t es eer —s cate ae 2 AERO SOE ee eee cee A PE PRRE ILS PETES OE Tt Z a. ol be Baily #HXaminet. * This is true Liberty, when Free-borr Men, nao to viet the Public, may deltas free.” — "NSW SERIES OHARLOTPE sTOWN, PRINUE EDWARD ISLAND. SATUR DAY, SEPTEMBER $6, ABBE | VOL 9--Nv, 94. i — Datty EXAMINER 8 ISSUED EVERY SVENING, See lee THE By sax Fxamiver Pcriisuine Company, from THEIR Orrice, Corner or WaTER ANB GREBAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, - : P. E. Island. Rares oF SUSSCRIPTION : Six Months, . . a $2 50 Three Months, - - : 1 26 One Month, - ° e 0 50 pm Advertising at most moderate rates Gentzacts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, en application. ALMANAC FOR & S PTEMBER 1881. MOON'S ( HaNGRs, First Quarter Ist day, 9h. 58m., Kk. (eelew kerizon. Full Moen 7th day, 124. 27m., midnight, S. Last Qoarter !6th day, 3h. 49m., a. m., S. E. New Mooau 23rd day, 7h. 42m, a m., W. (below herixen.) First Quarter, 30th day, 5h 39m. p. m. 8. ‘ih, oe Doar os wasx/S2® |San ‘Meen|High | Days’ f i Ih va |! m jaft’ u mere h. m. 1'Thuraday (5 26) 34) 1 38) 255/13 8 9 Friday 27 | 32| 2 36! 4 6 | 5) @ Saturday 28) 30) 3 5 37 2! 4 Munday 29' 281411) 7 6 59 | 6| Monday 31} 26,44 “ 8 16 55} 6) Tuesday 32) 24,513) 910) 52) TlWedneeday | 33) 2215 42|956| 49) 8 Thursday 34; 20) 6 * id 29 48) 9 Friday 36; 18) 6 37,11 le 42) 10 Saturday 37' 16,7 Taft 5) 39) 11 Sanday 33) | 7 4ij 0 32 36 | 19 Menday 40) 11) 8 21) 1 14 33 18 Tuesday 41) i2) 9 6, 1 59 ld Wednesday 9)19 48! 2 49) 27 16 Thursday 43, 7/16 53] 3 50! 16 Priday 45) 51k 5) 5 4/12 90 17|\@atarday 465 3\mern, 6 i7! i 1S Buaday 4715 110 “4 7 32) 14 19 Memday 4%, &9 1 54, § 15 Lt 30 Tuesday 50) 57) 2 57) $ 56) 21, Wedacsday | #1 55) 3 59) 9 7 22/Thursdsy § 52 33,5 210 7 8 Friday 53 Bl 6 5/10 9| 11 53! 4 Satureay 55 «649 7 91 12 | 54 5 Sunday S@ 47, 3 1511 47; =| 14 Monday 57, 45) 9 22)morn 43 | 27; Tuesday ; 59, 43:10 25) 0 24 44) 38) Wednesday 6 7 41°11 32; : 43 | aa 20/Thers. 2 39) aft 29) 80| Friday 8 HP $7! 1 19) 2 42| il 34 eee ee ee rer Credit Foncier PRANCO- CANADIEN, $5,006, 000 President—Hon. E. Vuclere,Senator, Paris. Vice-Pres.--Hon. J. A. Chapleau, Montreal. ! Capital, - - - —_— The Cempany wi'l make long term loans | with sinkin,: fund, and short term loans wi h-! out sinking fund. ! For parti-ulars, ap; ly at the office of Messrs. Sullivan & Morson, + solicitors, Charlottetown. W. W. SULLIVAN. Aug. 24, 1881, L. ARTHUR & CO, GENERAL Commission Merchants, 108 SOUTH MARKET STREET, BOSTON, MASS. May 16, 1381. Queen Insurance Co’y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL - 0 MIL [wkly | ; TY o MILLIONS STERLING. | |neurance effectec on Salt kinds of Buildings, Merchandise and | roduce, Also,on Vessels on the stocks, Bpecial rates for isolated residences, All Losses settle:! promptly, GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Priuce Edward Island | sat} EDWARD T, AUSSELL, & 69. SHITE RAL Commission Merchants, No. 2i3 State Street, BOOST, May 14, 1881. W.C. BISHOP, St aaa ~-—AND— FORWARDING AGENT, MARINE INSURANCE BROKER, maa = General Commission Agent, 80 BEDFORD ROW, P. O. BOX 1 - HALIFAX, WN. 8. pazncora ATTENTION given to the Shipment o: Lobsters and other Canned | Goods, and coli: thereon, dulls, Cargoes end Freights inaured in first- | ¢lase offices at most favorable rates. i Consignwwents of Produce solicited, and prom pt returns ¢ aaranteed, Correspondence solicited and promptly. ction of Custom pena answered a iSun tl igh | Days | (ap 7 6m | June 28, Harine Insurance Company —<or-— Prince Edward Island. Rozr. L: naworrs, Esq. ., President, Directors Hoy. L. C. Owen, I. Hanpraway, Esq., | B. Roesas, fsq., G. R. Beer, Esq., SAMUEL Murem, Kisq. Risks taken daily on Vessels, Cargoes and Freights, at their Office, George and Lower Water Streets. FRED. W. HSLES, Ch’town, April 25, 1881. rae ot ETAT