——~ THE DAILY BxXAMINER, AUGUST 18. be worn by Archbishops during the solemn | T HE Ds [LY I XAMINER. service of the great church festivals, and on | — | the occasion of the ordination of Bishops and Priests. It is a narrow annular band of a white woolen web, about three inches wide, upon which black crosses are em- broidered, which encircles the neck of the Archbishep, and from which two nar- row bands of the same material depend, one falling over the breayt, the other over the back of the wearer. he pallium is made wholly or in part from the wool of two lambs, which are blessed annually on the festival and in the church of St, Agnes. During the night of the vigil of the feast of St. Peter and St. Paul the paltia made of this wool are placed on the altar above the tomb of these apostles, and on the feast of St. Peter and St. Paul are delivered by 18, I1SS5. AUGUST The Unemployed in England. Tue London Standard recently pub- lished an interesting and important cor relative to the working elasses of England, more particulary enlarging on the condition of those having the misfortuuve to be unemployed. The correspondeace, was opened by seme one who signed himself “Observer,” and who claims to have taken no little pains, during the past few years, to make him- respondeuce self acquainted with some of the/|the Pope to the sub-deacon, whose duty is events in the’ social life of Eng | Keep them in charge. In the medieval Ae eee te, eee church the granting of the _pallium to lish working classes,—event: ; Archbishops was one of the chief occasions only the poor are able to realize. of the tribute which was paid by the “Observer” who is evidently a careful | national church to the support of the great aud intelligent observer, repudiates the} central office the dignity of the Papacy. In idea that the mass of the unemployed | some Sees, as, for instance, those of the are so, because of their own dissolute| great prince Bishops of the Rine, the habits, but on the contrary he advances aj ttibute was as much as 20,000 florins. dei eeiieRe of! Roman Catholics, however, maintain that Lx oomeee & - | this tribute was not a payment for the more correct one, Viz : that there are] calliam, but an offering to the Holy See thousands of steady, industrious and] made on the occasion of the grant of that honest workmen on the streets owing to| emblem of jurisdiction. circumstances over which they have po| The suffragan bishops of the archdiocese control. Thousands of workmen with| of Halifax are:—I. Rt. Rev. Dr. Sweeney, wives and families who have no alter-| Bishop of diocese of St. John, consecrated ' by Archbishop Connolly, April 15, 1860. 2. Rt. Rev. P. McIntyre, D. D., Bishop of : Charlottetown, consecrated by Archbishop can tell. Connolly, August 16, 1860. 3. Rt. Rev. This condition of the unemployed | James Rogers, D. D., first Bishop of the classes in England and more particuarly ee nen, en a ae : ge cities of England is most) bishop Connolly, Augnst 15, 1860. 4 Rt. oe meee & » Rev. J. Cameron, D. D., third Bishop of more humane theory them but to bee or but native lett How they exist nove starve. | themselves | ; ble sit not possible that some- ; eran, i od "7 1 to some Arichat, consecrated at Rome, in 1870, wag FO Ceee tO someny ’ ,coadjutor to Dr. McKinnon, as titular extent. Lately the question of emigra- | Bishop of Titopolis, tion has forced itself upon the attention of the authorities, and apparently it is the most practical way to relieve av overburdened country of a portion of its surplus population. Auother gentleman who has devoted much of his attentioa to this subject aud who sees the necessity of instantaneous action on the matter, writes as fol- lows :— — a Cardinal Manning on Ireland. Cardinal Manning has been interviewed on the Irish question, and spoke very freely. His views of the present condition }and future prospects of that country possess great interest, as he is in probably as good & position as any one to arrive at a correct estimate. He said:— ‘Tam very hopeful indeed of