eee coe nanan eineinatenn saa needed A ag ee Te RS, NNN NNR NeReNeR eS = 2 ARNE cc: Mb a oe arate tame Lg TOR SA SR i MARI seas -_ ae oe ce : 2 an Tae Dairy HWXAMINER. NOVEMBER 10, L883. No doubt the Domision Government | and their officials regret as much as the | withdrawal | potice, “St. people of this Proviuce the at this season, and at such short of the f Wales” and Lawrence ;” for they have been put to) the trouble and the country has been put to the expense of supplying means for carrying the mails and passengers on the Pictou route. This they have done with commendable promptitude, and in a way which caunot fail to give satisfactioa A steamer leaves Picton every day in the week for either Georgetown or Charlottetown, on the arrival of the mail train from Halifax. Thus, the‘ Northera Light” leaves Picton on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Seturdays ; aud the ‘Napoleon ILi.”” leaves Pictou on Mondays, Wedaesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. From the Island to Pictou mails and passengers W ill be carried on every day of the week - Fridays excepted. The “Northern Licht” leaves Georgetown on “«D.° . +} rincess o Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday morning at six o'clock, sharp. “Napoleon III.” leaves Charlotte- town every Monday, Wednesday and Saturday morning at 7 o'clock. She is obliged to stay in Picton from Wednes- day afteruoon until Friday moroving to take in coal, and sv cannot make a trip | from Charlottetown on Friday, or there would doubtless be daily communicatioa | to and from Pictou, as well as to and from Shediac. We may remark that the fears res-| pecting the “Northern Light” which the | Patriot is striving to raise are ground- | less; for the ‘Northern Light” was | placed upon the slip at Pictou last spriog and thoroughly repaired. The ** Northern | Light” never had an Inspector’s certifi- | cate—the enormous amount experded | upon her every year, being doubtless, considered a sufficent guarantee to i public. —_—<—-— + — Civic Repairs. Tae City Council will meet on Mon-| day evening. We hope that orders will | be yiven for the repairs of our side-| walks and streets where most needed We hope, also, that the best means of draining the northern part of the town so that the purity of Spring Park Brook | will be ensured, and the Charlottetown | Woollen Factory will not be forced to do | a civic work at their own expense, will | be discussed. | Election time is coming; | and our City Fathers should now be on} their good behavior. | -_ + “e+e em eee Editorial Notes. —Seven additional numbers of Pictur- esque Canada have been distributed. Alike in engravings and letter press, they are excelleut. The remaiving num- bers will not be distributed in this Pro- | vince until spring. —The Marquis of Lansdowne began his career as Governor-General auspic- ously. One of the first, if not the first, of his official acts was an act of merey— the reprieve of McCabe, who had res ceived the death sentence. —A sportsman in Maine, in denounc- the practice of hunting deer with dogs, | says that a law should be bidding the use of dogs in and that the penalty for the should be hanging, and for something severe. passed for- deer hunts, first offence the second, —Reliable advices from the Upper Provinces state that trade there is ina prosperous coudition; and according to | the best opinions, the country is finan- cially sound. The want of confidence which existed a few weeks ago, for the most part, resulted from the false reports and stock jobbers, and the failure of the | incom- | Exchange Bank through the petency of its officials. —A farmer in Vermont—poor man— | says that potatoes were not worth raising this year—he could get nothing | for them, only fifty cents a bushel! Last year he and his fellow farmers got one dollar a bushel for their potatoes. farmers would not be so despondent as the Vermonter if they could get fifty cents for their potatoes. In fact they would consider themselves particularly fortunate. —The manager of the Windsor Cotton Factory has written a letter to the| Toronto Globe respecting its gross mis- | statements about the wages of operatives, in which he says :— ‘“‘We paya thousand dollars weekly to 180 operatives. spinners, $10; spoolers, $4 to $5; drawers- in, $4 to $6; beam-warpers, $5 to $6; strip- pers and grinders, $7; drawers, $5 to $6; and slubbers and rovers, $7 per week; ring spinners, $5; and we work sixty hours per week.” , Whether or noc these are “starvation wages,’ let the public judge. same time, be it remembered, cotton fabrics were never so cheap as they are | demanded, and