Pine Patty EXAMINER, JULY 24, 1884. Editorial Notes. —lHov of toul play which actuates our petriotic Mr. Ferguson shows the spirit coutle mporary. -Too much of a good thing! Peo ple are beginning to think that St. Swithin’s pre pheey is likely to be ful filled. The rains prevail in the | pper as Ww ell as in the Lower Provinces —~ The Canada Gazette, received this morning, coutains the following under the head of ‘‘ Appointments’ : — ‘*The Honorabie Andrew Archibald Macdonald, of the City of Charlottetown, in the Province of Prince Edward Island, to be the Lieutenant Governor of the Pro- vinee of Prince Edward Island, on and after the first day of August next, vice the Honorable Thomas Heath Haviland.” This will, no doubt, satisfy the “Doubt ing Thomases’’ who affect to’ discredit the reliability of Tae Examiner. —For the six months of 1884 Eng- land imported animals from Canada more freely than in the same period of 1883. Thus :— 1883. 1884, Oxen and bulls £265,622 £298,581 Cows 9,831 ann Sheep and lambs fp te 3,225 3,018 Total .+-£219,019 £308,721 The shrinkage in English imports from Canada is principally wheat, fish and sawn lumber, which compare as fol- lows for the six months of the year :— 1883. 1884, Wheat : £327,487 £ 96,536 W heat flour 47,891 §1,353 Fish : . 282,696 191,036 Lumber—hewn. — 96, 187 "7 sawp . 285,337 353,928 The tonnage of vessels entered aud cleared at English ports for Canada in the six months compare thus :— Entered. Cleared. 1883 ..e210,210 400,007 1584 eee ee —The St. John Sun, commentiog on the Scott Act triumph in Arthabasca, says :— “‘Arthabaska is essentially a French County. Out of a population of 37,000, about 32,000 are French, and the result of the voting in that county was eagerly wait- ed for by the friends of the act, as it would show the attitude of the French people and the French Catholic Church towards it. The result has been even better than the most sanguine had anticipated. The act carried by a majority of over 1,200 votes, and the powerful advocacy of the Bishop of Three River, with sup- port from his brother clergymen, seems to have been actively and successfully en- listed in its behalf. Several other counties are already far advanced towards the vote, and, after the sweeping triumph in Artha- baska there is little doubt that a fairly general movement will be made in that Province. One who had not carefully fol- lowed the thread of public opinion would have scarcely been prepared for the gener- al advance movement in Quebec towards prohibition. Many of the archbishops and bishops and priests are strong advocates of the abolition of the traffic in alcoholic liquors, and ina number of municipalities prohibition is already in force, by virtue of the votes of their Coun- cils. Quebec is no longer to be looked upon as impossible ground for the Canada Temperance Act. The prospects for a somewhat general adoption of this measure by French counties is not a distant one, and with the territory gained already, and which will certainly be gained in Ontario, it is not impossible but that when Parlia- ment again assembles, the majority of the counties in Canada shall have openly pro- nounced for prohibition.” Our Advertisers. David Stirling informs all interested that the time for receiving tenders for the removal of rubbish, ete., from the site of the old Post Office, has been extended to the 4th of August. A. McNeill requests persons desirons of advertising in the Exhibition Prize List for 1884 to send in their advertisements imme- diately . The Liquidators of the Bank of Prince Edward Island advertise the sale of certain valuable properties, on the 12th September next J. A. Macdonald announces that the Montague Tea Party is postponed until the 29th inst. _F. W. Hales calls a meeting of the Steam Navigation Co. on the 8th August next, at 7 p.m. The London Trades Procession. The Trades Procession in London, organ- ized as a demonstration against the House of Lords, took place on the 21st instant. As it was about starting from the Thames embankment several loud explosions were heard near the Government offices. The crowd were greatly