Ireland— very hopeful. The Land Act has done a great deal of good. Its effect has been im- mense and wide-spreading. Disputes about |rent are no longer questions to be fought j out by landlord and tenant and settled in j}arbitrary fashion. They are matters in which landlord and tenant ‘both are com- pelled to bow to the judgment of an im- partial Court. Justice has taken the place of injustice. A large number of cases have already, as you know, been brought before the Land Court for investigation. ‘‘Much remains to be done, however. Government having done what it has for the tenant farmer. I should like to see it next approach the question of the Irish laborer. I suppose there are eight hundred thousand or a million laborors in Ireland whose condition at this moment cries aloud for improvement. It is only right that their material comfort should be attended to. Hunger and thirst and cold are not things likely to promote peace and stop dis- content in Ireland. The laborers should have the means of decent livelihood given them; they cannot be allowed to starve if we are to see an end of agitation and dis- order. “‘As the material prosperity of the coun- try grows so will the difficulty of ruling Ire- land diminish. There may yet be a bright future for Ireland, but this can only be on two conditions. ‘fhe influence of the Con- tinental secret societies in Ireland must be checkmated somehow—that is one condi- tion; and the American dynamite conspira- tors must no longer be tolerated. Paris and New York—between them—if allowed their way, would break up any established order.” In reference to home rule he said:— ‘I think a very large measure of admin- istrative liberty ought to be given to Ireland, I should like to see her as free to administer her own affairs as our own great cities—as Manchester, for instance. Manchester does many most wonderful things, quite inde- pendently, and so might Ireland. If you ask me, however, whether 1 am in favor 2f a separation between Ireland and England, or Of a dual system of government such as we seein Austro-Hungary, ] reply I am not. It appears tome that the union of England, Iseland and Scotland is essential to the complete prosperity of each, while to Ireland it is a vital necessity. England ‘When, as at present, large numbers of men are existing without the proper sus- tenance for the body, the quality, if I may use that word, of our wealth is deteriorat- ing. Unless help is forthcoming, and effec- tual steps taken to assist our working popu- lation, this destruction of reproductive capital embodied in our working population will surely re-act, and most disastrously upon the whole nation. I know of no place better suited for the absorption of our sur- plus labor than the regions of the North- west of Canada. If a few energetic gentle- men should respond to this appeal, immense numbers could be forwarded during the next two months. I am perfectly aware the winter is severe, but it is dry, bracing, and most healthy, with plenty of good food.” Canada with its millions of acres of rich lands in the Northwest would be right glad to receive them. Our popula tion at present is small, our fertile lands are lying waste for the want of people to cultivate them, while every possible in- ducement is offered to emigrants to come and settle down in this new country. There is no danger here of starvation, at least for many years tc come, but on the other hand there is a golden oppor- tunity offered to the industrious to be- come comparatively wealthy. It is to be hoped that something practical will come of this emigration movemeut which will be as advantageous to Canada as it will be beneficial to England in ridding that couatry of her surplus population. _— — Our Advertisers. Carvell Eros. received this week, rice, brooms, spices, kerosene vil. Also 500 barrels flour expected on Wednesday next. Persons desiring anything in the above line should give them a call. Donald Farquharson advertises that the congregation and Sabbath school of Zion Church intend having an