as the sub ehairman put it, to day. Mrs. Yeoman’s, during the early! well allow an encore part of 1883, was actively engaged in the temperance cause in the Province of | Quebec, and addressed large audiences | im many places. She organized some | . ce mn oe Women’s Christian Lemperance | } . “ . q . ~ ! nions, all of whick, with four others | eee since her visit, are in a ourishing condition, and doing good temperance work. Steps are now being | aro a i | too little is better than too much. Our | Our weavers earn on an | average $6, some earn $9 per week; mule | DATIOS taken to form a Quebec Provincial Union those already organized, as formed. ninety-three of the Unions of fand also all « have been .0Ts as soon Letters sent to Mails and Passengers | places where Unions may ultimately be : LAL ase 4 Se. | . ° formed in the Province. —The “N. 1. Depression” gives our Grit contemporaries a great deal of anxiety; but, oaturally enough, they seem to know nothing whatever about the **Free Trade Ruin ” in England-- firms falling by the dozen! Apropos of “N. P. Depression,” we read,— “Over one hundred new houses were erected in Moncton during the past year, and in Woodstock the record is equally good. ‘*\ gentleman, looking for an empty house, made a tour of the city of Halifax, a day or two ago. He traversed the whole north end, and from Cogswell street to the cotton factory, found but two small cot- tages and four parts of houses to let, In 1878 there were over 120 empty houses in the same district. And yet, the Recorder is praying for another era of depression ! Chere is only one vacant house in the south end. John Naylor, the real estate agent, says he cannot begin to get houses for people who apply for them. In 1878 he had 176 houses to let; now he has oniy two. Consequently his real estate business has been ‘‘ruined.’’ The bailiffs also say that their business has been ruined during the last few years.” We are indebted to E. L. Lydiard, Esq., for the following statement of ex- ports from Queen’s and King’s County, for the mouth of October, 1883 :— | POTATOES, Colonial—134,269 bus., $21,453 | Foreign—9,092 bus., 1,455 $22,938 OATS. Colonial— 96,197 bus., 32,707 | Foreign— 15,794 bus., 5,397 38, 104 TURNIPS Colonial—18,053 bus., 2,890 MEATS. Colonial, 1,037 Foreign, 63 1,100 MISCELLANEOUS. Colonial, 4,170 Foreign, 5,937 10,107 FISH, all kinds. | Colonial, 5,145 Foreign, 34,39 39,543 | PORK. | Colonial—20 bris., 300 SOUNDS. Colonial, 375 LOBSTERS, Colonial—602 boxes, 3,010 STARCH. Colonial—40 tons, 2,400 Ships sold abroad—2, 673 tons, 17,600 EUGS, Foreign—76,637 doz., 15,328 Total, $153,695 Under the new “Ships Licenses,” we | cannot get the proper exports, as we do not get the contents of ships, a ee a> The School Concert. Tur entertainment given by the teachers and pupils of the Upper Prince Street School, came off last evening in the main hall of their building. The pupils of the | higher grades occupied the tiers of seats to the left of the Chairman; all the other available space was taken by the large audience present. Principal Mellish called upon W. E. Dawson, Esq., to preside. The programme was then proceeded with, and required fully two hours to render it. On the whole, il was somewhat too long. There are some things, even good things, of which The one leaves you with a sense of relish, the other with an uneasy feeling of satiety. The teachers were certainly generous with the measure they meted out for the small admittance fee, but they almost erred in their estimate of the receptive capacity of their hearers. | Of a performance which contained so |many pieces it is impossible to speak in | detail. The pupils sang in concert a num- | ber of popular airs, chiefly patriotic, such | as ‘‘Hurrah for Canada,” ‘*Scots wha hae,” **’Twas in Trafalgar’s bay,” and another | devoted to the glorification of England. |The recitations also were of a patriotic | turn, ‘‘Breathes there a man,’’ ‘‘O Cale- | donia, stern and wild.” It may be added too, that the opening organ solo by Miss Harvie was the French National Anthem, and the closing song, God Save the Queen. Here was truly an exhibition of all-em- bracins jy triotism. There is nothing narrow in the range of sympathies fostered in the Upper Prince Street School. And not only were the pieces well sung as pieces, but they had a moving, stirring effect upon, at feast, one member of the audience, ‘The most ambitious piece attempted by the pupils was the rendering the trial scene ‘in the Merchant of Venice. The seven or eight who took part in this knew the dia- logue well, and repeated it with vigor and 'self-possession. It