frightened and thous- ands made arush towards Whitehall, be- hieving that the explosions were due to dynamite. The scare was ended when it was found that the explosions were noth ing more than a salute which the Horse Guards were firing in. honor of the birth of the Dachess of Al- bany’s son. The route of the procession lay along Parliament. street, Whitehall, Charing Cross, Pall Mall, St. James street and Picadilly. Before the procession started from the embankment the stream of the surging mass of humanity, viewed from Hungerford bri'ge, presented an un- broken array of human heads, relieved only by blue banners and trees along the em'ankment. The trade societies carried emblems of their respective crafts. Notice- abie among these was the banner borne by the tailors, which represented Adam and Eve after the fall. The agri- cultugal laborers were |: sudly cheered. eee wenmred for submission to ‘DS protests against the rejection of the Franchise Bill by an isveapunaibte ihad {not Chamberlain, ry {--] aa ° 7 . s 8 . dada meds : tiouse of Lords, «x- Gladstone's action continued existence titative Vr the nl unrepres s approval f na declares that «fthe unchecked p wer of impeding the popular will whi h the Lords exercises 1s not conducive to the weltare of the ; eople sod the peace and prosperity of the coun- try exrried iu the proces- a mbstone was s'On, wmMeerioe ad ‘Te the memory of the House of Lords, L834 Dense masses of spectators along the route interfered with the progress of the procession. It took a full hour and a half to clear th» embank- the end of the procession Parliament Street when entered the Park. Mr. President of the Board, of Trade, and other Ministers witnessed the procession and were loudly cheered. Some of the bands in the procession played the *‘ Dead March in Saul.” When the procession had arrived at the Park speeches were made, and the resolution previously prepared was submitted and adopted. There was heavy rain towards the close of the meeting. The Duke of Cambridge, Commander-in- Chief of the British Army, the Marquis of Hartington, Secretary of War, and Sir William Vernon Hareourt, Home Secre- tary, reviewed ihe procession as it passed the War Office. They were cheered by the members of the procession. People of prominence and note were stationed at various places along the route and watched the procession. Lord Ran- dolph Churchill and other well-known Tories were at the windows of the Carlton Club rooms, and were vigorously hissed by the passing throng. The Marquis of Salis- bury's residence, in Arlington Street, was guarded by police. A slight commotion was created there before the arrival of the pro- cession, by a man crying ‘‘Down with the peers!’ Order was quickly restored, how- ever, and no disturbance occurred while the procession was passing LETTERS PO THE EDITOR, False Insinuations Squarely Met. and left had ment, the head Sirn,—The following letter was sent to the Patriot Office early yesterday morning, but it appears that its publication in the paper which had given currency to the false insinuations referred to, does not accord with the ideas of fair play entertained by the managers of that newspaper. I am, yours, D. Frrovson. Charlottetown, July 24, 1884. To the kditor of the Patriot. Srr,—Will you permit me to state that al) your insinuations regarding the part which you attribute to me in the suspen- sion of a section man named Gillis, at Mount Stewart, are without foundation in fact. This suspension was made at the in- stance of his foreman (who voted against the Government at the last election) and I had no part in it,either by word or deed,or in anyother way- I believe Gillis did net vote against meas you state, and I do not believe politics had anything to do with the matter. It certainly had no influence un- favorable to Gillis as far as I am concerned, for my only action in the case has been to ask the member for the County to recom- mend him for employment in filling an- other vacancy on the railway. I am, yours, etc., D. Frercuson. Charlottetown, July 22, 1884. The Farthest Point North. ENGLAND YIELDS THE PALM FOR THE FIRST