Besr’s Wharf (Late Duncan’s, ) rs HE subscriber wishes to intimate to bis friends, and the public generally, that he | has opened a ¢ oal Depot at the above named place, where he is prepared to receive orders rises |svts | rises |water | len’h. | for all the leading kinds of Coal, and fill them at lowest possible rates. R. McMILLAN, Ch’town, Aug, 18-——eod, wkly im pd IN EW Paper Bag Factory! KENT STREET, Between Queen and Pownal, oi Charlottetown, - P. EL — eee SRY ERY quality and size of Paper Bags for | Grocers, Dry Goods men, Confectioners, Hatters, Droggists, and Pastry Bakers’ use, in ' stock or made to order at short notice, and sold at Montreal prices, with usual trade dis-'| 7 | counts, Parties having quantities of paper in stock | ;can have it made into Bags without loss of time and at much Jess cost than they can import them. Orders respectiully solicited. E. H. BABBITT. duly 27—-3m Ale RED A. BOWN, AUCT LONEER General Commission Merchant ST, JOHN'S, NEWFGUNOLAND, Solicits consignments of all kinds of Produce | | Butter, Eggs, Vege ables, etc., etc, Prompt returns gui nenitiind. ences on application, The Larcesb Amous ab af Life In surance at the Smallest Gnblay | THE DOMINION SARETY FUND | LiFi ASSOCIATION, ST. JN, N. B. AHOME GOMPANY. Provirciat Directors: Jas. de Wolfe Spurr, Jas.'T, Steeves, M. D.,¥ | Wm. Henry Thorne, Thos. Temple, Foster McFarlane M. D., Chas. F. Clinch, Hon, C.N, Skinner, Q. C., Jas. de Wolfe Spurr, Thos, A, Chipman, President Secretary ———— Na a ‘The Safety is fast becoming the popular plan of af- fording the protection of LIFE EXSURANCE! Members only pay actual current cost, No large accumulations of the people’s ‘money in the hands of the Association. Members vote for Directors, Expenses of management limited, Send forcirculars, Examine our plan. James MoLxop, M. D.. Physician, Ch towa, E. H. BABBITT, June 25, Bl. ‘Special Agent { for P. bk. i CON FEDERATION LIFE ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT : Hon. Sir W. P. How ann, C. B., K. C. M. G. VICE-PRE-IDEN'S : Hon. Wm. McMaster and Wm. Et.ior, Esq, Attention is Directed to the SPECIAL ADVANTAGES afforded by this Associa- tion as compared with the uniform Bonus of Two and a Half Per Cent. plan. ORDINARY LIFE PLAN. Casu. C.L. A. Policy No. 1. $10,- 080. Profits for 18589, ee eee $121 98 $312 00 Results under 24 per cent. Bonus plan............ Bonvs. 87 75 a This difference in favor of a ©. L. A. | policy holders 1verzasxs with each additional | p* remium paid. Policies in this Associatien are N: FEITABLE after ;Wo YEARS, and are Indisputable After Three Years. J. K,. MACDONALD, IN-FOR- D. R NM. Hooper ,Esq.,, Corner of Great COAL C DEPOT! Good refer-: (iu (7 6m nee! Pand System !) Managing Director, | eerie ahaa eon EI MT nnn Ten FIRET MEARINE HORACE HASZARD, General Insurance Agent, ~—— REPRESENTING — } | Commercial Union Firs Assurance Company, of London, ng... CAPITAL, £2,500,000 STG. CAPITAL, $800,000.00. British America Fira Assurancs Company, of Torants, Sat.,’ CAPITAL, $500,000.00. Sun Hutual Life & Accident Insurance Company, of Montreal, | oki rey: afd 000.00. | MARINE INSURANCE ALSO ‘in Risks taken on all descriptions of Property at LOWEST RATES. 29 | Office—Corner of Queen and Lower Water Streets, Charlottetown, Anh 4, 188i1—tf | RE FECTED. | i ' ee NOW OPENING | Cc fa AE = i DE. EOE, HAY MAKERS I A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF HAY FORKS, HAY RAKES, SCYTHES, SCYTHE SNATHES, SCYTHE STONES, | &c., &c., &e 0:0 FOR BUTTER MAKERS! “Milk Dishes, Churns, Cream Crecks, Butter Crocks, Butter Salt, Butter Prints, Buiter Firkins, &c., &e. O— for Fruit Preservers ! | Preserving Sugar, Preserve Pans, Preserve Jars and Crocks, etc., ctc., which, together with our large stock of General Groceries, Flour, Meal, Shelf Hardware, Paints, Oils, &., &e.; ever offered, at HENRY BEER. STHAMSTHIP