must have required very great care to make the performance as successfulas it was. But the speaking was much too fast, and except in the case of the Shylock and the Duke, the speeches were, 'as in parliament, too much recited to the audience, and too little addressed to the | eharacters taking part. The young ladies had entire self possession, which is the first requisite in appearing on the platform; but |they did mot reach the point of self- | forgetfulness, which is needed to personate a character. We do not intend to comment on | the readings and singing of the teacher's | themselves. In one case the reader was much annoyed by a chorus of boys outside who shouted in all keys that they had ‘‘one At the | more river” to cross. It is to be hoped that in the passage they will all get a thorough drenching. In another case an encore was “Mr. Dawson in this instance might very Ve had almost for- gotten to refer to the solo by Hettie Lewis, which was very prettily sung. =e Mack’s Macneric Mrprctye is an unfailing food for the Brain and Nerves, and by its re- juvenating effect on these organs never fails to | cure nervous exhaustion and all weaknesses of Sold in Charlottetown at Apothecaries Hall. See atlvertisement in| [novd lw whly | the generative organs. eolumn. we nen Foreign News Notes. Louis Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot, is dying at Turin, France having moderated her demands on Madagascar, an early settlement of the difficulty is anticipated. Proofs of a fresh intrigue between Spainish political exiles and their frieuds in Spain with the object of preparing covered. At the beginning of 1882, Sweden pos- sessed a merchautile navy of 4,151 vessels, measuring 530,000 tons, of which 3,397 were sailers, with 450,000 tons, and 754 steamers, with 80,000 tons. The number of sailing vessels had, during the year, de- creased with 184 ships. The Marquis Tseng says that if war occurs between France and China, which he believes probable, Annam will become a Chinese ally. The French will require 40,000 troops to overcome their united forces. Meantime England’s commercial interests will compel her to intervene, A Rome despatch says:—Cardinal Man- ning has been specially active and gracious in his reception of the American bishops. It is rumored that the Vatican is dis- pleased at the position taken by the Car- dinal, as it is believed his views with regard to the re-organization of the Ameri- can Episcopate differ from those of the Vatican. A St. Petersburg despatch says:—The Nihilists are miserably weakened in men and means. They have lost many promi- nent members the last two pears. The arrest of Vera Philipora, is the worst blow of all. They now regard Lavroff, who is in Paris, as their chief, and the campaign will be conducted from without. In Russia the Nihilists are broken up into widely scatter- ed groups, and are driven to murder and robbery in order to obtain funds. A special cablegram says the Popo is very decided in his opposition to the whole- sale exportation of Irishmen from Ireland, and is very outspoken in his condemnation of the British Government for permitting Orangemen to commit outrages upon Roman Catholics. It is reported that the Archbishop of Toronto has addressed to the Pope and Cardinals and to the Bishops of Lreland a long letter on the loss of souls in America, consequent on the wholesale and impoverished emigration. The new and thrifty town of Pallman, near Chicago, lies on a flat prairie, and the problem of drainage, which is so difficult to solve in a great many places, had to be met in Pullman. The following is the one adopted, and it is said to be satisfactory in its working and profitable in ita results. Sewers are built to empty into a sunken tank, from which the sewage is pumped through a twenty-inch main to a farm three miles away. The system cost $80,000; the farm yields a profit of $8,500 a year. —-—______-q>o————-— British News Notee. The recent rioting in Londonderry is to be made the subject of an official investiga- tion. The London Times, of October 25, con- tained a letter from an engineer describing and highly praising the state of the Cana- dian Pacitic Railway from Port Arthur westward. The Jilustrated London News, of October 20, contained a full page of sketches at Rat Portage and on the Winnipeg River, en- titled, ‘‘Sketches on the Canadian Pacific Railway.” They were accompanied by a very eulogistic notice of the progress of this great work. The Pall Mall Gazette states that the Government will probably introduce, next session of Parliament, a Household Suffrage bill, to apply to both town and