TIME IN THREE CENTURIES, Gen. Hazen, chief signal officer, U. S. A., at Washington, on the 17th inst., received the following telegram from Lieut. A. W. Greely: For the first time in thfree centur- ies, England yields the honor of reaching the farthest north point. Lieut. Lockwood and Sergt. Brainerd, on May 13, reached Lockwood Island, lat. 83 deg. 24 min., long. 44.deg.5 min. They saw from 2,000 feet elevation no land north or northwest, but to the northeast Greenland, Cape Robert Lincoln, lat. 83 deg. 35 min., long. 38 deg. Lieut. Lockwood was turned back in 1883 by open water on the North Gaeenland shore, the party barely escaping drifting into the Polar Ocean. Dr. Pavy, in 1882, following the Markham route, was adrift one day inthe Polar ocean, north of Cape Joseph Henry, and escaped to land, abandoning nearly every- thing. In 1882 I made a spring, and later a summer, trip into the interior of Grinnell Land, discovering Lake Hazen, 60 by 10 miles in extent, which, fed by the ice cap of North Grinnell Land, drains Ruggle’s River and Weyjrecht Ford into Cony- beare Bay and Archer Ford. From the summit of Mt. Arthur, 5,000 feet high, the contour of land west of the Conger moun. tains convinced me that Grinnell land tends directly south from Lieut. Aldrich’s fur- thest position in 1876. In 1883, Lieut. Lockwood and Sergt. Brainerd succeeded in crossing Grinnell land and, 90 miles from Beatrix bay, the head of Archer’s fiord, struck the head of the fiord from the western sea, temporarily named by Lock- wood the Greeley fiord, From _ the ceutre of the fiord, in lat, 80 deg., 50 min., lon. 78 deg., 30 min., Lieut. Lockwood saw the northern shore termination, 20 miles west, the southern shore extending 50 miles, with Cape Lockwood 70 miles dis- tant, apparently a separate land from Grin- nell Jand. Have nared the new land Arthur land. Lieut, Lackwood followed, going and returning, an ice cap, averaging about 15 feet perpendicular face, It follows that the Grinnel! land interior is ice-capped, with a belt of country about 60 miles wide between the north and southern ice caps. In March, 1884, Sergt. Long, while hunting, looked from the north west side of Mt. Carey to Haves sound, seeing on the northern coast three capes westward of the farthest seen by Nares in 1866. The sound extends about 20 miles farther west than shown by the English chart, but is possibly shut in by lani, which showed up across the western end. ‘The two years’ station duties, obser- vations,all explorations and retreat to Cape Sabine, were accomplished without loss oi life, disease, serious accident or even severe frostbites. No scurvey was experienced at Conger, and but cne death occured from it last winter. _—_——— +. Orances, Apples, Lemons, Bananas, Cocoa- nuts, etc., at the new Confection Opposite Miller Bros.— T, Carter. = Ijy24 2 DALIIL =X HSA eee, «CO Ut CORRENT NOTES. | John Bright is preparing a measure for! the reform of the Hoase of Lords. Preparations for the British expedition to the Soudan are nearly completed. Ships from Toulon and South of France will be stopped at Grease Isle for medical examination. The Greely party survivors are being lionized at St. John’s. Their commander is the guest of the city, Advices have been received from Dongola that Gen. Gordon was safe at Khartoum on the 22nd June, but their truth is doubted. In speaking of the Papal See on Satur- day the Spanish premier said Spain recog nized accomplished facts and desired peace with Italy. The Montreal Witness on Saturday gave further currency, by copying it from the Hamilton Times, to the Globe correspon- dent's statement in relation to Mr. Chap- leau’s entourage in his journey to British Columbia, and this after the statement had been specifically contradicted. Our even- ing contemporary professes to be non-par- tisan and deeply religious. Does it con- sider the cireulation of falsehoods concern- ing public men, after they had _ been contradicted,consistent with that profession? Asa matter of fact, we learn that Mr. Chapleau has not even taken his private secretary with him. Public life will soon become intolerable under the