TO LEASE, oe EDWARD THE CITY HOTEL, ITUATED on Great George Strect, op- posite the Roman Catholic Cathedral, the late occupant—Mr, A. A. Mackenzie—having | skedaddled, This House is now in a good state of re- ‘pair, is centrally situated, has recently been reshingled and otherwise "repaired * lots of cellar room; has about 30 rooms, The situa- | tion is about the best in the city, being cen- | trally situated and on — land, where the [drainage runs off to the river. Rent moderate, | PT T cal at Charlottetown | Apply to ES & CO. png. 22,781, en OeF PAM Check Square| « AKS@UT Sth of OCTOBER, | AND WILL CARRY Ahead Of all ul Competition. Lobsters, Starch, and other Products of the Island on Freight at the JET BLACK mest very lowest rates. STOVE POLISH | carrie « sHEEP { On tHE Upper Decx, And Will Sail for Liverpeol Direct on or About the Gth @ctober. Shippers will please make early application, in order to secure reom. Fer Freight and other particulars apply to HALF TON JUST RECEIVED, PEAKE BRO’S & CO, WHOLESALE aND Rertatt, | [au 23 2i w) Managers Our Agent, C, J. THOMAS, will sell — For Sale or to Let. /at the Market, and through the country, HAT Freehold Property, with a front of Also, Everlasting Axle Grease, - B. BALDERSTON eighty feet on Pownal Street and eighty. lfour feet ou Sydney Street, the House con- Agent for P. E I. — Street, July 30—6w 2aw, wkly ex Twa | taining 16 large rooms aud two Kitchens. OTe tif "4 SAT PP HI iS Can be turned into one Dweiling by uaiock- ‘h Jas bh ling adoor, Apply on = ae rp OSW BY BOSTON STEAMEES, March 12, 1881—+f | O FREIGHT will be received ai i three o'clock on days of sailing. Hides, Hides, i Bills of Lading must be presented for sig: | nature by four o ‘clock. CARVELL BROS, i —— i i i } | Canepeide, July 26, 1881. NEAT, QUICK, BRELIANT AND LASTING! ‘Six Million Packages Sold in 1880. Hides Spring Park Wool Shop. LIFE t Western Fire Assurance Company, of ‘Toronto, Ont, A Great Man. British Crops. oe man is great, Paver he gow THE “‘ MARK LANE EXPRESS ” SEES NO O serves a greatness not his own ' . For neither praise or pelf ; en Content to know and be unknown, Whole in himself. The ** Mark Lane Express” of the 5th says:—During the week progress has ‘been made with harvesting, but the best ‘condition has been middling, while the ;bulk bas been thoroughly bad. Since Tuesday the weatier bas beeu cloudy, cold, and rainy, with intermittent san- | shine. Cold has checked the sprouting lof the grain, but it has also retarded the ripening in the late districts, espe- cially iu Scotland where there has beeu if such a man there be, where’er | frosts. Reports from Ireland are deci- a cei he fare, ‘dedly unfavorable. The results of the Great Nature hath him in her care, British hervest exercises but gmall in- Her cause is his. fluence on trade. The available foreign supply to arrive is a question which will | interest the millers. Native crops are ‘actually further from the markets than . aa ta sl ol | American and Russian mew crops. Praise undeserved is satire ia disguise. Millers have ceased to operate cma Conversation is the vent of character, . their necessities, because they think they Streng is that man, he ouly strong, To whose well-ordered will belong, For service and delight, All powers that, in face of Wrong, Establish Right. And free he is, an@ only he, Who, from his tyrant passions free, By fortune undismayed, Hath power upon himself to be By himeelf obeyed. —Owen Meredith. om + Great Facts. + ie é i f i : y if | Hard workers are usually honest. | ANTED by C. F. STACK POOL, at the}: as well as thought. }isfortunes are in morals what bitters are in medicines. Cold natures have only recollections ; tender natures have remembrances. dustry lifts them above temptation. The willingness te run away in a fight | ‘distinguishes man from the beast. Sas ‘highest