country in all parts of Great Britain and Ireland. A like bill for the redistribution of seats in the House of Commons will probably fol- Jow. Lord Chief Justice Coleridge consulted Mr. Charles Russell and other leading members of the English bar the other day regarding the differences of procedure in the High Courts of Justsce of England and America. One of the points discussed was the admission of foreign lawyers to practise before English courts. >_>. _ Home News Items. During the month of October the ship- ments of cattle from Canada to the United Kingdom amounted to 5,886 head, and the shipment of sheep to 12,683. Under the rigorous system of inspection adopted by the Department of Agriculture the ship- ments of the month have been free from any scheduled disease. The farmers and others interested in this trade have warmly supported the efforts of the department. In the Moncton cotton mill a woman who can manage four looms earns six dollars a week, anda man who can manage six earns nine dollars aweek. But the mere fact that cotton mill operatives are paid at these rates will not prevent the veracious chronicler who says the Finance Minister thinks cigars are made of lard, from repeat- ing his story that they earn only twenty- five cents a day. Horeford’s Acid Phosphate A RELIABLE ARTICLE, Dr. E, Cutter, Boston, Mass., says; ‘‘I found it to realize the expectations raised, and regard it as a reliable article.’ — = nm Holloway’s Pills and Gintment, Vy Ki have received a consignment of the above medicines from Professor Hollo- way, and offer them at usual prices. We warrant these medicines genuine, as they have been shipped to us from Professor Hollo- way’s Establishment, 78 New Oxford Street, London, England. APOTHECARIES HALL COMPANY, DesBrisay’s Corner, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Nov. 10—2i wkly lm OB PRINTING of every description executed with Neatness and Despatch at the BXAMINER JCR_ PRINTING ROOMS, om, Water and Grest George a | EXHIBITION WHleK {MAINE Ma HCA LENE, OVEMBER 10 16 Se ae haan ——— ae E invite the Citizens and those who may be visiting the | SIECOND WEEK \ Town, during the week of Exhibition, to the inspection of our immense stock of another military outbreak have been dis- | WE Vatieties compicte in every Department at the Fifteen PALL ARD HAVE JUST PLACED UPON OUR SHELVES CONTENTS OF THE Two Hundred and Sixty Bales and Cases, OF ENGLISH, AMERICAK, AND CANADIAN, DRY GOODS, Comprising everything necessary for Household and General use. ——-—0! -— Very Lowest Prices for Cash. UPWARDS OF Thousand Grain Bags, And a Large Steck of Very Choice CHINESE AND INDIAN TEAS, Wholesale and Retail. GEO. DAVIES & CO. Charlottetown, Oct, 6, 1883 200 pieces Winceys, 30 ‘ Shirtings, 500 ** Prints, 100 ** Scotch Tweeds, 50 ‘* Worsted Coatings, 50 ‘* Scarlet Flannels, At twenty per cent less Also, One Hundred Cases and Bales Canadian Manufactured Goods, Very Cheap. All Goods we are selling very cheap this Season. Wiholesale and Retail, CARPET W. & A. BROWN & CO. . Ch’tewn, Oct. 6, 1887. 60 PIECES LOOK OUT FUR BARGAINS | en Sees W. & A. BROWN & CoO., os now opened 140 Cases and Bales of New and Fashionable Dry Goods. 100 pieces Ulster Cloths, bought at half price. 100 pieces Mantle Oloth, bought at half price. —OF THE— Boston Woanedy UOUpany WINTER GOODS... PRICE WINSDER, - Manager i The charmirg af talented artiste Miss Kdwina Grey, will appea: in a series of her great impersoy- ations, supported by an excellent Company, PEOPLE’S POPULAR PRICES; Admission, 25 cts. Reserved Seats, 35 cts, Reserve seat tickets for sale at Dodd's Medical Hall, and at Apothecaries Hall. Doors open st 7.30 o'clock; Overature at 8 o'clock, «THIS (SATURDAY) EVENING ; THE CCTOROON Nov. 10, 18°3. Pine and Sxrne° Lvmbep, rygxO be sold by AUCTION, on MONDAY NEXT, !2th instant, at balf-past three o'clock, on Pownal Wharf,— 3,000 feet Pianed Hemlock Boards, 15,900 feet Spruce Flooring (Planed), 68,000 feet Planed Pine Boards, 10,000 feet 14 inch Planed Spruce. ALSO some half-inch and three inch planed stuff, fit for Cabinet Makers nse, WILLIAM DODD, Auctioneer, 70: Ch’town, Nov. 10, 1883. BY AUCTION, (in the Market Square, MONDAY NEXT, 12th INST, AT 11 O'CLOCK, 50 bris. cheice Nova Scotia Apples, 10 bris. Herring, 10 bris. slightly Camaged Flour, 5 M. Manilla and Brown assorted Paper Bags CAMPBELL & RAYDEN, uchicneers. Ch’town, Oct. 20, 1883,—2i MORTGAGE SALE, TO be sold by Public Auction, on THURS. DAY, the TWENTY-SEVENTH day of DECEMBER NEXT (A D, 1828), at the hour of 12 o'clock, noon, in front of the County Court Honse in Alberton, Privce County, under nd by virtue of a Power of Sale, contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, dated the Twentieth day of February, A. D. 1859, and made between Peter Gav un, of Alberton, in Prince County, Merchant, and Anastatia, his wife, of the one pirt, and A Banperman Warburton, of Charlottetown, in Queens County, trustee for certain creditors of the suid Leter Gavin, of the other part,— 1,000 Wool Squares, very cheap. 