system of or- ganized falsehood which has been adopted in relation to public men. Chief Justice Daley, President of the American Geographical Society, writing on the subject of Arctic exploration, says : We shall never accurately know the laws of rial and ocanic currents unless we kuow more than we do now about what takes place in the Arctic circles. This will not be abandoned notwithstanding the calamity that has befallen the present expedition. No loss of life has hitherto attended the establishment of stations by other Govern- ments nor would any have attended the one established by our Government had it been properly carried out and attended to by those who understood the direction of it at Washington as to whom the command of the vessels sent out in 1882 was entrusted. The Judge does not believe in the theory of an open polar sea. A very funny case has just been brought before an English bankruptcy court and decided. It seems that a Mr. Edwin Dug- dale, who is a mineral water manufacturer, has been compelled by adverse fate to go into bankruptcy. Besides mineral water Mr. Dugdale makes a beer which appears to have a very enviable reputation. The composition of this beer, it seems, is a secret, and Mr. Dugdale refuses to surren- der the receipt for its manufacture to the ofticial receiver. The judge, however, has decided that he must give up the secret, and has threatened him with committal for contempt of court unless it isdone. Thie certainly is a very interesting and peculiar case, and it remains to be seen whether Mr. Dugdale will surrender what he claims to be ** part of his mental capacity ” to his creditors or go to jail for contempt.— Anverican Manufacturer. The celebrated mare Goldsmith Maid, now nineteen years old, has a home at Mr. H, N. Smith’s place, in Trenton, N. J There she was recently visited by her old driver, Budd Doble. Being asked if the Maid knew him, Mr. Doble replied: ‘‘Bless your soul, the minute I entered her stali she came up to me and rubbed her head against my arm and face. She neighed and frisked around the stall like a colt, and did everything but speak. I used some- times to give her an apple, and I had one this time. I cut it in quarters and put the pieces in different pockets, and she man- aged to get them all ont. It did my heart good to see her. You remember she had an unusually long tail. 1 used to teach her to lie down so that her tail would be clear of everything. I asked her to lie down this time, and you would have laughed to see her turn round and round and switch her tail about until it was just so, and then lhe down with it extended on the clean straw.” One of the most remarkable instances of the transmission of power by electricity is that presented by the electric railroad in one of the main cross-cuts of the Oppel col- liery, Saxony. The crosscut is ‘2,362 feet long, and is the outlet for the coal mined in the vein, the quantity delivered to it being six hundred mine cars per day of sixteen hours, each car weigning, loaded, 1,594 pounds. A train of fifteen cars is moved at a speed of from seven to ten feet a second, the steam engine at the mouth of the shaft making from 225 to 250 revolutions during the run, lasting from three and one-half to four and one-half minutes, through the erosscut. When doing this amount of work, the steam engine delivered 11.2 horse power ; or assuming the friction of the engine’s gearing to have occasioned a loss of twenty-five per cent., the power actually transmitted by the el cric current to the locomotive was 5 22 horse power, or 46.6 per cent. An estimate of the cost shows that there are probably many cases in which the transmission of power by elec- tricity would pay well. Attention has lately been drawn in one of our medical contemporaries to a disase met with in Siberia, known to the Russians by the name of Miryacht. The person affected seems compelled to imitate anything he hears or sees, and an interesting account is given of asteward, who was reduced toa perfect state of misery by his inability to avoid imitating everything he heard and saw. One day the captain of the steamer, running