu in Moctreal :— “Tt would be well, said Dr. Fox, to have a specialist at the lazaretto to study this disease, concerning which so little is known; but the policy of the Government seems to be not to cure it, but to stamp it out. Many of the patients have the worst form of leprosy—tubercular leprosy or leontiasis—so called because large bunches often form over the eyes, giving the patient s lionlike, brutal expression. It is fright- ful to be in a room surrounded by such lepers. The mascular lepers merely have bronze patches over the body. I never heard of so curious a case as that of the old woman who was on Sheldrake Island. When she dies it will be of old age, and not of leprosy. Thirty years ago she was dis- charged as cured, but she came to the lazaretto with new symptoms, not many years ago. ‘Physicians are divided in opinion as to whether lepers should be isolated, or treat- ed in hospital or in private practice. Some think there should be a law regarding lepers a3 strict as that which applies to small-pex patients. That the disease is hereditary is certain. The peculiar aspect of the cases at Tracadie shows that. True, an infant was born of a leper woman in the lazaretto which escaned the disease. But then it may skip a generation. My opinion is that, though the disease is hereditary, it is not dangerously contagious. But while I be- lieve it is contagious by inoculation, I do not think it is infectious. Consequently | think it is perfectly safe to treat lepers in hospitals, and do not think a lazarette is necessary. I see no harm in treating or- dinary cases of leprosy in private practice.” CO ae As Others See Us. Tue Glasgow Evening Times, of August 4th, has the Prince Edward Island :— **Prince Edward Island was once called St. Jean, but that was when the French held it. It was given its present name in honor of the Duke of Kent. Indeed, the Island is blessed with any amount of royal names, exclusive of its own. There is Charlottetown, called after Queen Char- lotte of course; and then there are the three counties into which it is divided— King’s, Queen’s and Prince. The popu lation is 108,000, of whom 45,000 ere Seotch, 25,000 [rish, 10,000 French, following short article on 21,000 English, and the remainder of various nationalities, though, comically enough, the vast majority were born on the island, and are therefore Canadians. But then the census says different—a fact which does not at all tend to homogeneity or the making up of a great Canadian nation, in which origins and jarring races will have been forgotten. Of the entire population 95,000 were born inthe island. As regards religion, there are about 60,000 Protestants and 47,000 Catholics,and it can be said with truth there is not much dissension among the creeds. Prince Edward Island might fur- nish a noble example of tolerance and good- will to other parts of Canada that I could name. It is a misfortune connected with the Island that people in Canada generally know as little and as much of 1t almost precisely as they know ot New Zealand, although it is one of the Provinces of Con- federation. Some people know somewhow that it is an Island lying in some gulf, whether St. Lawrence or the Gulf of Mexico they seek not to inquire, as it hardly matters; others have heard that it is part rock and part iceberg, connected with Labrador, whose inhabitants eke out a miserable existence by fishing for cod. The truth about it is, that it is one of the most fertile and beautiful spots on the earth’s surface. The grass is as green as the immortal shamrock of Tom Moore. [reland alone excepted, the grass in Prince Edward Island is greener than in any part af the world. When it is added that you can buy Nova Scotia coal for $2.25a ton, and goed