excursion to West River, on Wednesday next. The Union House opened, to-da y, one ease of imported Havana cigars. Also might possibly stand and thrive, even after pipes and smokers’ articles, which will be & separation from Ireland; but Ireland sold cheap }could not thrive if she were severed from | England.” ep ee Telegraph Notes. A British Jew, provided with a proper British passport, has been expelled from Russia by order of the anthorities. Count Talstoi, Russian Minister of the Interior, has ordered the enforement of the decree forbidding Jewish manufacturers employing Christian workmen. —— i a » Investiture of the Pallium on Archbishop O’Brien. | The Halifax papers contain elaborate de- | scriptions of the ceremony of the Investi- ture of the Pallium on Archbishop O’Brien, which was performed on Wednesday. At the appointed hour the pallium was laid upon the altar from which consecratery Very Rev. Dr. McIntyre took it and placed it upon the shoulders of the Archbishop with the following words, his Grace kneel- ing :— To the honor of Almighty God, of blessed The flag on the Italian consulate at Tan” gier that was hauled down on the 16th, has again been hoisted and the panic among ; the people owing to feara that the Italian Mary ever a Virgin, of tne Holy Apostles jennieen solaldl biceshaad the town, is sub- Peter and Paul, of ourlord Pope Leo XIII, | siding : of the holy Roman Church and of the| ~ Siacieite. tch f Dubli Church of Halifax committed to their| 7 ak aie e i aa vs - ws charge, we bestow upon thee the pallium, | — “ ‘oll. 7 oan sa oe = taken from the body of the blessed Peter | ooo U ‘b fu pny i. aaa - in whom is the fulness of the pontifical | 708¢ Ot \sibetu, with great slaughter on office with the designation of the archiepis- eis oe ha to have been copal names, that thou mayest use it in the | church on certain days which are expreased| A meeting of delegates from Limerick, in the privilege granted by the Apostolic | Clare and Tipperary counties, Ireland, was See, in the name of the Father, and of the! held in Limerick on the 16th, for the pur- Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen. | pose of establishing branches of the National fKE EMBLEM, ITS ORIGIN AND Importance | League. Four hundred persons were present. A resolution was passed declaring to the Pope, in person or by proxy, for the the judicial rents are rack rents and that pallium within three months of his conse.|*h® meeting was convinced a couple of cration, and it would not be held to be law- successive bad harvests must lead to a ful for him to exercise any act of what is general strike against judicial rents. A properly archiepiscopal jurisdiction, until | priest presided over the meeting. @\shall have received it. The pallium|} ‘here are in Boston sixty-nine women cannot be transferred from one Archbishop | taxed for $100,000, five over $500,000, and to another, as it is required that it shall be two over $1,000,000, and it has cccurred to received direct from the Pope; on the death | ap enterprising individual that a directory of one of these ecclesiastics the pallium is | of single ladies possessed of fortunes would buried with hiw. _ In use it is supposed to| be a valuable guide to men in search of a symbolize the office of ‘‘Good Shepherd” | partner. Certainly the idea is a good one, earing the lost sheep upon his shoulders, | and a similar directory would not be amiss use is said by Roman Catholics to have elsewhere, as there are a great many men nded from 4 very early period, It is looking round in search of a ‘‘visible means worn by the Pope at all times, but can only ' of suppurh” Every new Archbishop is obliged to apply | } was Lee third. by Lee and had to stop rowing. 