up to him, suddenly clapping his hands at the same time, accidentally on and fell hard cn the deck. Without having been tonched, the steward instantly clapped his hands and shouted; then, in he)pless imitation, he, too, fell as hard aod almost precisely in the same manner aud position as the captain. This disease has been met within Java, where it is known as ‘* Lata.” In the case of a famale servant who had the same irre- sistible tendency to imitate, one day at des- sert her mistress, wishing to exhibit this peculiarity, and catching the woman’s eye suddenly reached across the table, and, seizing a large French plum, made pretence to swallow it whole. The woman rushed at the dish and put a plum in her mouth, and, after severe choking and s2mi- CURRENT NOTES. A regular poser— ihe photographer. The Duchess of Albany has been deliv- | ered of a son. The last part ef Froude’s life of Carlyle is | a!most completed. | Louis Engelhardt, merchant, London, has | failed; liabilities, £270,000. The Seott Act has been earried in Artha- | biska by a very larve majority. The police inspector at Backnu bas been | mortally wounded by two nihilist:. Germany has av organization designed | to assist bavkrupt noblemen to emigrate to Chili. Torrid heat preveils at Vienna. Seven deaths from sunstroke have occurred in the streets in two days. A Russian military train on the Backn Ralway has been attacked by Persi:n robbers, who killed the Cossack guards and wounded the commander. A deputation to urge the permission of Western States catile being imported into Great Britain through Canada will wait upon the home governuient next week. Both in this country and in Eogland the eldest son of the Prince of Wales is called in the public prints Prince Albert Victor, bat by the members of the Royal Family he is invariably called Prince Edward, and when he ascends the British throne he will be known as King Edward. The merchants of the City of Mexico have been unable to make satisfactory ar- rangements with the official commission appointed by the Government. The stamp laws therefore will be enforced as originally promulgated. Al! merchants have been warned to stamp their goods immediately. A veteran of the war of Napoleon has just turned up in Montreal, and gives his name as Count Zowaski,a native of Poland. According to his story he is 93 years old, having being born in Warsaw in 1791. He claims to have served under the great Napoleon, and to have been captain of the 101st Light Artillery, He went through the terrible retreat from Moscow, the brilliant battle of Austeriitz, and the fatal Waterloo, and recalls the scepes and incidenta of each in a wondertul clear manner. He took part in the Polish war for indepen- dence in 1831; fought in Hungary, and was banished to America in 1851. He was also @ participant ip the Anjerican Civil War, since which time he has led a wander- ing life, and is now seeking means in Mon- treal to enable him i» reach France, where he has friends. Mr. Cross, who will be remembered (if remembered) as the husband of George Eliot, and who has been engaved since her death in obtaining materials for a life of her, is said to have recovered most of her letters, and among theu: a series extending over several years, addressed to some of her early friends. Of this treasure trove we have what appears to be an authentic account :—‘‘Gecrge Eliot tuok extraordinary pain with her let- ters. They were invariably written with almos:.as much care as if they had been in- tended for immediate publication; but this sort of solicitude for good work was inher- rent inher character, and she was quiet incapable of hasty, ill-considered com- position, even in her shortest notes, written to her most intimate friends concerning the most trivial topes.” This description of George Eliot’s ietters does not promise much entertainment for the readers of her biography, for it was not in this deliberate and painstaking fashion that the . English masters of letter-writing wrote to their friends. The rm of a currespondence lies in i’s spon- taneity, and is nd in its fullness in the letters of Cowper, and Byron and Lamb; it is absent from the letters of Pope and Burns, which redd like those of George Hiiot, as if they had been intend- ed for immediate publication, as, indeed, those of Pope were, when he found a con- venient tool to convey them to Curel. E Prvurisus Unvum.