lumpers of potatoes for twenty- five cents per bushel, you may guess that living is not hard, and that poverty is un- known on the Island. > * The Shaw Bros. Failure. The statement of Shaw Bros., submitted to their creditors, show their liabilities to be $7,500,000, instead of 3,500,000, as first stated. Whatever losses the banks and others interested would have met with, had the liabilities been as first stated, will now be doubled. The fact is that this is one of the worst commercial collapses of the decade. The Boston Traveller Says: “‘A very remarkable exposition of the firm’s affairs was expected at the meeting of the creditors of F. Shaw & Bros., but the reality was far ahead of the expectation. Never since the exciting time of 1857, when the suspension of specie payment was dis- cussed in the merchants’ exchange news room, has there been so large an attend- ance of capitalists, bankers, bank presi- dents and business men, for one common purpose as that in the shoe and leather ex- change yesterday. Had the real magnitude of the failure been suspected, the spacious room of the exchange would have been crowded, The attendance of bank presi- dents from all parts of New England was evidence of how widely scattered had been the paper of the insolvent firm. When Mr. Piper, the expert, read his statement, the astonishment of the assombly was visible. Had not the statement of the direct and contingen! liabilities been so appalling, and taken pariies so greatly by surprise—-eyen those wed they new the worst | featurce—thece would undoubtedly have | been an exviting Who sup] . « aUcvale, - —-_. om « _Mownsy saved is money made, Essence of Vinegar makes the most wholesome Vinegar at half the price of ordinary Vinegar. it at the Apothtturies Hall, VesBrisay’s Corner, ; excess of the previous year. ee Ne Re Local and Other Utes. Purits can get their full school supplies at the Diamond Bookstore. - > O DonneELL, the murderer of Carey, the in- former, is to be taken to London to stand his trial there. - > Tur opium duties at San Francisco for the last fiscal year were over a million dollars in > Tne Excursion to West River, to-morrow, promises to be the best of the season. There will be both a tea and refreshment table, > Tuer Yarmouth schooner ‘‘Roseneath,” Capt. Byron Hines, is at Gloucester, Mass., with 290,000 Ibs. codfish, valued at nearly $9,000, - > A Company is to be organized in Dublin for assisting migration in Ireland. Irishmen in America will be appe&led to for subscriptions. Pror, Prerers, of Clinten, New York, an- nounces the discovery of a new planet, which is stated to be unusually bright for an asterowl, siiseiisiidipieiiiea Customs receipts of the United States for the first fourteen days of the present month decreased $1,927,000, and the internal revenue increased $53,000. --—~ RepMon»D, the National League representa- tive in Australia, denies that his mission has failed, and expects to forward five hundred pounds to Ireland every week. AR wnbate Tur Jews in London number about one hundred thousand, They have three weekly newspapers, fifteen synagogues, and a rabb- nical college, with the finest Jewish library in the world. —> Tue Sons of Temperance, with their friends, will hold a Basket Picnic, at Royalty Junction, on Thursday afternoon. Members of the Order from abroad, who may be in the city, will be welcomed. Tue United States post office authorities have decided that after October Ist a two cent stamp will carry a letter to Canada, but that three cents will be required on letters from Canada to the States. / Personal. ‘Talmage is lecturing in Winnipeg. © Donnell is to be tried in England. Joaquin Millar's daughter has become a Roman Catholic. Mrs. Langtry has engaged to play