values. | continue higher than in London and other jmarkets where foreign arrivals rule | and dear. ‘can hold out until increased Atlantic ‘shipments have arrived. The weather ‘has doubtless checked the upward tend- eucy but a few samples ef grain* har- vested before the rain came still fetch the Rates in the Provinces Flour from old wheats is scarce Foreign trade has been slow i trade. Prosperity is no just scale; adversity !throughour the week, the millers havi ing ,is the cnly balance to weigh friends, A pecularity of the clock is, that as soonas it strikes it goes on with its. , work. Pin thy faith to no man’s sleeve. Hast thou not two eyes of thine own.—Car- lyle. A noble heart, like the sun, showeth its greatest countenance in its lowest | estate. Elegance of language may not be in the power of everyone, but simplicity and straightforwardness are, That virtue which depends on cpinion looks to secrecy alone, and could not be, trusted in a desert. Talent becomes feebler as an artist ages, but facility may be retained and even augmented. A masterpiece of art has in the mind a fixed place in the chain of being as much as a plant or crystal. Nature makes us yours only when we lack necessaries, but custom gives the name of poverty to the want of super- | fluities. Despotiem can no more exist in a nation until the liberty of the press be destroyed than the night can happen be- fore the sun is set. Wise men are instructed by reason ; men of less understanding by experience ; the most ignorant by “necessity ; aud}; brutes by nature. Since Time is not a person we can overtake when past, let us honor him with mirth and cheerfulness of heart while he is passing. _—_- Advice to Graduates. Don’t give up study. Don’t thick life is all sunshine. Don’t imagine it is all shadows. Don’t think you know everything. Den't feel too proud to go to work. Don’t forget your old schoolmaster. Don’t disgrace the sehool you leave. Don’t be a drone—-go at it with a will. Don’t think that you perform the i world, Don’t think you are smarter than your father, Don’t be long ia choesing your life- work. Don’t expect success unless you work for it. Don’t be afraid of failure if you do your best. Dont scorn the advice of experienced persons. Don’t refuse a good thing at hand while waiting for something better. Don’t forget that the most learned peo- ple have still something to learn. Don’t imagine aa education is not needed for manual labor. A master mechanic caunot know teo much. Don’t think your education is com- plete, a foundation has merely been laid upon which you are to build your after Ite. Don’t lay aside your books forever now that you are out of school. Give some part of every day to reading—read up the branches you glance over in school. To throw aside study at the end of scnool-life is the greatest mistake a girl or boy can make. rt > <> 2 ee —— BRLLIANT Scizxtiric Triompa.— Thous- ands cured of Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthima, and Lung diseases by Dr, M. Souviell’s spiro properties direct to the parts affected. ustruments expressed to any address ‘market has been inactive, trument nmveys medicinal meter, an instrument whi b conveys med Fu} ;2i¥" special permission for the perforn- ene SA Se a hom: that the Privesss Frederica of Hano- for particulars to Dr. M. Souvielle, ex-Aide td ‘is ebout to establish for those who, Surgeon to the French Army, 13 Phillip|>y the rules of maternity hospitals, are dis- Square, Montreal. All letters must contain | charged at the end of a fortnight from the ‘laid in a working supply await the de- ' velopments of the trade indifferently, and the present rate of shipments is decidedly in their favor. Ov Friday business was small, at a shilling decline. Off coast the Of sixteen cargoes which arri-ed five were sold. There is no barley or eats off coast. ‘The bulk of the British