—Here is a clipping from the N. Y. Graphic of Friday last, which shows that our American cousins are not altogether devoid of that curiosity regarding the domestic life of their rulers which they are accustomed to lauzh at and call toadyism when they find it in the English or Canadian press:— Nellie Arthur's Pony. — (Special despatch to the Graphic.)—Washington, July 18 —The little calico pony which an Indian chief presented to the President’s daughter while the President was on his Yellowstone tour last year. still clings to his wild West- ern ways and refuses to adopt the manners and customs of civilization. He rides wei! under the saddle, but despises a waggon. The President has purchased a village cart to fit his station, and Albert, the White House coachman, has been trying to break him to this, but he vetoes any such pro- ceedings in a very emphatic way. Albert has been driving him to asulky in which he can kick and buck as much as he likes without damage, and the daily performance is witncased with great satisfaction by crowds of people who live in the neighborhood of the Executive stables The other day Albertfthought he had reduced the pony to a suflicient degree of subjuga- tion, and harnessed him to the cart. The little fellow noticed the change of vehicle, and showed his resentment by running away and emashing things to flinders. Albert gives him up as incorrigible, and says, ‘*He’s got the very debil in him, shuah.” ns Ee = az LIVERY STABLES Good, Reliable & Comfurtable Teams, GRAPTON STRELT. JOHN F. POWERS. Proprictor. Ch’town, July 11, ’84 asphyxia, succeeded in’ swallowing it, but her mistress never tried the experiment | ayain.—Lindin Medidal Reccrd, 24. a ‘POSTPONED. WON AGUE TEA PASTY, N aid of St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church, is postponed. owing to the unfivorable | slate of the wea her, until Tuesday, July 29. JOUN A. WeDONALD, Secretary. Montague, July °4 ~ 8i wkly ti Dominion of Canada, Province of Prince Edward Isiand, IN PRE SUTREME COURT. in pursuance of an orderof Mr Justice Peters, dated the sixth day of Jun-, 1°83, ip the matter of An Act of the Parliament 9! Canada, passed in the forty fifth year ot Her present Majesty's Reign, Chapter 23 intituled, “An Act respecting Insolvent Banks, Insurance Companivs, Loan Com- panies, Building societies, and Trading Corporations, anc of the President, Di- rectors. and Company of the Bank of Prince Edward Island, an Insolvent Bank. ing Company.” fQxHE Liquidators of the above nan.ed Banking Company will sell by Pubiic Auction, atthe “ourt House, at Charlotte. town, on Friday, the twelfth day of Septem- ber next, at the hour ot two o'clock, p. m, all that tract, piece or parcel of jand, situate, lying or being on Lot or Township Number 5 in Prince County, Province of Prince Edward Is'and, bounded as ‘follows, that ie to say: By aline commencing atasiake set in the west side of the reed leading from Alberton to the Government Wharf, and on the north side cf Dock Street, and running thence westwardly along the north side of Deck street seven Chains and ten links, or to a s reet; thence northwardly along the sxid street to the suuth boundary of land in the possession of R. B. Reid; thence south fifty-seven degrees, thirty minutes, east slong said boundary to the said road; and thence along the same southwardly three hundred and seventy-Lwo (37?) feet, to the place of com- mencement, Containing forr acres, one rood and thirty-four perches, a little more or less, The said abc ve tract of land being beld by the said insolvent Pankicvg Ccmpany under ard by virtue of a ceriain Indenture of Mortgag’, bearing date the twentieth (20th) day of Novemler, 1878, and made between the Hon, James Colledge Pepe and Elias Dalrymple Pope, his wife, of ibe one part, and the President, Directors aud Company ot the said jasu'vent banking Compauy, of