50,000 marks for the relief of sufferers on the Island of Ischia. dents in the University here, connected Siberia. UNION HOUSE, Arnold’s Latin Prose Composition, Dictionaries, Royal Readers, Bovkstore, 89, Queen Street, Queen Street, TELEGRAPHIG NEWS, {SrectaL Dresrarones To THe Examiner, ] Hanlan Again a Winner. Fircusure, Mass, Aug. 18 The regatta at Waspacum Lake to-day attended by about 16,000 people. Hanlan won first place, Hosmer second, and Ross in turning was run into A Charitabie Emperor, Berwin, Aug. 18. The Emperor William has contributed Sent to Siberia. St. Perersspura, Aug. 13. Twenty-two young men, who were stu- with a Nihilist journal, have been sent to oe The Telegraph Strike. New York, Aug. 18. The strike of the telegraphers and line- men ,ended this afternoon, at three o'clock. Master Workman John Campbell sent out a despatch from this city to all the local assemblies of the brother- hood throughout the United States and Canada stating}jthat the executive com- mittee had come to the conclusion that the strike was a failure and authorized all oper- ators to go to work again if they wished. Another to Follow Webb. Ortawa, Aug. 18. Capt. Rhodes intends trying to swim Niagara whirlpool, on the 23rd, from the Canadian side, Obituary. ee QuEBEC, Aug. 18. Judge Alleyn + suddenly yesterday. Weather Bulletin. Probabilities for the next 24 hours for the Maritime Provinces. Toronto, August 18--10 a. m. Moderate west to southwest winds; fin® warmer weather. ——— -— ————————— EXCURSION WEST RIVER. HE congregation and Sabbath School o Zion Church have arranged for a joint Excursion by steamer to West River, on Wednesday Next, 22nd inst. The “Southport” will leave the Ferry Wharf at 9a m.and 2 p. m. Return Tickets, 25 cents; children under 12 years, and not connected with the school, 10 cents. Tea will be on the table from one o'clock. Tea tickets, 25 cents, DONALD FARQUHARSON, Chairman of Committee. Aug. 18, 1888, 600 boxes Valencia Raisins, 50 bags Rice, 280 doz. Brooms, 70 boxes Spices, 110 casks Kerosene Oil, RECKIVED THI8 WEEK, AND 900 Barrels Flour, Expected Wednesday next, CARVELL BROS. _Aug. 18.--pat 2i OPENED 'TO-DAY, —-AT THE— NE CASE of imported Havana Cigars, the best in the city, and which will be sold very cheap. Parties buying small lots a to call and see our steck. Also a new ot o Pipes and Smokers’ Materials, Ch’town, Aug. 18,—lw PUPILS ATTENTION LL the School Books in use may be found at the Diemond Bookstore, ip cluding,— : L’Allegro and Il Penseroso (Milton), Greenleaf’s Arithmetics (authorized edition), Colenso’s Algebra (Part I), Chambers’ Plane and Solid Geometry, First Principles of Agriculture (Tanner), Czsar’s Gallic War, Sweet’s Method of Teaching, Calecott’s Musical Grammar, Cicero pro Archia, Bryce’s Latin and Greek Readers, Xenophon s Anabasis (Book V.), Walter Smith’s Freehand Drawing, AND ALL SCHOOL SUPPLIES, Very, Very Cheap. fe Don't forget the place — Diamond THEO. L. CHAPPELLE. Ch’town, Auy. 17; 1889. i City FREE OF CHARGE, - lc SS att tt ttt a ett . = LONDON HOUSE. ——-——0.- i i i ’ WE ARE SHOWING A HEAVY STOCK OF Crey Cottons, White Cottons, Bed Ticking's, sSheetings, Denims, &c. Bought since the tecent Reduction in Prices, and saarked Accordingly, GEO. DAVIES & CO. Ch’town, August 17, 1883. British Warehsuse, To the Wholesale and Retsil Trade. :0:— ——— W.&A. BROWN & CO. AVE now opened the completion of their large stock of SPRING AND SUMMER DRY GOODS. They are offering special inducement~ to cash buyers. It will be to your advantage to inxpect their stock before purchasing elsewhere. Establishment closes every evening at 6 ."clock (Saturdays excepted.) WV. & A. BROWN & C0. Ch'town, June 1, 1889.—wkly ———_—$——— - ont a a. iowa Bane ——— - . = _ BPurniture. —:0:— MARK WRIGHT & CO, ARE SELLING AT THEIR NEW WAREROOMS, 83 QUEEN ST. PARLOR SETS, BEDROOM SETS, Sideboards, Hall Stands, Music Stand<, Chairs, Tables, Bedsteads, Looking Glasses, Window Poles (new generally, Lounges, styles), Cornices, and Furniture . , 9 ' At Rock Bottom Prices. Woven Wire Matrasses (the best bed in use) very cheap; Matrasses, in Hair, Moss, Fibre, Wool, Flock, Excelsior and Straw. GIVE US A CALL AS WE MEAN BUSINESS, Ch’town, Aug. 11, 1883.