50 boxes Silk Fringe, 25 ‘* Silk Plushes, LL the estate and interest of the said 50 “ Velveteens, 4A Peter Gavin, in and to all that tract, 30 * Silk Velvets, piece or pareel of Land, situate, lying and 50 “ Frillings, being in the village of Allberten, in Prince County, in the said Island, being pert and parcel of a plot of ground lately in possession of Benjamin Rogers, tnd bounded as follows, namely): By a line commencing at a stake fixed on the north s de of a street known as Princess §Street,, acd on the south-west angle of a plot of Jand owned by John R, Larkins; thence running north by the Mag- netic Meridian of 1764, a dis‘ance of sixty links; thence west a distance of one chain and twelve links, or until it reaches 4 street, sometimes known as Queen Street, thence following the course of the last mentioned street southwardly to Princess Street afore. said, a distance of sixty links, thence fol. lowing Princess Street east one chain and five links to the place of commencement, being the present dwelling house and ware. house of the said Pever Gavin, ALso,—All that tract, piece or parcel of 300 Jackets and Dolmans. than prices of former years, BAILY EXPECTED. dy wkly, -- NEW FALG GOODS land situate at Brae, on Lot number Nine, in Prince County bounded and described as follows—Commencing at a stake fixed at high water mark on the shore of Brae Harbor and running eastwardly a distance of two hundred —~——AT --— and ten feet, thence westwardly a distance of two hundred and ten feet, thence southwardly os B. MACD ON ALD’S. following the course of the said Harbor tothe Ladies’ Dress Goods, in all the newest fabrics. Ladies’ Mantle Cloths, in the newest makes, Ladies’ Mantles, Shawls, Silk Velvets, Velveteens. Brocaded Silks and Satios. Ladies’ Straw, Plush and Silk Hats, Feathers, Flowers, Ribbons. Woollen Squares, Sciurfs, in variety. IN THE GENTLEMEN'S A heavy Stock of Cloths, in Beavers, Worsteds, Tweeds and Fancy Coatings. Readymade Clothing, for Men and Boys. Underclothing, Fiannel Shirts. Also Parks’ and other makes Cotton Warps, at the lowest cash prices, NITURE, FURNITURE, AT SOST. Opposite Post Office, Charlottetown, i. hs rec ——— FUR —0i— Bf am now receiving New Goods fer Fall and Winter. as place of commencement, containing one acre of land a jittle more or less, with all the houses and buildidgs thereon, the same being the site and establis:ment of a Lobster Factory of the said Peter Gavin, aod being held under lease from Robert T, Oulton, Aso; All that tract piece or parcel of land siiuate at Brae aforesaid, and dercribed as fol- lows—com meneing at north west angle of the tract above desciibed, and running thence eastwardly a distance of two hundred and ten feet, thence northwardly a distance of three bundred and thirty feet, thence westwardly a distance of two hundred feet, tnence south- wardiy following the various course of the Harbor to the place of commencement, con- laining one and one half acres of land « little more or lees, being the premises on which a Steam Mill, the property of the said Peter Grayin, ie erectedardheld by him under lease from Robert T. Gulton. Aso; All that other tract ; iece and parcel of land situate lying and being on Sandy Island, in Caseumpec Harbor, and fronting on the North Shore and running back as staked, containing two acres of land, a little more or less, being part of the state of the iaie Edward Cunard, and demised by him to Benjam’n Rogers for the purposes ot a Fishery for a term of years, which by divers means assignments in the law has become vested in the said Peter Gavin, ag by references to the same on file in the Registry office will more fully appear, to- gether with all the houses, buildings, fac. torieg, stages and 4ppurtenances therewith 0:0 DEPARTMENT : J. B. MACDONALD, Queen Street thereof, For further particulars apply to Warberton EDSTEADS, Chairs, Tables, Washstands, Sofas, Lounges, Parlor, and Drawing Room & Conroy. Solictors, Charjottetown. Bedroom Suits, Looking Glasses and Mirrors, Window Furniture, Picture Frames and) qicture Mouldings. Oharlottetewr, Jan, %, IR8T. yy Dated this First day of November, A. D. 18°, JOHN NEWSON. A. B. WARBURTON, Morigagee, Nov, 10.—law sat wkly tl enle