the Other part, and now due avd ubsutirfied, and un'er and by viitue of the Power of Sale in sail Mortgage contained, the above de- scribed tract of land will be sold together or in parcels, as per couditions of sale. 2 I'he Liquidators of the above named Bank- ing Compausy will also sell, by Public Auc- tion, ut the Court House in Charlottetown, on F.iday, the 29th day of Angust next, at the hour of two o'clock in the afternoon, all thet tract, piece or parcel of land, together with all bui'd'ngs and improvement: there- ou; lying and being on Townstip Number 2', in Qacen’s County, in the said Province, and is bounded as follows, that is to say: Commencing at a equare stake fixed at the southeast angle of a tract of land in posses- sion of George Houston; tkence west 2§2 feet, to a tract of land in possession of Charles Stevenson; thence by a right angle 45 degrees northeast 19! feet, toarigbt of way Jeading from Charles Stevenson’s to the Settlement Road; thence south along the raid right of way to the rail Settlement Roaa 253 feet ; thence along said Settlement Road to a stake fixed at the northeast angle of a tract of land in possession of Theophilus §. McLeed 57 feet ; thence west 100 fect ; thence sou‘hwest 81 feet; thence south to the Set- tlement Road, leading from New Glasgow to Haz+) Grove 100 feet; thence following couse of said Road southwest to the place of Commencement 53 feet, containing torty thousand two hundred end twenty-three feet, a little more or less. 3. Also 4 of that undivided tract, piec> and parcel of land, eituate, lying and being in Charlottetown, in Queen’s County, in Prince Edward Island, and known and distinguished as the wert f urth part of Town Lot Number 41,in the first huodred of Town Lo’s in Charlotietown, aforesaid, the said west fourth part of said Town Lot being bounded on the "orth by Dorchester Street, on the east by the north fourth part cf said Town Lot, on the south by the south tourth part of the same Town Lot, and on the west bv Town Lot Number 40, in the said first hundred ot Town Lots in Charlottetown, aforesaid, te. gether with all the houses, bu ldings rights, privileg-s, easements, adventeges and appur tenances whatsoever to the said above two last mentioned tracts of land belongivg, or in anywise appertaining, ‘lhe said last wo plots of land, as ¢ hove described, being heid by the said insolvent Banking Cowp my under and by virtue ofa certain Indenture ot Mortgage, bearing’ date 15th day of De. cember, 1881, and made between William Crilley Bourke, now deceas-d, of the one part, aod the President, Directors and ( om- pany «ft the said insolvent Banking Com- pny, of the other part, and now due and un- Satislicd, and under and by virtue of the power of salein said Mortgage contaiued, The said last described two several tracts of land will be sold together or in parcels, as per conditions cf sale. 4. The Liquidators will also sell, at the Court House in Charlottetown, on Friday, the 29th day of August, at the same bour, one Lot of land formerly be longing to the Ardgowan Estate, and bound- ed as follows: On the north and south by a road eavh leading from the Mount Edwara Road to the St, Peter's Road; on the east by land in the possess‘on of Rev. Dr. Firg- geral ‘ ; on the west by land iu the possession of Don»ld Farquharson, and containing one an one q~arter acre, a little more or legs, As regards the remaining % of the piece above described and numbered three, ar- rangements have been made with the owners of the remaining ¢ 80 that the purchascr at the above sale may purchase the whole, and at the seme rate that the 4 1s sold under the Mortgage BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA, Per DAVID ©, CHALMERS ; L ©C,OWEN, © C, GARDINER, Liquidators of the Bank of P, E. Island. July 23%.