—2w wkly Im Stan —— CATT AT HEAPSIDE” —FOR-- Groceries, Hardware, Classware, Earthenware, Weedenware, &c, sor Us ar FLOUR, MEAL. TEA. SUGAR, MOLASSES AND OTHER GOODS Are Giving General Satisfaction. —_—_—O—_— te&Goods expressed to Steamers, Railroad Depot and other parts of the HENRY BEER. Charlottetown, July 28, 1883.—taw and wky, DOMHRLON —ELHIBITION 1883. (pening at Si, Jolin, N.B,, OCTOBER |, 1833, WNERS of Live Stock in P, E. "Island are require? te send te my cftice, not later than Saturday, the 25th day of August inst, Evtries ot euch animal» os they wich to exhibit at the above Exhivition, in order that the same may be suboitted tor the ap. proval and sanction of & committee appoint. ed by the Aovisory Board for that purpose Animals thus selected will be forwarded to 'and from St. John free of charge to owners, but at their risk. Entries of Agricultural Products and other articles must also be made at my office not later than Saturday, the 13th day of Septem. ber next, A. Mer BELL, Secretary Advisory Roard Ch'town, Aug. 16, 1883.—dy wkly tt FAT HERRING. 100 Bante BAR#RLILS, i OY - Wale eg Ch’town, Aug, 17, 1883.—2w Quarters, for sale by OLD BONES. IGHEST PRICE paid for old bones, in large or small lots, delivered at John Newson’s Furniture Factory, “ JOHN NEWSON, Ch'town, Aug. J7.—2m ——y ee tte nee 10. CABINET MAKERS HE Merchants’ Bank of Halifex hereby invites Tenders for the Counter and Screen Work of their new Banking Cflice, at Summerside. Plans and specifications can be seen at the Charlottetown Agency, where Tenders, addressed to the undersigned will be received up to one p. m, on Saturday, ist September, 1°83. D. H. DUNCAN, Cash jer. Ch’towa, August 17, 1883 9 DOLLARS REWARD, ag above reward will be paid to any per. son who will give such information as will lead to the conviction of the person or persons who <egtroyed a target at the Ken- sington Rifle Range, on the night ot the 1]th instant. GEORGE L. DOGHERTY, Sec’y Pro, Rifle Assoociation of P. E. J, Ch’'town, Aug. 14, 1883. OB PRINTING of every description executed with Nveatness and Despatch at the EXAMINER JCR PRINTING ROOMS. car V} ater and Senet Oa- rye Street, WANTS, LOST, POUND, de, OST—On Friday, Augrst 17, a GOLD BRACELET. ‘lhe tinder will be re- warded by leaving it at Tym Examiner Orricg, {aug18 2i \ JT ANTED-—At the Unien Bouse, a first- class Restaurant Cook. To the right party good wayes wi!! be paid. [aulS lw ee EGS,—KEGS.—25 5-gallon Kegs and 25 lu-galion Kegs —James Byrne, Great George Street. {aug!7 3i pd [TANTED IMMEDIATELY—A man for W general work, Also a girl for dining room. Apply at the Revere House. jaug 14 ANTED—A good general eervant Small family. No washing. Apply during forenoon or evening to Mrs. O Meara, Pleasant St, faug 14 fy°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 ot " OST—Saturday night, Aug. 11th, between York Station and MeMijlan’s Hotel, a black overcoat, with velvet collar, The finder will be rewarded by leaving it with Mr. Hayden, York Station, or at the London House, Charlottetown. jaug 14 wkly lin rg HE CREAMER that I manufacture with iron tap is the ““ hampion.”-—Henry D. Wapman, 55 Pownal St. {auld AJ ANTED—A GIRL, about eighteen years, to do general housework. (ne from country preferred. Apply to Mrs. Geo, Tweedy, Spring Park Road. [augS lw wkly 2i fgX\O LET—A house containing six rooms. Apply to James McLeod, Spring Park ad. {au 4 OARDERS--A few boarders can be ac- commodated at Mrs. Rodd’s, opposite Pickard’s Bakery. {jly 31 10 LET—That Dwelling House contain- ing twelve rooms, besides kitchen, on Upper Hillsborough street, lately occupied by Capt. Michael Foley. Apply to Henry Blatch, [iy30 eod tf ARE OLD CHINA—A few specimens for sale. Apply Box 245, P. O., “h’town. [aug2 6) eod ARE BOOK — “Hogarih’s Analysis of Beauty,’ for sale. Apply Box 245, P. O, Ch*town, jaug 2 6i eod INEGAR—Just received a supply of French Imperial Triple Vinegar, war- ranted of best quality. For sale at Jobn Hobbs’ G;ocery Store. fang 2 3w taw {VOR SALE—Set of Tiusmith’s Toole, also a lot Tiuware, cheap. Apply to Mrs. odd, oppogite Pickard’s Kakery. (jly 31 DVERTISE in THE DAILY EXAMI NER, Rates moderate, % 5 i at.