Winnipeg next spring. in Rey. Robert Knox, one of the leaders of the Pan Presbyterian Council, is dead. The Princess of Wales has roused the in- dignation of the English milliners by the extreme plainness of her hats. A deputation of prominent Montreal business men waited on Mr. Senecal, on the 18th instant, previous to his departure for Europe, and presented him with a con- gratulatory address on his being decorated with the legion of honor by President Grevy. What a sight for the gods! Sir Charles Tupper and Hon. Mr. Mackenzie arm-in- arm inspecting the Canadian exhibit at the International Fisheries Exhibition! (Vide interview in Halifax Herald.) Yet they speak of the asperities of public life. There are evidently amenities as well.—- Hamilton Tribune. The Dutch authorities in Java have invited Dr. Vander Heyden to try there the system he has employed in Japan to check the cattle disease. is process con- sists in the injection into the veins of iodium, in the proportion of 0.864 to 0.1152 grains per pound weight of the animal. He claims that it kills all living organisms in the body. HOTEL ARRIVALS. RANKIN HOUSE, Aug 21—Beverley R Newbery, Brackley Point; Jos R Macdonald, Georgetown; P T Collins, New York; W Freeman, Halifax; John Harris, Brooklyn, N Y; James Stead, do; J H Taylor, wife and son, Boston, Mass; F Kennedy, Halifax; J H Stevens, Wallace; P S Archibald, Moncton; Joha C Brown, Richi- bucto; James Brown, Cape Breton; W H Wheatley, Brookfield, Vt. _- > -— Tue Halifax Herald says H. M.S. ‘‘North- ampton” will sail on the 25th inst., for Quebec. She will be joined there by H. M. 8. *Canada.” H, M.S. **Dido” will sail about the lst prox. for the West Indies. ——_~.>_-——_ Mrs. Lanorry aud her American admirer have taken up far too much space in the newspapers already, but the following parting touch excuses itself. She is said to be ‘‘the lily of the valley,” aud he ‘‘the valet of the lily.” icenineamiliitatioes STEVENS, a prominent English Socialist, was expelled from Austria on Sunday week, and on reaching the German frontier, was arrested by the authorities. The British ambassador was appealed to, but declined to interfere. ——@——— ‘Tne pulp factory of Wright & Peyton, at Peterboro, Ont., was destroyed by fire on the 19th inst. The loss is $8,000. A fire also destroyed Moore & Sons’ marble works and an adjoining cabinet shop, both of which were insured; loss $20,000. _— > THe Dominion Government have estab- ished four Indian industrial schools through- but the Northwest Territories. There is one established in the district of Qu’Appelle, an- other in Battleford and a third at Edmonton. The fourth is located in the MacLeod district. a Tue Stayer or Drypen.—The proclama- tion of the Lieut. Governor's reward of $200 for the arrest of Steeves, who shot and killed Dryden in Albert County in April last, still appears in the New Bruns- wick Royal Gazette. coseuieliilicieanan Tue traffic on the Canadian Pacific Railway for the week ending the 14th of August amotfited to $156,000, against $59,000 in a corresponding period last year. The Grand Trunk last year carried $17,000,000, its ex- penses being about $12,000,000, or two thirds of the receipts. In the expenses of the Cana- dian Pacific are also two-thirds, or $5,450,000 out of $8,000,000, a balance of $2,700,000 is left, a gratifying exhibit for a road only par- tially completed. -_- > — A rep hot blatant politician, by the name of General Cab!e, speaking at a gatherirg of Confederate soldiers at McKinley, Texas, re- cently declared that England and America could never have more than unnatural friend- ship, and that he hoped to live long enough to lead ex-Confederates under the Stars and Stripes in a contest against England. In the interests of