—law th - _ a PRINTING of every description executed with Neatness and Despatch UBSCRIBE for the WEEKLY EXAMIN- ER. Only ONE DOLLAR « year, at the EXAMINER JOR PRINTING P. BE. ISLAND Steam Yavig tien Company, fWVHE Anonal Merting «f the Sbareholderg of the Steam Navigi tion Company wij be held in their office, corner Great George and Lower Water Stieeis, on Friday, the th day of August rext, at beven o Clock in the evening, for the election of Directors rud other business. By order 7. ww, HALES, Si Cretary, Ch’town, July 2‘, | ®4—tlauy 7 NOTICE 10 COxTRACTORS EALED TENDERS will be received, aq. dressed toF H_ En,i, Sec etary of Pubs lie Works Department, Ott: wa, until Monday the 4th August, '884, for taking down the Brick and Stone Wa'is of the eld Post Oftice Building, Charlottetown, including all ing piping, and remevig all materials and clearing away all the rubbish from the site, For further particulars apply to DAVID STIRLING, Architect, The Esplanade, Ch’town, July 17, 1°84 [her pres TG ADVERTISERS, ee ew ee JARTIES wishing to advertise in the Prige List forthe P. EK Island Exhibiti 1884, now in the hands cf the printer, will please send their advertisements immediately to John Coon. bs, Printer, or to A. MeNEILL, Secretary, July 23—41 + CAITLE SALE! Saturday Next, 26ih July, instant, at the hcur of eleven o'clock, a.m,,a valuable steck of catile, consisting of 9 Cows, 9 Calves, 4 two-year-old Heifers, 1 twe-y:ar-old Steers, 3 one-) car-old Heilers, 6 one-year-old Steers, 3 Horses, and a lot ef Farming Implements For further particulars apply to BRECKEN & FITZGERALD, Solicitors, July 223i FOR SALE OR TO LET. ‘HAT Double-Tenement House on Pownal Street, three stories high, well fitted,” turnished, etc, One tenement contains six rooms and kitchen. It basa large yard, ; ut- buildings, etc. Apply to MICHAEL TRAINOR, Ch’town, July 18—ecd if WANES, LONT, FOUND, de, OARD—A couple cf first-class Boarders, Ladies or Gentlhamen, may find comfort- able accommodation by ¢pplying to Mrs. W. Kennedy, Hillsbom ugh Dark. {js 23 tf ANTED- By a conpetert yevng mar, versed in book-keeping, a smvation as clerk in a store, Good reteresers, Salary moderate at first. Apply at this « flice, [jy28 ANTED—A Lady acd Gentlemen want Board and beduong ter two or three © months frem Ist of September. Will require use of small perlor. Situation, within five minutes walk of Prov neial }uilding Ad- dre:s, by letter, A. b., this cflice, stating price and Ipgation. {jy22 ein tos A Lady and Gentleman or two Ladies can be accommodated in & private family, with Parkr, Bedroom and Dining Room. Situation desirable. Kooms large, airy and well-ventilated. Apply to Mes. Presies, King Square. [jy22 eod ti qVOK SALF—A_ first-class No. 2 Singer Sewing Machine, for shoemaker’s work, quite new. Also a Patent Cramping Machine, in good order. The above will be sold cheap for cash, Apply to James Mcl Bop, a iy Park Road. Cres CABINET OKGAN FOR SALE, with ten stops, five sets Recds, and handsome case, standing vine feet high, with imitation Pipe Front, WéilJ sell at = bar- gain. Apply to Grornce Carrer, Char lotte- town. ‘jyls Im law wy rn LET— With immediate possession, thit dcsirable Dwelling House,on Pleasant, ™t. at presept oceupied by Henry Blatch.—W™. Dopp. \jy}7 - LET—Furnished or Unfurnished, the Dwellmg House adjoiving the residence of Judge Hensley, Upper Prince Street. Ap- ply to E. R. Brow. {jy 6 or pal- ho SALE—The yacht Carita. ticulars enquire of W. C, Hovxiex. jjy 15 tf iw LET—The two-story Dwelling House, opposite the Subscriber's residence, on Dorchester Street, lately occupied by Mrs. Macgowan, with stable and coach-house. Rent moderate. Apply to Groner ALLEY, [jy10 eod ‘§ O LET—Two Furnished Rooms, with use of Kitchen, in a private family. Apply at this office, \jyt0 Bepebonns—4 few boarders can be ac- commodated in a pleasant locality by Mrs. E Doyle, King street (between Frivce aud Hillsbwongh Street), Also a complete foot lathe for sale. 7yVO LE T— House opposite Railway Station, Apply at this Oftice, jjly 2 ‘y O LET—House on King "Street, near Pownal Street, Apply at this Ollice jily 2 “ENT MILLS and other choice brands family Fiour forsale by Henry Beer. Vtlice and Warchouse, Water Street, pear Ferry Wharf. [may l O LET—-A House on King Stre:t, be- tween Hillsborough and Weymouth ts, Possession immediately, Also a Warehouse LOOMS, cor, Water and Groat George Streq: ou Grafton Street, Apply to Writiam Dobp. f > {may2