crop is available for grinding only, avd prices are ruled by maize. Foreign was stagnant. Maize was slightly in favor of buyers. Sales ot English wheat were 21,320 quariers, at 55s 2d per quarter, against 16,536 ‘quarters, at 43s 3d per quarter, for cor- responding week last year. a a Waste Lands in Ireland. ENGLISH QCAPITALISTS COMMENCING ON THE " - WORK OF RECLAMATION, The movement for the reclamation of waste lands in Ireland is likely to be pro- duetive of great good. A stock company was recently formed in London, with a large capital, for the purpose, and in the Land bill just passed a clause provides that Government funds may be used with the object of inéreasing the food-producin area. Out of the tota! area of Irelan (20,808,271 acres), between five and six millions of acres are uncultivated, Nearly 4,000,000 of acres of this waste land have been pronouneed by most excellent Irish and English authorities to be reclaimable, the most of it being in the west of Ireland and in the districts where the greatest suffering prevailed in 1846 and 1847, and 1879 and 1880. Half of Connaught is uncultivated, although 1,500,000 acres of it can be pro- fitably cultivated. Of the 1,364,000 acres in Mayo, 500,000 acres are waste land, nearly all of which is reclaimable. Kerry has 1,168,000 acre, of which 700,000 are waste, and 400,000 acres of that are re- claimable. The scheme of reclaiming this vast territory is not new. As far back as 1846 a recommendation for the improve- ment of waste lands in Ireland was made in Parliament, anda bill was drawn up, but it fell through on its second reading. In 1849, Sir Charles Trevelyan demonstrated that Ireland was able to support a much larger population. The proposition has repeated several! times since, but nothing practical has eome of it thus far. It has been pointed out that the landlords own nearly $3,000,000 acres of bog land, which can be drained as effectually as the same kind of land as been drained in England. The reclamation of the bog land would of of itself furnizh an area to produce food for 6,000,000 of people, about 1,000,000 more than there are in Ireland. This proves conclusively that there is soil enough to support abundantly three or four times the present population. A I During the week ending August 6, three ateamera reached the Mersey with live stock from the United States and Canada. The collective consignments amounted to 967 cattle and 1,031 sheep, being an increase op the preceding week. The arrival of fresh meat and also larger, amounting to 3,551 quarters of beef, and 300 carcasses of mutton. No hogs arrived. The steam- ers which conveyed live steck were the Missouri, with 593 cattle; the Toronto, with 254 cattle and 1,031 sheep; and the Bavarian, with 120 cattle; and the steamers conveying fresh meat were as follows:— The Bavarian, with 1,502 quarters of beef, ‘the Circassian, with 728 quarters of beef; the Baltic, with 600 quarters of beef and 150 carcases of mutton; the Spain, with 525 quarters of beef; and the City of Mon- treal, with 196 quarters of beef and 150 carcases of mutton. When the great hall which Henry VIII. added to the palace of Cardinal Wolsey at Hampton was opened a fortnight ago, for an saateur theatrical enterainment, it was the iret time in 150 years that it had been opened for such a purpose. Abcut 600 vistors wero present. Her Majesty had nee, which was in aid of # convalescent June 1, “81—law wed June 27,81, , stamps for reply. s2 tf time of their confinement. j Sa wr dene a capes Sovtas Se pa i} Naas MALS TIS SERNA Ree EN Mae on SRR Ae oe pte Pee SaaS Soeamea a sates Spe RPA nA, SRE i rH _ ag 5 Lapa oversee PDs et SN = tpg marraige a a oat maa BRET a ComaES LLL PCE PLE EINE BAS I 60 A i lt Ai AON fo tw Sete agua, ay wma a Taian 2s se aisle unin celiac inl 5 tagainanaliinion + TP tte Mie ae panne eoreeas Ee en ae ee