the troops he would be likely to command, itis to be hoped that the ‘Black Sergeant” will pay him a visit before long. --~- >. — Proressok H. FARMER, senior examiner in agriculture under the Government Depart- ment ef Science in England, had an interview with the Minister of Agriculture, recently. He is the author of several works, such as, ‘The alphabet of the principles of agriculture.” ‘‘Jack’s education; or, how he learned farm- ing,’ ‘The Abbott’s farm,’ and ‘Holt’s castle; or, the threefold interest in land,’ and is a great authority in England. Hecomes to this country in behalf of the interests he re- presents, and will study carefully the agri- cultural capabilities of Canada, Our Advertisers. A. MeNeill will “sell 178 tons Gowrie Mines slack coal, on Lord’s Wharf, to- morrow, at eleven o’clock. J. A. Lawson notifies all interested that Col. Hickman, of Kentucky, will lecture in the Y. M. C. A. Hall, on Thursday evening next. J. D. McLeod announces that he has taken Stainforth Sanderson into partner- ship, and resumed business, at the store lately occupied by Arthur & Toombs, Grafton Street, where first-class groceries and provisions can be obtained. Summerside Exporte. SUMMERSIDE, Aug 20. Shipped per steamer ‘‘Princess of Wales,” Cameron, master, for Point du Chene:— 82 cases eggs, . . - $ 443.00 12 horses, - . - 1,200.00 3,050 Ibs. cheese, ° . - 366.00 250 bush. oats, - - 113.00 375 sheep pelts, - . - [185.00 5 bris. pork, . - . 100.00 150 lbs. butter, 27.00 250 sheep, . 653.00 | 4 cattle, - - . 80 00 15 bbls mackerel, . 70 00 $3,251.00 New Goops, selliug cheap, at J. 'B.. Mac- DUNALD’S. {aug20 OSBORNE HOUSE. Aug. 20—Mrs M McGoslin, Wellington; J P Tuplin, Summerside; Mrs James Tuplin, do; Mrs Bridge, Boston; Mrs A B Cosgrove, North Tryon; R H Reid, Alberton; Miss Lucy Reid, do; H Ellis, do; G Boyd, Halifax; Hugh Logan, Georgetown; Theodore Clark, Alberton, Miss C Sutherland; Georgetown; A H Love, City; James England, Kensington; F Gallant, Tignish; Miss Grey, Toronto; John R Morrow, Lynn, Mass; Miss E Campbell, Boston; D Rogers, Summerside; James Ferguson, Wel- lington, REVERE HOUSE. Aug 18—E J Howell, Montreal; J T Wild- ing, do; W E Robertson, Toronto; Thos Gowdy,Guelph, Ont; WS Bryce, Gawandque; John Tufts, Boston; J F Shatford, Halifax; Jas R Cragg, do; H F Knowles, Boston; Jas Crovther, Toronto; E M Knight, Amherst; James Hill, Boston; L Brown, New Castle; J P Grant, Montreal; J F Sterns, Souris, 20— J Taylor, Moncton; W P Hunt, do; C P Me- Lennan, Halifax; J H Myrick, Tignish; D Schurman, Summerside; W Rice, Toronto; C C Bare, Montreal. SEASIDE HOTEL—-RUSTICO BEAGH, Aug. 16—Mrs Henry Samitel, Boston; Fanny A Weldon, Lancaster, Mass; Annie McLeland, Boston, Jennie Page, do; A A Whitney and wife, New York; T C Hersey, Portland, Me; RB Coben, Boston; Migs S Hersey, Charlottetown. 17—Mias Dawson, Charlottetown; Miss PcPhee, do; Miss M Dawson, do; 1 B Dawsen, do. 18—Mr and Mrs Alex Buntin, Montreal; Miss Buntit, do; Mr and Mrs O L Richards, Quebec; Miss B Richards, do; Miss M Richards, do; James C Richards, do; David Laird, Chaxiaaietow>:; W A O Morson, do. - > ae ———- ea MARRIED. At the Quincy House, Sydney Street, on the 2ist inst., by the Rev. K, Maclennan, M. A., Mr. Elias Rumell, of Liscomb, N, 8., to Hannah Jane Ferguson, of Malpeque, Be Maile (Halifax Herald please copy.) ___- a —— Se DIED. At Summerside, on the 19th inst., Mrs, John Bethune, aged 32 years, At North St. Eleanors, on the 11th inst., of chronic pleurisy, Sidney Herman, third son of Edgar J, and Harriet E. Craswell, aged 20 years. Bought since the British Wa Furniture. ————:0-- PXAMINER, AUGUST 21. 1283. LONDON HOUSE. WE ARE SHOWING A HEAVY STOCK OF Grey Cottons, White Cottons, Bed Tickines, >heetings, secent Reduction Denims, &c. in Wrices, and véarked Acecordingty. GEO. DAVIES & COQ. Ch’town, August 17, 1883. iment) Om —_ — rehouse, To the Wholesale an. Retail Trade. [0:- SUMMER ~ W.&A.BROWN & CO. H AVE now opened the completion of their large stock of SPRING AND They are offering special inducements to cash buyers. It will be to your advantage to inspect their stock before purchasing elsewhere. Establishment closes every evening at 6 «’vlock (Saturdays excepted.) Ch’town, June 1, 1882.—wkly —i0:— #. & A. BROWN & CO. MARK WRIGHT & CO. ARE SELLING AT THEIR NEW WAREROOMS, 83 QUEEN ST. PARLOR SETS, BEDROOM SETS, : Sideboards, Hall Stands, Music Stand-, Chairs, Tables, Bedsteads, Lounges, Looking Glasses, Window Poles (new styles), Cornices, and generally, Furniture At Rock Bottom Prices. Woven Wire Matrasses (the best bed in use) very cheap; Matrasses, in Ch’town, Aug. 11, 1883.—2w wkly Im Hair, Moss, Fibre, Wool, Flock, Excelsior and Straw. GIVE US A CALL AS WE MEAN BUSINESS, EE SHIP NEWS. PORT OF CHARLOTTETOWN. ENTERED, Aug 20—W Wright, McRae, Cocagne, laths; Bounty, Reid, Sydney, coal; Morven, Marchand, Pictou, coal. Aug 21—Eliza B, Boudroit, Sydney, coal; Three Sisters, Walpole, Pictou, coal. CLEARED. Aug 30—W Wright, McRae, Pictou, bal; Levi Hart, Gerrior, Pictou, bal; Bounty, Reid, Pictou, bal; Mary Alice, Arsenault, Eg- mont Bay, mdse; Minnie Scott, Harpell, Wallace, mdse. Aug 21—-Morven, Marchand, Pictou, bal; Omega, Boudroit, Pictou, bal; Three Sis- ters, Walpole, Pictou, bal. OUTPORTS., Summerside, Aug 20—Ent sch Perseverance, Gaudet, Buctouche, lum; Annie Florence, Bernard, Pictou, coal; Opal, Steele, Pagwash, herring. Cld sch Perseverance, Gaudet, Buc- touche, bal. Weather Bulletin. Probabilities for the next 24 hours for the Maritime Provinces. Toronto, August 21—10 a. m. Moderate to fresh south to west winds, fair to cloudy weather with local showers and thunderstorms. THE LAW SOCIETY. SPECIAL MERTING of the Members of the Law Society will be held at the Law Library, On Thursday Next, AT ELEVEN O'CLOCK, A. M., to take into consideration a communication received from the New Brunswick Bar. A tull attendance is requested. F. L. HASZARD, Any 21, 1878. Sebv’y. JULY, 1883. —_——- 09:0 ——-— JOHN MACPHEE & CO. Will, during this month, give epecial bargains‘in Curtains, &c., &c. 0:0 &c,, at the lowest prices. 0:0 New Black and Colored Cashmeres,{Beige Cloths, Satins, Cashmere Serge, Velveteens, Laced Spanish Laces, Gloves, Ribbons, Scarfs, Housery, Feathers, Flowers, Parasols, Umbrellas, Job lot Parasols at half price. Table Linens, Napkins, Damasks, Grey, White, Printed and Plush Cottons, Cretonnes, Tickings, Cotton Warps &c., at prices specially low, —O>— ever. 0:0 READY-MADE CLOTHING, in Men’s and Boys’ Coats, Pants and Vests, cheaper than Job lot of Men’s Pants at cost. Tweeds, Worsteds, Broadcloths, White and Colored Shirts, Collars, Ties, Underclothing, ——0°¢ Job lot of Faney Shirts at 50 cents; Straw Goods at cost; Remants at half price. Bargains in every Department, &ce. Rare WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. JOUN McPHEE & CO, July 3, 1882 —%w, whly Rorert Orr’s Onn Sranp. THA. TEA. ———:0: ————_ EXCELLENT QUALITY. UR NEW TEAS are warranted to give extra geod satis faction. BEER & GOFF. Ch’towa, June 4, 1883. 2aw wly | — ROTICE ae HAVE much pleasure in announcing lo my customers and friends that have taken STAINFORTHA SAN DERSOW into partnership, and that wy have resumed business for the present in the shop on Grafton Street, lately occupied by Mergrg Arthur & Toombs, near Apothecaties Hall. and would ask ‘or the firm a continuance of the very liberal patronage heretofore be, stowed, J D. McLEOD & GO, Ch'town, Aug 21.--1). wkly 2j COAL... ¥ AUCTION, TO-MORROW (WED. NESDAY, August 22nd, at 11 o'clock, Lord’s Wharf, 178 tons Slack Coal (Gowrie Mines), ex sch “Mary White.*’ ’ Sale positive, No reserve, A. MeNEILL, : Auctioncer, Ch’town, Aug. 21, 1882.--1i GRAND Temperance Rally. OL, J. J. HiCKMAN, of Kentucky, one of the foremos' platform temperance speakers in America, will lecture in the ¥ M.C A. Hali,on Thursday next, at eight p.m, Free to all, A collection will be taken for the Temperance Agency Fund. By oder, J. A. LAWSON, Cl’iown, Aug. 21,—3i THE CITY SCHOOLS. ILL BE RE-OPENED, after the Mid. summer Holidays, on Monday, 27th August, instant, At nine o’clock,a,m. A full attendance of pupils, on that day, is requested, iu order that all may be graded into their proper Departments. ISAAC OXENHAM, Secretary of School Board Aug, 20.—tl 27 WANTS, LOST, FOUND, de. OY WANTED—A boy, 15 to 16 years of age, to take charge of a horse and cow, and work in a garden, will find employment by applyingto Major Freeland, on Market days, at Admiral Bayfield’s, Brighton Lodge. : [aug 21 EMGVAL —We have leased Monaghan’s Briek Store, next door to Dodd & Rogers’ Hardware Store, where we intend moving in a few weeks. The shop at present occupied by us, to which is attached a jarge yard and warehouse, is tolet. Erquire on the prem- ises.—J. C. Spracur & Co., Sigu of the Big Boot, Queen Street. fang21 ta fr wy tf TALIAN BEES, A few swarms for sale, in the popular Langstrath Framed Hives, —lewis P. lanven, feug2) 2i wy i pd ANTRAYED—From ber pastuie, on the hI Lower st. Peters Road, last Thursday evening, @ BLACK COW. Any information as to her whereabouts will be thankfully ree ceived by Robert Young, .Queen Street, Obar, lotietown, (aug2i {ERVANT BOY WANTED. Must have WW geod reference. Apply at this office. [aug20 2i Ve LET—A Stable, with Coachhouse and Loft, on Pownal Street. Apply at Ex- MINER OFFICE. fang20 ONEY LOST—On Saturday, ]/th inst. between Rocky Point Ferry Boat and Kclipoc Bakery, @ purse, containing money, The finder will be suitably rewarded by leay- ing the same at this office, {aug20 2i whkly Ji pd ANTED—At the Union House, a first- class Restaurant Cook. To the right party good wages will be paid. {aul8 lw RAWING,—Miss E, Longworth wishes to receive pupils, after the first of Sep- tember, for instruction in Drawing and Paint- ing. {aug15 eod tf ya IMMEDIATELY—A man for general work, Also a girl for dining room. Apply at the Revere House, jaug 14 y O LET—The Tenement House, on Cum- berland Street, lately occupied by W. H. Stewart, Esq., and formerly owned by Mr, R. B. Heustis. Apply at the store of Davison & Co., corner Great George and Kent Streets. [aug 11 Gi fgsHE CREAMER that I manufacture with iron tap is the ‘““Champion.”—Henry D, WapMaNn, 55 Pownal St. {auld \ ANTED—A GIRL, about eighteen years, todo general housework, One from couniry preferred. Apply to Mrs. Geo. Tweedy, Spring Park Road. ‘ {augS lw wkly 2i ‘qo LET--A house containing six roome. Apply to James McLeod, Spring Park ad. {au 4 OARDERS—A few boarders can be ac- commodated at Mrs. Rodc’s, opposite Pickard’s Bakery. {jly 31 : ie LET—That Dwelling House contein- ing twelve rooms, besides kitchen, on Upper Hillsborough Street, lately occupied by Capt. Michael Foley. Apply to Henry Blatch, fy 30 eod tf INEGAR—Just received a supply of French Imperial Triple Vinegar, ware ranted of best quality, For sale at Jobn Hobbs’ G,ocery Store. faug 2 3w taw gWOR SALE—Set of Tinsmith’s Tools, also a lot Tinware, cheap. Apply to Mrs. Rodd, opposite Pickard’s Bakery. {jly 31 V V HOLES A Tie &B ETA TTI, ry°O LET—(withimmediate possession) that handsome and commodious residence 1 the northern suburbs of the city, on St. Peters Road, lately occupied by L. B. Archibald, Esq. Enquire of Lonuwortn & Haszarb. [may 16, 1838